Last on the list was Cape Cod. I didn't know what to expect. I heard it's very popular with New Yorkers, that some rich people have big mansions there etc... So I didn't expect it to be so well preserved. It must be a lot more crowded in summer of course, but it feels like there's room for everyone. Unlike what us the French did with your coastline (we ruined it basically, especially around the Mediterranean coast), here there's a nice mix of towns and wild stretches of sand and dunes. It's big : I thought I could explore it in a couple of days, but it would have taken me a week to do all the walks that seemed interesting. There's not a touch of concrete or an ugly supermarket anywhere. Instead, there's nice Victorian houses, windmills, observation towers, lighthouses, piers... Appart from an ugly golfcourse, I say good job America on that one. It is expensive however, hotels are like 30-40% more expensive than in Maine.
In the end it was a nice short trip. I regret not having been able to hike in the real mountains of Maine, near the Canadian border, but November is the worst time to do it : roads are closed because it's deep mud, not hardened yet by their harsh winters.
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