About
the Area
by
Jack Kintner
Whatcom County
Linger a while and you’ll see why Whatcom County
is the kind of place that grabs visitors, first by the
eyes and ears and then by the heart, and quickly turns
them into residents. It’s got a natural beauty that quickly becomes a
part of you as you savor its bold delicacy, like enjoying
a well-served meal in a fine restaurant. No surprise that it’s
home to one of the country’s best systems of county
parks, and to vast stretches of true wilderness locked
up into
the North
Cascade National Park. 
It’s one of the few places in Washington where the
mountains not only meet the sea, the Chuckanut Mountains
(the foothills you drive through coming up from the south
on Interstate 5) march right into it to become the San
Juan Islands, once a part of Whatcom County until separating
shortly after statehood (November 1889). Wags claim that
island smugglers needed their own sheriff.
Dominated by 10,878 foot Mount Baker, it’s almost
all mountains, so most of Whatcom County’s 180,000
people live on its western edge in a piece of rolling farmland
shaped like the inverted triangle of a “yield” sign.
About 40% live in Bellingham, the bottom point of the triangle,
and most of the rest are spread out between it and the
other
two corners, Blaine (pop. 4,000) to the west and Sumas
(1,200) to the east, each about 30 miles away. Lynden (10,000)
is right in the middle of the triangle, about where the
sign bolts to the post.
Halfway up the right side is Ferndale (10,000), and halfway
up the left side the Mount Baker Highway crosses the Nooksack
to penetrate the foothills to Deming, the “South
Fork Valley” towns of Acme and Van Zandt, and farther
on the hamlets of Kendall, Maple Falls and Glacier, last
stop
before the Mt. Baker ski area and as the crow flies
sits halfway from the county’s western tip at Point
Roberts to its eastern border at the top of the Cascade
Mountains. The ski area gets more snow than any other spot
of ground where such things are recorded in the whole country,
including Alaska.
Once home to giant (200+ feet high) trees, enormous coal
mines and world-class salmon canneries, Whatcom County
is now home to the highest stretch of road in the state
(7,150 feet) on its eastern boundary and to a uniquely
isolated little patch of ground, four-mile square Point
Roberts,
200 miles to the west. At 2100 square miles, it’s
similar is size to King, Snohomish and Skagit counties.
Native artifacts thousands of years old give it a feeling
of permanence, despite the fact that it’s dominant
feature is a live volcano whose steam plume regularly spurts
a reminder to the wary, sort of a giant snooze alarm for
those who forget that the ground they’re walking
on may have come out of the top of that mountain not so
long
ago. Like an elixir, Western Washington University keeps
the place young, and young at heart. A high quality university,
one distinguishing characteristic its students have is
their
creative ability to find ways of sticking around
once their academic career has ended.
Finally, one of our greatest blessings is our sister to
the north, Canada, and like sisters everywhere we love
her even when she’s laughing at us and our foibles,
or we at hers. Vancouver, host to the 2010 winter Olympic
Games,
is close enough to visit twice in one day and still be
home for dinner.
About
Bellingham By Jack Kintner
Bellingham is the county seat, and though quaint is also
urbane. With Seattle just 85 miles south and Vancouver,
British Columbia only 57 miles to the north, almost
two million
people live less than two hours’ drive
from here. More and more, people everywhere seem to know
about this place. Bellingham was named to the list
of Where
to live and Play Now! CNN and Money magazine rates
Bellingham among the eight best places to retire.
Bellingham itself is a small city with big attractions.
There is the Mt. Baker Theatre, first opened in 1927,
and now a beautifully restored 'old-time' theatre
that presents a wide range of offerings.
Whatcom Museum of History and Art (pictured at
left), has four components. The first is housed
in the old city hall building, built in 1982, and
features contemporary art, Victorian clothing, history
exhibits and the Watch Museum. The second building
features Northwest Indian and Inuit exhibits. The
third exhibit changes regularly, displaying art and
historical topics. Finally, there is the Whatcom
Children's Museum - a hands on museum for young children
with interactive exhibits.
