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Port Ludlow
We can point to the stormline and say, "The ice stopped here." We work and play at the very limits of the glacial incursions from the north. Gargantuan mountains of frozen water scratched deep trenches in the face of the earth as they advanced relentlessly into these most southerly latitudes, and when they retreated over successive millennia the liquid sea claimed the trenches as its own. The "inland ocean" we so enjoy today is our legacy from that geologically recent era, and one would certainly include Port Ludlow among the more enjoyable corners of the glacial footprint in Puget Sound. Port Ludlow is situated at the head of Hood Canal, on the western shore of Admiralty Inlet. Mariners bound for Port Ludlow are advised to be mindful of rocks scattered along a rough line from Olele Point, (at the south end of Oak Bay), to Tala Point (at the NE edge of Port Ludlow waterway). The hazards are well marked, with Klas Rocks near 47.57.79N, 122.40.25 W and Colvos Rocks near 47.56.92N, 122.40.00W. NOAA chart #18477 should be consulted prior to entering Port Ludlow. Most vessels will find adequate depth if they do not crowd the shorelines, and a wide turn around Burner Point (marked by a totem pole) is advisable when approaching the Port Ludlow Marina. Ludlow Creek threads a cleft between the granite and basalt cores of the Olympic Mountains to emerge with a happy gurgle into Ludlow Bay. The creek runs brown with tannins leached from the peat and soil upstream. Salmon spawn below the falls. Atop a rocky base, primordial forests of conifers, ferns, and deciduous shrubs built up a reddish brown, spongy mass to nurture countless generations of seedlings. The red bark earth gives way beneath soft footfalls, and is so full of roots that the tangles breach the surface. When the lumbermen arrived at Port Ludlow in the 1850's, the cedar and hemlock towers supported fragrant green canopies a hundred feet and more above the ground. Between fire cycles, sunlight was excluded from the forest floor so underbrush was limited and walking between the monstrous trunks was relatively easy. When "Euro" man arrived at Port Ludlow, he began his occupation by felling the gigantic trees. Cities in California and timber-depleted regions in the Midwest were desperate for clear, straight grained lumber and mills at Port Ludlow and nearby Port Gamble responded to the demand. In the earliest years of Port Ludlow, the first sawmill enterprise was plagued with financial problems and forced to close. The tiny community turned instead to shipbuilding. Hall Brothers shipyards of Port Ludlow completed 31 sailing ships between 1874 and 1881. When the shipyard began to decline as well, the Pope and Talbot Company (successfully running a thriving lumber operation across the canal at Port Gamble) bought the original sawmill for just under $65,000 and revived the timber operations at Port Ludlow. Lumber schooners would call at a wharf in Ludlow Bay to load 125,000 board feet of lumber per day, and a "company town" of about 500 people was established. In the middle of the 20th Century, Pope and Talbot closed the lumber mill at Port Ludlow. The wharf and millworks were dismantled, and many of the better houses were barged across Hood Canal to be reused in Port Gamble. A boater visiting Port Ludlow today can still find some evidence of the lumber years, but much has changed. The village of leisure and retirement townhouses perched just above the storm tide line have little in common with the rustic shacks and simple cottages that housed laborers and foremen in the era when the scream of saws and the aromas of pitch and wood chips permeated the air. The marina to Port Ludlow is in very good condition, and well equipped. A fuel dock offers gasoline and diesel, and a dockside convenience store has a good inventory of beverages, snacks, basic groceries, some boating gear, and an assortment of tourist souvenirs. Transient moorage rates are approximately 85-cents per foot. Thirty- amp shorepower is priced at $3, while 50-amp hookups are $6. We have always encountered a friendly and courteous staff at Port Ludlow. Port Ludlow is a short cruise from Seattle, Everett, Port Orchard, or Port Townsend and is particularly suitable as a destination for yacht club or power squadron weekends. Picnic tables surround a bonfire pit near the marina office to create and ideal venue of a potluck dinner. Additional tables are located under cover, providing a rainy day option for outdoor dining. There are horseshoe pits near the fire circle. Shoreside restrooms and showers are clean and bright. It would be hard to avoid having a wonderful time at Port Ludlow. Boaters arriving solo, (without a schedule of organized club activities) will enjoy exploring the area. A pontoon bridge crosses a man-made freshwater lagoon and connects the marina with a very decent dining establishment. The Harbormaster Restaurant, (with the Wreck Room Lounge), offers a diverse menu but takes special pride in seafood dishes. Locals recommend the halibut and chips. There are a number of interesting areas to explore at the marina, and many more very nearby. Even if the restaurant isn't the ultimate destination, there's a broad sitting area on the midspan float of the pontoon bridge; a fine place to contemplate the mossy shallows where the mud is yellow green with algae and the wind teases the surface like a lover with a gentle comb. For many years, there was constant fire on Burner Point. The kiln bricks are scattered in the shallows