It is time to escape New York for a
week as our beloved city continues to bake in the summer heat. We are headed to
Cape Ann, Massachusetts to attend a friend’s wedding and then enjoy the New England coast.
Summers in New York City are marked
in part by our efforts to go elsewhere as weekend getaways snarl traffic on
Friday and Sunday nights and holiday weekends can send people away from the five
boroughs in droves.
I find it more enjoyable to stay in
the city during some of the more popular times to leave. Going around the city
on Labor Day can make New York feel like a ghost town in parts.
But New Yorkers need to leave the
city for long periods of time over the summer in order to maintain our sanity.
New York is an intense and crowded place. It can get even more crowded and
oppressive in the summertime as our transit system and the areas near where we
work are flooded with slow-moving tourists who are often clueless about the way
to behave in a big city and slow things down. We don’t hate tourists; we like
and need tourists, but their increased presence intensifies an already strained
existence.
And the often unrelenting humid
heat of New York helps bring our regular misery stew to a high boil.
The city traps the heat with its high buildings, blacktop and concrete, jacks
it up a notch with the captured exhaust of car and bus traffic and tops it off
with some extra hot blasts from air conditioning units. Too many weeks and
months of New York City heat can drive you insane and long for someplace,
anyplace, where you can enjoy looking at trees or relax with cool grass under
your feet.
When I was growing up my family
made Lake George in upstate New York our
regular vacation spot. Lake George is far enough north that it is cool at night
and not obscenely hot during the day. You can see lots of stars in the sky and
the place is enough of a popular tourist destination that they have large
amusement parks. There are also historic forts you can visit that are rich in
history of the Revolutionary and French and Indian Wars.
This is the first year my wife and
I are taking our daughters on a vacation. We had a brief visit in Maine with
family but we are about to embark on our first vacation of the four of us as a unit
and we are heading to Cape Ann, Massachusetts.
My father’s family vacationed in
Cape Ann when my Dad was growing up and he and my aunts and uncles were
photographed in front of the Fisherman’s Memorial in Gloucester. We plan to recreate these
photos as best we can with our girls. Rockport is also going to be having its
annual Lobster Fest while we are there and I have promised to attend.
I plan on eating seafood, visiting
with friends and otherwise doing as little as possible. It’s not too late to
plan your own summer escape from New York. Be sure it’s temporary.
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