Saturday, January 26, 2019

2019 JANUARY IN EASTHAM and introducing THE PRE-QUELS - 2009 - #1 & #2 - North to Eastham, The Trip

Winter sunset
Soooo, it's January, 2019, and it's "quiet time" on Cape Cod, my favorite season, a time for a rejuvenating rest from the busy summer and the holidays, a time to reflect on what we've learned, and a time of planning for the next season.  In particular this month, I've been reflecting on our adventures getting to Cape Cod, and in re-reading them seeing how much we've already forgotten as we've filled our days with a brand new life.  So, I'm going to start the new year with something I meant to do a long time ago, fill in the story of how we got here in the first place.  This journal began as a promise to friends and family in Virginia that I would keep in touch and tell them about this exotic place I was going to live.  Honestly, if I hadn't kept a journal, I'd have forgotten many of the details that have colored this ongoing adventure.  So, in honoring the request to keep in touch and describe what it's like to live here, it has become a gift to myself, as well.  In contrast to the later posts, the Prequels are full of wonder and discovery at everything new.  After nine years, there is still much to discover, but my wash-ashore status is noticeably less.

January is when the bluebirds come back to take advantage of our heated birdbaths.
This year's crop arrived Saturday, January 26th.
Last month was the 119th Annual Cape Cod Christmas Bird Count, which has been described as Citizen Science at Its Best. The goal is to record as complete a sample as possible of the wintering birds in a 15 mile circle to keep track of wintering bird populations over time.  The Cape and Islands has six of these counts in different locations, including Eastham.  There's some friendly competition among the hobbyists to see which location can record the most species.  In good years, a local count may tally over 130 species in one day.  These are dedicated birders who do this rain or shine. 
[Taken from The Weekly Bird Report on WCAI]




As the land mass narrows going north on Cape Cod, the three main roads converge at a rotary that connects the town of Orleans and Eastham.  When I moved here nine years ago, I found that there were many residents who lived in towns south of the rotary who considered anything north of it to be the wild unknown.  In fact, historians show that the rotary was at one time a body of water called Jeremiah's Gulch that required a boat to continue north.  So it's only fitting that one of the first places you come to as you enter Eastham is the appropriately named Wild Care, which started when a local woman and a few volunteers began taking in and helping injured animals at her home. It officially became a non-profit organization in 1993 and moved to the current Eastham property in 2004.  Through contributions and fundraisers, they now boast pools, a heated Jacuzzi, x-ray technology and 3 cameras to monitor the recovering animals.  Approximately 27,000 wild animals have been assisted so far with a 46% success rate, and there are more than 230 volunteers and 8 full time staff.  275 different species have been treated, including sea birds, reptiles, mammals, birds of prey, and others which are brought to their attention by people who happen upon the wild animals in trouble and call the 24/7 helpline. [Information taken from The Cape Codder]

Learn more at:  Wild Care Cape Cod


It wouldn't be January if the subject of weather didn't eventually come up.  The jury is still out on what kind of winter it will be here.  Although storms have weekly been  causing havoc from the west to the east coast, and then north, we've yet to see more than a flurry and a scant inch on the Cape.  Disappointing for me, but a relief for many others.  We still have pansies blooming, but it's too early to predict if I'll get to wear my snow boots.  In the meantime, here are some fun science facts about snow, courtesy of the Marie Mitchell Museum on Nantucket that you can enjoy in total comfort whether you have snow, or not:      
FUN SCIENCE FACTS ABOUT SNOW
Sure, it’s fun to play in, to throw, and to make snow angels – and maybe not so fun to shovel – but, as hardy New Englanders, snow is part of our winter landscape. While you’re watching those flakes come down this year, here are some interesting facts to think about.
1. Snow is translucent, not white. Snow is made up of ice particles, which are colorless.
2. Each winter in the United States alone, at least 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 snowflakes fall from the sky.
3. Not every storm that produces snow is a blizzard. In order to be classified as a blizzard, winds must be at least 35 mph and visibility must be reduced by snowfall to less than .25 miles for at least three hours.
4. Other types of snowstorms include snow squalls and snow bursts.
5. Snowflakes always have six sides. The water molecules that form snowflakes can only fit together to form six-sided crystals.
6. In 1988, Nancy Knight, a scientist for the National Center for Atmospheric Research, observed two snowflakes that were exactly the same. The snowflakes came from a snowstorm in Wisconsin.
7. Snow is a mineral, according to the National Snow & Ice Data Center, because it’s a solid that is naturally occurring and inorganically formed.