Roughly the same physical size as San Francisco, it’s
a grown-up lumbering and fishing town that was made out
of four little villages that merged, which is why the
streets change names so often. Like Boston, it can take
a while
to figure out your way around, and if ten people talk
about a way to get from point A to Point B, you can bet
there
will be ten equally good but different routes. It sits
on an old coal mine, and includes the historic Fairhaven
district where the San Francisco parallel becomes evident.
View
Bellingham Restaurants
About
Fairhaven - provided
courtesy Waterside
Washington State
Fairhaven, once the Northwest center for maritime
trade and commerce sits just south of downtown Bellingham.
Fairhaven is the southern terminus of the Alaska ferry
as well as an Amtrak stop on the Vancouver, BC, to Seattle
to Portland run. For
those wishing to explore the San Juan islands, Victoria
- San Juan Cruises offers sailing excursions in the summer. The
Greyhound bus company also has a terminal here. It's fascinating
to watch the goings-on when the ferry is leaving for Alaska.
Kayakers, grizzled old men with equally grizzled old dogs,
anxious families - you tell this is not a typical ferry
journey. These people are setting out on an Alaskan adventure.
Fairhaven itself still retains much of its turn-of-the-century
maritime architecture and flavor. Many of the old buildings
with their colorful and intricate stonework have been restored
and trolley tracks still line the streets. Along Harris
Street, visitors can still see the historic Sycamore Square
Building. If you need reading material, look for the renowned
Village Books. And just behind Village Books is Fairhaven
Green with a bronze life-size replica of "Dirty Dan Harris".
Many a photo opportunity it taken here as families and
kids sit on the bench and have their photo taken with Dirty
Dan!
The area lends itself to leisurely strolls, taking in the
shops and restaurants. Have a coffee here; check out the
unusual kites there. If you're really interested in slowing
down, visit the spa at The Chrysalis Inn. They offer all
kinds of services that will give you a fresh outlook on
life.
Western Washington University is situated near Fairhaven.
This beautiful tree-lined campus is ranked very high in
national college ratings. Spend a few minutes overlooking
the campus' outdoor sculpture exhibit.
South of Fairhaven
lies historic Chuckanut Drive, a narrow, winding,
arbutus
tree-lined
road that
skirts
along
the
hills overlooking Puget Sound. Along the way, the road
passes restaurants and art galleries.
View
Fairhaven Restaurants.
About
Lummi Island - provided
courtesy Waterside
Washington State
Lummi Island is the most northeasterly of the San Juan
Islands, is also the most easily accessed. Visitors
need only take a six-minute ferry ride aboard the Whatcom
Chief. What lies before you is a heavily wooded and
serene 20-mile network of roads that will open up a
new world for you. The island has long attracted artists
and artisans who typically hold an island open house
tour three times a year.
There are no campgrounds, no state parks, no RV parks
but there are a few charming bed and breakfasts that
will fit the bill nicely. Take a day hike around the
north end of the island, stopping in at the Willows
Inn for a salad of organic greens grown on their own
Nettles Farm. The owners are proponents of the Slow
Food movement - you'll want to take your time over
dinner while overlooking Rosario Strait and the San
Juan Islands.
Launch a kayak and explore the many state beaches accessible
only by sea. On the southeast end of the island is
the Lummi Island recreation site. This is a designated
beach camp site that is part of the state's Cascadia
Marine Trail. On your way to and from Lummi Island,
stop at the Silver Reef Casino. Built by the Lummi
Indian Nation, the casino offers non-stop fund and
food with several restaurants and eateries.
About
Blaine By Jack Kintner
Initially settled in the 1850’s by wilderness survey
parties and by prospectors from several area gold rushes,
Blaine is named for the popular Republican Secretary
of State James G. Blaine, who actually signed the papers granting Washington
statehood in 1889. Much like Port
Townsend with which it is often compared, Blaine boomed in the
late Victorian era and then faded, leaving a downtown
neighborhood of old buildings and grand wooden homes, many with their once
ubiquitous backyard stables just big enough for a horse, a little hay and a
buggy still
standing.
