Local Tourist

An Outing to Port Gamble

As I promised myself, I would make every outing an adventure! Today my granny friend Susan and I took a little jaunt across the Hood Canal floating bridge to Port Gamble.

It is a tiny dot on the map, but very attractive with some cute artsy craftsy sort of stores which are housed in the old houses that line the street. The first little store we visited, The Artful Ewe, is a yarn store - every color and type you can imagine! Vibrant, brilliant color! And the most adorable whippet called Princess Grace, who welcomed us in her knitted collar and pearls!

I have lived within 15 minutes of the village for 9 years, visiting the store a few times when they used to serve a buffet-style breakfast in the General Store. Since then, it has become quite a little tourist town and the serve-yourself cafe is now a full-blown restaurant with a very good menu and an excellent reputation.

After browsing the eastern side of the street, we ended up at the Port Gamble General Store and Cafe, which also houses the local logging museum. The store has a whole wall banked with candy! And a wide variety of other tourist-type goods, like cards and hats and t-shirts. It also has a very good selection of local wines. However, we chose to have a snack, sans wine! I had a delicious clam chowder with smoked salmon that was more bisque than chowder. Definitely recommend it and Susan had sweet potato fries with blue cheese and garlic! Wow, they really pack a punch. The leftovers were quite pungent, creating an interesting aroma in the car.

The last store we visited is called TangoZulu and is an import store with a difference. They only deal in Fair Trade goods which included Ilala Baskets up in Zululand which I have visited. There were other Zulu things there - the wire baskets, wire and bead key rings, motorbikes made from coke cans, the usual tourist things we see in South Africa but a rare find in cloudy Washington.

Port Gamble, according to the Kitsap County Visitor and Convention Bureau:

Port Gamble

The village streets of this once bustling logging town haven't changed much since the 1850s.

The original New England Victorian-style homes have been preserved, along with the town's general store and stately church.

Port Gamble is a National Historic site. While you're there, visit the hilltop cemetery and look for the grave of the first US Navy man killed in battle in the Northwest.

Prior to its closing in 1995, the Port Gamble Mill was the oldest continuously operating sawmill operating in North America.

The Port Gamble General Store is still just that, selling clothing, a wide variety of specialty gifts, toys and gourmet foods. A restaurant within the General Store features homemade favorites. There are also antique shops, a trading company featuring local artists, a day spa, a now famous truffle shop and more.

Birthdays

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Dosusananas and Mardelle in the middle. Life changes and relationship issues aren't just for the young, they can, and do, happen at any age. So for Susan life is in the process of turning upside down, with her trying to release old behaviors and move her relationship on to a new level - but obviously with a lot of resistance. So for a while, I have a new roomie. Which is fun for me and I think, good for her while she figures things out.

But it is especially hard as it was her birthday we were celebrating last night! Well, this was last night and her birthday is today - so she woke up, alone (except for a kitty) not at home and not with her husband of more than 40 years.

But we made the best of it, as birthdays are always a reason to celebrate and that's what three grannies did last night. And although it wasn't a new adventure, it was a an experience! We went to our favorite little bistro, Alchemy, and I had my favorite tequila gimlet.

Lime in the tequila gimlet.

I don't know why I love tequila so much! But it does remind me of a certain party at an old Chinese restaurant in Newport Beach called The Stag. (I just googled it and it is still there, 40 years later!) We had been back from Tahiti a couple of year but when the Bali Hai Boys showed up, it was party time! Villi Vala, a wonderful old (even then) guitar player and singer was there and as usual, played the Tahitian music I love. Being young and agile as I was, hopped on the table and dance the tamure! Fueled by tequila!

Well, anyway...

Back to Granny Susu's adventurous life!

Secretive planning continues for my New Zealand trip. But in the meantime. it looks like I won't go sailing on San Francisco Bay in April. Partly due to financial constraints and partly because there is the opportunity of a lucrative position in the offing! Doing what I do best as a managing editor. So...

One thing I have learned is that I need to stay flexible (both physically and mentally!) so that is what I am doing!

Monday is my birthday and it is the start of a wonderful new year.

Getting Ready to Fly

The views I would see from the Kenmore Air seaplane Monday, weather permitting, I get to go flying! And not just in any old plane, or airliner, but a float plane! I am really excited about it.

The last time I flew in a seaplane was back in 1970 in the Virgin Islands. I was on a Visitor's visa which kept expiring, so I would take the old Grumman Goose from St. Thomas in the U.S. Virgin Islands to St. John in the British Virgins, check in and check back out and fly back to St. Thomas. That went on for a while... but that's a whole other story!

Warm boots for the flight - I hate being cold!

