BOWING BROOK DEER COVE. 333 



The coast from Cliffy point continues to trend north-northeast- 

 ward and is stony and backed by a more or less wooded bank for 2 

 miles, to a low point fronted by some rocks, two of which are pin- 

 nacles 25 feet high. There are several houses on the point, and the 

 rocks in front, extending a little northward, form Daniels cove, which 

 is sheltered from the southwestward. 



The coast from Daniels cove trends north-northeastward, and, 

 for a distance of 3| miles, is a stony beach, with a high clay bank, 

 covered on the top with scrub, and broken here and there by small 

 streams. 



Caution. — The prominent points of the land between Daniels cove 

 and port Saunders are reported to be inaccurately laid down, with 

 reference to one another, on the charts. 



Bowing" brook, the largest of the streams, is 1^ miles from Daniels 

 cove, and there is a narrow bridge across it. 



Spudgels cove, 1| miles from Bowing brook, is a slight bend, and 

 here the foreshore changes to a jumble of ledges and rocks, fronting 

 a bank of broken limestone shale, which falls in low cliffs. Inside 

 of this bank, the land rises to wooded ridges 250 to 380 feet high, with 

 intervening marshes and numerous ponds. 



Belvans cove, 6 miles from Daniels cove, is a small bight, with 

 rocky ledges fronting it, wdiich afford some shelter for boats. There 

 are several huts on the narrow foreshore under the low cliff, that here 

 recedes a little. A stream, bridged near its mouth, runs into the 

 eastern side of the cove. 



Table cove, f mile northward of Belvans cove, is a shallow bay 

 with a stony beach, but it affords no shelter. There are a few huts 

 on the beach. 



Table point, northward 1^ miles from Belvans cove, is a projec- 

 tion of the shale bank and cliffs, fronted by low rocky ledges. The 

 land back of the point rises gradually in wooded slopes. The sound- 

 ings offshore between Daniels cove and Table point are regular, and 

 the land may be approached to a depth of 20 fathoms, which is ap- 

 proximately one mile from it. 



The coast from Table point trends north-northeastward, and at 

 about f mile from the point there is a small bight into which a small 

 stream runs from some ponds at a short distance inland. The bight 

 is foul and rocky, but a boat might land there between the ledges, 

 when landing is not possible southward of the point. The land 

 north-northeastward of Table point is of moderate height, and the 

 coast inside of the rocks is covered with grass, but there is nothing 

 noticeable. 



Deer cove, 1^ miles from Table point, is a small break in the rocks. 

 For about 4 miles from the cove, the rocky ledges are backed by low 



