Soap stars, Golden Statues and 5 unforgettable Ocean City Scenes: Our Weekly Rundown

Golden photo ops

When we’re out talking to people on the boardwalk, sometimes we get the opportunity to go a little further than just having a conversation, sometimes this happens:

Scoping out the beach

As part of our continuing Ocean City Stories coverage, we spoke to Ferris Berlin, a scoper who was working the 39th Street beach and had a great time being Ferris. We also got him on video:

Crew 7

With the crew competitions on the horizon this weekend, we headed out to speak with Crew 7 Crew Chief Kevin Johnson. OceanCity.com sponsored Crew 7 this year and intends on being out on the beach to cheer them to victory.

Fun on the boards

In case you hadn’t picked up on the trend, we really enjoy Facebook Live, and we know you do as well. We’re doing our best to bring you some of the beach scenes you may be missing while you are away from Ocean City.

Broadway reimagined

Our contributor Jeff Smith talked to two professional television actors who are part of an original play being performed in Princess Anne. The pair reworked an acclaimed original one act play into a full length one.

Great excuses

If you’re looking for a good excuse to visit the beach after Labor Day, let us suggest returning to the beach for a beer festival at Hooper’s. Spend the afternoon relaxing in the September sun and enjoying some of the best beer the region has to offer. Follow that up with an afternoon nap and then an evening out on the town. There is seriously no better way to spend the weekend. Trust us.

Return of Ocean City in 60 Seconds

We were off for a couple of weeks, but we finally returned with a wicked-cool hat and great recommendations for the week ahead. This week we’re thinking about North Ocean City and why you should spend an evening knocking around up there, or a day there on the beach.

and one final recommendation

Saturday is the Crew Competition on the Inlet, featuring different rescue and endurance games among the Ocean City Beach Patrol members. It’s certainly worth the trip downtown.

Worcester County cooling stations announced

(July 25, 2016) With heat indices through Saturday expected to range from 95 to 105, the public is invited to escape the heat by visiting the Worcester County Recreation Center (WCRC) in Snow Hill as well as any of the five Worcester County branch libraries in Ocean City, Ocean Pines, Berlin, Snow Hill and Pocomoke. Senior citizens over the age of 55 may also seek relief from the heat at any of the four Worcester County Senior Centers, which are located in Ocean City, Berlin, Snow Hill and Pocomoke, during standard operating hours.
The WCRC is open Monday – Thursday from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m., Friday from 6 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., and closed Saturday and Sunday. For more information, call Recreation and Parks at 410-632-2144.
For library branch hours of operation, contact the Worcester County Library closest to you or visit www.worcesterlibrary.org.
Worcester County Emergency Services urges residents to drink plenty of fluids, avoid alcohol and caffeine, and take frequent breaks from stressful activities to avoid becoming dehydrated and overheated, which can lead to heat cramps, heat exhaustion, or heat stroke. Be aware that heat exhaustion and heat stroke are both serious conditions.
Heat cramps are painful spasms that usually occur in leg and abdomen muscles and are accompanied by heavy sweating. Administer first aid by placing firm pressure on cramping muscles, or gently massage to relieve spasms. Give an individual suffering with heat cramps small sips of water. If nausea occurs, discontinue use.
Heat exhaustion is a mild form of heatstroke. Symptoms may include heavy sweating, extreme weakness, muscle cramps, nausea and headache, vomiting or fainting. Heat exhaustion can be treated by drinking liquids and resting in a cool, shaded area.
Heatstroke is a severe medical emergency characterized by a body temperature greater than 105 degrees. It can develop quickly and is often accompanied by dry, red skin, convulsions, disorientation, delirium and coma. The victim should be kept in a cool area, and emergency medical care should be obtained immediately by dialing 911. Delaying assistance can be fatal.

Breathing Under Dirt: An interview with Michael O’Leary and Grant Aleksander

They both stand when I approach. Michael O’Leary is tall. He has a warm face that invites conversation and his handshake is firm, strong. Here is a man who exudes confidence, a man accustomed to sitting down and chatting with total strangers about his life and his work. He wears blue jeans, a black T-shirt and a gray jacket which he takes off halfway through our conversation. It is a warm day in Berlin but not hot, and as we sit on the porch of the Atlantic Hotel a breeze drifts lazily over us. His silver analog watch seems large on his arm, but it is big enough for me to read from afar.

Grant Aleksander has a shock of blonde hair that is cut medium length and frames his youthful face. He has piercing eyes and when he talks he looks directly at me. I am almost pulled into him, and I can see why millions of television viewers for years were enraptured by his charisma. He folds his hands across a black shirt, blue jean clad legs crossed at the ankles. He rocks in the chair and looks out onto the street.

“This is a lovely little town,” he says.

“The coolest small town in America,” I say with a grin.

Michael and Grant speak with an easy going style, and they seem remarkably comfortable with one another, an ease that comes from years of friendship and experience. They are both former cast members of the longest running drama in American television history, Guiding Light. Over the years they became close friends and developed something of a shorthand together. While they don’t complete each other’s sentences, they do seem to read each other’s thoughts. And when it comes to the play they have come to Berlin to promote, they are of the same mind.

Set in the south during the Korean Conflict, Breathing Under Dirt is about Patience, a woman plagued by the memory of the dead: her father, her sister, the dogwoods in the garden. She tends to her father’s chrysanthemums in that same garden with her wheelchair-bound mother. Grace gives Patience brutal honesty and tough love. The two women clash over the past. Patience has put her father on a pedestal as a way to deal with her own painful memories. Grace, with biting sarcasm, refuses to let her dead husband’s image be falsely polished.

In the midst of her struggle Patience meets Jack Riley, who is the epitome of all the good she wanted her father to be. He is strong and firm, he has eyes only for her, and best of all he doesn’t drink. “Only grenadine and coke, like me,” Patience tells her mother. But Jack may be just as unreal as her memories of her father. When we first meet him he’s a little too perfect, and as their relationship unfolds we see a darker side of the man Patience believes to be her savior.

The play started as an entry to the Manhattan Repertory Theatre’s One Act Play Competition in the spring of 2016. After it won first place, Michael, in a furious month of writing, expanded it to a full length show. Grant, who directed the one act version, was eager to stay involved as the play grew in length and depth.

“There is no way I could do this play without Grant,” Michael says.

“The writing is compelling,” Grant adds. “The play leads you to believe it is about something bigger than itself.”

