Day 6, Port Townsend
Today was a low-key day, meant for visiting our friends and getting to know their grandson who is staying with them while his parents move from Boston to Harlingen, Texas.
We took the opportunity to walk around Port Townsend. It has a nice downtown area with lots of individual proprietor shops that range from restaurants to art stores to a bike shop. When we were here in April, the streets were fairly quiet. Today, it was nice to see that the shops have survived and are being kept busy with tourist visitors. Many of the stores have signs requiring masks and we saw more people wearing masks than we had in Oregon. We grabbed some delicious baked goods from Pane d'Amore and set off to explore further afield.
Denis and I wandered for 5 miles. Port Townsend is an active port. We mused how there must be twice as many boats in the marina as there are residents of Port Townsend. In addition to the boats moored here, the marina hosts over 6000 overnight guest boats per year. It also has one of the larger boat maintenance and repair shipyards and can accommodate 200 vessels ashore at any one time. I enjoyed seeing one boat being taken out of the water and moved to dry dock. It was moving along being controlled much like a remote car. These travelifts are capable of moving up to 330 tons!As we wandered back to the house, we found a few paths to walk along. We came across a deer munching on the berries growing along the path. It seemed to not want to move. On the other hand, they are pretty used to wandering through the town. Maybe they knew we were the visitors.We stopped at the Port Townsend Brewery and tried a sample of each of their IPAs. Surprisingly, we enjoyed the hazy the best. 🍺



Awesome!
ReplyDelete