A beautiful January afternoon on Cape Cod Bay
Although this is supposed to be the quiet time, we've hosted three groups of guests this month, all just looking for a break from their daily routines.  One couple even came from Florida and probably passed many Cape Codder "snowbirds' on the road escaping the cold in hopes of some Florida sunshine.  

And, there's a lot of this going on here in January:
The New England Patriots head to their ninth Super Bowl
And now, the Prequels Part I & 2


    
     December 2009 - North to Eastham – Part 1 – The Trip



The definition of the word travail is ‘painful, or laborious effort’.  It is also the origin of the word travel, a word we more commonly associate with much more pleasant connotations.  Although reaching our destination of Eastham, MA has proved to be all we had hoped, the actual move from Richmond, VA epitomized the word, travail.   It is not without noting that from the time we fell in love with our new home to the day we signed papers and were presented the keys, it took close to 9 months, and also felt very much like giving birth to a new life, complete with labor pains.  It took selling 3 homes in the worst real estate market of our lifetimes, settling an estate, and transferring way too many possessions in a caravan which consisted of a 24’ moving van, 2 additional vehicles, 4 people and 2 bewildered cats, a distance of 500+ miles through several large cities on I-95. 

Our last weekend in Virginia was spent partly in Alexandria at my niece’s wedding.  We should have been home preparing for the move, but wouldn’t have missed the family gathering for anything.   We had spent the week before moving down all the boxes of things that had been banished to the attic while showing the house, and trotting back and forth to the Fedex office with more and more forms that the settlement company came up with, daily to sign, notarize, fax and overnight to them.   On the Monday after the wedding, we closed on one of the two houses that should have settled that day, picked up the moving van and began loading.   On Tuesday, at the last moment, we closed on the other house and continued loading, but it was apparent that due to the constant interruptions from the settlement company, we would not be finished by the end of the day, nor would we have enough room to take all of our things.   The weather forecast for Wednesday, our scheduled day to drive, was torrential rain and gusty winds, all the way up the coast.   A quick call to our realtor and a lot of begging bought us another night at the house from our buyers, most of which was spent trying to finish loading in the already pouring rain.  With nothing left to sleep on, we finally checked into a motel in the wee hours of the next morning for a few hours of rest before the drive.  We returned to the house with bleary eyes to resolve loading and dispursing the last of our possessions, which was only accomplished by abandoning many of them.  Two loads to Goodwill, a load to the dump and many disbursements to friends and neighbors-later, we collected the cats and got on the road about 3 p.m.   This, after only a couple of hours of sleep…

Our caravan consisted of Ron, driving the moving van, fortified by a cooler full of Starbucks Doubleshot Expressos, our friend, Mark, driving Ron’s pickup truck, which was also fully loaded, and my son, Doug, driving my car, with me and two, very upset cats.  After watching their world shrink for 8 months, first to stage and show the house, then the rest packed into boxes and disappearing one by one into a truck, then stuffed into a loud and vibrating car, they were not at all sure about the outcome of their predicament.  With several stops for gas and food, coordinated by cell phones, we managed to pull into our motel in Hyannis by about 2 a.m., only to find that despite the information on the website, the cats were not welcome.  The clerk was kind enough to find Ron & I a room down the street that would also take the cats, so we left Doug & Mark there and returned to the car.  Unfortunately, the door to the cat carrier sprang open on the way, releasing Newfie, the black cat, to streak across the parking lot into the bushes against the motel, which were full of thorns.  Thankfully, he decided that the car looked like a better bet than me stomping and cursing through thorns, and he willingly returned.  As I gazed up at the street light in the parking lot, it began to flurry.  That, somehow, made the very long and tense trip feel fresh and hopeful again.  Several hours later, in the Barnstable Courthouse, with Mark and Doug cat-sitting, we signed the final papers, got keys, and finally went home.



North to Eastham – Part 2 - Honey, We’re Home
It took 2 days for Ron, Mark & Doug to unload everything, and my time was consumed by emptying and flattening boxes as fast as I could and placing things where I was most likely to be able to find them again.  My inherent tendency to create order from chaos definitely had me in my element.   While I plowed through the stacks they left me, Ron took the guys for a brief tour of our town’s First Encounter Beach on Cape Cod Bay, where they learned the joy of letting the stiff wind support them, with arms outstretched like airplanes.  First Encounter is named for the Mayflower Pilgrims’ first meeting with the native Wampanoag Indians.  Not wanting to take unfair advantage of my helpers, who had worked both tirelessly and cheerfully, we took the next day off to show them some of the reasons why we had chosen to live in this place. 

