Surfing culture
didn’t enter my consciousness until I saw the Beach Boys at the Iowa State Fairin 1975. I wasn’t that cool of a
seven year old - my sister and I were campaigning for the Bay City
Rollers. For the past decade
or so, parking lots on the ocean beaches are filled with surfers, muscling between
the sunbathers, riding the last of morning’s high tide waves. Out at Cahoon
Hollow, the Beachcomber Bar and Grill’s summer line up includes Dick Dale later
this month.
It is a gorgeous
Sunday morning and I am uncharacteristically up at 8:30 AM and at the beach
with coffee and puppy. As the climate has warmed, more and more bikers are
sitting outside PB’s Bistro, sipping cappuccino in their spandex and helmets
after completing the 22 mile Cape Cod Rail Trail.
I have really
fallen in love with Wellfleet, and now I am regretting not renting through
September or October. I had planned a Fuller Build to Sri Lanka in July, and
truly hoped to be out of the country for at least a month. Unfortunately, that
trip had to be rescheduled for next year and I find my last three weeks rushing
forward. I can't remember what day it is, it always feels like Sunday and that
I'm going to have to pack up and leave immediately. The spike in energy hasn’t helped matters.
I thought that
Memorial Day marked the start of summer, but I was mistaken. For sure, it all
happens the week before 4th of July. Traffic has slowed to a crawl, drivers turned surly, left
turns near impossible to make, (unless before or after 10 PM, when P.J.’s has
finally closed the take out window).
My friend Deb
won’t even attempt Route 6 on a Sunday unless it’s after 9 PM. “Blue plates”
she says, meaning the license plates of everyone hailing from other than MA,
but specifically Connecticut.
The library has
been consistently full, people answering their phones with full voice. I glance
up at my tablemate, and we shake our heads, silently agreeing that these
intruders are just plain rude.
Most of the
locals I’ve met during the spring have gone into hiding, shopping early and
getting home before the dinner crowd starts marching down Main Street in their
khakis, plaid shirts and Lily Pulitzer dresses after the struggle to find
parking. It has been interesting to be on this side of the street.
Summer folks emit
a temporary entitlement over the town, knowing their money fuels an economy
that all but dies during the off-season, accounting for more than 70% of the
influx of income from July through September, which is the snarky retort you’re
bound to hear if you even mention how dense the traffic is on Friday.
Two older folks
have parked their bikes at the end of the parking lot, and rest on the bench,
another addition, recently perched on the edge of the sandy decline. “How long
have you lived here” they ask me. I am just a seasonal renter I reply, but
looking out at the Atlantic, the sandbars that have raised themselves in
anticipation of beachcombers & sand castle makers. I think I might like to
stay here. Why they ask? Everyone
I’ve spoken to that lives here loves it. And we all look out at to the edge of
the world and the changing light.
6 comments:
Well, Gato, the Fates probably have something else in store for you, this season. As the old French saying goes, the gods laugh loudest when people make plans. Bon voyage! Love, M.
summer is a full time gig in LA.
summer is a fulltime gig in LA.
I love the cape. i love this post, it really reflects the torment that one has when leaving such a beautiful spot. Sigh...if only winter lasted a month and summer six..
Kat, I do not ever want you to leave this place....it brings out the true and most wonderful Kat! Beautiful writing.....
Much love,
mar
Really sounds lovely Kat, completely understand why you don't want to leave. Hoping to see you when you're back in LA. :) xo
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