This summer we
took a trip to Cape
Cod . Stupid name.
No one wore a cape and I didn't see a cod whatever that is. My dad yelled bad
names at all the other cars on the road who were not going fast enough. We
stayed at an old and smelly motel and played miniature golf. My brother,
Robert, cheated and put the ball in the hole with his hand. People who were
watching laughed and thought he was cute. I was angry because he had a better
score than me. That is the trip we took this summer. President Kennedy was
nearby in a place called High Anus. Stupid name.
Barry Levine, 8
years old
July 1961
Barry,
this was poorly written. C
-
From 1961 until 20 years later I had not visited Cape
Cod until our honeymoon. We had since been there four more times in the
last five years. Some things never change we stayed in a smelly motor inn where
our clothes were constantly damp including the clothes that were in the
suitcase. The only time we didn't stay
in a smelly hotel was when we stayed in the Radisson (as of this summer it is now
a Doubletree) with their dial-a-number beds which was significantly more
uncomfortable than an air mattress.
I happen to like Cape Cod . Until
recently it was a place where we were contemplating retiring to. We asked some
local retirees how they handle the winters there. They said the winters are not
bad. They spend them in Florida .
Another woman who retired there also stated that the winters aren't bad ...
compared to the average snowfall of twelve feet in northern New
Hampshire where she previously resided. Interesting
that we cannot get a straight answer on this question.
Thirty one years ago on our honeymoon we parked near beaches
and walked by the lighthouses and watched these little sand piper birds running
along the beach. We watched the fog roll in and heard the roar of the waves
crashing on the shore.
Now we can't get near the national seashore beaches or the
lighthouses, parking costs fifteen dollars if you are lucky enough to get there
early enough before the lots are full. Traffic is backed up for miles. All of the other beaches are private and
gated off or you need a town permit to park there. Our hotel advertised that
they are a short walk to the beach. A short walk of one and a half miles.
This week was a particularly good week to take your young
children to the town of Chatham
located at the elbow of the Cape . The Cape
looks like an arm of a person showing off his biceps and ending in a fist. The
little kiddies were treated to great white sharks ripping apart cute little
seals frolicking willy-nilly by the rocks.
I still like Cape Cod even though I
do not like beaches. I hate the sand on my feet, I hate salt water and feel
that when I step into the water I will step on a crab or sea urchin, get stung
by a jellyfish and get bit by a great white shark but only after I realize I
forgot to take my phone from my pocket thus incurring a $169 fee to replace it
when I get out of the hospital with two hundred plus stitches that were required
to sew my arm back on and a severe case of diarrhea from the antibiotics to
treat the sea urchin sting.
On the way from New York
to Cape Cod you have to pass through one of the least
inviting states in the country, Rhode Island, which incidentally is not an island. Thankfully the trip from Connecticut
to Massachusetts is only forty
miles. Rhode Island does not even
have a Welcome sign when you enter the state. There are no service plazas,
tourist information centers and the rest areas are all under construction and closed. It's like going into a restaurant that has a sign that states that the rest room is out of order but you know that there is nothing wrong with it and they just don't want you to use it.
Not one bathroom
for more than forty miles in Rhode Island
and then none for the next fifty miles of Massachusetts !
And for a couple with an enlarged prostate and IBS (I have the enlarged
prostate, Ilana has IBS) this is no easy task. Rhode
Island only wants people who own yachts or play polo.
All others are encouraged to pass on through. At least Massachussetts has a welcome sign.
We decided to take a ghost tour of Barnstable
Township the second evening we were
at the Cape. I like the sound of that... The Cape. Makes me feel like I am an insider, a Capester! Let me tell you about the tour but be forewarned that after reading this
you may not be able to sleep tonight.
We parked our car by
the old jail of Barnstable at 8:00 PM. Oddly enough we were the only
couple there. We thought that possibly the tour was cancelled and tried calling
the tour company but we couldn't get a dial tone.
