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    Travels with the I-Pad -- Port Gamble Trails

    I like to take the IPad preloaded with trail maps to go hiking, that way, you probably can't get lost. Well I probably could get lost, for some reason I seem without a good sense of direction, thank god I am married, although we do  spend much of our time recovering from me turning the wrong way everywhere we go, but the I-Pad is truly and awesome thing and keeps me from getting lost often. So I had this map loaded onto my IPad before I left home. Port Gamble Trail Map.

    It was so incredible today. It was windy and not too warm 63 degrees, and cloudy of course. It's been this way all year-long so far, cloudy and cool. I understand we have not warmed to even to 80 degrees! I don't have much to complain about, it never gets to hot to ride or to hike or to be outside.

    The walk to the trail head. Port Gamble is quite a little town of historic buildings. We do the Tour d' Kitsap almost every year and we do ride through Port Gamble every year. This was the first time going to Port Gamble to hike.

    This is a church right in the town and the entire town is made of historic buildings.  The town was originally constructed in 1853. The entire town is a national historic site. Port Gamble was the longest continuously operating mill town in North America.  Pope Resources restored and operated the town until 1995 when as the only remaining company owned mill town in Puget Sound, it was closed down.  Port Gamble is now a tourist attraction drawing people from all over. There are unique shops and markets and hiking trails. The turn of the century buildings are pretty cool, they even bookstore than rents out bicycles to explore the many trails around Port Gamble. It's pretty cool it's called The Dauntless Bookstore.

    We covered 11 miles in the park, there are lots of trails and ground to cover, we didn't do all of it that is for sure and we did it all on foot, not on bicycles or horseback.

    Salmonberries.. yummy. Their space is often overtaken by blackberries. Salmonberries are obviously lighter in color and very sweet, it is a native plant of the Pacific Northwest.

    They can be as dark as the meat from a Copper River salmon. Quite beautiful and the bears love them.

    The remnants of old growth cedar trees.

    A Doug Fir Root Wad.

    Root wads are pretty incredible, and useful in salmonid restoration programs. There were several marked streams in the area.

    Bear den.

    There has been a juvenile Black bear loose in a one of the surrounding areas. I guess they need a place to crash. But this is actually an example of a bear den and not an active bear den, because this is an interpretive forest area, which is used to teach people about the environment of the Pacific Northwest. I know at times a local tree expert will take people on tours through the forest. I missed that day, but when I will be there for the next one.

    Oh and I did not once get lost, I had the IPad with me.

    Crossposted at: The Angriest Liberal

    Comments

    These are great pix!

    You know I will spend a couple days a week just checking out National Geographic's latest pix.

    But damn, there is so much beauty out there in everyone's neighborhood.


    Thanks Dick.


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