Poulsbo, Washington is a historic town located at the north end of Liberty Bay on the Kitsap Peninsula. It is referred to as little Norway due to settlement in the late 1800’s by immigrants from Scandinavia and buildings with Norwegian architecture. Though the tourist-oriented historical downtown area is full of little cafes and restaurants we did not see any that were Norwegian themed or that served exclusively Scandinavian cuisine.
The first residents of the area were of the Suquamish tribe which inhabited that area. European settlers began arriving in the 1860’s, though first contact was with Captain Vancouver’s exploration ship in 1792. The town of Poulsbo was founded in the 1880’s. The name means Paul’s Place in Norwegian, though the first recorded immigrant was named Ole Stubb. Norwegian Ian Jorgen Eliason was considered the father of Poulsbo as the first permanent settler after staking out his homestead in 1883.
Logging was the first industry with floating logging camps cutting trees along the shoreline by 1860. A sawmill and shingle mill were key features in the town’s early years. Farming was important to the town’s prosperity, bolstered by the maritime endeavors of the Mosquito Fleet steamers hauling their goods to Seattle. Fishing was an important industry in the area’s early days too, followed by employment from the US government in support of nearby Keyport Naval Station. There is still a naval base in Keyport operating undersea support for the Bangor submarine base. The Naval Undersea Museum there is an interesting tourist attraction. Tourism is now a very important source of income to the people of Poulsbo.
The Olympic Hotel built in 1892 was the town’s first hotel. It was destroyed in a fire in 1914. The cause of the fire is still unknown. It started in the hotel and burned 9 businesses, destroying 8 and damaging 1. The rebuilt hotel houses the current modernized Hotel Scandi, which is the only hotel located within the historic downtown area.
Hotel Scandi is an unmanned hotel with 9 rooms people can book online. It has 4 bathrooms shared among residents of the 9 rooms. When taking a short trip to Poulsbo with my mother we booked a room there due to the convenient location. Everything in the historic downtown is walkable from there. The hotel has reserved parking places in a lot behind it for people booked there. GPS says you have arrived when you are in the middle of the road in front of the building, of which the hotel is the top story and there are other businesses underneath. The entrance to the parking lot behind the hotel is down the block a bit. We had passed it before the GPS announced that we had arrived. Once you find it and go up a little hill to turn into the lot the hotel’s reserved spaces are clearly marked with signs at each of their spaces at the far end of the lot. There are no signs in the parking area marking the entrance to the hotel. If you know where to go you can get in through a gate in a plain brown fence, which opens into a small courtyard with a door to the hotel. The hotel is accessed through a code, which we were sent only a couple hours before check-in time on the day of our arrival. The keypads are just a blank screen and only light up if touched in the lower left corner. None of that information was included anywhere in the booking info or the text with the entry code, which was also the door code for our room. There is another entry door down at the street level on the side of the building next to an Italian restaurant where the workers are probably asked daily how to get into the hotel by people who can’t get the keypad at that door to light up because they weren’t told to touch the one corner.
Once we got inside we saw a couple sitting in the shared living room area in the center of the building’s upstairs. They said that their code had only worked on the outer door, but wouldn’t open their room and the phone number on the booking information they had didn’t actually contact anyone who could help. They did finally find a contact number somewhere online and eventually gained access to their room. Once we found an entrance to the hotel and learned the keypad trick our code worked just fine on both the outside doors as well as the one to our room. We had a nice room with separate bedroom and living room areas and a sleeper sofa so we didn’t have to share the bed. It also had a view of the town and a peek-a-boo water view out the main window. 2 of the 4 bathrooms were just outside our room and the other 2 on the other side of the central room that all of the other rooms were accessed from, which wasn’t far because it’s not that big of a space. The first night it was just us and the other couple so the bathrooms next to our room were pretty convenient. The second night a young family checked into the room next to ours. Besides being noisy in the middle of the night they were messy in the bathroom so we started using the ones on the other side, which were totally clean. There wasn’t anyone on that side of the hotel so nobody had used those at all. With not that many people in the hotel the shared bathrooms worked out fine, though if all 9 rooms were full it might not be so easy to get into one. It would probably still be worth staying there for the location though. With not that many people in the hotel the shared bathrooms were pretty convenient in that if both people in the room wanted to shower or even just use the bathroom at the same time there were plenty of options to do so, whereas in a standard hotel room that isn’t an option.
There are a couple little museums – a maritime museum and a heritage museum. They sit next to each other at the other end of the historic area, which isn’t very far since it isn’t all that big. There was one building between the hotel and the waterfront, and a large parking area at the waterfront for people who weren’t so fortunate as to have a place to stay right in town. Wine tastings must be popular there. Several businesses offered them. There were a lot of little gift shops and plenty of restaurants, coffee shops, and some pubs. There’s also an aquarium and a historical cabin, but they are only open on the weekend and we were there midweek so we did not see those. None of the museums or aquarium have a fee to go inside, but they do have donation boxes since they need some sort of income to survive.
There’s a marina full of boats at the waterfront next to a park with grassy space, restrooms, a shelter building, benches, picnic tables, and a paved walkway alongside the water. At low tide there’s a beach, but at high tide it’s under water. The trail extends along the waterfront beyond the little park. It’s part paved trail, part boardwalk, and a bit of gravel trail. In one area it opens up into a grassy space with a playground for small children and a stairway up to the street at the far end of town. We saw lots of people walking dogs along that trail. We also saw a lot of squirrels in the trees along the trail. Mostly gray squirrels, but we did see one of the native Douglas squirrels.
The park was a popular place for events. The first night we were there they had some sort of musical event going on and the next day something involving preschool children. A bakery near the center of the historical area seemed quite popular as it sometimes had a line going down the sidewalk out in front of it.
Overall it’s a cute little town. For a short visit it can be a destination in itself, and for a longer visit a base as a place to stay while exploring the larger area around it. Besides the Navel Undersea Museum, Poulsbo is pretty closes to Bainbridge Island where there’s a ferry to Seattle, and not far from Kingston where there’s a ferry to Edmonds. There are also other parks and trails in the area surrounding the town.


































































































































