Westerly and surrounding area

Donna
Westerly and surrounding area

Parks & Nature

Forest for hiking and camping and Wachaug Pond. The Vin Gormley Trail makes a circle around Wachaug Pond; about 18km.
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Burlingame State Park
1 Burlingame State Park Rd
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Forest for hiking and camping and Wachaug Pond. The Vin Gormley Trail makes a circle around Wachaug Pond; about 18km.
Park with amenities such as tennis courts, playing fields, bike trails located at the water's edge on an old airfield.
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Ninigret Park
5 Park Ln
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Park with amenities such as tennis courts, playing fields, bike trails located at the water's edge on an old airfield.
Large State Beach parking with amenities.
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Misquamicut State Beach
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Large State Beach parking with amenities.
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East Beach
East Beach Road
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Wilcox Park
44 Broad St
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East Beach
East Beach Road
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Narragansett Beach
39 Boston Neck Road
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Matunuck Beach
Matunuck Beach Rd
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A walk down the sand trail - Ninigret Avenue will bring you to the remains of USLSS # 57 located close to the Charlestown Breachway.
Sand Trail
Sand Trail
A walk down the sand trail - Ninigret Avenue will bring you to the remains of USLSS # 57 located close to the Charlestown Breachway.
Beautiful location at the site of the nation's 3rd oldest light house. Rocks at the shore line to explore and a large park.
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Beavertail Lighthouse Museum
Beavertail Road
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Beautiful location at the site of the nation's 3rd oldest light house. Rocks at the shore line to explore and a large park.
Beautiful here!
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Fort Wetherill State Park
3 Fort Wetherill Rd
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Beautiful here!
Beautiful woods very close by. Mountain bikes are welcome here. Many mountain bike trails.
Woody Hill Management Area
Beautiful woods very close by. Mountain bikes are welcome here. Many mountain bike trails.
Some of the properties that Westerly Land Trust owns are open to the public and have nice hiking trails. An interesting one down the street from us is the "Dr. John Champlin Glacier Park". Here there are signs explaining how the glacier formed the land we live on. From "Charlie's Overlook" you can look over Winnapaug Pond to Misquamicut Beach out to the Atlantic Ocean and sometimes Block Island and Long Island are in sight. Go to westerlylandtrust.org for detailed information.
Westerly Land Trust
Some of the properties that Westerly Land Trust owns are open to the public and have nice hiking trails. An interesting one down the street from us is the "Dr. John Champlin Glacier Park". Here there are signs explaining how the glacier formed the land we live on. From "Charlie's Overlook" you can look over Winnapaug Pond to Misquamicut Beach out to the Atlantic Ocean and sometimes Block Island and Long Island are in sight. Go to westerlylandtrust.org for detailed information.
Some of the properties that Westerly Land Trust owns are open to the public and have nice hiking trails. An interesting one down the street from us is the "Dr. John Champlin Glacier Park". Here there are signs explaining how the glacier formed the land we live on. From "Charlie's Overlook" you can look over Winnapaug Pond to Misquamicut Beach out to the Atlantic Ocean and sometimes Block Island and Long Island are in sight. Go to westerlylandtrust.org for detailed information.
Dr. John Champlin Glacier Park
5 Kettle Cl
Some of the properties that Westerly Land Trust owns are open to the public and have nice hiking trails. An interesting one down the street from us is the "Dr. John Champlin Glacier Park". Here there are signs explaining how the glacier formed the land we live on. From "Charlie's Overlook" you can look over Winnapaug Pond to Misquamicut Beach out to the Atlantic Ocean and sometimes Block Island and Long Island are in sight. Go to westerlylandtrust.org for detailed information.
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Stonington Lighthouse Museum
7 Water St
