So the Mrs. and I motored down to the southernmost end
of New Jersey, “Exit 0” on the Garden State Parkway, and spent the weekend at a
bed and breakfast in Cape May.
It was a relaxing two days. The weather here is finally
turning from winter to spring, and though it was still a little too cold and
too windy to go sans jacket, the sun
shone brightly both days with nary a cloud in the sky. Saturday we walked close
to 9,000 steps (according to the wife’s Apple watch) as we walked among the
shops and the streets lined with bright-painted Victorian gothic mansions.
Our bed and breakfast was this sprawling two-century
old complex located two blocks from the beach and two blocks from the town
center in the opposite direction. We were able to park in a spot on the street
right in front – metered parking was not enforced – which helped greatly in
unloading our bags. The room was on the third floor, a large bedroom / sitting
room / bathroom affair, with six windows overlooking the town. Two church
spires highlighted the landscape. There was an extremely comfortable couch,
ancient hardwood floors, and, best of all, a king-size bed! I was so enamored
with the layout I pronounced that if we could only take the room, put it by
itself in a cottage a mile from a beach anywhere, that would be the Platonic
form of a retirement home for us.
We ate like royalty all through the weekend; me,
specifically, like King Henry the VIII. Friday night, after sitting in Jersey
shore traffic for nearly four hours, I was craving a burger and a beer. We
checked in, and in less than twenty minutes I found myself sitting in an old
Irish pub, drinking a fruity, chunky IPA and downing the messiest burger I ever
ate. This set a trend for the weekend. I tried a whole slew of IPAs and wolfed
down fish tacos, crab cakes, apple waffles, and egg soufflés. (Though I had my
breakfast with OJ, not IPAs.)
In our down time relaxing in the room or in the early
morning hours I’d read while the wife watched her newest British historical
melodrama on her iPhone with her ear buds. I finished The Fellowship of the Ring and put away fifty more pages in The History of Venice. During our
shopping strolling time I slipped into a book store, found a well-stocked World
War II section, but could not justify paying full price for what would be a
roll of the dice.
One of the sights of Cape May is a gorgeous Catholic
church, Our Lady Star of the Sea. Two years ago on our last visit down here I
was able to go inside and soak up the atmosphere. Saturday, however, there was
an Irish funeral going on (there was a shamrock on the Hearse and a horde of green ties), someone very
major based on the turnout and the fact the church was essentially walled off.
But I did get to take in the amazing stained glass windows all about the outer
stone façade. It was quite transcendent.
All in all a refreshing 40-hour break from the daily
grind.
Our room was at the top, the two windows on the right ...
1 comment:
Lovely! Good for you two!
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