Mystic Connecticut: A Maritime History

Colonial charm with a touch of witchcraft and weird hedge mazes in historic towns.

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BuffaloBreezer
Posts: 2
Joined: Wed Mar 06, 2024 2:59 pm

Mystic Connecticut: A Maritime History

Post by BuffaloBreezer »

Pulled into Mystic with the rain threatening and the air smelling like old wood and brine. The seaport museum? Yeah, it’s a time machine, and if you haven’t watched the shipwrights carve a spar or a little kid try to climb the rigging, you’re missin somethin.

Mystic Pizza is real (the movie’s kinda overrated, but the pie’s not bad). Walked the docks, watched some guy haul in a blue crab the size of my head. “Wicked good,” he said, so I took his word for it.

History here is everywhere—captains’ houses, weathered old signs, tales of whalers and storms that didn’t make the papers. Caught the last tour of the Charles W. Morgan, imagined I was off to chase whales ’til the end of the map.

Soaked to the socks, bought chowder, got lost in the little maritime art shop.

Mystic’s got that “real deal” feeling, y’know? Even the fog has opinions. Anyone else got shipwreck stories or haunted taverns? And why does everything here taste faintly of salt and legend?
AppalachiaAce
Posts: 6
Joined: Sat Mar 02, 2024 9:16 am

RE: Mystic Connecticut: A Maritime History

Post by AppalachiaAce »

My gran took me to Mystic once—before I knew the difference between a schooner and a sloop.

She told me, “every ship’s got a ghost.” I believed her, then and now.

Loved the old tavern on the corner. The barkeep’s got a story for every knot in the bar.
QuiltTrailQuester
Posts: 3
Joined: Sat Mar 16, 2024 11:22 pm

RE: Mystic Connecticut: A Maritime History

Post by QuiltTrailQuester »

Real question: why is the chowder here better than my grandma’s? (Sorry, Gram.) Also—lobster rolls at the food shack behind the aquarium, do not miss.
BourbonBuff
Posts: 9
Joined: Thu Mar 14, 2024 1:44 pm

RE: Mystic Connecticut: A Maritime History

Post by BourbonBuff »

Mystic is a goldmine for maritime nerds. The seaport’s preservation of 19th-century shipbuilding is legit—go inside the ropewalk, watch ’em twist tarred hemp into line.

Also: the drawbridge? Built in 1922, still running on original mechanisms. My favorite view is from the bridge, especially at sunset.

p.s. There’s a plaque about a shipwreck from 1837 on the wharf. History under every cobblestone.
SiestaSeeker
Posts: 6
Joined: Sun Mar 17, 2024 1:42 pm

RE: Mystic Connecticut: A Maritime History

Post by SiestaSeeker »

Hit the little beach at sunrise, it’s chilly but worth it. Wish the seagulls would chill, tho. Best sunrise I’ve seen in ages.
MapleMarauder
Posts: 2
Joined: Fri Mar 08, 2024 10:33 pm

RE: Mystic Connecticut: A Maritime History

Post by MapleMarauder »

Did the Mystic River kayak tour—highly recommend! Guide told us about pirate raids (probably made half of it up, but still cool).

Ate way too much fudge from the downtown shop.
DesertDrifter
Posts: 4
Joined: Thu Mar 14, 2024 12:15 am

RE: Mystic Connecticut: A Maritime History

Post by DesertDrifter »

I thought it’d be touristy but honestly? More charm than crowd. Even in the rain.
WillowWader
Posts: 2
Joined: Sat Mar 09, 2024 4:16 pm

RE: Mystic Connecticut: A Maritime History

Post by WillowWader »

Grew up near Mystic—my dad was a boat mechanic, so I spent summers smelling like grease and salt. Still remember the sound of rigging in the wind. Mystic’s changed but the river still feels the same.
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