The two men struggled with casting for the part of Jack until Grant had an idea. “I wondered if I could still play the young Marine,” he jokes as he flashes a grin that soap opera fans across the world remember. The casting was a perfect fit. Jack is a jaded soldier just back from the Korean Conflict who, unlike Patience, does not believe in the power of love. “War conquers everything,” he tells her, “Including love.” He is the antagonist to Patience’s fragile ego, and it seems to be a role suited to a man who spent more than twenty years playing the troubled Phillip Spaulding.

Grant will also direct the play, and for him that dual role is the biggest challenge. “As a director I get caught up in directing the play, in standing back and observing the actors and giving them notes. As an actor, though, I have to be engaged in the moment.” He smiles warmly. “My wife will be there at every performance, though, giving me notes.” He laughs. “She tells it like it is.”

The play, according to Michael, is about reconciliation and rebirth, about coming to terms with your own mistakes and recognizing that in order to ask for the forgiveness of others we must first seek that forgiveness within ourselves. For both of them seeing the play produced will be the culmination of some intense hard work. “It’s one thing to write the play,” Michael says. “It’s another thing entirely to see it produced.”

Grant adds, “Michael has written some real truths. The production, and the performances, will be full of the same heart.”

In that vein, Michael and Grant have recruited some bigs names for the production in Princess Anne in August. Tina Sloan, another Guiding Light alum, will play Grace. Cynthia Watros, who also spent some time on Guiding Light (and is well known to those of us who watched Lost), plays Patience. “Cynthia perfects this role,” Michael says. “I am in awe of her talent.” Rounding out the cast will be local actor Robert Forrester as the father.

It was Robert, in fact, who helped bring Breathing Under Dirt to the Eastern Shore.

“It’s impossible get a play produced in New York,” Michael says. “So we knew that if we wanted to take the first step to get this together then we wanted to do it in a regional theater.”

Robert has been a life-long Guiding Light fan and follows Michael through social media. When he saw the play had won the competition he sent Michael a congratulatory note, mentioning that he was part of the new Lower Shore Performing Arts Company (LSPAC) and they were looking for a show to help raise money.

“I felt I knew Robert through our emails pretty well,” says Michael. “I liked the idea of bringing the first production of the show to a small theater. And if we could help with this new company, help them raise some money, that would be great, too.”

Grant, who is from the Baltimore area, loved the idea of bringing the play to a small community. His wife, in true Eastern Shore, everyone knows everyone way, is old friends with Kathryn Redden, a producer of the play and another founding member of LSPAC. Bringing the play to Princess Anne seemed a perfect fit. The team wanted to draw on the  community and held auditions to round out smaller parts with local actors. “There is a lot of talent here,” Grant adds.

During our nearly two hour chat on the porch of the Atlantic Hotel we are interrupted half a dozen times by fans. They do not seek autographs, but instead want to have their photos taken with “Rick” and “Phillip.” Both men are gracious and kind with fans of a show that has been off the air for seven years. One young woman tells us it is her mother who is the bigger fan of the long running soap opera.

“You’ll have to drag her out to see the play in August,” Michael jokes.

She laughs. “Oh, I don’t think I’ll have to drag her.”

Breathing Under Dirt, written by Michael O’Leary, directed by Grant Aleksander and starring Cynthia Watros and Tina Sloan, will be presented at the Ella Fitzgerald Center for Performing Arts in Princess Anne, MD, on August 13 and 14, 2016. For more information and to purchase tickets go to lowershorepac.org.

Inaugural Delmarva Paddling Weekend registration begins

Early bird registration is now open for the inaugural Delmarva Paddling Weekend, which will be held September 30 through October 2, 2016. The event features guided excursions and clinics by kayak, canoe and stand-up paddleboard on the Nanticoke and Pocomoke Rivers, Broad Creek and Nassawango Creek, the historic mill ponds near Laurel, Delaware, and Chincoteague Bay behind Assateague Island east of Snow Hill, Maryland.

Social events and special camping packages are available for this new outdoor event that celebrates the paddling experiences around Laurel and Snow Hill and showcases the towns as paddling “Trail Towns” — central locations to stay, play, dine and drink before and after paddling experiences. Both Laurel and Snow Hill are situated on beautiful waterways with easy access to amazing outdoor recreation opportunities and proximity to excellent state parks, and the towns’ natural beauty and rich histories make them prime destinations for both nature and heritage tourists.

Modeled after the successful Delmarva Birding Weekend, now in its 21st year, participants can choose from an à la carte menu of clinics and paddling trips. They can learn basic kayaking and SUP skills, and try their luck at kayak fishing. Interpretive paddling tours guided by local naturalists and historians will focus on the birds and wildlife of local waterways, connections our local rivers have to historical luminaries as Harriet Tubman and Captain John Smith, and twilight ghost tours on the water.

Participants may bring their own human-powered boats or boards, or local outfitters will provide kayaks, canoes and SUPs for those in need. Participating outfitters include DelMarVa Board Sport Adventures, Quest Kayak, Coastal Kayak, Delaware Paddlesports, and the Pocomoke River Canoe Company.

Locals and visitors alike are invited to participate. For those wishing to stay or camp, special accommodations will be offered at Trap Pond State Park, Pocomoke River State Park, and the bed & breakfasts of Snow Hill.

Event sponsors include the University of Delaware’s Sustainable Coastal Communities Initiative, Delaware Sea Grant, the Town of Snow Hill, Delmarva Almanac, the Delaware Office of Tourism, the Greater Laurel Chamber of Commerce, and DelMarVa Board Sport Adventures.

The Delmarva Paddling Weekend is organized by Conservation Community Consulting, LLC along with a host of other partners. To register and learn more, please visit www.DelmarvaPaddling.com.

Southern Delaware Tourism supports and encourages the identification, development and promotion of sustainable, year-round tourism in Southern Delaware that contributes to economic growth and improves the quality of life. For more information, call Southern Delaware Tourism at 302-856-1818 or visit their website, www.VisitSouthernDelaware.com.

