(Continuing my San Juan Island Trip in July 2017)
Historical Society Topographical Interactive Map San Juan Island |
We hit the ground running Monday, starting with an interview with town/island leader, Barbara Marrett, over an amazing Breakfast. (Seriously, I am going to have to try and recreate the baked eggs in tomato we ate at Cynthia’s Bistro). We talked about island life, the tight knit community, and their ties to the orcas and the Salish Sea. It's hard to deny the beauty of the area that just draws you in, and her story reflected that pull. I have always been curious about small town island living and what brings people there, and she let us pepper her with questions about Friday Harbor's growth and laid back nature, the (sometimes) hassle of being cut off from the mainland, and her history that brought her to the island.
After our breakfast education we were handed off to another amazing town leader - the executive Director of the Whale Museum, Jenny Atkinson. She spoke to us for hours about the orcas and other whales that visit the Sound. Adding to what we learned the evening before from Maya's Legacy (whale watching tour), we were getting a crash course in the local ecosystem. She spoke passionately about the resident orca pod and how connected people on the island are to it. The reason the whale museum started naming the orca's was the fact that locals are able to identify so many since the people and orcas grow up together and these orcas are often found near the island coast line. Islanders are able to pinpoint births and deaths in the pod since they are such a regular site around the San Juans. Sadly, they numbers have plummeted. The Whale Museum mission is education everyone they can on the majesty of these mammals. After our talk, we were given a tour of the museum, and next thing we knew we were well past noon and well past the schedule that Lesley had made for us to maximize our time. So, after some purchases (I had to adopt a whale to support their mission), we headed out.
Before we left Friday Harbor and drove into the heart of the island, we wanted to stop by the Art Museum. Although we had planned for the Art Museum on Monday before our ferry, we found out it would be closed... quick schedule tweak and we made it. The museum is small! Really 2 main rooms. It was hosting an exhibit on native masks - masks from private collectors. Much of this stuff was never seen in public. And it was glorious. These pieces tell stories but the museum let them speak for themselves - you had to pull up piece information on your smart phone using your scanner! It was a smart way to show these pieces.