Did you know about this!?
The land that encompasses the Desert of Maine became a farm in 1821 when it was purchased by the Tuttle family. Like other Maine farmers of the era who were struggling to compete in an expanding agricultural market, the Tuttles' methods of farming gradually depleted the soil of essential nutrients. Subsequent overgrazing by large numbers of sheep produced widespread erosion of the topsoil, exposing a deposit of aeolian sand that was lying underneath.[2] Eventually the entire farm became barren, and the Tuttles abandoned the land in 1890. For years, it was known as "the sand farm" and was a popular local feature.[3] In 1925, Henry Goldrup purchased the land for US$300 (equivalent to about $5,400 in 2024) and developed it into a tourist attraction;[2] he named it the "Desert of Maine".[4]
It is a tourist attraction now. Do they have to actively keep the forest at bay? Or is it really a permanent desert? Other farmers in the area surely used the same practices, but only one spot remains barren?
What gives?