Coney Island is an endless summer draw for New York. It has
a large beach, world-famous amusement park rides, and a seedy underbelly that
gives it character. Coney Island has kept its lowbrow edge despite waves of
gentrification and upscaling happening throughout New York but with particular
intensity in Brooklyn. Williamsburg used to be a dangerous place to be. Now
it’s only dangerous if you live in a rent-controlled apartment.
One of the attractions that has been added over the last two
decades of revitalization is MCU Park, which opened as KeySpan Park in 2001.
The field hosts the minor league Brooklyn Cyclones.
My wife, who is much more adept at sourcing and planning
family outings, discovered a good value in theFlock, a children’s club that includes tickets to several games for the
entire family.
We got to Coney Island and found an expensive pay lot close
to the stadium. With low clouds rolling in, fogging the tops of the nearby
apartment buildings, we decided to get something to eat before submitting to
the amoral monopoly of stadium snacks. In the short distance between MCU Park
and the original Nathan’s, we started feeling raindrops. Nathan’s was mobbed,
but close by was Pete’s Clam Stop, which had large plastic bench-style picnic
tables in a small dining area. We ducked in, found a seat, and ordered food.
Pete’s Clam Stop was a good
discovery. Its hot dogs were just as good as Nathan’s with the same traditional
snappy flavor and they also had large fries that were a bit big and unwieldly
but were in the crinkle-cut tradition (they even served them with a small
French fry fork.) Pete’s also has fresh clams and oysters on ice, and
hand-painted signs encouraging customers to eat clams to help to have a child
and to eat oysters if one wanted to have twins. I had not heard this bit of old
wives’ tale wisdom, and since we already have twins plus one, we did not feel
the need to sample the oysters or clams.
The rain picked up heavily as we ate our food, watched World
Cup Soccer on TV, and enjoyed the camaraderie of other Coney Island visitors
making a lunch stop to duck out of the rain. The picnic tables became filled
with people sharing the space. A woman with her kids at the table with us
remarked on two of our daughters’ red hair.
Before long the rain was gone and the sun was out by the
time we headed back to the ball park.
We got to meet two of the players and got them to sign our
daughters’ t-shirts. They all became too shy to get their photo taken with the
players. The highlight of the Flock benefits was getting to go on the field
near second base for the national anthem. Unfortunately, the field at MCU Park
is artificial turf, so it feels as if you are walking on a cheap shag carpet
with some extra padding underneath.
With three small kids, I spent more time herding them and
trying to quell their tantrums than I did actually watching baseball. If I were
a baseball aficionado or cared about seeing a future baseball superstar in
action I might be disappointed, but I don’t really follow baseball and I’m a
Yankees fan anyway (the Brooklyn Cyclones are a Mets farm team), and time is
better spent with family. It is more enjoyable to share ice cream with a
four-year-old than to watch someone throw a fastball. The Cyclones won the game
1-0, beating the Lowell Spinners, a Boston Red Sox farm team.
While our seats were in the last row of the stands, they
were still field-level seats and comparable seats at a major-league ballpark
would have been unaffordable for a family of five. Snacks were still
overpriced, but the ticket deal that my wife found included some snack
vouchers, so that allowed me to actually not spend money on overpriced stadium
snacks.
Our seats were shaded so we escaped the worst of the sun.
Still, it was an exhausting day. We drove home, buzzed from weariness, but also
excited about having more Coney Island adventures.
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