As the sun began to
set a man walks out from behind the old jail dressed in colonial garb and
wearing a tri-corner hat. He introduced himself as James Otis and asked us if
we believed in Ghosts. I stated that I was highly skeptical. He stated that Barnstable is one of the most haunted towns in the Americas and that after this tour he guaranteed that
I would be a believer. I scoffed at him. He
returned a self-deprecating smirk and collected the thirty dollar tour fee and
we proceeded.
We began our walk and
passed by several old homes and the town hall. James was very knowledgeable
regarding the history of the area but there was nothing that he could say or do
that would convince me that ghosts actually exist. After an hour we finally arrived at the last
location of the tour, the Barnstable graveyard. There was very little light from the low Moon and there was a slight rustle of leaves from the trees.
James asked us to wait while he entered the cemetary first. After he
entered he asked us to come in. He explained that the two waist high rock
pillars at the entrance were there for the pall bearers to rest the coffin
while they walked around to another entrance... the living entrance. He
explained that the early residents believed that if they entered with the body
of the deceased they too would die within the year.
After we had entered the
old graveyard James explained that there were dark entities along with the harmless souls that resided in
the graveyard. He pointed out areas of the graveyard where sightings were frequent
and often horrifying. He said we could walk around for a few minutes but to come
back promptly as we need to leave as soon as possible. We started to walk and
then turned around mere seconds later to ask James a question but he was no
longer there. I walked to the head stone where he last stood and saw thirty
dollars on the floor. I bent down to pick it up and when I had looked at the gravestone
the name on it was ... James Otis!
Out hearts were
beating so furiously they seemed like they would burst out of our chests. We
ran to the tavern that was a block away and told them what happened. They stated
that there hasn't been a tour in more than ten years as too many people were badly
affected after entering the graveyard that the tour company could no longer get
people to take the tour. Noticing our fright they told us to sit down and gave
us a cup of grog to calm our jittery nerves.
At least this is what we told the kids what happened. I
still don't believe in ghosts but I do enjoy these tours. We still haven't
confessed that we made up the story and since they refuse to read my blog they
will never know unless one of you tell them. And if you do and I find out, well,
I can be very vindictive. We did take the tour given by Derek, head ghost
hunter of the Cape and Islands Paranormal Research
Institute and found the tour to be quite interesting. There was a family from Syracuse ,
New York , who took the tour three times
this week.
James Otis was a local Barnstable
politician and loyalist who got fed up with the King and stated in 1756 that "Taxation without
representation is tyranny". He promptly got his head bashed in for saying
that but survived the attack. This was
the educational component of this blog.
No trip to Cape Cod is complete
without attending a performance at the Cape
Playhouse in Dennis. The playhouse
is a summer stock theater that has attracted many Broadway legends and
continues to do so to this day at about
40% of the price of a Broadway show. They do six shows each summer. This
year we saw Nunsense. Not one of my
favorites but it was done well and had scenes that had us laughing so hard it
nearly ripped the stitches out of my arm reattachment.
For dinner we took advantage of the cheap lobstah (that's
how they pronounce lobster in the Cape ) prices and had
twin lobstahs. I didn't see a close resemblance in either of the lobsters and
concluded that they must be fraternal twins. Ilana is a pro at eating lobstahs
now. In an earlier blog relating our honeymoon experience I mentioned her first
attempt at dismembering a full lobstah. It did not go well for the lobstah,
Ilana or the people sitting at the next table who should have been wearing
their lobstah bibs.
One thing I do not get is the attraction of the Lobstah
Roll. They take the delicious lobstah meat, mix it with mayonnaise and celery
and put it on a hot dog bun and charge you anywhere from $12.95 to $18.95. For
$19.95 we had the twin lobstahs, salad and french fries at Salty's on Route 28
in South Yarmouth . Ilana could eat lobstah breakfast,
lunch and dinner. Once a year is fine by me I prefer shrimp.
Note: I feel bad about my critical portrayal of Rhode Island. If I am wrong please let me know if there is anything worthwhile to do there. By the way a welcome sign would be nice.
Excellent. Can't wait for the stitches to be removed so your next piece goes to press
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