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Block Island. A nice day excursion. Take the ferry from Galilee.
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New Shoreham
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Block Island. A nice day excursion. Take the ferry from Galilee.
Take a walk out to the old Fort remains.
Fort Mansfield
Take a walk out to the old Fort remains.
Skate park in Westerly
White Rock
Skate park in Westerly
Quonochontaug Pond is our nearby coastal lagoon. Quonochontaug means black fish. It is the deepest and most saline of the salt ponds. It is now connected directly to the sea by a breachway that was stabilized with rock jetties by the US Army Corps of Engineers in the 1950s. The town boundary between Westerly and Charlestown cuts through the middle of the pond. Water quality in past years has been very good because the pond is relatively deep, well flushed by the tides, and development has been limited. Quonnie is the least intensely developed of any of the ponds. Most of the development is residential and much of it is occupied only seasonally. Like all of the ponds, Quonnie is an important nursery for winter flounder, young striped bass, blue fish, and tautog. Bay scallops fluctuate in abundance from year to year, but in a good year, they are often found in this salt pond. The shoreline is part of the Atlantic Flyway, a major migratory bird resting area. “The salt ponds have probably been in some kind of existence, they wouldn’t have looked exactly like today but probably would have been in about the same spots about 4 - 5,000 years ago,” said Bryan Oakley, associate professor of environmental geosciences at Eastern Connecticut State University. “That coincides with when global sea level was kind of slowing down when the last of the Laurentide, the big ice sheet, started to melt. They’re not geologically super old, but certainly, they’ve been around for a number of thousands of years. What was on the shore face or the area offshore before that, we don’t have a good handle, because they would have gotten chewed up as the shoreline migrated across to where it is today.” The sea level was more than 3 feet lower during that early period, so sections of the ponds that are now shallow would probably have been completely dry. “Areas in the back that are shallowed out would not have been inundated yet,” Oakley noted. “They wouldn’t have had water on them … The exact extent of inundation kind of depends on the elevation of the land underneath the lagoon.” Each of the salt ponds has its own geological characteristics, determined by the retreat of the glacier, which began about 11,600 years ago. The salt ponds have been and continue to be a valuable resource for members of the Narragansett Indian Tribe. Lorén Spears, executive director of the Tomaquag Museum, described traditional practices that extended far beyond fishing and shellfishing. “Everything that was edible was eaten and everything that was useful was used in any way that it could be made into something else,” she said. “Just to use an example, a shell like the quahog shell, it’s not just the food, but the shell can be turned into a ladle. It can be flipped over the other way and with a long stick, be a hoe for your garden. It can be broken apart and cut and shaped into beads, wampum beads or white beads or the purple beads that we know today as wampum. Everything has multiple uses, so our ancestors and even our people still today often think, is it edible? Is it medicinal? Is it useful? Is it spiritual? And in many cases, it’s all of the above.” The salt ponds are relatively shallow, allowing sunlight to reach the bottom, which encourages the growth of eelgrass. With their sheltered, calmer waters, the ponds are also important nurseries for fish and shellfish, and give them access to the ocean when they are more mature. The ponds also provide important food sources for birds, migrating monarch butterflies and horseshoe crabs, and serve as buffers during storms. Art Ganz, a retired marine biologist who has lived on the shore of Quononchontaug Pond since 1970, is the director of the Salt Ponds Coalition. Incorporated in 1984, the coalition monitors water quality, conducts public outreach programs and promotes the protection and conservation of the salt ponds at the state's General Assembly. Ganz agreed that development is a significant contributor to the decline of the ponds' health. Small summer cottages have given way to large year-round homes that are crammed onto small shoreline lots. More efficient septic systems, which remove nitrogen, have encouraged more building along the shore. “Years ago, people had an outhouse, a seasonal house, a cesspool, they probably didn’t have washers and dryers in those