around the circular cement base, colored in the reds, the yellows, dirty whites and sooty browns of the flames they once contained. You can see the bricks on lower tides, relatively and curiously exempt from hosting the ubiquitous barnacles populating the surrounding rocks. Perhaps the bricks still taste of smoke from the wood chips that fired the oven and cured the lumber at Port Ludlow and thereby discourage the tiny shells. We can remember a fire circle for the use of marina guests on this point, but there is no trace of it any more. Look now for the ochres, the browns, the purples, and the bronze of Port Ludlow's current industry in the sunset colored rows of chockablock townhouses, just across the wild grass meadow from the point. Yes, that is one of the "classic" picnic tables, oddly displaced somewhere between the old kiln site and the ultra modern residences and disappearing from sight in the purple topped stalks of rangy emerald turf. The busy Burner Point kiln would have stood on the circular, fortified concrete base like an enormous and smoking tipi, (a dwelling form extremely unusual among tribes enjoying a natural abundance that allowed the luxury of fixed, planked structures). A more suitably NW native shape, a story pole, stands on Burner Point today. The pole was commissioned by Pope Resources and erected in 1995. The upper figure is an eagle, representing a time of airborne spirits that preceded terrestrial life. The second figure is a bear, symbolizing the natural world prior to human habitation and considered a spiritual ancestor by the indigenous S'klallam nation. The third image depicts two men standing with locked arms, and commemorates the partnership of Mr. Pope and Mr. Talbot. The fourth image is a lumberjack, and the fifth is a beaver. The lumberjack and bear images recount the logging and homebuilding phases that characterize the last 150 years at Port Ludlow. The lowest carving consists of six interlocking figures, depicting the diverse community of people and cultures currently co-mingled at Port Ludlow. On a day in early June, a bald eagle perched atop his wooden likeness on the Burner Point pole, surprisingly unperturbed by the human taking photos from the edge of the concrete circle. A lone crow, (a far more humble but momentarily more aggressive bird), eventually drove the eagle from his perch. Hikers will enjoy a day or more at Port Ludlow. Many of the logging roads in the area have been converted to trails. There is a pamphlet available in the marina office with some information on a five-mile scenic trail located perhaps two miles from the marina (count on a 9-mile walk, round trip). For the less fit, the less ambitious, or those beginning a hike in hours of waning daylight we can recommend an interesting walk of no more than two and one-half miles, including the distance from the marina to the head of the trail. To reach the Ludlow Falls Interpretive Trail, walk through the marina parking lot and turn left on the two-lane county road. The road will eventually raise a small settlement with a gas station, a bank, a chiropractor's office, and a clearing where the outdoor market is held on summer Fridays. Across the parking lot behind the bank building is a bulletin board with a map of all the hiking trails in the Port Ludlow vicinity. The head of the Ludlow Falls trail is down the road across the street from the bulletin board, and does wind through a RV park for a relatively short stretch. The route to the trailhead is plainly marked with small signs and arrows. The Ludlow Falls trail is circular, and hikers interested only in viewing the falls could turn right, rather than the recommended left, and find the falls only a few hundred yards beyond a wooden footbridge crossing a small gorge. We suggest the left turn, and a half-mile walk through the woods where trailside signs provide information about several varieties of trees and shrubs encountered along the way. The left turn route is generally either level or downhill all the way to Ludlow Creek, where some easily negotiated stairs assist in regaining the original altitude and bring a hiker to the scenic head of Ludlow Falls. This is a lovely walk in late spring, but we observed factors that bode well for an impressive natural tour during any season in the NW. The hike is more than worth the time and energy required, and we considered it a highlight of our visit to Port Ludlow. It's easy to recommend Port Ludlow, but important to realize that it may be caught in some high grass time when the recreational aspect of the marina becomes increasingly engulfed by the advance of the nearby townhomes. Additional demand for permanent moorage has previously been known to reduce or eliminate guest moorage at other desirable marinas. One can be optimistic that there will be many years, maybe even a few decades before this grand eagle of a destination gem is displaced by the less noble, but noisier and more insistent crow of developers. When trying to ignore the signs for condominium sales offices, a cynic might note that there is still some "pitch" in the wind at Port Ludlow. |
#2
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Awesome story, being from Tacoma, I visited Port Ludlow once and its truely
