
Orders not picked up within 30 days will be returned to stock. Kittery Trading Post will not have any liability for any order delays. Kittery Trading Post does not make any guarantee that your order will be available at any specific time. NOTE: Firearms must be picked up and processed inside the store. For documentation and your protection we will record vehicle plate number and date/time of pickup.Once confirmed, they will place your order in your vehicle's backseat or trunk. (On vehicle or trailer if a Bike, Boat or SUP**).A KTP team member will confirm purchase via printed or digital receipt and Valid ID shown through vehicle window.When you hear the greeting, dial EXT 330, to connect to the Curbside Pickup department. Park in one of the numbered parking spots near the marked pickup door in the back of our south parking lot. (Bikes, Boats & SUPS have a separate marked pickup area).Upon receipt of your order ready email confirmation drive to the Kittery Store between 10:00AM-6:00PM.If your product is located at our Kittery Store it will be ready within one hour of order confirmation, if not please allow 24 hours.*.We’ll let you know when your order is ready via email or phone.Shop Online – Select Contactless Curbside Pickup as your shipping method during checkout.(Note: wear walking shoes and bug spray). The views once you get to the farm are beautiful - the apple trees were just starting to bloom when I went - and the house is magnificent in its historic simplicity. The trail is fairly easy and winds through the woods to the farm, and you'll hear lots of birdsong.

The house itself isn't open except by appointment and on Pettengill Farm Day in October, but you can peek through the windows. There's no parking lot, just an off-road space that fits 3-4 cars, or you can park on the street near the few nearby houses. A wide dirt trail leads from the entrance to the farm and house that's about a 20-minute walk each way (it's wide enough for a car, but cars aren't allowed). There are also two wooden structures, one of which has a placard about the archaelogical digs done on the farm. Pettengill Farm is a 19th century saltwater farm off the Harraseeket River and has 140 acres of woods, apple orchards, a salt marsh, gardens, fields, a few forest trails, and an 1810 saltbox house that's listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Picnic tables are available and small fees to enter. Trails may be wet and muddy after rain, and some have regular running water on them. I saw two rare lady slippers along the trail. This is a very good place for bird watchers. There is a huge rock to look out from, one picnic table on it, and informational plaques. Switchback is a trail for more fit hikers, and fat tire bicyclists came down it from the summit. 3 miles (I mistook it for the Summit trail of the same length, which is described as "steepest ascent, but not a difficult hike).

I began my hike to the summit on the easiest Northern Loop trail, but very quickly diverted to the Switchback trail because it was only. Outhouses, informational plaques, and paper trail maps are available. Horses, snowmobiles, Nordic skiing, and bikes with fat tires can be found here during their seasons. The easiest one is a mile long, while shorter ones have varying degrees of difficulty. There are many trails to get to the summit. First time, the Thursday before Memorial Day, so not crowded.