cottages,” he said. “Today, they’re big, big houses and they house lots of people and unfortunately, the technology that was developed for these denitrification systems was essentially intended to improve the efficiency of areas, say, replace a cesspool with a denitrification system. But the back side of it is, because of this technology, a lot of these properties that we would consider unbuildable, with high groundwater and everything else, are now allowed to be built on. So as far as I’m concerned, this kind of backfired.” In addition to effluent from septic systems, nutrients from animal and bird waste and lawn fertilizers enter the ponds. Nutrient overloads are the cause of eutrophication, a condition that depletes the oxygen in the water. Coliform and Enterococcus bacterial contamination, which was a problem in 2018, is also a growing concern. Ganz said it is a challenge to make summer residents aware of environmental conditions until they are personally affected by them. “I get very, very frustrated, particularly where I live,” he said. “There’s so many summer people that come in and everything is rosy from Memorial Day to Labor Day, but they really don’t care too much about what goes on in the off season and the changes that we are seeing, the changes in our beaches, the effect of the king tides and the ever-so-gradual sea level rise that people don’t pay attention to. These are very real things that need to be looked at on a year-round basis … We saw this when we had the bacterial problem in some of the ponds. People were some upset.” For many Rhode Islanders, including members of the Narragansett Tribe, dense development has also created an access problem. “We’re eastern woodland coastal people but we don’t have direct access in the sense of lands that are ours, that are on the salt ponds,” Spears said. “Every year, there’s always some kind of new blockade to keep people out of salt pond areas in various places in South County.” Cassius Spears, director of the Narragansett Food Sovereignty Initiative, described once-productive ecosystems that were dramatically altered when the ponds became thickly settled. “You can go down to the pond any time of the year and you’ll see myself or a family member … just enjoying the therapeutic part of reminiscing about how this pond must have looked during the time of our ancestors,” Spears said. “So when you want to look at changes around the pond, and I tell this even to my grandchildren, I point around the pond and I say, ‘Look, see all these houses over here? How many Indians do you think live in some of these houses here? I think you’ll find it’s most likely not even one.'" Spears said he likes going to Ninigret Pond because it is relatively accessible and the least degraded. “I feel that it probably has the least amount of abuse than all the ponds in the area,” he said. “To be able to go and see a nice bed of eelgrass is really important, especially when you see how devastated the other ponds in the area are.” Recent dredging at Ninigret and Quonochontaug ponds has raised the hope that water quality will improve with increased tidal flushing. “We have dredged, including just this last year,” Lee said. “Initially, the sand all went back on the beach where it came from … to re-nourish the beach system. Last year, they went onto salt marshes because there’s concern that we’re going to lose our salt marshes because they’re not keeping up with sea level rise. That’s really an experiment to see if that’s doable.” As conditions around and in the salt ponds change, there will be no choice but to adapt. The only constant with the salt ponds, Oakley said, is continuous change. Storms impact the barrier beaches, which in turn have an impact on the salt ponds behind them. “The bottom line is, no matter what, it’s not going to get better because they’re migrating under the influence of storms and in the background of all that is sea level rise,” he said. “What sea level rise starts to do is give more significant impacts to smaller but more frequent storm events, so we’re not waiting on infrequent storms to have a big impact. You start to have a more significant impact from smaller event … The barriers might migrate faster and then, sometime down the road geologically, we’ll be talking about what’s happening with the size of the lagoon or the changes to the lagoon, because of the barriers moving back. It’s always been a dynamic system and the geological reality is they’re extremely dynamic systems and they’re formed and modified by those important processes.” Many text parts taken from Salt Pond Watchers Summary Data Report 1985 – 1987, Coastal Resources Center, University of Rhode Island Technical Report No. 10, October 1990, by P. Kullberg, V. Lee, and M. Platt, and a Dec 27, 2019 article from The Westerly Sun by Cynthia Drummond titled "Charlestowns salt ponds are ecosystems in transition".