We all piled into the truck and drove down Cape to Provincetown, the farthest point north, passing through the scenic towns of Wellfleet and Truro.   The quaintness and constant proximity to water is what draws everyone to this area, mostly in the summer, but we find that winter brings its own special beauty and peacefulness to the small beach towns, and year-rounders have plenty of opportunities for entertainment of all kinds.   We had a delicious lunch at JoMama’s,  cruised for bargains in the most eclectic of shops and contemplated the wild beauty of the ocean at Race Point before returning to eat lobster rolls from the local Stop & Shop for dinner.   We never take for granted that our days now begin and end in a place that most people come to for only a week, or two, and wish they could stay longer.    It took about a week to become acclimated to the feeling that we would not have to leave, too. 

The cats, thrilled to be out of the car, and rediscovering their favorite furniture, smells and comfy spots, made themselves right at home exploring all the new nooks and crannies, smells and sights.  We’re all childishly delighted, after living at the bottom of a hill and surrounded by the forest, by now having a distant view of the Mid-Cape highway from our front windows.  The back windows look out on an open porch, surrounded by trellises covered in wisteria and roses, and birds, lots of birds.  I have made sure the bird feeders are full.  We tend to think of each window as a different T.V. channel.

Getting Settled
There is a delicate balance to changing from one location to another, and one must pre-determine this domino effect, or end up just spinning wheels.  For instance, the weather forecast was for snow, lots of snow.  The yard was covered with piles of flattened boxes, which were constantly being rearranged by the incoming Alberta Clipper, and needed to be taken to the dump before they got buried under the predicted 18” of snow.  But, one must have a town dump sticker for that, which requires proof of residency, which requires a new driver’s license and tags, which first require proof of new car insurance.  That took about 3 days to accomplish, which was just in time for the blizzard that covered most of the east coast.   MA is more prepared to deal with snow than VA, and though the snow was higher than my new boots, the promptly plowed roads were just fine to drive by the next day.   Luckily, with the help of our real estate agent, and new friend, Alan, Ron was able to find a great deal on a new snow blower just hours before the deluge. 

And now, a tribute to Cape dumps, or transfer stations, as they are called:  they are a recycler’s dream-come-true.  Not only is there a place to dispose of every possible item, each town has its own section to bring things that are too good to throw away, but aren’t wanted anymore.  Anyone can leave things, or take things, and they each have names.  Eastham’s is the Swap Shop, or Stock Exchange.  Harwich is the Treasure Chest, and so on.  They’re a great place to look for something you need, or to upgrade something you already have, not to mention get rid of things you no longer want.   I quickly found a bulletin board to replace the one I had to leave behind and dropped off several boxes of unwanted household items left by our sellers.

Another task was choosing a new bank and opening new accounts.  In our minds, there was no other choice than the Cape Cod Five, in business since 1855, originally The Cape Cod Five Cents Savings Bank.  The woman who opened our accounts was none other than Paige Pennypacker.   Talk about the right name for the job…

We chose the town of Eastham for its mid-Cape location and its lack of people-drawing commerce.  It is, however, only a mile and a half to the Orleans rotary, where we can find almost anything we want, or certainly whatever we need.   A word about rotaries:  they’re not as confusing as one first thinks after learning the simple rule.  Drivers inside the rotary have the right of way; drivers wanting to enter the rotary yield until they can take their place on the merry-go-round.  The beauty of rotaries is that if you miss your turnoff, you just go around again until you see the right one.  The danger is the out-of-towners who aren’t used to them.  ‘Nuff said.   Eastham’s main commercial area consists mainly of the Town Hall, fire station, post office, library, information center (open in summer), the Eastham Superette (wonderful sandwiches made fresh to order), Windmill Park, various restaurants, motels and rental cottages, and of course, the entrance to the Cape Cod National Seashore, created in 1961 by President John F, Kennedy, and run by the National Parks Service.  Our neighborhood is called Fort Hill.  It was never actually a fort, but boasts a magnificent lookout over Nauset Harbor, the salt marshes, and beyond to the Atlantic Ocean.  It’s a favorite meeting spot for year-rounders to come to sip morning coffee, take a lunch break or for quiet contemplation, or fitness walks on the walking and bike trails, anytime.  On the 3/10th of a mile walk from our home to the lookout, we pass the famous Captain Penniman House, a French Second Empire style home, built in 1868 by a whaling captain, and noted for the whalebone jaws in the front yard.

