NATIONAL PARKS CONSERVATION ASSOCIATION • January 9, 2025
It was a gorgeous morning in late June, and we were in what might be the most idyllic section of Acadia National Park. We stood at the edge of Hemlock Bridge, one of the park’s famous stone archways, listening to the waters of Maple Spring Brook trickle below. It was a perfect day, but I wasn’t there to enjoy the views. We had work to do. Just behind us, a trail cut 2 miles steeply uphill through forest and boulders and ultimately to the granite summit of Sargent Mountain. The National Park Service wanted to bring thousands of pounds of soil up to the peak to help save the park’s most imperiled ecosystem, and managers had determined that the best way to do it was for us, a group of regular people, to lug the dirt there on our backs. The goal of the Save Our Summits project is to restore native vegetation atop Acadia’s famous granite peaks.