Quonochontaug Pond, Rhode Island, Stati Uniti
Quonochontaug Pond is our nearby coastal lagoon. Quonochontaug means black fish. It is the deepest and most saline of the salt ponds. It is now connected directly to the sea by a breachway that was stabilized with rock jetties by the US Army Corps of Engineers in the 1950s. The town boundary between Westerly and Charlestown cuts through the middle of the pond. Water quality in past years has been very good because the pond is relatively deep, well flushed by the tides, and development has been limited. Quonnie is the least intensely developed of any of the ponds. Most of the development is residential and much of it is occupied only seasonally. Like all of the ponds, Quonnie is an important nursery for winter flounder, young striped bass, blue fish, and tautog. Bay scallops fluctuate in abundance from year to year, but in a good year, they are often found in this salt pond. The shoreline is part of the Atlantic Flyway, a major migratory bird resting area. “The salt ponds have probably been in some kind of existence, they wouldn’t have looked exactly like today but probably would have been in about the same spots about 4 - 5,000 years ago,” said Bryan Oakley, associate professor of environmental geosciences at Eastern Connecticut State University. “That coincides with when global sea level was kind of slowing down when the last of the Laurentide, the big ice sheet, started to melt. They’re not geologically super old, but certainly, they’ve been around for a number of thousands of years. What was on the shore face or the area offshore before that, we don’t have a good handle, because they would have gotten chewed up as the shoreline migrated across to where it is today.” The sea level was more than 3 feet lower during that early period, so sections of the ponds that are now shallow would probably have been completely dry. “Areas in the back that are shallowed out would not have been inundated yet,” Oakley noted. “They wouldn’t have had water on them … The exact extent of inundation kind of depends on the elevation of the land underneath the lagoon.” Each of the salt ponds has its own geological characteristics, determined by the retreat of the glacier, which began about 11,600 years ago. The salt ponds have been and continue to be a valuable resource for members of the Narragansett Indian Tribe. Lorén Spears, executive director of the Tomaquag Museum, described traditional practices that extended far beyond fishing and shellfishing. “Everything that was edible was eaten and everything that was useful was used in any way that it could be made into something else,” she said. “Just to use an example, a shell like the quahog shell, it’s not just the food, but the shell can be turned into a ladle. It can be flipped over the other way and with a long stick, be a hoe for your garden. It can be broken apart and cut and shaped into beads, wampum beads or white beads or the purple beads that we know today as wampum. Everything has multiple uses, so our ancestors and even our people still today often think, is it edible? Is it medicinal? Is it useful? Is it spiritual? And in many cases, it’s all of the above.” The salt ponds are relatively shallow, allowing sunlight to reach the bottom, which encourages the growth of eelgrass. With their sheltered, calmer waters, the ponds are also important nurseries for fish and shellfish, and give them access to the ocean when they are more mature. The ponds also provide important food sources for birds, migrating monarch butterflies and horseshoe crabs, and serve as buffers during storms. Art Ganz, a retired marine biologist who has lived on the shore of Quononchontaug Pond since 1970, is the director of the Salt Ponds Coalition. Incorporated in 1984, the coalition monitors water quality, conducts public outreach programs and promotes the protection and conservation of the salt ponds at the state's General Assembly. Ganz agreed that development is a significant contributor to the decline of the ponds' health. Small summer cottages have given way to large year-round homes that are crammed onto small shoreline lots. More efficient septic systems, which remove nitrogen, have encouraged more building along the shore. “Years ago, people had an outhouse, a seasonal house, a cesspool, they probably didn’t have washers and dryers in those cottages,” he said. “Today, they’re big, big houses and they house lots of people and unfortunately, the technology that was developed for these denitrification systems was essentially