On Tuesday, all too soon, it was time to take Mark & Doug to Logan airport in Boston.  We had planned the early evening flights so that we could spend the day showing them the big city where we both used to live.  But, no one really wanted to leave Eastham before they absolutely had to, and our timing backfired as we were forced to brave rush hour traffic to get to their flights.  Next to South Koreans, Boston is known for its crazy drivers, and Tuesday was no exception.  Despite some close calls and an unscheduled detour on the Mass Pike heading west, we made it back intact.  

And, now that the holidays are nearing an end, our attention turns to finding good tenants for the rental units.  The B&B idea has sensibly faded into more of a seasonal or year round scenario, a work smarter, not harder philosophy, however, depending on availability of our guest quarters, we may dabble when it suits us.  Each day of sorting, rearranging and exploring brings us closer to feeling more at home than guests.  We like to think of ourselves as the current caretakers of this wonderful property that others have tended before us.  We look forward to seeing the surprises that each season brings and welcoming friends to share it with us.  















                                                                                                                           

Monday, December 17, 2018

2013 - Wicked Awesome August


WELCOME TOURISTS!  There's a bumper sticker occasionally seen around here that I've always found a little distasteful.  It sneers, "I'm not on your vacation".  Although one can't help noticing that when vacationers outnumber locals, our small, quiet towns can seem like a free-for-all, I give kudos to Eastham's Chamber of Commerce Executive Director, Jim Russo, who reminded members this month that "tourism is the driving force of Eastham's economy".  This is not the first time Jim has encouraged us to take the high ground on an issue and it's a pleasure to see someone gently nudge the weary locals by stating the obvious; in this case, don't bite the hand that feeds you.  We are truly grateful not only for the tourists who visit our B&B, but for everyone who contributes to the financial well-being of our neighbors.  We are actually on your vacation and we hope you have a nice one and come back!  
ROSES, ROSES, EVERYWHERE! - across from Eastham's town green



off the beaten track in Orleans
The other day, when a motorist stopped me in a parking lot to ask if I was a local, I stifled a silly grin and got out what I hoped was a nonchalant "yup" and some requested directions to a lumber store.  After almost four years as a year-rounder, one would think life would adjust to the mundane, but I still wake up feeling like a kid in a candy store.  I barely approach the 15 generations of Cape descendants that some folks around here claim, but I do feel a little more qualified this summer to claim local status since I've now suffered through some of the not-so-sweet initiations, like deer ticks and poison ivy.  There's nothing like a whole itchy month of August to earn a "local" badge.      


New England is pretty passionate about their sports teams, but after last year's disastrous Red Sox performance, I've held off bringing up the subject.  When your team comes in dead last for the season, there's nowhere to go but up, and so far, that's what our Sox have done, currently jockeying for first place.  Of interest though, was the July 31st game against the Mariners.  Bear with me...tied in the 9th inning and seeming to battle on endlessly, we finally succumbed to sleep before the end of the game.  But, in the morning we were elated to find out that the Sox had finally won in the 15th inning, which made it truly the longest game of the year, beginning in the month of July and ending in the month of August!  GO SOX!    
Hallowed ground of Fenway Park 
Through the Calamine-pink tinge of poison ivy, I've been focusing on some of the simpler pleasures that come from the feel and smell of sheets and towels fresh from the dryer and precisely tucked in for the next guests.  The satisfaction of stocking the kitchens with lots of fresh fruit and exotic yogurt flavors.  The delight of being able to open the windows and doors for some fresh Canadian air.  My new hibiscus making itself at home in the garden with its plate-size white blooms.  Taking the back roads to find pictures waiting to be discovered.  And, my new air conditioners that keep me as comfortable as it gets with a wicked rash.  Simple pleasures are always there for the finding.  
more simple pleasures
August guests came from as far away as France, England, Canada, Texas, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey and Massachusetts.  We've had our second engagement in the Studio (at least that we know about) and we host the second generation of guests whose parents traveled here from the UK two years before.    
Peaches apples, tomatoes and cukes-the gardens keep giving.
It's not Fall, yet, but I did see the first couple of brown leaves make their descent on a gentle sea breeze.  The new garden is providing tomatoes and cucumbers for several families and the peaches from our tree are magically turning into jam by my beach plum jelly connection.  Stop and Shop has their first tempting colorful shipment of chrysanthemums.  Regardless of whether residents never want summer to end or they can't wait, August malaise settled over the area like a thick, foggy marine layer.  And, desperate people still call without much hope of finding last minute Labor Day reservations.  These things don't lie.  You can count on Fall and the slower pace it brings being right around the corner.      
Last days of sailing Camp in the Orleans Town Cove

