Alt Text Map of Schoodic Peninsula and Acadia National Park in Maine. The roughly rectangular peninsula is shaded green for parkland, and surrounding land is beige. A road runs horizontally above the park and dips down, connecting with a U-shaped red road that follows the coastal perimeter. Extended Description A dashed blue line swoops in from the left edge, passing between Turtle Island, Ned Island, Mark Island, and Heron Island, around Grindstone Neck, and into Winter Harbor at the top. Text near the line reads “Passenger ferry to Bar Harbor (seasonal).” Winter Harbor’s ferry stop also has a bus stop. State Route 186 stretches from here to Birch Harbor on the east side. This description will work counterclockwise around the peninsula, followed by a transcription of the legend. Near Winter Harbor, a road extends down from State Route 186, entering the park and passing by bike trails and hiking trails as well as the Schoodic Woods Campground and Amphitheater, which is slightly further inland. In this area there is also a ranger station, bus stop, parking, and restrooms. Birch Harbor Mountain sits in the middle of the peninsula, just outside of park boundaries. Red text near Mosquito Harbor identifies day-use parking, and here the red park road begins one-way traffic, for autos only. Frazer Point, which pokes into Mosquito Harbor, has a bus stop, picnic area, and restrooms. The park road continues down the west coast, passing Ned Island and Mark Island, which has a lighthouse. Near Pond Island, an unpaved road branches off the road and goes inland, connecting to a hiking trail that leads to Blueberry Hill at the bottom of the peninsula. The unpaved road also links to Schoodic Head, elevation 440 feet (134 meters). As the park road curves around the bottom edge, it splits in two with one way going down to Schoodic Point, which has a bus stop, restrooms, and parking, and to the nearby Schoodic Institute and Welcome Center, which has a bus stop and restrooms. The other way continues around the bottom edge, around Blueberry Hill, which has parking and overlooks Little Moose Island and Schoodic Island. Along a hiking trail here is The Anvil. The park road continues north, passing Schoodic Head and Rolling Island and then curving around Schoodic Harbor, where the park exit is. Here ends one-way traffic, and there is a parking lot. Bike paths also connect to the road here. The road picks up from here, passing Bunkers Harbor, then coming to another parking area and bike path point before reconnecting with State Route 186 at Birch Harbor. Legend A solid white line on green land represents bike paths. Text here reads, “Horses are prohibited on the bike paths on Schoodic Peninsula.” A scale in the lower left corner of the map shows distances of 0.5 and 1 kilometer and 0.5 and 1 mile.