4 ways to keep Pokemon Go from ruining your vacation

It is pretty rare that a fad has the tacit or even explicit endorsement of the older generation but even for those of us who don’t play at (participate in?) Pokemon Go there is something of an admission of excitement that the game encourages kids to get out of the house. For those kids who can be a little persnickety about enjoying the great outdoors, Pokemon Go presents grownups the opportunity to add a little color to their days and even learn to like watching kids play video games for a change. What follows are some of our favorite ways to make Pokemon Go fun (or at least tolerable) for people who aren’t playing but whose young or old traveling companions are under the Pokemon thrall.

lifesaving station

Check the Ocean City Life Saving Station Museum

As we wrote last week, many businesses can use Pokemon Go as a way of enticing people to their doors. It works well enough that there even are guidelines. If is a fact, though, that Pokemon creatures are naturally attracted to cultural places. The Ocean City Lifesaving Museum is right along the boardwalk, so it is already an attractive place to hunt Pokemon. Poke your head inside and take the tour and you can learn a lot about the beach culture of bygone times so you get to leave with a little knowledge as well as a potential Pokemon capture.

The horse-naming lottery allows people to make donations for the opportunity to name the new horses.
The horse-naming lottery allows people to make donations for the opportunity to name the new horses.

Check around the Assateague Island Visitor Center

If the prospect of seeing wild horses isn’t appealing enough, maybe seeing wild horses while hunting for Pokemon will do the trick. There are plenty of nooks and crannies near the visitors center where the creatures might be found and, when you’re done, you can learn all about life on the island past and present. Out behind the visitors center is a nature trail that covers lots of different places including the restored Rackliffe House and astounding views of the Assawoman Bay. Once you’re done there, pop across to the National Seashore which is certain to be a creature hotbed.

Photo (and capture) by MegaCallum
Photo (and capture) by MegaCallum

Hunt on your way to the beach

If getting out to Assateague isn’t your bag, remember that when you step out of your hotel, there is a very good chance a Pokemon creature stands between you and the beach. Hotels all over the island have made an effort to attract creatures for their guests to hunt, so don’t be afraid to encourage exploration of the immediate area before you head out on larger quests.

Scour quaint, charming Pokemon-ridden Downtown Berlin

pokemonberlinIf the Pokemon hunting is cutting into your shopping time, or if you want to sit and grab a snack or a cold drink between sorties, pop over to Berlin, where it is quiet and the sidewalks are wide and creatures are out in force. From the porch of the Atlantic Hotel to the Taylor House Museum, there always is the opportunity to let your kids hunt Pokemon while you enjoy your vacation.

OCBP Crew Chief Kevin Johnson: the new old guy on the job

After 11 years working the inlet, OCBP crew chief Kevin Johnson moved uptown. Part of the attraction was a new view and new patrons to look after, sure. But the move was also tied to a larger culture wherein getting to know as much of the beach as possible both enriches the job and gives the crew chiefs and other OCBP members  a better overall view of the beach they call home for the better part of every summer.

The Ocean City Beach Patrol is helmed by people who have been guards for a decade or more. What makes is effective and functional is that the management structure is build upon this kind of commitment to the beach and to the job. Being talented is important, but so is being wise. OCBP management cultivtes a kind of beach wisdom by learning all of the job in as many of the places as possible.

Kevin Johnson became an SRT after graduating from Stephen Decatur. His brother was on the beach patrol and Kevin thought it would be a fun summer job. More than a decade later it has become much more than that.

“It just grew on me,” he said.

Friends hanging out on the 39th Street Beach. For people who spend the whole summer in Ocean City, staking out a regular place is pretty common.
Friends hanging out on the 39th Street Beach. For people who spend the whole summer in Ocean City, staking out a regular place is pretty common.

Moving up the ranks in the Ocean City Beach Patrol

It didn’t take Kevin too long to realize that he wanted to move up in the beach patrol. He was substitute teaching off season and in season he thought he had more to contribute. Taking on more responsibility for a job that already comes with life and death decisions isn’t something he went into lightly, but it was something he felt he was ready for. He not only wanted to contribute more to the OCBP, but knew that he could be helpful in cultivating crews for the coming generations.

When he started as the crew chief of crew one, down in the inlet, he had his chance to start affecting the OCBP’s big picture in small ways.

Samantha Snyder and Melissa Thornton riding the waves at the 39t Street Beach.
Samantha Snyder and Melissa Thornton riding the waves at the 39t Street Beach.

‘A different way of guarding’

Starting at the inlet and working your way north the character of the beach as well as that of the patrons begins to change. The inlet beaches tend to attract shorter term guests. Day trippers and weekenders, people who may be less familiar with Ocean City or who may visit less regularly. This isn’t a hard and fast rule, but as broad stoke descriptions go, it is close to the mark.

Moving north, the blend changes. The proportion of people who are there for the week or two or even for the entire summer flips. Lifeguards get to know the people on the beach in a different kind of way. The intellectual requirements are different.

At the Inlet, there are more general questions and more of them. As you move uptown, the relationship between the guards and the patrons changes to one that is based on longer term interactions. The training for each, though informs the way guards respond.

Kevin said keeping interactions friendly, accurate and brief while scanning the water is something that is ingrained as part of the OCBP training.

“You learn to answer any questions beach patrons have keeping your eye on the beach,” he said. “During the academy, it is reinforced, ‘Eyes on the water.’”

In the heard of the Crew Seven area of responsibility.
In the heard of the Crew Seven area of responsibility.

Keeping in Shape

This is the last year Kevin will be a 20-something crew chief. Looking 30 in the face, he knows that the physical part of the job is the challenge he will have to rise to every year for the rest of the time he works for the OCPB.

“The job keeps me young, we’re working out all the time,” he said. “It does get a little harder.”

Hanging out with the younger people doesn’t just help keep him young, it also wakes his competitive urges. After 11 years he still is one of the top swimmers on the patrol, and he expects to keep it that way by keeping in shape during the off season. But in the middle of July, the off-season seems a million years away.

Ferris Berlin’s Day at Work

He’s young and good-looking and equally good natured, so it is hard to give Ferris Berlin too hard a time about his name. I met him while I was hanging out at the 39th Street beach taking photos of OCBP Crew 7 members and waiting for an interview. He’s a scoper. That is, he takes photos of people on the beach or boards in Ocean City and the company he works for makes them into those little telescope photo souvenirs (or key chains or about a thousand other things) you can buy as a memento. He gets either a commission or a flat rate depending upon the gig. He told me. It isn’t critical.

When I was a reporter in Berlin, I interviewed one of the early scopers, a woman who (if memory serves, I can’t find the story) was one of the first “girl” scopers. She would use a camera, but they still could turn the whole production around in a day. Ferris, suing a digital camera and a couple of SD cards turns in over in a few hours.

DSC_0375When he’s on the beach (he shares the 10 blocks between 34th and 44th streets with a buddy) a courier comes by at about 2 p.m. and people can pick their photos up (if they choose) as early as 2:30 p.m. Once he’s taken his last photo at about 5 p.m. he hustles back to the shop and has them turned around by 5:30 p.m. Hustle, here, is the operative word.

