With the amount of fog that's been around areas of Southern Maine the last couple of weeks (mainly along the water), plus the fact that we're exactly one week out from Halloween, this just seems so fitting.

Townsquare Media
Townsquare Media
loading...

By the way, before I even get into this, let me just rip the bandaid off for anyone who notices the hood of my truck in the bottom of this picture that's clearly taken from the driver's seat and wants to bust me for TeXtInG aNd DrIvInG -- I pulled over in the insanely too narrow breakdown lane next to the guardrail and put my hazards on to take any picture you see in this article.

I couldn't live with the guilt of getting into an accident and possibly harming or killing someone just for a picture for an article, and I most definitely wouldn't risk messing up my truck either. So I just saved you the time and energy for trying to cancel me. But I digress...

Halloween season in Northern New England

Obviously, it's not just Halloween season in New England, but there's something extra unique and next level about Halloween season here. The changing leaves and temperatures. The seemingly constant cloudy, gloomy skies. The ghostly chill in the air. It all just adds to the mystique of Halloween in New England.

But even knowing and experiencing all that my entire life in New England (minus the couple years in Tulsa, Oklahoma), I didn't expect to come across what I did yesterday while I made the drive west from Southern Maine to the mountains in New Hampshire.

Townsquare Media
Townsquare Media
loading...

Maine State 136 along the Androscoggin River

The route my GPS took me early yesterday morning to meet with family for breakfast in at the Town & Country Inn in Sherburne, New Hampshire brought me through Durham (Maine, not NH) along the Androscoggin River on Maine State 136. It was around 7:30a and my truck thermometer said it was in the 40s, with the sun peeking out but also pretty chilly in the air.

Google Maps
Google Maps
loading...

After driving through some thick, thick fog (that literally looked like driving into the abyss), I turned left around the bend of 136 in Durham and began driving parallel to the Androscoggin, with the river to my right. And the sight was something out of the old Friday the 13th movies with Jason Voorhees stalking his prey along an eerie, foggy Crystal Lake -- except this was daytime.

Townsquare Media
Townsquare Media
loading...

Something so simple and unexpected, but also just an absolute perfect view during Halloween season. The cemetery I saw off to the left about a mile after the fog burned off over the Androscoggin was a nice touch, too.

Read More: Stores That Used to Be at the Maine Mall

Here are some stores that used to exist at the Maine Mall in South Portland but now are there no longer.

LOOK: The most expensive weather and climate disasters in recent decades

Stacker ranked the most expensive climate disasters by the billions since 1980 by the total cost of all damages, adjusted for inflation, based on 2021 data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The list starts with Hurricane Sally, which caused $7.3 billion in damages in 2020, and ends with a devastating 2005 hurricane that caused $170 billion in damage and killed at least 1,833 people. Keep reading to discover the 50 of the most expensive climate disasters in recent decades in the U.S.

More From 94.3 WCYY