intended to improve the efficiency of areas, say, replace a cesspool with a denitrification system. But the back side of it is, because of this technology, a lot of these properties that we would consider unbuildable, with high groundwater and everything else, are now allowed to be built on. So as far as I’m concerned, this kind of backfired.” In addition to effluent from septic systems, nutrients from animal and bird waste and lawn fertilizers enter the ponds. Nutrient overloads are the cause of eutrophication, a condition that depletes the oxygen in the water. Coliform and Enterococcus bacterial contamination, which was a problem in 2018, is also a growing concern. Ganz said it is a challenge to make summer residents aware of environmental conditions until they are personally affected by them. “I get very, very frustrated, particularly where I live,” he said. “There’s so many summer people that come in and everything is rosy from Memorial Day to Labor Day, but they really don’t care too much about what goes on in the off season and the changes that we are seeing, the changes in our beaches, the effect of the king tides and the ever-so-gradual sea level rise that people don’t pay attention to. These are very real things that need to be looked at on a year-round basis … We saw this when we had the bacterial problem in some of the ponds. People were some upset.” For many Rhode Islanders, including members of the Narragansett Tribe, dense development has also created an access problem. “We’re eastern woodland coastal people but we don’t have direct access in the sense of lands that are ours, that are on the salt ponds,” Spears said. “Every year, there’s always some kind of new blockade to keep people out of salt pond areas in various places in South County.” Cassius Spears, director of the Narragansett Food Sovereignty Initiative, described once-productive ecosystems that were dramatically altered when the ponds became thickly settled. “You can go down to the pond any time of the year and you’ll see myself or a family member … just enjoying the therapeutic part of reminiscing about how this pond must have looked during the time of our ancestors,” Spears said. “So when you want to look at changes around the pond, and I tell this even to my grandchildren, I point around the pond and I say, ‘Look, see all these houses over here? How many Indians do you think live in some of these houses here? I think you’ll find it’s most likely not even one.'" Spears said he likes going to Ninigret Pond because it is relatively accessible and the least degraded. “I feel that it probably has the least amount of abuse than all the ponds in the area,” he said. “To be able to go and see a nice bed of eelgrass is really important, especially when you see how devastated the other ponds in the area are.” Recent dredging at Ninigret and Quonochontaug ponds has raised the hope that water quality will improve with increased tidal flushing. “We have dredged, including just this last year,” Lee said. “Initially, the sand all went back on the beach where it came from … to re-nourish the beach system. Last year, they went onto salt marshes because there’s concern that we’re going to lose our salt marshes because they’re not keeping up with sea level rise. That’s really an experiment to see if that’s doable.” As conditions around and in the salt ponds change, there will be no choice but to adapt. The only constant with the salt ponds, Oakley said, is continuous change. Storms impact the barrier beaches, which in turn have an impact on the salt ponds behind them. “The bottom line is, no matter what, it’s not going to get better because they’re migrating under the influence of storms and in the background of all that is sea level rise,” he said. “What sea level rise starts to do is give more significant impacts to smaller but more frequent storm events, so we’re not waiting on infrequent storms to have a big impact. You start to have a more significant impact from smaller event … The barriers might migrate faster and then, sometime down the road geologically, we’ll be talking about what’s happening with the size of the lagoon or the changes to the lagoon, because of the barriers moving back. It’s always been a dynamic system and the geological reality is they’re extremely dynamic systems and they’re formed and modified by those important processes.” Many text parts taken from Salt Pond Watchers Summary Data Report 1985 – 1987, Coastal Resources Center, University of Rhode Island Technical Report No. 10, October 1990, by P. Kullberg, V. Lee, and M. Platt, and a Dec 27, 2019 article from The Westerly Sun by Cynthia Drummond titled "Charlestowns salt ponds are ecosystems in transition".

