Peaks Island is reached by ferry. The Casco Bay Lines terminal is located in Portland’s Old Port. Besides being a major tourist destination, filled with popular restaurants and shops, the Old Port is home to the original inhabitants, fish and lobster processing plants, fishing and marine suppliers and other marine related businesses. The Old Port is always busy. In the summer it is extra busy.
Parking is at a premium. Check the Bay Lines’ parking map for possibilities. The CBL arrival lot, for passenger and island freight handling, shares space with municipal buses, semi-trailers delivering fish to a processing plant, pedestrians heading onto the Maine State Pier. In summer, add a schooner company, occasional concerts on the Pier, as well as cruise ship passengers (a thousand or two per ship) debarking to explore Portland, and the taxis and tour busses they attract. Allow time to find parking and buy your ferry ticket.
The deckhands count boarding ferry passengers and at 399, the boat is full and further boarding stops. If you do not get aboard, you will have to wait for the next ferry. During the summer this is not an uncommon occurrence. It is more common on the Peaks side when everyone wants to return to Portland at the same time at the end of a beautiful afternoon. There are three restrooms on Peaks, available depending on the season.
Plan ahead and use the restrooms at the CBL Terminal in Portland, or use the restroom, or “head”, on the ferry, before you arrive at Peaks.
Fires are prohibited on all PILP properties. Fire is a serious danger on an unbridged island. Peaks has a Portland Fire Dept. station, (as well as ambulance, EMTs, and Portland Police officers) and a well-trained Volunteer island crew, and the PFD Fireboat and Ambulance boat are always on call. But much of the island terrain seriously limits the ability to fight fires. Peaks has had numerous serious fires in the last 100 years, with theatres and hotels, homes, and businesses destroyed. (ref; https://www.fifthmainemuseum.org/2020/06/24/fire-and-water/)
Peaks Island Land Preserve does not have any trails that meet Architectural Barriers Act (ABA) standards. PILP trails traverse uneven terrain, varying from steep and rocky to wet and marshy. There are some bridges that vary from loose boards or tree trunks to simple wooden bridges. Trails may sometimes be blocked by fallen trees. Battery Steele is easily accessible by walking, biking, or car. Built of concrete, the floor is smooth and wheelchair accessible, though there is no light inside, and it may be flooded after rain.
There are three restrooms on Peaks, available depending on the season.
There is a seasonal restroom, with extra porta potties in summer, in the lower corner of the ferry parking lot. There is a restroom in the lobby of the Library at the corner of Island Avenue and Sterling Street, past Brad’s Bike Shop.
There is a rustic composting toilet in Trott-Little john Park, near the corner of Upper A Street and Florida Avenue, just off Brackett Avenue. This is the closest facility to the “back shore”. Plan ahead and use the restrooms at the CBL Terminal in Portland, or use the restroom, or “head”, on the ferry, before you arrive at Peaks.
Cell phone reception is spotty in places on Peaks Island. The “back shore”, or ocean side, of the island, as well as much of the wooded interior area, are places where reception fails.
Fires are prohibited on all PILP properties.
Camping is prohibited on Peaks Island and all PILP properties.
Motorized vehicles are prohibited on PILP properties. Class 3 ebikes are also disallowed.
Turn your passion for Peaks Island into action. We depend on volunteers for monitoring PILP lands, and for helping to revitalize specific areas: containing ‘invasives’ and planting native seedlings that will be suited to supporting that specific natural habitat.
Volunteers also help with trail work, removing blowdowns and insuring that fire hazards are minimized.