2013 - Mystifying March

Snowy cranberry bogs in Harwich
In like a lion? 

          In like a lamb?  

                    Winter?  

                              Spring?  

                                         M A R C H !
First Snow Drop flower
It's just the mysterious month of March as always with something for everyone.  New England kicked off the month as the recipient of yet another 3-day-long Superstorm.  It crippled the cities with snow and ice, but saved just big winds and slush for the coastline.  After the third big Nor'easter of the winter, our dunes in Eastham are looking sawtoothed and ready for a bigger breach.  With weather like this, not having a direct waterview is more of a comfort than a disadvantage.  I always love a good storm, but after the third straight day of listening to the windows go "whoooooooooooo" and chasing the porch furniture, even I was ready for a break.   The extreme winter didn't stop guests from Seattle and New York from spending a cozy Presidents Day Weekend with us, and couples from Boston and Watertown, MA, Omaha, Nebraska and Bethel, CT joined us for March's preview of the coming season.   
Bird TV, Bob & Tom's favorite channel

No sooner than flipping the calendar to March, we had our first grackle, starling and flicker visits at the suet feeders, and shortly thereafter heard the familiar screech of red wing blackbirds.  They always know what month it is and where they're supposed to be.  The bluebirds left us briefly in protest of the table saw ruckus in the driveway, but they're back to claim their spots.  The flower bulbs are never afraid of a little blizzard either, and I managed to get about 25 bags of mulch down on the gardens while I still had a chance to dodge little heads popping up.  Spring chores begin early.

There's a new Cape Cod bear in town.  After appearing on our kitchen barstool for a couple of days, I finally inquired where he/she came from.  The best I can trace the origins is that someone put him in our friend Ray's truck in the Stop and Shop parking lot.  It then found it's way to Ron's car in our driveway and then to our son's car, who brought it into the kitchen.  I get it.  Since the authorities thought it wise to drug and relocate the real Cape Cod bear last year, someone has created a new bear-spotting game.  He has since moved on to surprise our friend, Jose, and we look forward to hearing about the next siting.

The big news for Crosswinds Bed and Breakfast this month is the renovation of the Cottage.  As impressive as a 4' by 12' closet is, we felt that the space could be better used as part of the main room.  So when the season quieted, Ron put on his carpenter hat and tool belt and created a sleep alcove, adding a sizable space that will accomodate a futon for larger parties.  The cement floor has been replaced with cheerful, blonde wood and a fresh coat of paint has added the finishing touch.  
BEFORE
      Click on the following link to see the AFTER results:  

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T5nHWCyd9qg


Precious local commodity
I ran into my Beach Plum Jelly 'connection' last week, who has just returned from wintering in Florida.  Sue scavenges the Cape every summer for prime beach plum locations and turns her crop into delicious jellies that are sold to benefit an organization that provides scholarships for women.  She gives me a special price to buy in bulk for the B&B rooms.  I learned last summer that jelly makers will share their frozen beach plum juice with other jelly makers, but they never reveal their picking locations.  It's a precious local commodity and lucky is the one who has "a connection".  
Newly remodeled dunes
Once again, I've been lucky enough to be offered another chance to exhibit some of my photos.  Since this is my second time with the Cape Cod Five, I wanted to do a brand new showing that no one had seen before, so I printed and framed some favorites from London, Copenhagen, Paris and Amsterdam that we'd wanted to hang at home, anyway.  One thing led to another, and I was offered the Artist of the Month spot in June at the Hope Chest, an upscale Consignment Shop, run by the Lower Cape Outreach Council.  This one will be a mixed theme, so I'll be able to print some new favorites to go along with the already exhibited ones.  Considering how many good photographers there are on the Cape, it's so gratifying to be included.  
This has been on my bulletin board for decades.
Finally, yes it's true, I was overheard wishing for "one more good snow" before Spring.  And while yes it's also true that we received about 4" of snow on the last day of winter and about 6" in the first week of Spring, I really can't accept any of the credit for it.  Trust me, if I had the power to do that, there would have been a lot more snow days off from school in Virginia when I was growing up.  So, it's definitely, "in like a lion" this year.  And without it, we couldn't have created our Snow Bunny homage to Spring.
Welcome, Spring!
That was my volunteer parking place.  Going, going...