breath taking. I really enjoy your writings. Do you write for a magazine or paper ? I look forward to your writings. Thanks Ed wrote in message oups.com... Port Ludlow We can point to the stormline and say, "The ice stopped here." We work and play at the very limits of the glacial incursions from the north. Gargantuan mountains of frozen water scratched deep trenches in the face of the earth as they advanced relentlessly into these most southerly latitudes, and when they retreated over successive millennia the liquid sea claimed the trenches as its own. The "inland ocean" we so enjoy today is our legacy from that geologically recent era, and one would certainly include Port Ludlow among the more enjoyable corners of the glacial footprint in Puget Sound. Port Ludlow is situated at the head of Hood Canal, on the western shore of Admiralty Inlet. Mariners bound for Port Ludlow are advised to be mindful of rocks scattered along a rough line from Olele Point, (at the south end of Oak Bay), to Tala Point (at the NE edge of Port Ludlow waterway). The hazards are well marked, with Klas Rocks near 47.57.79N, 122.40.25 W and Colvos Rocks near 47.56.92N, 122.40.00W. NOAA chart #18477 should be consulted prior to entering Port Ludlow. Most vessels will find adequate depth if they do not crowd the shorelines, and a wide turn around Burner Point (marked by a totem pole) is advisable when approaching the Port Ludlow Marina. Ludlow Creek threads a cleft between the granite and basalt cores of the Olympic Mountains to emerge with a happy gurgle into Ludlow Bay. The creek runs brown with tannins leached from the peat and soil upstream. Salmon spawn below the falls. Atop a rocky base, primordial forests of conifers, ferns, and deciduous shrubs built up a reddish brown, spongy mass to nurture countless generations of seedlings. The red bark earth gives way beneath soft footfalls, and is so full of roots that the tangles breach the surface. When the lumbermen arrived at Port Ludlow in the 1850's, the cedar and hemlock towers supported fragrant green canopies a hundred feet and more above the ground. Between fire cycles, sunlight was excluded from the forest floor so underbrush was limited and walking between the monstrous trunks was relatively easy. When "Euro" man arrived at Port Ludlow, he began his occupation by felling the gigantic trees. Cities in California and timber-depleted regions in the Midwest were desperate for clear, straight grained lumber and mills at Port Ludlow and nearby Port Gamble responded to the demand. In the earliest years of Port Ludlow, the first sawmill enterprise was plagued with financial problems and forced to close. The tiny community turned instead to shipbuilding. Hall Brothers shipyards of Port Ludlow completed 31 sailing ships between 1874 and 1881. When the shipyard began to decline as well, the Pope and Talbot Company (successfully running a thriving lumber operation across the canal at Port Gamble) bought the original sawmill for just under $65,000 and revived the timber operations at Port Ludlow. Lumber schooners would call at a wharf in Ludlow Bay to load 125,000 board feet of lumber per day, and a "company town" of about 500 people was established. In the middle of the 20th Century, Pope and Talbot closed the lumber mill at Port Ludlow. The wharf and millworks were dismantled, and many of the better houses were barged across Hood Canal to be reused in Port Gamble. A boater visiting Port Ludlow today can still find some evidence of the lumber years, but much has changed. The village of leisure and retirement townhouses perched just above the storm tide line have little in common with the rustic shacks and simple cottages that housed laborers and foremen in the era when the scream of saws and the aromas of pitch and wood chips permeated the air. The marina to Port Ludlow is in very good condition, and well equipped. A fuel dock offers gasoline and diesel, and a dockside convenience store has a good inventory of beverages, snacks, basic groceries, some boating gear, and an assortment of tourist souvenirs. Transient moorage rates are approximately 85-cents per foot. Thirty- amp shorepower is priced at $3, while 50-amp hookups are $6. We have always encountered a friendly and courteous staff at Port Ludlow. Port Ludlow is a short cruise from Seattle, Everett, Port Orchard, or Port Townsend and is particularly suitable as a destination for yacht club or power squadron weekends. Picnic tables surround a bonfire pit near the marina office to create and ideal venue of a potluck dinner. Additional tables are located under cover, providing a rainy day option for outdoor dining. There are horseshoe pits near the fire circle. Shoreside restrooms and showers are clean and bright. It would be hard to avoid having a wonderful time at Port Ludlow. Boaters arriving solo, (without a schedule of organized club activities) will enjoy exploring the area. A pontoon bridge crosses a man-made freshwater lagoon and connects the marina with a very decent dining establishment. The Harbormaster Restaurant, (with the Wreck Room Lounge), offers a diverse menu but takes special pride in seafood dishes. Locals recommend the halibut and chips. There are a number of interesting areas to explore at the marina, and many more very nearby. Even if the restaurant isn't the ultimate destination, there's a broad sitting area on the midspan float of the pontoon bridge; a fine place to contemplate the mossy shallows where the mud is yellow green with algae and the wind teases the surface like a lover with a gentle comb. For many years, there was constant fire on Burner Point. The kiln bricks are scattered in the shallows around the circular cement base, colored in the reds, the yellows, dirty whites and sooty browns of the flames they once contained. You can see the bricks on lower tides, relatively and curiously exempt from hosting the ubiquitous