Food Scene

Many good restaurants to choose from and small local shops to visit.
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Westerly Downtown Historic District
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Many good restaurants to choose from and small local shops to visit.
Oyster farm with restaurant.
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Matunuck Oyster Bar
629 Succotash Rd
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Oyster farm with restaurant.
Breakfast and baked goods
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Sunny Side Up
253 Post Rd
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Breakfast and baked goods
Coffee and treats with Wifi.
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Dave's Coffee
5193 Old Post Rd
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Coffee and treats with Wifi.
Great atmosphere.
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Amigos Taqueria Y Tequila
2 Canal St
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Great atmosphere.
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Weekapaug Inn
25 Spray Rock Rd
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Ocean House
1 Bluff Ave
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Ice cream shop and also rustic restaurant
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St Clair Annex Inc
141 Bay St
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Ice cream shop and also rustic restaurant
Small chocolate factory
Hauser Chocolatier
59 Tom Harvey Rd
Small chocolate factory
Dusty's Ice Cream
662 Atlantic Ave
The Ocean Mist often has live music. Their location is directly on the water.
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Ocean Mist
895 Matunuck Beach Rd
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The Ocean Mist often has live music. Their location is directly on the water.
Downtown Westerly river location
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Bridge Restaurant [Raw Bar] and River Patio
37 Main St
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Downtown Westerly river location
84 Aleworks Brewing & Tavern
15 Canal St
Very good dumplings.
Beijing Dumpling
55 Beach St
Very good dumplings.
One of our very favorite restaurants in town.
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Thong Thai Restaurant
15 Railroad Ave
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One of our very favorite restaurants in town.
The Dog Watch Cafe is located directly on the water. The atmosphere is relaxed and lively and the food is good.
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Dog Watch Cafe
194 Water St
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The Dog Watch Cafe is located directly on the water. The atmosphere is relaxed and lively and the food is good.
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Maria's Seaside Cafe
132 Atlantic Ave
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Local brewery.
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Grey Sail Brewing of Rhode Island
63 Canal St
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Local brewery.
Homemade gelato
Pompelmo Gelato
31 High St
Homemade gelato
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Koi Japanese Cuisine
65 High St
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Tate's Italian Kitchen
64 Brown St
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Mel's Downtown Creamery
37 W Broad St
Ice cream bar
Very good pizza
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Pasquale's Pizzeria Napoletana
59 S County Commons Way
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Very good pizza
Almost in the ocean location with food and drinks and friendly service.
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Windjammer Surf Bar
321 Atlantic Ave
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Almost in the ocean location with food and drinks and friendly service.
Beijing Dumpling
55 Beach St
Dumplings!
A good selection of products sourced locally as well as some of the best bread that you can buy in our area. They sell the excellent Terra Firma milk from North Stonington, CT.
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Quonnie Farms
16 W Beach Rd
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A good selection of products sourced locally as well as some of the best bread that you can buy in our area. They sell the excellent Terra Firma milk from North Stonington, CT.
Very good Syrian food.
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Aleppo Sweets
107 Ives St
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Very good Syrian food.
One of our local favorites.
Cinder Restaurant
169 Main Street
One of our local favorites.
Greek foods market
Yoleni’s Providence
292 Westminster St
Greek foods market
Pick Pockets Deli
510 E Main Rd
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Buon Appetito Ristorante & Pizzeria
386 Norwich-Westerly Rd
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Bacco Vino & Contorni
262 Atwells Avenue
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Scialo Brothers Bakery
257 Atwells Ave
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Nice for a breakfast on the beach.
Sam's
301 Atlantic Avenue
Nice for a breakfast on the beach.
Meats fresh from the farm. New farm shop.
Beriah Lewis Farm
273 Boombridge Road
Meats fresh from the farm. New farm shop.
Picknick tables at the breachway to eat at.
Salty's Clam Shack
668 Atlantic Avenue
Picknick tables at the breachway to eat at.
Cinder Restaurant
169 Main Street
Very good meats
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Dunns Corner Market
5 Langworthy Rd
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Very good meats
Very good meats
Westerly Packing Co
15 Springbrook Rd
Very good meats
Closest liquor store
Ocean State Liquors
233 Post Rd
Closest liquor store
Very good sushi to go
JU-SUSHI Westerly
114 Granite St
Very good sushi to go
Turkeys! Plus farm shop. Beautiful old farm.
Ekonk Hill Turkey Farm
227 Ekonk Hill Rd
Turkeys! Plus farm shop. Beautiful old farm.
Our favorite liquor shop. Big selection, sometimes specials, really friendly people.
Village Wine & Spirits
Our favorite liquor shop. Big selection, sometimes specials, really friendly people.
Very good fish shop, often with local catches and specials.
The Fishery
271 Post Rd
Very good fish shop, often with local catches and specials.
Chinatown in Boston. You think you have landed in China. Some very good food to be found.
Chinatown, Boston
Chinatown in Boston. You think you have landed in China. Some very good food to be found.
Fresh organic foods from the farm
West Farm Organics
26 Springbrook Rd
Fresh organic foods from the farm
Village Wine & Spirits
Liquor Store
General Stanton Inn
4115 Old Post Rd
The tasting menu is very good, but a LOT of food
Bayberry Garden
The tasting menu is very good, but a LOT of food

Getting Around

Some Amtrak trains stop in downtown Westerly.
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Westerly Station
14 Railroad Ave
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Some Amtrak trains stop in downtown Westerly.
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Block Island Ferry
304 Great Island Rd
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TF Green Airport station
700 Jefferson Blvd
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mbta station
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Wickford Junction station
981 Ten Rod Rd
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mbta station
Westerly location. With 3 day advance notice rental cars available.
Hertz Car Rental
20 Westerly Bradford Rd
Westerly location. With 3 day advance notice rental cars available.
Westerly location.
Enterprise Rent-A-Car
13 East Ave
Westerly location.