Monday, November 26, 2018

2018 November - Thankful

Of all the Halloween thingsI saw this year, I think this one takes the prize.
I know, since it's November, we're expected to be talking turkey, or tofurkey if you're avoiding meat to save the planet.  There will be plenty of time for remembering the Pilgrims' first dinner with their reluctant Indian neighbors.  But first, if you live in my town, there's the Eastham turnip to celebrate with it's own annual festival.  Everybody's good at something, and we just happen to grow wicked awesome turnips and find interesting ways to eat, and yes even celebrate them.  
Local restaurants will vie for top turnip honors in the Turnip Cook-Off, with the public sampling creative turnip dishes and casting votes for the People’s Choice Award. The Higher Ground String Band will entertain with lively blue grass music ~ and even a turnip tune or two! Turnip-themed competitions such as the Turnip Shuck-Off (who can peel a turnip the fastest?) and the Enormous Turnip Weight Guessing Contest will amuse even the stodgiest of vegetable eaters! A lively Turn Up for Fun Kids Zone will entice young ones with turnip-themed games, activities, crafts as well as a juggler, balloon artist, face painter, temporary tattoos and more! The young at heart will go turn-nuts for Cape Cod Henna’s turnip body art. Come for lunch ~ turnip taste buds will be tantalized with pulled pork & turnip slaw ~ or try crepes (both sweet and savory varieties), gluten free and vegan offerings, or pizza. Shop early for the holidays. This is the largest gathering of LOCAL vendors on the Outer Cape ~ artisan wares, handcrafts, LOCAL produce and food stuffs ~ and of course, Eastham Turnips will be on sale here!

The winds have returned to us for the winter. They range anywhere from soothing us to sleep to giving the trees a good "pruning" of dead branches.  It's also the time of year when in between the slate gray, stormy skies come days when the sun bathes what leaves are still holding on tight above deep multicolor piles beneath them with such golden light that it beckons you to take a day off from chores and revel in the beauty.  We know this seasonal treat will be fleeting before winter paints a different picture, so that's just what we did, letting the house fend for itself while we took a drive to Provincetown, literally the end of our world at the northernmost tip of the Cape.  We combined a couple of errands with one of the suggestions on our "10 Favorite Things We Like To Do" list in the B&B suites.  Across from the Town Hall, a very nondescript place called George's has been there since P'town was mostly a Portuguese fishing town.  From all appearances, there is nothing to draw your attention to it other than a sign's promise of food and drink inside.
Upon entering, one finds a rather dark, narrow building with booths on one side and a bar on the other.  Nothing fancy, however, keep walking and you'll come to the takeout area where, among other mouthwatering temptations, you can order lamb gyros, a favorite of ours. 
Now, remember what it looks like from the street?  Well, keep walking towards the back and go outside and you will find a beautiful deck that overlooks Cape Cod Bay.  In the summer, one can sit at the tables and enjoy the breeze and stunning million dollar view of the water and you'd never suspect from the modest outside front what a treat awaits you.  That's the kind of insider info that guests appreciate being in on.  We took our gyros home for a delicious dinner treat. 

And, nothing is ever too corny to do in P'town, We like to let our inner-tourist out.


And, finally, some "new-to-me" information from the historic trip that brought the Mayflower Pilgrims to our town, which prompted this whole annual Thanksgiving holiday ritual that Native Americans refer to as a Day of Mourning.  A guest commentary appeared in our Cape Codder weekly by Jack Sheedy, a resident of the Cape Cod town of Dennis, in which he reminded us that the Pilgrims stopped in our town of Eastham first in November of 1620 before high-tailing it to Plymouth in December.  In 17th century manuscripts, they refer to finding three sea creatures on the beach that they called grampuses, "about 5-6 paces long, about 2 inches thick of fat, and fleshed like a swine."  These were likely whales that were harvested of their blubber.  As they made their way around what is Cape Cod Bay, which is still a favorite gathering place of these creatures, they decided to name it Grampus Bay.  Imagine what that would have done to the classic song 'Olde Cape Cod' if it had stuck.

