I’ve been in York Harbor all June and just returned to Salem. It was a very productive month removed from daily tasks and diversions, but I missed certain things and people: my husband (I brought the cats), my garden, my street. Certainly not the tour guides and groups though: they were in part what drove me away. Of course I found the usual Dunkin iced-coffee cup propped up on my stoop the moment I got home. Salem is busy and festive all year long now it seems; while the incessant witch tourism annoys me the other celebrations are great, and June is a particularly festive month with its mix of private and public celebrations: weddings and graduations, Juneteenth and Pride. Salem goes all out for Pride and I missed that, and definitely craved some color amidst our rainy and foggy weather, so I took off for Portsmouth late last week seeking flags but finding doors. When I was growing up across river, Portsmouth was a much shabbier place: now you are hard-pressed to find an old house that is not in perfect condition. I expanded my usual downtown walk to include neighborhoods a bit more outlying like that bordering Christian Shore and the South End, and found so many lovely houses, all with very colorful entries. Red was an exotic front-door color before; now there is a veritable rainbow of Portsmouth doors. And I’ve got some flags here too.
Ok, I think I have the whole spectrum represented! It was surprisingly difficult to find white doors: as you see, one is hiding behind a tree. I wasn’t sure where to put taupe, so I paired it with brown. There are no painted brown doors, just various shades of natural woodwork. Not too many black doors either, but lots of green, and lots of yellow. Do not tell me that one of my purple doors is blue; it is purple. Portsmouth is the best walking city ever: beautiful neighborhoods, dynamic downtown, tons of historical markers, pocket parks, well-maintained sidewalks. More rainbows are there for the making!
Some singular Portsmouth doors: two-tone green and Happy Fourth!
July 1st, 2023 at 6:09 am
Oh, the colorful doors, Donna! The orange/tangerine quite captured me, as did the purple. We have a green door, perfect for our little garden cottage. And did you see that crescent moon twg “wreath?”
July 1st, 2023 at 6:27 am
I LOVE that wreath—I’m going to copy it somehow.
July 1st, 2023 at 6:32 am
Me, too!
July 1st, 2023 at 8:01 am
a pleasure to see all this!
Yes, when I grew up in Exeter, Portsmouth was shabby. I’m glad it’s not any more.
July 1st, 2023 at 8:35 am
Me too! Great town.
July 1st, 2023 at 8:35 am
Hi Donna,
Thanks for the great pics of Portsmouth doors from your recent visit. What an interesting array – could almost compete with the colorful “doors of Dublin” seen on so many calendars and place mats in that fair city.
July 1st, 2023 at 8:36 am
Yes, it’s close, but you’re right: almost!