It once was the state’s third busiest port, sending
lumber to rebuild San Francisco after the 1906 earthquake
and
fire on square riggers that could easily sail into the
expansive Semiahmoo Bay off the Georgia Straight more
easily than
the restricted waters of Puget Sound to the south.
A fading economy sent many of it young people away to
earn a living, people like the first mayor’s daughter
Nellie Cornish, who grew tired of not getting paid to
play the piano for civic functions and left for Seattle,
where
she founded the Cornish School.
A later export is Luke Ridnour, starting point guard
for the Seattle Supersonics, who led his high school
teams to successive state championships after a second-place
finish in 1998.
In
1921 Sam Hill erected one of the few monuments to peace anywhere in the world when he built the 62-foot
Peace Arch just east of where the international border
hits
the beach at the town’s northern city limits.
Soon a 40-acre park was established surrounding the monument,
half in the US and half in Canada. People from both sides
can enter the park and mingle without going through customs,
a tradition that survived the terrorist scare of September
11, 2001. Where borders everywhere else were being closed
down for security, Peace Arch Park’s hours informally
expanded to accommodate night-time candle light peace
vigils.
Blaine is half water, and along with Bellingham it’s
one of just two towns on the water in Whatcom County.
There are unincorporated areas such as Birch Bay, Sandy
Point, Point Roberts and so on but they’re facilities
are usually private and provide the public little access
to anything more than a pleasant walk on the beach. A
very pleasant walk, to be sure, but no marina facilities,
fishing piers, ferry services, customs and so on.
Blaine’s marina, extensively renovated a few years
ago by the county-wide Port of Bellingham authority,
provides moorage for over 350 boats, as does nearby Semiahmoo
Marina, a part of the world-class Semiahmoo Resort &
Spa on the west side of Drayton Harbor. Once home to
the Alaska
Packers Association (APA) cannery, the 200-room resort
hosts gatherings from around the world
in a breathtaking setting surrounded by a pristine beach.
The passenger ferry M/V
Plover that once delivered cannery workers
across the harbor to work still runs in the summers for
tourists. The 1,500 permanent Semiahmoo
residents live in homes clustered around a golf course
designed
by Arnold Palmer,
home to an annual charity tournament that last year raised
nearly $80,000 to combat Lou Gehrig’s
Disease. It’s public every other day, alternating
with its companion course on nearby Loomis Trail. Blaine
sits on Drayton Harbor, a nearly circular 4,000-acre
jewel that is one of the most important stops, along
with nearby Birch Bay, for migrating shorebirds and seabirds
along the west coast. Like a huge shallow dish, the harbor
sustains a lush variety of plant and animal food. Wildlife
biologists
using satellite tracking technology have discovered that
thousands of migrating birds from all over tend to stop
to feed in the harbor and in Birch Bay as if
they were a popular highway restaurant.
To keep the birds and other marine critters healthy,
happy and edible, considerable effort has been expended
by the Drayton Harbor Community Oyster Farm over the
past decade after the harbor was closed to shellfish
harvesting
in 1992. Tender and succulent Drayton Harbor oysters,
some the size of a middle schooler’s gym shoes,
are once again being harvested for a booming market in,
among other places, China.
Traditional gatherings, always at or around the waterfront,
include late April’s Semiahmoo Regatta, a two-day
affair that draws over 100 sailboats and four hundred
sailors as it raises money for various charitable causes,
one
of the few small town Fourth of July celebrations with
a pancake breakfast, several block long street fair and
auto show & shine, a parade with enough variety and
interest to be in the bar scene in a star wars movie
(ever seen an antique combine rumbling down main street?)
and August’s
Plover Days, with the George Raft Race, all kinds of
seafood from the local fishing fleet and the annual swim
across the harbor entrance. View Blaine Restaurants
About Birch Bay By
Jack Kintner
The fastest growing area in Whatcom County, Birch Bay’s
claim to fame is a large tide flat of sand
several square miles in size that bares itself at low
tide, and as the water creeps back in
over
the hot sand it warms to bath water temperatures in the summer. It has one
of the largest heron nesting areas in the state, a large
state park
at one end and outstanding birding throughout the year.