Everything Else

Beautifully located farm where you can pick your own fruit and/or eat in their cafe.
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Sweet Berry Farm
915 Mitchell's Ln
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Beautifully located farm where you can pick your own fruit and/or eat in their cafe.
Local Vineyard
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Stonington Vineyards
523 Taugwonk Rd
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Local Vineyard
A small local vineyard.
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Langworthy Farm
308 Shore Rd
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A small local vineyard.
A local vineyard since 1977.
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Newport Vineyards
909 E Main Rd
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A local vineyard since 1977.
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Clyde's Cider Mill (seasonal) opens sept. 1st
129 N Stonington Rd
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Historic site where local grains are milled on granite
Kenyon's Grist Mill
21 Glen Rock Rd
Historic site where local grains are milled on granite
Submarine museum
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USS Nautilus
1 Crystal Lake Rd
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Submarine museum
At times the Tall Ship Barque Eagle is docked here. Often if docked one can go on it and take a look around
USCG Acadamy Pier
At times the Tall Ship Barque Eagle is docked here. Often if docked one can go on it and take a look around
Native American museum
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Mashantucket Pequot Museum & Research Center
110 Pequot Trail
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Native American museum
Purple Shell
4820 Old Post Road
Wampum
Narragansett Museum
Tomaquag Museum
390A Summit Rd
Narragansett Museum

Entertainment & Activities

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Watch Hill Merry Go Round & Beach
151 Bay St
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Mystic Aquarium
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Paddle Surf RI - Paddle Board, Surfing, Lessons & Rentals
3 India Point
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Roger Williams Park Zoo
1000 Elmwood Ave
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Heart of Avondale
93 Watch Hill Rd
yoga studio
Good place to go fishing
Weekapaug Breachway
Good place to go fishing
Brumble Bikes
166 Main St
Rental bicycles available and delivery of bicycles.
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NBX Bikes
922 Boston Neck Rd
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Rental bicycles available and delivery of bicycles.
Rental of bicycles and delivery of bicycles available.
Napatree Bikes
9 Branch St
Rental of bicycles and delivery of bicycles available.
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Mystic Cycle Centre
25 Stonington Rd
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Washington Trust Community Skating Center
61 Main St
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Kayak Centre
562 Charlestown Beach Rd
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On the Rhode Island section of the nemba page you can find detailed information on mountain bike trails in our area.
New England Mountain Biking Association
58 Forge Hill Rd
On the Rhode Island section of the nemba page you can find detailed information on mountain bike trails in our area.
Paint your own pottery and let Get fired Up fire it for you.
Get Fired Up
7 W Broad St
Paint your own pottery and let Get fired Up fire it for you.
Indigenous Museum
Tomaquag Museum
390A Summit Rd
Indigenous Museum
Climbing hall
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Rock Spot Climbing
1174 Kingstown Rd
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Climbing hall
Martial Arts, TRX, Fitness Kickboxing
Kiefer's Martial Arts
114 Granite St
Martial Arts, TRX, Fitness Kickboxing
Bowling
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Alley Katz Bowling Center
116 Granite St
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Bowling
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Westerly Station
14 Railroad Ave
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Bicycle rentals
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Stedman's Bike Shop
196 Main St
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Bicycle rentals

Drinks & Nightlife

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Foxwoods Resort Casino
350 Trolley Line Blvd
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The Knickerbocker Music Center
35 Railroad Ave
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Paddy's Beach Club
159 Atlantic Ave
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Windjammer Surf Bar
321 Atlantic Ave
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Shopping

Many small shops open in the summer season.
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Watch Hill
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Many small shops open in the summer season.
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Westerly Downtown Historic District
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Large well laid out shopping mall in Providence directly off of I-95.
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Providence Place Mall
Providence Place
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Large well laid out shopping mall in Providence directly off of I-95.