If you're fond of sand dunes and salty air
Quaint little villages here and there
You're sure to fall in love with Old Cape Grampus

If you like the taste of a lobster stew
Served by a window with an ocean view
You're sure to fall in love with Old Cape Grampus

Winding roads that seem to beckon you
Miles of green beneath the skies of blue
Church bell chiming on a Sunday morn
Remind you of the town where you were born

If you spend an evening you'd want to stay
Watching the moonlight on Cape Cod Grampus
You're sure to fall in love with Old Cape Grampus 

I don't think so...

First 2019 snowflake alert:  November 14th

resulting in this:

Cooler weather indicators - our heat-seeking cat-thermostats


Saturday, October 27, 2018

2018 October - Not Quite Summer / Not Quite Fall

GO SOX - all the way to the World Series!
Sometimes all the usual seasonal things seem just too mundane to mention anymore, so let's just get that out of the way quickly:

Pumpkins - CHECK  
Chrysanthemums - CHECK
 Falling leavesCHECK   
Wellfleet Oysterfest - CHECK 
First frost - CHECK 
Ripe cranberries - CHECK
 Halloween costumes - CHECK  
  
All accounted for in New England.  We're a very traditional place, after all. But, I've always got my eye out for the UN-usual, and I think I found a couple of Cape Cod things that might qualify. Here's one, now:

Did someone order a deer?
For those who are tired of doing the same old thing every evening, the Parks Service sponsored a Full Moon Lighthouse Tour of Nauset Light in October.  BYOF [bring your own flashlight].  Now, doesn't that sound like a fun thing to do [assuming it's a clear night]?  Our light was moved from a pair of beacons in Chatham to the Eastham location in 1923 in pieces on an ox cart.  It moved again in 1996, but this time just across the road to stay ahead of erosion.  

Eastham's Nauset Light
If you thought that was a grand idea, have you ever been to a Puddin' Party?  Well, I can totally recommend the experience.  Created on a whim by our musical-genius friend, Chandler Travis, it consisted of live music, an introduction to his friend, Paulette Humanbeing who was visiting from California, and a fridge full of what else, your choice of chocolate, vanilla, or butterscotch pudding.  [Special kudos also go out to Belinda's awesome homemade lasagna.]  Paulette, an artist and musician, was a delight, contributing her own unique musical genre somewhere between comical, political, and wonderful whimsy.  One reason why Chandler is one of my favorite musicians is that I never have to decide what kind of music I'm in the mood to listen to.  He's likely to play a little bit of anything and everything accompanied by a devoted group of other incredibly talented and creative musicians.  His latest CD, Backward Crooked From the Sunset can be previewed at this link:  Backward Crooked From The Sunset

Wonderful treat, Chan!  What's next?              
Kami Lyle, Burke MeKelvey, Chandler Travis, Dinty Child, & John Clark
Still uninspired?  How about this:  The Lower Cape Curling Club is hosting a series of clinics to familiarize participants with the basics of the sport.  The 11-week season begins at the end of October with the league scheduling games for Wednesday mornings and Sunday nights.
Nope, not these curls...
That's the one.
When you think of Fall in New England, you probably picture something from a calendar page showing spectacular reds, oranges and gold leaves of Vermont mountains.  The coastal colors of Autumn are a bit more muted, with surprise dabs of bright contrast when you least expect to find them, in the middle of a salt marsh, down a winding path, a bright vine curling around a centuries-old tree, or tucked in fancily on a front lawn.  It's a more modest display tempered by the ocean, but no less appreciated for its subtle and surprising beauty. 

A red carpet on an Eastham salt marsh
Luscious orange towering over a neighborhood pond.
A hint of yellow catching the sun at the National Seashore Headquarters
We've entered the quiet season now, with only the occasional B&B guest venturing across the bridge, each with their own specific agenda.  There is an almost infantile joy at approaching the main road and not having to wait for any traffic going by.  I encountered a friend in the grocery store recently who remarked, "There were hundreds of people in these aisles in the summer and I didn't know one of them, but now when I come in it takes twice as long because I know every other person."  This is the real Cape Cod that pre-existed tourism.  This is the best reason to live here, but never forgetting that tourism makes it possible for many.  

Enjoy your Autumn, wherever it finds you.







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