Scopers are hustlers in the positive, rather than the pejorative sense. They make their living by being fast and charming all at the same time. Ferris is charming enough. Mostly, he took the job to spend the summer on the beach. In the name of simplicity, he’s from outside of Philadelphia and hadn’t really intended on spending the summer at the beach.

He and his 34-44 street buddy met some girl scopers and thought it was a cool way to spend the summer. They applied together for summer of 2017 but were surprised to receive a call and an offer for the 2016 season.

“We didn’t even know they were hiring still for this year,” he said.

They got a place and now spend their days and early evenings working their sections of boardwalk and beach, taking the best photos they can and hoping to convince enough people to buy the occasional trinket that makes their time on the beach worthwhile.

 

Exploring Assateague Island from the beginning

There certainly are ponies and nature trails and ghost crabs to catch, but one of the great parts of going to Assateague National Seashore is hitting the Barrier Island Visitor Center first. The visitor center is both a place for rest and relaxation (even when it isn’t open) as well as a place where you can get some context before or even during your trip to the island.

The horse-naming lottery allows people to make donations for the opportunity to name the new horses.
The horse-naming lottery allows people to make donations for the opportunity to name the new horses.

Targeted, engaging programing at Assateague

Assateague Island’s nature interpreters do everything from teach clamming and musseling classes, to leading guided nature trail hikes. These all are part of a bigger plan to make sure that the barrier island’s ecology and history are both understood and valued. The Visitor Center is kind of the heart of that whole program. It affords interpreters to give tours of the entire island without leaving the building, bringing people an up close and personal look at the native species and processes that keep the island one of the great destinations in the region.

Beyond the hands-on displays, the center also has a small theater that shows educational videos about the island and its history. Speaking of history:

Back when Assateague nearly was a resort community unto itself.
Back when Assateague nearly was a resort community unto itself.

Plenty of history for exploring Assateague Island

Did you know Assateague once was being groomed as an Ocean City-style resort? Have you walked on whats left of the paved streets of that destroyed town? How about its history as a stop of for pirates, smugglers and all other sorts of romanticized half-villains from the colonial era through prohibition? The displays chronicling the island’s history provide depth that accompany’s the ecological displays’ breadth. In addition to the salvaged anchor from a Spanish ship and a few remaining street signs from the abandoned development, the visitors center provides information that can help people understand why this island has attracted visitors for more than 400 years.

People stop in all day for directions and information about the park as well as the local area. The National Park Ranger interpreters always are helpful.
People stop in all day for directions and information about the park as well as the local area. The National Park Ranger interpreters always are helpful.

People whose job it is to know

If you visit museums regularly while on vacation you know about rolling the docent dice. Sometimes the people who are providing you information are volunteers who are passionate but maybe a little less knowledgable than you might hope. In the visitors center the docents and other helpers are supported by Park Rangers, men and women paid and trained to be, if not experts, certainly highly knowledgable about both the island and the surrounding area.

They are qualified to give both directions and advice about local attractions and island activities as well as to advise on the rules for enjoying yourself at Assateague.

 

Participating in the scene: Patrick Henry’s next turn

If you’ve never had the pleasure, there’s nothing quite like a conversation with Berlin artist Patrick Henry. Sitting in the quiet front room of his gallery one day, we talked art and business, aesthetics and politics, and the advantages of getting older. The topics weren’t that clean, they meandered into one another as they must when you’re talking about themes.

I’ve covered Patrick’s career, on and off, for the better part of the last 10 years, including what I take to be the two most important movements in his career: when his art was added to the permanent collection of the Reginald F. Lewis Museum in Baltimore and when he “found” his red paint. Both events were seminal to his work just after the turn of the century, when he began toying with changes in the distinctive style that had brought him regional acclaim.

Patrick’s family and teachers identified him as a natural talent at once and fostered and encouraged those gifts. This was astonishing in itself. Not a lot of young black men in segregation-era Worcester County were encouraged to pursue painting. Not a lot of men of any color were. This is the heyday of watermen and farmers. Labor from all racial sectors was prized above a pursuit of the arts.

Place became critical to Patrick, though, as he started his formal art education. Black artists of the 60s and 70s were particularly committed to depicting urban life. When I asked how common professional rural painters of color were in his generation, Patrick half laughed and then pretended he was going to count them off on his fingers. The era was dominated by people like Ernie Barnes (who did the “Good Times” painting) and the urban intellectual scene. Abstraction was the order of the day, even in representational art.

Patrick’s representational style set him apart from the first. His use of muted colors, and his emphasis on identifiable scenes from identifiable places on the Eastern Shore eventually made his work valuable enough that he was able to quit his day job and paint full time. That is what brought him to the attention of the Lewis museum and made his major exhibit, “Into the Light” a watershed.

He followed it with “Amusement” a show full of color and expression. He had been toying with color for a while, after painting a Barnes-esque reproduction for a friend. It was daring in that it didn’t look like a “Patrick Henry” show. But the paintings were from familiar Eastern Shore scenes, including those from the boardwalk past and present, and still identifiable. From “Amusement” he seemed to double down on rich color and made a series of paintings from the classic cars of Cruisin’ followed by black and white head shots of actors and actresses from the golden age of Hollywood. He punctuated these changes with continuing nods to his roots, producing the occasional landscape, but pushing them as well.

representational art at the globe
Patrick’s latest show at The Globe in Berlin features portraits of pop stars, his new direction asks a little more of the viewer’s participation.

It is nearly an oversimplification, but think of representational art as emotional. It asks the audience to bring their own experience to the act of viewing. Abstract focuses on the intellectual. The viewer is asked to tease meaning out of piece. Art, of course, is a spectrum, so let’s say Rockwell occupies one end of it and Mondrian the other. Between are artists working to find a balance between what they give to the viewer and what they ask of her. As Patrick begins to look toward the next phase of his career, he’ll probably nudge the needle a little further away from the representational.

The stories his paintings have told so far have been his stories, inspired by photographs he took or by places he visited. He only asked his audience to bring their memories of a place and a time to his work. From the landscapes, to the carousel horses, cars and celebrities, the viewer was just asked to feel one way or another about his work.

