 Open seasonally, May through October, The Moors offers newly decorated double occupancy rooms with phone, cable TV, WIFI, cube refrigerator, ceiling fans, expanded Continental breakfast and heated pool.
Stay at The Moors to watch the tides ebb and flow and sunset over the dunes. Spy on sailboats and ships on the horizon and blue heron fishing at low tide. Try to paint or photograph intense colors of the moor or a pink and gold sunset reflecting on a full moon high tide. The scene is constantly changing!
When you feel like moving (you are on vacation), take a swim in the pool or walk 20 minutes to Herring Cove Beach or into town. Shop, shop and gallery hop! Take a break, sit on a bench in front of town hall to people watch, listen to the steeple bell and enjoy the amazing street entertainment. Oh, go ahead, get an ice cream at Ben and Jerry’s; you’ll dance it off at the Boat Slip.
Our guests like the quiet of the west end to get away from the crowds in town and to see the other wildlife including fox, red cottontail rabbits, blue heron, and many species of small birds. Some nights we hear coyote howling in the dunes.
You have had quite a day, so turn on the paddle fan and take a nap before dinner; there are many excellent restaurants and snack shops or use the BBQ. Then enjoy the nightlife- dancing, live entertainment at bars, cabarets, comedy clubs, and theater. When you’ve had enough of the hum of downtown, retire to the quiet west end and sleep to the sounds of nature.
Area Attractions and Activities: Provincetown has a wonderful history as first landing place of the Pilgrims, world renowned fishing capital and second home to famous writers and artists. The miles of beaches, old colonial and Cape Cod architecture, summer flower gardens, sunrises and sunsets over the Atlantic, long nature walks in the cool Beech Forest and miles of bicycle trails through the Province Lands attract aesthetics and naturalists. For water enthusiasts there is schooner sailing and wind surfing, fishing and whale watching. The "Cape light", brightest in Provincetown, draws the painters and photographers. The community is a unique mixture of native and city slicker, artist and tourist, straight and gay getting along in this small town of 3,000 year-rounders and 30,000 day-trippers, vacationers and summer residents.
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