Welcome to the Coffee Cache series and Fort Ebey State Park on Whidbey Island.
Featured coffee drink: Cafe Miel -- to brewed drip coffee add milk, honey, vanilla extract, cinnamon and nutmeg.
Fort Ebey was originally built for coastal defense in World War II. It, along with Fort Casey (to the south on Whidbey Island), Fort Worden (to the west across Admiralty Inlet near Port Townsend on the Quimper Peninsula), and Fort Flagler (on Marrowstone Island southeast of Port Townsend) provided a formidable military presence at the entrance to Puget Sound. All four were decommissioned after the war and became state parks. Visit each one to take in their fabulous Salish Sea views, explore their gun batteries and add a few more caches to your find list.
A printable map of Fort Ebey State Park can be found
|
- The geocache may be placed on Washington State Parks and Recreation Commission managed property only by written permission from the Washington State Parks and Recreation Commission.
- The following items shall not be placed in the geocache: Food items; illegal substances; medications; personal hygiene products, pornographic materials; inappropriate, offensive, or hazardous materials or weapons of any type. Log books are required for each cache and are to be provided by the owner of the cache.
- It is the visitor’s responsibility to orient themselves with policies and rules pertaining to State Parks areas.
- Report any incident, problem, or violation to State Parks staff.
|