angel1234 wrote:I did have the island one but I cant see where it says little grassy bluffs. And Wash doesnt seem to be one of the states we are messing with.
I really don't want to post the link, but this is what I took right off of the same site and the same Keystone that we have been hashing over for a long time. TTH, I have it save in Word.doc. Perhaps you will want to reconsider your answer, or perhaps you are the one who is leading people astray. You live there.
Washington: Port *** is a great place for spending the night and having dinner, but if you arrive early, you could take the ferry across **** to Keystone on Whidbey Island. (Crossing time: 30 minutes.) Keystone is another one of those places that is merely a name on a map. Look to the left as you approach the ferry landing. The
grassy bluffs hide the gun emplacements of former Fort ****. The lighthouse towering above the fort was built in 1899; it is now part of **** Park.
When leaving the ferry at Keystone, ignore the direction signs and turn left, not right (Rte. 20). Drive past the fort (or turn left into the grounds and take a walk through the old batteries and on the
grassy bluffs) and continue north on ****. Turn left. After passing a pretty
bluff topped by pines (that looks like part of the California Coast), the road drops to the beach at **** Reserve.
When you land at Keystone and look around, it seems hard to believe that a city named "****" stood here a hundred years ago with aspirations of outdoing its "rival" in the Midwest. Today, not even the foundations remain.