Especially for seabirds and shorebirds (depending upon where they
rest at night), it’s classed by the Audubon Society
as one of 50 Important Birding Areas (IBA's) in Washington
State, along with nearby Blaine’s Drayton Harbor.
The area is a popular unincorporated summer tourist destination
that’s rapidly becoming a “real” town.
Attractions and activities include a sand castle contest
in the summer and a well-patronized Polar Bear Swim every
New Years Day. There’s a small golf course in town
and two more championship courses, one in nearby Blaine
designed
by Arnold Palmer, just minutes away.
It’s home to about 4,500 year-round residents,
and in the summer population swells to over 12,000 people,
with Birch Bay State Park recording over a million individual
visits each year. Recreational activities include the
refurbished Birch Bay Water Slides, a Miniature World
Family Fun
Center, Surrey Bike Rentals, Birch Bay Discovery Days
every July and TrendWest Resort (and the future Sandcastles
Resort, due to be finished in 2005)
at Birch Bay.
Interestingly, it’s not only one of the first places
Europeans visited in the county, beginning with a stop-over
by George Vancouver well over two centuries ago, what
they did here sounds quite familiar: Vancouver gave his
men an unheard of two weeks off while his ship bobbed
at anchor a mile or so offshore to make spruce beer and
recover from the scurvy that ravaged some of his crew.
Today, going to the beach to relax with a brew is a time-honored
tradition. View
Birch Bay Restaurants
About
Point Roberts - provided
courtesy Waterside
Washington State
The change is obvious as you approach the border. The
trees grow taller and more numerous. The houses of
suburbia disappear and you are left with the vista
of Tyee Drive and the ocean beyond it. You can relax.
You passed the 49th parallel. You've arrived. You're
at Point Bob.
Point Roberts was first seen by Western eyes in 1775
and 1792, initially by Spanish captain Juan Francisco
la Bodegay Quadra and then by Captain George Vancouver.
Vancouver named the point after his friend and colleague
Henery Roberts.
The year-round population of Point Roberts stands at
just 1,511 people, increasing to an estimated 4-5,000
as cabin owners and their extended families return
in the summer. Commercially, there is a large supermarket,
a golf course, marina, gas stations, galleries, and
a variety of restaurants and cafes to suit most tastes
and most budgets.
Take time to explore, especially on foot or bicycle.
No hill is too steep or too long. Only 4.9 square miles,
the Point can be given a good once-over in a day. Enjoy
Maple Beach's half-mile of sandflats, great for crabbing
and clanmming and boasts the warmest waters north of
California. Don't miss Lighthouse Marine Park. If you've
timed it right, you'll catch the 'Orca show.' Point
Roberts is home to two pods of Killer whales who are
often seen as close as 10 feet off the beach when the
salmon are running.
The Point is a favorite launch spot for boaters wanting
to go to the Canadian Gulf islands or Washington San
Juan islands. It has a 1,000-slip marina (which offers
a restaurant, chandlery, repair
services,
haul-outs,
guest moorage
and 24-hour refueling). There's plenty to do to pass
the time. With beaching, eating out, fishing, biking,
camping, golfing, kite flying, crabbing or lazing out
- the Point will keep you coming back. View
Point Roberts Restaurants.
JACK
KINTNER is a freelance photojournalist whose work appears
in several area magazines and newspapers. A native of
Port Angeles, Washington,
he lives in Blaine with his lovely wife Linda and their
two dogs, a Border Collie named Duke and a loveable if
somewhat loudmouthed coyote cross named Dutchess. When
not working or fly fishing he can often be spotted in
the skies above Blaine is his yellow J-3 Cub named
Butterfingers. Jack Kintner can be reached by emailing him
at jack.kintner@verizon.net
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