So the seaplane is a Kenmore Air plane and I won't know which one it is until - get this - it picks me up at the local marina! I don't even have to drive to the base. Then we will fly either over the Olympic Mountains or south of the range, out to the West Coast. The whole purpose, besides a story or two, is to test the waters in Willapa Bay and Grays Harbor. The trip is part of an ongoing Department of Ecology program that monitors the waters of Washington State. And because the magazine I work with is the inflight magazine for the airline, I am able to go with them, take photos and shoot videos and write an article.

Now that is a BIG adventure. And I am really hoping the weather holds and doesn't screw us up.

Talking about the weather - wow! Spectacular today. Sun, mild, calm. So I went for a walk in town to blow away the cobwebs and cabin fever. And while there I found the exact boots I need for my flying trip, as I was cautioned, "Dress warmly." The boots are waterproof and Thinsulate lined. Perfect! And I have some lined jeans that a friend gave me, so I should be fine. I hate being cold!

A Little Windfall

Saturday night and time to get out of the house for a little adventure.

A windfall in the mail allowed me to change the "let's go our for coffee" to "let's get a cocktail!" And as it was late in the day, completely appropriate.

Alchemy Bistro and Wine Bar is a delightful bar that serves a mean tequila gimlet, so was the venue of choice. It has a very relaxed ambiance and excellent service. So both Susans chose gimlets and proceeded to enjoy the fruits of my windfall, with toasts to our benefactor who can ill afford to be so generous!

And today I woke to bright sun and frost... and no hangover at all!

And the sight of bright daffodils made my day.

A Little Adventure

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laluna My friend Susan said I have to take the Granny part off my name because of a little incident, we experienced today coming home from a coffee break in town. This is what she wrote on Facebook:

"Driving us home today from an outing Poulsbo, Susan had a very close call at Termination Point. Susan exhibited such amazing driving skills. Some guy pulled out right in front of us and with no time to pick a different course, Susan punched it just enough that he went behind us. I fully expected an impact. There was a semi coming toward us on 104 and we would have been shoved into its path had the other driver hit us. Still shaking but really glad it was she who was driving. I am not sure if I could have pulled that off. Thanks, Susan! I think you need to pull the name "Granny" off of anything you are involved with. You are far from what most folks think of when they hear "Granny". Thanks from me and my husband, kiddos and grand-kids!"

It happened very fast and I really didn't think - just reacted! I know Susan was more shook up than I was. I'm just glad her little Honda Fit had the get up and go I needed to blast us out of the way!

But it's also good to know my reactions are still good - despite being a granny!

Our little adventure into Poulsbo was otherwise very pleasant, with a stroll along the main street and coffee at Hot Shots cafe. Poulsbo is a great little town to visit. It has a population of about 10,000 and has a very Scandinavian flavor. The streets are lined with Danish and Norwegian-style buildings and you can get the best pastries at the bakeries.

There are also a lot of art galleries and Gallery Walk is the second Saturday of each month, so I have "calendared" it for the next one in 10 days. Should be a fun outing. I've been to the Port Townsend Gallery Walk (on the first Saturday of each month) but never gone to Poulsbo's.

The town is right on Liberty Bay and the marina is large and a popular place for boaters in the summer. In the winter, the docks are fairly empty but it is one of the few places that still has boat houses.

Poulsbo is also easily accessible from Seattle. You can come across on the ferry from Seattle to Bainbridge Island, then just a short 20 minute drive, over Agate Pass to town. Or the ferry to Bremerton and then up Hwy 3 about 20 minutes. Or... you can drive around through Tacoma, over the Tacoma Narrows Bridge, through Gig Harbor. About an hour and half depending on traffic.

Today, I talked to my sister in New Zealand on Skype. It was really hard not to say anything! And she doesn't have a clue, so we are doing a good job keeping the secret!.

Planning Begins

the boysFor those of you who read why I am doing this, a lot of it is about planning for a surprise visit to my sister in New Zealand. It began just over a week ago. I was bowled over by an email from my niece who lives in Tauranga, New Zealand where my sister and her husband have retired. We are from South Africa but I live in the United States and I haven't seen my sister for several years. She turns 70 this year (I can't believe I have a sister that old!) and so Jenni wants to surprise her at Christmas.

Of course I am going - the ticket is already booked for November 15, but I will go to Southern California a couple of weeks earlier to celebrate an early Christmas with my sons, their partners and my two adorable grandsons.

But because I live in a cold climate, I need to address the issue of summer clothes! So I am going to break out my old skills and start sewing! Yes, I still have my old Bernina sewing machine that is still going strong. And I discovered that I can download patterns from the pattern companies! No paging through the big old pattern books, just scroll through the designs online. Very cool! And I have dug out fabric that has been stored for years and will make skirts and tops that I would never have the chance to wear hear in the Pacific Northwest.

Perhaps my biggest hurdle to cross being away for 4-6 months is - what to do with the kitties? And the house? So I have already put out the word for a caretaker and will probably take out an ad on caretaker gazette. I need someone to take care of my two "boys" who are my daily companions.