Crocker Pond

A retreat in Bethel’’s snowy, adventure-filled woods

 

Dusk descends as I motor along the North Road, a rural byway that runs parallel to the Androscoggin River between Bethel and Gilead. Lacelike flurries, the advance scouts of an approaching storm, tat the windshield and dance in the headlights. The woods disappear into shadows. Snowflakes filter through the treetops and float to the down-covered ground. The woods are lovely, dark and deep, I say to myself. But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep.

Fortunately, my resting place is at hand. A blaze of light shines through a stand of evergreens. For those who embrace winter, the Crocker Pond House is an ideal retreat, a place to savor the season, a place for a weekend ski trip, or to get away from it all. I’ve come anticipating a day of dogsledding with Mahoosuc Guide Service into the frozen world of the Umbagog Lake National Wildlife Refuge, followed by a day of schussing Sunday River’s peaks. I just as easily could have come to Stuart and Ellen Crocker’s B&B to snowshoe the trails that begin at the back door, to ski along a riverside snowmobile trail, to sled down the front knoll, perhaps even to glide across the namesake pond. Dusk descends as I motor along the North Road, a rural byway that runs parallel to the Androscoggin River between Bethel and Gilead. Lacelike flurries, the advance scouts of an approaching storm, tat the windshield and dance in the headlights. The woods disappear into shadows. Snowflakes filter through the treetops and float to the down-covered ground. The woods are lovely, dark and deep, I say to myself. But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep.

Fortunately, my resting place is at hand. A blaze of light shines through a stand of evergreens. For those who embrace winter, the Crocker Pond House is an ideal retreat, a place to savor the season, a place for a weekend ski trip, or to get away from it all. I’ve come anticipating a day of dogsledding with Mahoosuc Guide Service into the frozen world of the Umbagog Lake National Wildlife Refuge, followed by a day of schussing Sunday River’s peaks. I just as easily could have come to Stuart and Ellen Crocker’s B&B to snowshoe the trails that begin at the back door, to ski along a riverside snowmobile trail, to sled down the front knoll, perhaps even to glide across the namesake pond.

crock_6

Serendipity brought the Crockers to inn keeping. Neither had a lifelong dream of operating an inn; they hadn’t had careers in the hospitality, marketing, or tourism industries, from which so many innkeepers come; nor did they purchase an existing inn as a way to move to a sought-after location. “We just went by the seat of our pants,” Ellen says.

Twenty years ago, Stuart planted the seed that grew into the inn. He had vacationed in the White Mountains as a child and longed to return, but life had rerouted him to British Columbia, where he worked as an architect. During a visit east in 1979, a friend recommended he look at some land on the outskirts of Bethel. “It was the central part of an old farm owned by a French Canadian logger from Berlin,” Stuart says. “There was a cleared spot from an old farmhouse that burned, a small pond, and woods. I offered him what he wanted, $33,000 for fifty acres. It was a lot of money at the time.”

Flash forward to 1990, when Stuart, a widower with two young daughters, followed his dream and moved his family across the continent to Bethel. Within months, he met Ellen, a psychotherapist. After a whirlwind courtship (“My friends thought I was crazy,” Ellen says) they married and began designing their future home. In the back of his mind, Stuart was tinkering with the idea of a B&B. “I thought building an inn would be a good form of supplemental income, a way to meet people, and a chance for me to show my work to potential clients,” he says. And with that, the Crocker Pond House took root.

For Ellen, designing and building the inn was an education in itself. “I didn’t understand how much thinking went into a design like this. Every little piece was decided before a hammer was raised,” she says. “There were squeaky moments when I thought the project could be done much faster. Now I understand. If a house isn’t out of square, nothing needs to be redone.”
“That’s why you hire an architect,” Stuart says. He transformed their ideas and vision into reality. “We wanted to have a Maine lodge feeling without being really rustic. We wanted it to be more finished, to fit the land, and to fit Maine,” he says. “It’s kind of a shingle style, which I felt was a way to achieve the feeling of a woodsy lodge.”

He succeeded. When first glimpsed through the giant white pines sheltering it from the drive, the Crocker Pond House seems comfortably settled, as if it’s been there for a century or more. But a longer gaze reveals architectural elements that give it twentieth-century pizzazz.

The inn’s multiple bay projections are elements of Stuart’s style. “They make you feel more surrounded by the environment,” he says. “They give you three-way views and allow light to enter a room from multiple directions.” Playing with form is another hallmark. “It makes architecture interesting when you have different sizes and shapes,” he says.

