Point Ruston Revisited

Click for larger image

We enjoyed our first weekend at Point Ruston so much that we returned for another earlier this year. We love the rooms at the Point Ruston Waterfront hotel, with sweeping views to Commencement Bay, where we can get a little work done by the window and see what’s happening outside, both on land and the water. On our last trip, we explored along the waterfront towards the ferry terminal and Dune Peninsula Park. This time we walked up into the town of Ruston to check out a local pub and got some great views across Commencement Bay from the Wilson Way Pedestrian Bridge that connects Dune Peninsula Park and Point Defiance. And we discovered some more appealing public art in the Point Ruston area.

Below are highlights from January 19 and 20th, 2024. Click any image for a larger view, or click the position to view the location on a map. And a map with our most recent log entries always is available at mvdirona.com/maps.

 
1/19/2024
 
Click for larger image

 

The cargo ship Navios Herakles I at anchor off Tacoma after arriving in from Nantong, China earlier in the week. We passed the vessel on our way to Point Ruston for a weekend stay.
 
Click for larger image
Point Ruston Waterfront

 

Our room at the Point Ruston Waterfront hotel, with sweeping views to Commencement Bay. We really enjoyed our stay here over a year ago, and felt it was time to return.
 
Click for larger image
Copper & Salt

 

We had an excellent dinner, with a wonderful view, at Copper & Salt restaurant in our hotel at Point Ruston.
 
1/20/2024
 
Click for larger image
The Office

 

James getting some work done Saturday morning in our hotel room at Point Ruston. We love this spot by the window where we can work and see what’s happening outside, both on land and the water.
 
Click for larger image
Dune Peninsula

 

Looking down Dune Peninsula park at Point Ruston, named in honor of local author Frank Herbert. The Tacoma Yacht Club is partially visible at left in the distance.
 
Click for larger image
Unification

 

Unification in bronze by Pacific Northwest artist by Edward Korolak is one of many public art displays at Point Ruston.
 
Click for larger image
Ole

 

The sculpture Ole by Enumclaw stained-glass artist John Casey and metal artist Anita Schuller on display at Point Ruston.
 
Click for larger image
Sprite

 

Another Point Ruston sculpture, this one Sprite by Washington artist Kris Vermeer.
 
Click for larger image
Stack 571, Point Ruston

 

Lunch at Stack 571 at Point Ruston. James ordered the appetizer wings and there was enough there for both of us. Stack 571 is named after the 571-ft (174 m) smokestack, demolished in 1993, that was part of the ASARCO copper smelter at Point Ruston. 571 feet is taller than our 40-story apartment building, and the stack was the highest in the world when completed in 1917. The foul-smelling smoke that spewed from the factory, once one of the most polluted Superfund sites in the country, was the inspiration for local author Frank Herbert’s epic science-fiction novel Dune.
 
Click for larger image
Winifred Street Bridge

 

Jennifer looking down to the railroad tracks from the Winifred Street Bridge in Ruston on an afternoon walk from our hotel at Point Ruston.
 
Click for larger image
Totem Yacht Club, Ruston

 

The clubhouse for the Totem Yacht Club in Ruston. The club was founded in 1955 to “encourage the sport of yachting, to stimulate a greater interest in boating, to promote the science of seamanship and navigation, and to provide a forum for the exchange of boating information and member fellowship.”
 
Click for larger image
North End on Pearl, Ruston

 

Watching the Houston Texans take on the Baltimore Ravens during in an NFL wildcard games. The game was close for the first half, with score tied at 10-10 at half-time. But the Ravens rallied in the second half to win 34-10.
 
Click for larger image
Garden of Eatin, Ruston

 

Patrons of the Antique Sandwich Co. enjoying a winter lunch in the “Garden of Eatin”.
 
Click for larger image
Point Defiance Park

 

Jennifer at the entrance to the Point Defiance Park. The 760-acre (307 ha) green space juts into Puget Sound, and visitors can tour the park either on a ring road or on one of several walking trails. The park incorporates the smaller Dune Peninsula park, and the Fort Nisqually Living History Museum and surrounds the Point Defiance Zoo and Aquarium.
 
Click for larger image
McLaren 720S

 

A spectacular McLaren 720S waiting in the line at Point Defiance for the ferry to Vashon Island, viewed from the Wilson Way Pedestrian Bridge.
 
Click for larger image
Point Defiance Boat Launch

 

The parking capacity of the Point Defiance Boat Launch indicates how popular it must be in the summer.
 
Click for larger image
Tacoma Yacht Club

 

Looking across the Tacoma Yacht Club from the Wilson Way Pedestrian Bridge connecting Dune Peninsula and Point Defiance.
 
Click for larger image
Ruston Way Waterwalk

 

One of several mosaics, this one just outside our hotel, on the Ruston Way Waterwalk along Commencement Bay.
 
Click for larger image
Ice Cream Social

 

Handmade ice cream cones, freshly made, at the Ice Cream Social in Point Ruston where we stopped to satisfy our sweet tooth.
 
Click for larger image
Dusk, Commencement Bay

 

A small Coast Guard vessel streaking across Commencement Bay at dusk.
 

 

Show locations on map Click the travel log icon on the left to see these locations on a map. And a map of our most recent log entries always is available at mvdirona.com/maps.

   


If your comment doesn't show up right away, send us email and we'll dredge it out of the spam filter.


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.