barnacles populating the surrounding rocks. Perhaps the bricks still taste of smoke from the wood chips that fired the oven and cured the lumber at Port Ludlow and thereby discourage the tiny shells. We can remember a fire circle for the use of marina guests on this point, but there is no trace of it any more. Look now for the ochres, the browns, the purples, and the bronze of Port Ludlow's current industry in the sunset colored rows of chockablock townhouses, just across the wild grass meadow from the point. Yes, that is one of the "classic" picnic tables, oddly displaced somewhere between the old kiln site and the ultra modern residences and disappearing from sight in the purple topped stalks of rangy emerald turf. The busy Burner Point kiln would have stood on the circular, fortified concrete base like an enormous and smoking tipi, (a dwelling form extremely unusual among tribes enjoying a natural abundance that allowed the luxury of fixed, planked structures). A more suitably NW native shape, a story pole, stands on Burner Point today. The pole was commissioned by Pope Resources and erected in 1995. The upper figure is an eagle, representing a time of airborne spirits that preceded terrestrial life. The second figure is a bear, symbolizing the natural world prior to human habitation and considered a spiritual ancestor by the indigenous S'klallam nation. The third image depicts two men standing with locked arms, and commemorates the partnership of Mr. Pope and Mr. Talbot. The fourth image is a lumberjack, and the fifth is a beaver. The lumberjack and bear images recount the logging and homebuilding phases that characterize the last 150 years at Port Ludlow. The lowest carving consists of six interlocking figures, depicting the diverse community of people and cultures currently co-mingled at Port Ludlow. On a day in early June, a bald eagle perched atop his wooden likeness on the Burner Point pole, surprisingly unperturbed by the human taking photos from the edge of the concrete circle. A lone crow, (a far more humble but momentarily more aggressive bird), eventually drove the eagle from his perch. Hikers will enjoy a day or more at Port Ludlow. Many of the logging roads in the area have been converted to trails. There is a pamphlet available in the marina office with some information on a five-mile scenic trail located perhaps two miles from the marina (count on a 9-mile walk, round trip). For the less fit, the less ambitious, or those beginning a hike in hours of waning daylight we can recommend an interesting walk of no more than two and one-half miles, including the distance from the marina to the head of the trail. To reach the Ludlow Falls Interpretive Trail, walk through the marina parking lot and turn left on the two-lane county road. The road will eventually raise a small settlement with a gas station, a bank, a chiropractor's office, and a clearing where the outdoor market is held on summer Fridays. Across the parking lot behind the bank building is a bulletin board with a map of all the hiking trails in the Port Ludlow vicinity. The head of the Ludlow Falls trail is down the road across the street from the bulletin board, and does wind through a RV park for a relatively short stretch. The route to the trailhead is plainly marked with small signs and arrows. The Ludlow Falls trail is circular, and hikers interested only in viewing the falls could turn right, rather than the recommended left, and find the falls only a few hundred yards beyond a wooden footbridge crossing a small gorge. We suggest the left turn, and a half-mile walk through the woods where trailside signs provide information about several varieties of trees and shrubs encountered along the way. The left turn route is generally either level or downhill all the way to Ludlow Creek, where some easily negotiated stairs assist in regaining the original altitude and bring a hiker to the scenic head of Ludlow Falls. This is a lovely walk in late spring, but we observed factors that bode well for an impressive natural tour during any season in the NW. The hike is more than worth the time and energy required, and we considered it a highlight of our visit to Port Ludlow. It's easy to recommend Port Ludlow, but important to realize that it may be caught in some high grass time when the recreational aspect of the marina becomes increasingly engulfed by the advance of the nearby townhomes. Additional demand for permanent moorage has previously been known to reduce or eliminate guest moorage at other desirable marinas. One can be optimistic that there will be many years, maybe even a few decades before this grand eagle of a destination gem is displaced by the less noble, but noisier and more insistent crow of developers. When trying to ignore the signs for condominium sales offices, a cynic might note that there is still some "pitch" in the wind at Port Ludlow. |
#3
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Drop into West Marine, Boater's World, Day Island Boatworks, Breakwater
Marina, Point Defiance Boathouse or similar locations down in Tacoma and sort through the "freebie" pubs sometime. You'll find the US magazine with which I am associated. The same publisher also runs most of the material in a British Columbia magazine with a different title. Glad you enjoyed the story. It will be out with photos in the July 6 issue. I got a good shot of the bald eagle on the totem pole, but I will need to see how the quality holds up as it is will need to be slightly enlarged. |
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