Inside, a loft library extends over the front part of the living room, creating an intimate space by the downstairs fireplace before the room opens to a soaring 18-foot ceiling and a wall-of-glass projection framing mountain views. The design preserves privacy while fostering camaraderie. “We can have thirty people in here and have a great party but still have an intimate feel,” Ellen says.

It’s an intimate group of one, the night I arrive, but after a day of outdoor play, it’s hard to imagine a more comfy place than settled either in front of the fireplace with a glass of wine or by the woodstove in the loft library with a good book. Cherry-toned walls and floors make it all quite warm and cozy.

The inn’s decor marries Stuart and Ellen’s eclectic furnishings and styles. “It’s his and hers,” Ellen says. “You can tell Stuart is very precise, and I’m more slap-dash. I brought the Victoriana with me, and Stuart likes straight lines.” In less skilled hands, in tighter quarters, the soft curves of her antique sofas and chairs would be jarring against the precise lines of Stuart’s preferred Crafts-style pieces; the muted shades of her Florentine oil paintings and Chinese scrolls and papercuts would clash with the simple forms and bright colors of his prints by Haida and Tsimshian First Nations artists.

Many of Ellen’s pieces reflect her Norwegian heritage. Her parents immigrated to a small Norwegian community in Berlin, New Hampshire, and she inherited some of her father’s handcrafted furniture and her mother’s linens, along with a passion for Norwegian embroidery, a variation on needlepoint. Her embroidered pillows add color to Stuart’s furniture. In one corner of the living room, a Norwegian “good luck” troll, another nod to her heritage, rests on a coffee table. “It’s all very important to me, and Stuart puts up with it,” Ellen says.

The Crockers invite me to join them and Stuart’s daughter Sarah, visiting from Colorado, at the Jolly Drayman, a traditional English pub in town, for $5 burger night.

I’d been planning to go elsewhere, but this sounds far less expensive and far more fun. For $5, I’m expecting sliders, but these are hefty half-pounders served with a generous side of fries. What a steal!

The storm that threatened earlier is a no-show, and by the time we return to the inn, moonlight is peeking through the clouds. My first-floor room happens to be fully accessible, but like all five guestrooms, it has no TV or phone. There are blinds on the door opening to the outside, but not on the windows, which are placed high enough for privacy. I fall asleep under the moon and stars amid a deep, pervasive silence.

On a sunny morning, it’s easy to comprehend the beauty of Stuart’s designs. Light and shadows dance inside the rooms as if filtered through a prism. Stepping into the living room’s bay projection truly is like being part of the wintry world outside. Looking at the new dusting of snow, I want to grab a sled and zip down on the inn’s sloping front lawn. But breakfast is ready.

“When we started out, I had delusions of grandeur. Stuart was going to cook and I was going to clean,” Ellen says, setting down a mounded plate of Stuart’s blueberry pancakes. “That lasted two weeks. We hired someone to clean.” Stuart laughs and fires back, “but I’m still cooking.” Breakfast isn’t one of those elaborate multicourse extravaganzas, but it’s abundant, delicious, and quite filling—perfect for fueling a day’s adventures.

And Bethel delivers plentiful options for winter fun beyond Alpine skiing or dog-sledding. Stuart ticks off a few possibilities: gliding along the Bethel Nordic Ski Center’s groomed trails or, with caution, along the snowmobile trail that parallels the river across from the inn; snowmobiling into the woodsy wilderness on a guided tour with Sun Valley Sports; skating on the Bethel Common’s rink or on the Crockers’ pond, if the weather cooperates; and snowshoeing the trails behind the inn.

If those ideas aren’t enough, the shared breakfast table sometimes doubles as a gossip center. “Skiers tell us they want to get out early, then they sit at the table for an hour and a half talking with other guests,” Stuart says. They swap ski and travel stories. Stuart also volunteers in the Maine Handicapped Ski program at Sunday River, and guests pick his brain for insider info. “They want to know everything from where to park and where to eat, to how to avoid the weekend crowds.”

Occasionally, the conversations can get pretty deep. “Sometimes people are more forthright with strangers,” Ellen says. “I think in our society people are gyrating faster and faster in their own little individual circles, and if we can provide a place where people can connect and slow down, that’s a real service. The dining room table is the focus.”

She gazes from the dining room out at the undeveloped woods and mountains beyond. “I’d always loved having people in and entertaining, but I didn’t know how I would feel about having people I didn’t know,” she says. “It’s turned out to be wonderful. We’re at the end of the world here, and the world comes to us.”

And now you know whose woods these are.

Crocker Pond House | 917 North Rd. | Bethel | 207.836.2027

Share The Inspiration