Going forward, he will ask more of the audience and, he hopes, deliver a new experience to them for their trouble. The work is of scenes, but not places. He’s thinking more about archetypes, using softer lines but more emphasized brush strokes. He invites the viewer to sharpen the lines, to interpret the stroke choices, but still in terms of their attachment to Eastern Shore-type scenes. That is, he increasingly is interested in painting scenes that have no place, no real address in the outside world. Patrick is less and less likely to work from photographs or memory, now, and more likely to work on intuition and will. First he wants you to think about the painting and then feel one way or another about your thoughts. He isn’t tempting you to remember where you’ve seen that place before. He tells you up front you haven’t.

As you get older and become successful you have to make a choice. It isn’t so much about cruising on a hard-earned reputation (although if you can and do, there’s no crime in it) as about understanding your ability to exercise choices. Patrick has cultivated a niche and an audience by delivering his vision and staying true to it. With each layer he has added to his work, he’s established himself as an artist who wants to encourage a conversation about the past and invite contemplation on its relationship to the present. This newest layer calls for viewers not just to identify how they see a scene, but why they choose to see it that way.

Enjoy an evening at OC 360

The recently-opened OC 360 restaurant on top of the Fenwick Inn exceeded the expectations of everyone in attendance one recent afternoon. The crowd was a mix of locals and visitors. Some had come to check the place out for the first time, others had wandered in just to see what was going on and several were hotel guests who chose to start the evening in the hotel before heading out. Nearly all the people at the bar were on vacation.

Jen White and Matt Reidy from Anne Arundel County were staying at a nearby condo and came to the Fenwick to have a beer or two before heading out to dinner with their family. The grandchildren were asleep and so the couple decided to make the most of their free time.

Jen has been coming to the Fenwick Inn for nearly three decades. She said she liked how the place looked and that she had many fond memories of vacationing in the area. For her it was a treat to be able to bring her grandkids in the same way she brought her kids to the Fenwick Inn when they were younger.

Fenwick inn guests
Jen White and Matt Reidy on the deck outside of OC 360.

The restaurant and bar features an outdoor area where people can dine or just walk out with their drinks and take in the entire length of Ocean City, both bay- and oceanside. It has always been one of the eatery’s greatest attractions.

Back inside Jacob Stampf and Morgan Murray, both from Pittsburgh were having a drink before they headed out for the evening. She was enjoying an Orange Crush and he a Duckpin Pale Ale. The restaurant’s full bar has everything from rail drinks and aluminum-bottled beers to premium brands like Bulleit Rye and an impressive selection of local, regional and national craft beers.

The pair weren’t regular Ocean City visitors, but each had been a few times and both were looking forward to their time at the Fenwick Inn.

Jacob Stampf and Morgan Murray at the bar.
Jacob Stampf and Morgan Murray at the bar.

Heather Grim and Beth Cross of the Westminster region were spending the evening at the Fenwick Inn before going to visit family in town and decided to take the opportunity to have dinner in the bar area. There was live music starting and the lady and her young charge sat at one of the tables overlooking Coastal Highway in the bar area. The had gone outside before hand to take in the view and decided to stay for dinner rather than look elsewhere.

They ordered as the music started and settled in to be entertained while they ate. Heather said she may eventually move to Ocean City and was looking forward to the trip. Beth has been a regular visitor to Ocean City for years.

Heather Grim and Beth Cross
Heather Grim and Beth Cross

As Happy Hour came into full swing more and more people filed into the restaurant and bar areas, which are separated but visible to one another. People who were interested in having a quieter dinner to themselves tended to choose to dine in the sit down restaurant, but the greatest number of people chose either a table in the bar area or a stool up at the bar. The staff was sufficient to the challenge as the number of diners grew and moved through the rooms and all were clearly happy to be there and honestly helpful.

The menu choices were diverse enough that there was something for everyone and, at happy hour prices, they also were affordable.

Using Pokemon Go! for your business

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Over the last few days you may have noticed a sharp increase in the number of (and the excitement with which) people walking around looking at the world through their phones. They are playing Pokemon Go! an interactive video game that allows people to hunt for Pokemon creatures in real life. There are plenty of ways to use it for fun, but there also are many creative tactics for using Pokemon Go! for your business.  

The game is not unlike a scavenger hunt in that there are items (virtual cartoon animals) to be found and collected. Using a phone’s GPS and its camera, players can see the virtual Pokemon world and get alerts that tell them where the nearest Pokemon creature is. Once they find a creature they have to capture it. There are various ways to do that but, for our purposes, just knowing that it must be done is a start.

The app is free to download and to use, although it does cause a significant battery drain places with charging stations and free WiFi, then, are particularly attractive to Pokemon Go! Enthusiasts. But that is not the only way businesses can take advantage of the opportunity provided by the Pokemon Go! Explosion.poke stop

pokemon gym and stops in berlinPoke Stops and Poke Gym locations:  There are many Poke Stops and Gyms in our area.  The Town of Berlin’s municipal lot is a gym and there are at least five Poke stops nearby.  Players use these stops to get tools for the game, from balls to incense and more.  The original list of Poke Stops comes from Pokemon Go’s developers’ first game called “Ingress.”  Regardless, many rural areas don’t have a lot of stops in the original game.  Now, apparently, you can request that Poke stops be added.  This means you can request that YOUR BUSINESS be added as a Poke Stop.  This gets gamers to come to your business to collect important components for continued playing of the game.  Comicbook.com gives instructions on how you can request a stop or you can go straight to the request form on PokemonGo.com’s website.   In addition, Restaurant Week provides instruction about how businesses can lure Pokemon animals to their locations. As the phenomenon continues, there likely will be many more commercial options and applications local businesses can take advantage of in the coming weeks.

Even without purchasing “Pokemon Lures” as directed in the Restaurant Week article, businesses can get a handle on where they stand Pokemon-wise, simply by downloading the app and knowing which animals are nearest them, and whether and how valuable they are. Similarly, members of the management team can download the app to get a better sense of the attraction. This way they can make better-informed decisions about how and to what extent the Pokemon Go! app can add another dimension to their businesses.

The staff at the Chincoteague Bay Field Station, for example, took a very creative approach to show how neatly their mission dovetailed with the Pokemon Go! craze.

Five Real-Life Pokémon you can find on the Eastern Shore

Pokémon GO has captivated a large audience, and not even Chincoteague Bay Field Station is immune. In case you’ve been living under a rock (or a Geodude), Pokémon GO is a virally popular mobile app that lets you catch Pokémon on your smart phone depending on where you are in the real world. Since the app debuted, you often can find CBFS educators and interns hanging around the Station’s sign out front, which is the nearest Poké-Stop to campus. And although we’re a little salty that the station wasn’t deemed a gym instead, we still love it.

