Monday, October 10, 2011

Touring Cape Cod

Wednesday, October 5th.  We awoke to another sunny morning.  It was windy last night, but no rain.  Our campsite is amongst these large scrub oak trees and you couldn't help but wonder if limb come down in the wind...But they didn't.  After breakfast we began our tour of Cape Cod.  The main road goes right up the spine of the cape and frankly we couldn't tell if we were on a backroad in Michigan, or Vermont or Maine. But it's what's eminating off that spine road that's interesting.  There are many beautiful beaches, light houses and little towns.  I'm sure the towns are packed in the summer.  But now that schools back in the tourist population is lighter and with lots of europeans.  Even the Ben & Jerry's is closing for the season.  The main town is Provincetown at the very northern tip of the cape.  It has a historic, Key West feel to it.  Very artsy, lots of shops, galleries, small restaurants and B &B's.  P-Town, as they call it is the site where the Pilgrims first touched foot on north american soil.

Enjoying the National Seashore
Cape Code hosts a National Seashore designation.  And the beaches are pretty.  But aren't any nicer than Lake Michigan beaches...and those are fresh water.  All in all, Cape Cod was very nice, but it's not on our list of places to return to.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Brewster, MA; Cape Cod

Tuesday, October 4th.  We've experienced our first "Nor'easter".  It blew so hard last night and into the morning that the motorhome was shaking.  And Rain...now we're from Seattle and we've seen lots of rain...But this rain last night was amazing.  It was so hard and so horizontal.  When we got up there were deep puddles all over the place (and this is sandy soil).  We waited all morning, waiting for the rain to subside.  But it didn't.  So we packed up in the rain (again) and took off for Cape Cod.

To get there we had to go thru Boston.  We actually drove thru "the Big Dig", which is a freeway (6 lanes) that goes under downtown Boston.  The tunnel goes literally for miles and it's deep enough to drive a motorhome thru.  It was pretty amazing.

We got to Brewster mid afternoon.  It was a sunny day down here and we enjoyed 'drying out'.  We look forward to exploring the Cape tomorrow.

Monday, October 3, 2011

Rainy Sunday/Sunny Monday

Monday, Oct. 3rd.   We packed up the motor home, hooked up the car and drove down to Salisbury Beach in the rain.  Have I said how not fun it is to be doing all the disconnecting/connecting in the rain?  Well, it's not.  The drive was in very heavy traffic.  Lots of folks returning from a weekend in Maine back to Boston and New York.

Our campground in Salisbury Beach is a Massachusetts state park.  It's located right where the Merrimac River dumps into the Atlantic.  It wasn't really raining as we set up there...just a light mist.  On the recommendation of a neighbor, we had dinner at the Hungry Traveler restaurant.  Diane had a wonderful shrimp and crab in a lobster sauce casserole and I had prime rib and stuffed shrimp.  Very good restaurant!

Presbyterian church
George Washington statue 
This morning we awoke to mixed sun and clouds.  But the clouds soon gave way to a beautiful sunny day. We took a drive over to Newburyport, just across the Merrimac from Salisbury.  Newburyport is full of history.  It was the first port established...before Boston.  It is also where the Coast Guard began.  We took a walking tour around the town.  Lots of houses have been preserved in their 1600's and 1700's style.  And lots of old churches.  The downtown had lots of shops, restaurants, galleries and museums.

We came back to the campground and took Buster to the beach for a sunny, relaxing afternoon.

Saturday, October 1, 2011

Kennebunkport

Saturday, Oct. 1st.  It rained most of the night and was raining this morning.  We drove down the coast about 30 miles to Kennebunkport.  The town has some beautiful old homes dating to the late 1700's Although the Bush's weren't in town that day, they were at their compound.  Barbara Bush had been honored with a sculpture in a bay-side park.  The town was very crowded with tour buses and other tourists (like us).  We walked around while it rained on and off and then had lunch where we had the best lobster we've had on the trip.  We also had very good clam chowder.  We returned to the motorhome and took Buster for a rainy walk on the beach (we're from Seattle...we're used to it).
The Nott House now a museum
Congregational church

Old Orchard Beach

Friday, Sept. 30th.  It rained last night...hard!!  We took Buster out for his evening 'constitutional' between cloudbursts.  As I was picking up his 'constitutional results' the sky opened up and we got soaked as we ran back to the motorhome.

The next morning the rain and all clouds were gone.  We had a two hour drive down to Old Orchard Beach.  Once we got settled into our campsite, we took Buster to the Beach.  It's a beautiful sandy beach which stretches for several miles.  Nobody was swimming because the water is very cold...55.
Di w/ L.L.Bean

Yes, this is a McDonalds
We took Buster back to the motorhome and went to Freeport, Maine, about 20 miles north of our campground.  Freeport is the home of L.L. Bean.  And there's outlets for dozens of other companies.  The L.L.Bean store(s) complex is huge with a clothing store, camping store, home store and a restaurant.  Even the McDonalds in Freeport was the most unique I have ever seen.  We finished the day with a wonderful baked Haddock dinner at a tavern in an 1800's era hotel.

The Maine Coastline II

Thursday, September. 29th.  It was an overcast day, but not raining.  We ventured thru the towns of Wiscasset and Bath and then down to the Reid State Park and the town of 5 Islands, all south of the Booth Bay peninsula.  Bath is quite a large town with a large and active ship building industry.  Wiscasset is on a large inlet off of the Atlantic and has lots of large old homes and an active fishing industry.



Reid State Park is at one of two points on a peninsula.  It features a long sand beach on one side of the point and a rocky shore on the other.

The town of Five Islands is a small fishing village that's been around a long time.  All of this is very representative of the Maine coast.

Booth Bay Harbor

Wednesday, September 28th.  Another sunny day as we drove about 2 hours down to Booth Bay.  There is a town of Booth Bay.  But the larger town is called Booth Bay Harbor.  It was founded in the early 1700's and was home to a number of ship captains.  Many of the old buildings have been retained and preserved.  They feature great porches orienting to the bay and the ocean beyond.  Their economy is based on 1) the sea and 2) tourism.  This is the first small town we've encountered that had pay for parking lots scattered around the downtown.  Reminded me of Seattle.  Even tho it's after Labor Day, the town was bustling with tourists.  Lots of galleries, shops and restaurants.  We wondered how the artists in the galleries could make a living, there being so many of them...not just here, but all over New England.  We speculated that maybe this is a post-retirement avocation allowing them a chance to market their hobby.

The area around Booth Bay Harbor is dotted with small islands and rock outcroppings.  Lots of lighthouses around and channel marker buoys.  And all over were the buoys/floats put out by the lobstermen and crabbers to mark their trap locations.  All  in all, it was very picturesque.