The Pokémon you can catch are regional – Pokémon you’d get out in the marshes near Chincoteague are quite different than the ones you’d find in the more populated area around the Ocean City boardwalk. It just so happens that many Pokémon have real-life counterparts living in the same habitats. While you may not find a Ghastly floating around in real life, here are five Pokémon that bear a striking resemblance to organisms found on the Eastern Shore.

Terrapin with the Pokémon Squirtle
Squirtle © The Pokémon Company, Game Freak

Squirtle = Diamondback Terrapin

Squirtle is the iconic turtle of the Pokémon franchise, and the diamondback terrapin is the iconic turtle of the Eastern Shore. Both are cute, but can be a bit nasty if you’re not careful. Holding a terrapin may result in scratched hands from its claws. Holding a Squirtle may result in gallons of water being blasted into your face.

Moon Jelly with Tentacruel
Tentacruel © The Pokémon Company, Game Freak

Tentacruel = Moon Jelly

Both Tentacruel and the moon jelly can be found in the waters of the Chincoteague Bay. Moon jellies can get fairly big with a diameter of 10 to 12 inches. Tentacruel grow to be even bigger. Like Tentacruel, the moon jelly has many tentacles that can release toxin to catch prey. Unlike Tentacruel, a moon jelly will not knock over a skyscraper with said tentacle.

Osprey with the Pokémon Pidgeot
Pidgeot © The Pokémon Company, Game Freak

Pidgeot = Osprey

The osprey was clear inspiration for the Pidgey evolution line, especially the final evolution, Pidgeot. An osprey will use its keen eyesight to catch fish right out of the water mid-flight. Many of Pidgeot’s Pokédex entries also allude to its impeccable vision and ability to snatch prey out of the water. These Pokédex entries also say that Pidgeots can make gusts of wind strong enough to bend tall trees and that they can fly at speeds reaching Mach 2. Osprey can’t do either of those things.

Ghost Crab with the Pokémon Krabby
Krabby © The Pokémon Company, Game Freak

Krabby = Ghost Crab

While Krabby seems to be based on many different types of crabs, it matches the ghost crab the most out of the crustaceans on the Eastern Shore. Ghost crabs are famous for burying themselves in the sand on beaches. Krabby is famous for having what is arguably the least creative name for a Pokémon.

Lined Seahorse with the Pokémon Horsea
Horsea © The Pokémon Company, Game Freak

Horsea = Lined Seahorse

As the only type of seahorse we have in the area, the lined seahorse is the closest Eastern Shore equivalent to the Pokémon Horsea. Both creatures use their curled tails to hold on to grasses or other objects to either avoid being washed away by the current. However, the lined seahorse might actually be harder to find than its Pokémon counterpart, as camouflage is the poor swimmer’s first line of defense. In contrast, Horsea’s first line of defense is spraying bubbles at you.

Pokémon GO is a viral sensation, and for good reason. It’s fun, and it is great motivation to get outdoors. Next time you go on a Pokémon-related adventure, keep an eye out for the amazing real-life creatures that live on the Eastern Shore as well.

Chincoteague Bay Field Station, formerly known as Marine Science Consortium, is an environmental education center located on the Eastern Shore of Virginia. CBFS provides outstanding multi-disciplinary, educational and research opportunities that celebrate the rich natural, cultural, economic, and technological resources of the mid-Atlantic Coastal region through field-based and hands-on learning.

Looking for Subjects in West O

Over the last few weeks we’ve been working on a video feature called “Ocean City Stories” wherein contributor BL and I knock around Ocean City with a camera and a video camera and talk to people. You can see the completed work on our YouTube page. This week we decided to tackle fishing on the bridge, starting in West O.

It turned out to be a mediocre idea (which I can say because it is mine). It wasn’t that we didn’t get good folks to talk to. Actually, we got a few. It is because we parked by the side of the road and I am too old and fat to schlep over the Route 50 Bridge and back in my dress shoes and slacks. My face was a pretty fun-colored red by the end of it.

BL, who is the videographer/director of this video series is young and slim and enthusiastic. It is hard not to despise him as I’m humping along in the sun, but he’s charming and good natured and likely would be missed by his family. I picked him up at the Ocean City Park and Ride and drove to the foot of the bridge. It’s hard to give you a sense of how little space you have out there when you stand between your parked car and the Ocean City bound Route 50 traffic.

Boaters headed out for the evening after dining at Sneaky Pete's. People are always up for a good time when boating in Ocean City.
Boaters headed out for the evening after dining at Sneaky Pete’s. People are always up for a good time when boating in Ocean City.

Biking across the Route 50 Bridge

My hope was, at first, to catch some commuters, those people you see riding their bikes across the bridge after a long shift downtown. The bulk of the bridge bike (and, really, foot) traffic is comprised of people who either live in West O or Ocean Pines or people for whom the West Ocean City convenience stores and groceries are more convenient than those farther uptown. Suffice it to say that none of them were really interested in talking. Most were interested in getting home and showering, I assumed.

After more than a decade as a reporter you can smell the, “Don’t talk to me” that emanates from some people. There was no need to go all Chris Hansen on them for some friendly Ocean City stories, so we let some pass without making our pitch. Others (I assume those who were heading across the bridge to shop rather than to shower and turn in for the night) had a more approachable demeanor, but turned us down flat.

Editor’s note: If you are a bike commuter, reach out. We’d love to chat with you.

Ever the cinematographer, BL noticed a school of rays cruising along in the shallows and I got off a couple of quick, poorly framed photos. As I was taking them I knew they were bad. That’s the level of photographer I’ve risen to. I can tell when I’m doing acceptable work and when I’m not. Hopefully I’m wrong. I haven’t edited the photos yet, so I don’t know. If the following is a photo of a school of rays (or skates, or whatever) then I was able to salvage it.

Skates (or rays) in the Assawoman Bay cruising the bridge.
Skates (or rays) in the Assawoman Bay cruising the bridge.

Route 50 Bridge work

We moved on to the SHA guys who were standing over what, it turned out, was a hole in the bridge sidewalk. It was a stress fracture, or something of that nature, that they had patched. There was no danger to the cars or the structure, but if you were cruising across that bridge on your bike at night you were in for a nasty bump at the least.

I don’t know how often you have the opportunity to try and have impromptu interviews with SHA workers on the job, but let’s just say they weren’t particularly chatty. BL and I had come the the conclusion we were on the wrong side of the bridge. There were people coming and going on the other side. We elected to cross.

If you didn’t know, there is a gateway in the bridge pedestrian walk that allows someone to cross from one side of the bridge to the other. There is a particular horror in trying to use the crosswalk in that, you can’t see around the fence from close up. Your choices are to step back and look both ways or to stick your head out into the road and look both ways. I started by peeking around the corner, super-spy style, until I was comfortable with the generous distance between even the farthest-right diving bridge patrons.

“So, we’re really going to Frogger it?” BL asked, trying not to sound too enthusiastic at the prospect.

What I wanted to say was that I surely was a Frogger champion long before he was born. I have placed a quarter on the “next up” line for Frogger in a video arcade. Of course we would Frogger it.

What I did say was, “Yes.”

This gentleman is a fisherman on the bridge one week every year.
This gentleman is a fisherman on the bridge one week every year.

Getting ready to run is so much more difficult than actually running. It is a choice to commit and to live with your choice and to place your faith as much in your own abilities as in the abilities of drivers to break on the outside chance you were wrong.

I really enjoy doing things that are dangerous for 45-year-old vaguely out of shape white guys. I engage in occasional minor crimes when I’m sure I can get away with them and (and this is the worst, more cliche of all the things) pretending that I’m on par chance-taking-wise with 20 year olds.

We hit the far sidewalk with ease. I wasn’t  certain BL even considered it an effort until we crossed back later and he admitted he hadn’t sprinted with his camera gear over his shoulder since high school.

The rest of the afternoon went as expected. We found a couple of people to talk, we struggled with the audio against the racing cars on the bridge, we Froggered back to my car. I stopped at the Royal Farms on the way home, purchased a gallon of water and drank half of it on my way back home.

5 reasons why Berlin is still the coolest small town in America

It’s been two years since Budget Travel named Berlin the Coolest Small Town in America, but that doesn’t mean the town has lost its charm. In fact, Berlin now is cooler than ever (and I’m speaking to you as an expert on all things cool).

In 2014 Berlin’s residents, with their undying small town pride, nominated the city and helped it reach 28 percent of the vote among 14 fellow cool-town finalists. Budget Travel commends Berlin for its proximity to Ocean City and Assateague, and for famously providing the backdrops to Runaway Bride and Tuck Everlasting—statements that alone would provide sturdy support for any coolest small town nominee, but that aren’t even close to being the only reasons why Berlin is so special.

Berlin has more than earned its placement in the catalog of cool towns. Here are 5 reasons why this small town is still the coolest.

stephen decatur park
Stephen Decatur Park view

Berlin is surrounded by all the wonders of nature

Berlin is a green town both visually, framed by trees and sprawling foliage, and environmentally: the Grow Berlin Green campaign, which began in 2009, seeks environmental protection, conservation and smart growth practice for the community. GBG works wonders in its parks and playgrounds, which remain beautiful and clean year-long, and in ways that we can’t always see. Recycling, stormwater and wastewater management and, among many other initiatives. Increased activism among Berlin citizens and policymakers provides the support to keep the community green and friendly towards the Earth.

The three parks in the area, Stephen Decatur, Dr. William Henry and John Howard Burbage provide fun for children and atmosphere for adults, and there’s never a lack of places to hike, picnic and enjoy the natural surroundings.

berlin

There’s no shortage of cute, unique and slightly weird shops

Berlin is a hub for independent retailers and antique stores, where you can always find a somewhat off-kilter souvenir to bring home. It’s unlikely that most towns in 2016 can boast the presence of a video rental store the way Berlin can, and the prevalence of retail stores and wine bars makes for a great combo—one store even invites you to shop while you drink.

Berlin is heralded as the antique capital of the Eastern Shore—Culver’s, Stuart’s, Uptown and Town Center Antiques are all present on Main Street, and I can never simply walk past Toy Town Antiques—the Blues Brothers beckon me from the store window to come inside and sort through Barbies, Beanie Babies, and shelves upon shelves of tiny kitsch Santas. Very cool.

globepatmusic

There’s almost always something to do

If you somehow grow tired of the shops, art galleries and restaurants, there’s almost always an upcoming event to bring you back into town. In the summer, local businesses turn bathtubs into “racetubs” at the Berlin Bathtub Races, and the Berlin Heritage Foundation sponsors the annual Peach Festival. Concerts on the Lawn are a frequent happening, along with the 2nd Friday Art Stroll, and nothing welcomes in the fall like Octoberfest with its sidewalk sales, beer garden and Corn hole tournament.

Downtown Berlin MD

It’s got a rich and colorful history

Fun fact: the town’s name most likely came from an old Tavern, as “Berlin” is thought to have come from a combination of the words “Burleigh” and “Inn.” (Editor’s note: With due respect to the memory of Ed Hammond, we endorse Burleigh). Even before that, the path of Main Street was once walked by the Native Americans of Assateague and Pocomoke, and later became the Philadelphia Post Road that connected the north and west centers of commerce.

Stephen Decatur, the 19th century naval hero and namesake to the nearby park, high school and roads, was born in Berlin. While Decatur’s birthplace is unfortunately no longer standing, downtown Berlin is a National Register Historic District whose older buildings include Burley manor, the Chandler house and St. Paul’s Episcopal Church.

ioofbuilding

It’s probably haunted

Of course, most of the old places that contribute to the color of Berlin are supposedly totally haunted. A secret society known as the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, originating in Baltimore in 1819, once held shop in the heart of Berlin. Their duty was “to visit the sick, relieve the distressed, bury the dead, and educate the orphan,” and they also partook in a number of mysterious rituals—one of which has resulted in human remains being found within the walls in many of the Fellows’ former lodges. Their former lodge in Berlin is now a yarn shop, but the letters IOOF still are etched proudly on the outside of the building.

Also, the landmark that is the Atlantic Hotel is notoriously haunted and is associated with at least five different ghost stories. Berlin’s Ghost Walk (one of many Chesapeake Ghost Tours) features the hotel and several other locations that are rumored hotspots of paranormal activity: the former Odd Fellows Hall, the Maryland Wine Bar, the Pitts House, St. Paul’s Graveyard, the old Dairy Queen and the Calvin B. Taylor Bank, where a woman in a long white dress is frequently seen standing near and where a soldier still in uniform walks nightly.

What could possibly be cooler than a haunted, historic town that hosts races in bathtubs and actually cares about the environment? There may be a few odd fellows in Berlin, but at least they have plenty of small town pride.

Getting ready at The Ropewalk

There is a sensory experience that is as much taste as it is smell when you pass from the oppressive heat of the parking lot and into a well air-conditioned partially darkened bar. When I rolled up to The Ropewalk (honestly just trying to get a little work out of the way before I went home and not intending to have a Happy Hour Adventure) I saw that already it was Happy Hour, which did its job by making me happy.

An early happy hour in the summertime just makes sense. For most vacationers, happy hour lasts until you start packing to go home. The thing about The Ropewalk though is that while it is not a “drinkers” bar, it still is a bar for drinkers. The difference being that it also is a family place, and there were equal parts from practically every generation present when I stepped out of the heat and into the freshly cooled Ropewalk lobby.

At first I thought there were an awful lot of staff members walking around. It was a little after 2 p.m. or so and there weren’t a ton of people present. Later I would discover that these folks were preparing for the evening rush which was just about to start and would continue well into the evening. There are few things more frustrating than having a wonderful time in an understaffed restaurant. Having to search for a server detracts from your experience because it puts the focus on the fun you aren’t having rather than the fun you are having. There is no way this happens at The Ropewalk. Staff members were buzzing in groups of twos and threes getting ready making sure there was silverware making sure there were glasses making sure that the glasses of the people that were there were full, but not being oppressive about it.

Noah and Mya Howard and Olivia Walter were happy to run off into the play area while Maura Howard and Randy Walker ordered dinner for the group.
Noah and Mya Howard and Olivia Walter were happy to run off into the play area while Maura Howard and Randy Walker ordered dinner for the group.

A note on family friendliness

One thing that it is easy to forget about when you go to a destination bar is how professional the bartenders are and also how much fun they have. Just to be clear, a destination bar is a place that you go to to settle in for a while. What makes The Ropewalk a destination bar is that it has multiple bars for multiple sensibilities. It has games for grown-ups and children, it has a water view and it has a restaurant. If money is no object you literally can show up at 2 p.m. and pour yourself into a cab at 2 a.m. and have had an absolute blast. I don’t necessarily recommend this.

As part of the Happy Hour Adventure series mostly what I will write here is about why it’s fun to go to happy hour at a particular place. That is not to take in any way away from how family-friendly The Ropewalk is. There are distractions for the kids there are games for the kids there are fun drinks for the kids and there are menus for the kids. As I looked around at some of the young families I saw The Ropewalk as the perfect opportunity to have a date night with your spouse as well as a family night out. It turned out to be the same thing. The playground is safe and easily viewed from the right table in one of the sandy beach bars so you can take some time to reacquaint yourself with your spouse and every now and again look over your shoulder and tell little johnny to stop jumping off the apparatus. Seriously, though, you can have a fun time there with your family without forgetting that you are a fun loving person as well.

Liz Williams and Sean Duckworth play corn hole and enjoy their drinks in the sun.
Liz Williams and Sean Duckworth play corn hole and enjoy their drinks in the sun.

Afternoon party time

I made my way to the back bar there were two bartenders there and they were looking a little lonely. Mostly they were as the rest of the staff was setting up for the evening, but they were joking and talking with members of the band who are also getting ready for a big night and generally having a good time. Having a good time is critical if you’re a bartender in Ocean City in July. It is going to get busy and you want to remember that only can be projected if you are actually having fun. I have yet to meet a camera shy bartender and the two guys in the back at The Ropewalk were no different. One was making an orange crush the other was pulling a tap beer, and both were making a real effort to make sure they each got a chance to show off.

The beer selection was fine and there were a number of local beers available which is something that’s important to me. The orange crush was orange crush-y which is really the most you can ask from and Ocean City bar.

Across a distance of tables there were two other bartenders at a different bar also prepping and goofing around. I have it written before about the preparation period, but it really is something worth watching (and a great excuse to show up at a bar at 2:30 in the afternoon).

Bartender Shannon Fitzgerald was both chatting with me and the customer and the other bartender she flitted from tap to glass to customer. The one thing that at a good bartender knows is how important preparation is. It won’t do to run out of orange crush at 8 o’clock on a Thursday night. You have to be prepared. People are counting on you. Everyone is having their best night out all the time, potentially, and the bartenders know that. I think that’s where the fun time attitude originates.

As I made my way out to the parking lot a line was beginning to form already. There were plenty of seats still and people weren’t waiting for tables, but the front desk only could accommodate so many people at a time.

Most were families with kids, many of whom were interested in sitting either out on the deck with a view of the bay or in the sand with a view of the playground. All would get what they wanted in time and once they were seated would be served promptly by the waves and waves of staff members that continued to appear seemingly out of nowhere folding and carrying and pouring and hustling.

It was a sight to behold. It is a site worth beholding.

 

Making new friends in Ocean City

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One thing about Ocean City that surely is unique are the friends you can make and the people you meet when you live here, and with today’s technology and social media, keeping in contact with past coworkers, old friends, or even temporary acquaintances is so much easier. It also can be less awkward. It is acceptable to become best friends on snapchat with someone you’ve barely spoken to, and you’ve met in person maybe a few times. Then there’s the fact that the people you can meet who become your friends in Ocean City may be on the other side of the state, country, or world.

During the summer in Ocean City, there are a lot of students traveling abroad representing countries around the world. They come to Ocean City to work, to travel and to see the United States. I have met people from Russia, Croatia, Ukraine, Romania, Ireland, Germany, Czech Republic, Hungary, Canada, Mexico, Chile, Brazil, India, China and South Korea. Then there are tourists that come for a few days in the summer to relax on the beach. I’ve seen license plates from almost every state in this country. It does not matter the distance, California, Florida, Washington, Nevada. Ocean City seems to be the place to be in the summer.

The people who live here are exceptionally friendly. I never had noticed or thought about it before it was pointed out to me, but we are. Even in the summer, I had been saying why I enjoyed Greece so much to a friend at work who is from Romania; I mentioned that everyone there was friendly and would actually talk to you, and she agreed that that was one of the reasons why she liked it here so much. We smile and ask about each other’s day, whether we’re acquainted or not. I’ve gone to Baltimore and asked cashiers how they were and they would look at me shocked. In Paris, New York, Rome, people glare and pretend not to notice you. To live here and have the friends you can make here is truly exceptional.

That is the reason why I am glad to call Ocean City home; why I am grateful to have the friends I have and live in a time where the technology is available to me so I can keep in touch with them, regardless of where we go in life, even if it is back home.