Thursday 26 July 2018

Thursday, or Thereabouts - July 26, 2018






Hot, Hot, Hot!
So hot that the tar bubbles up between the stones on the road;
round, shiny, black blobs of goo.


I can smell that flip-flop sticking ooze.
     An acrid gasoline smell assaults my nostrils
     and I run away...
...way back in time to childhood summers.





In the heat of July, I envied my pals who spent the summer at cottages by shining lakes in Muskoka or Haliburton. It seemed to me that all the cool kids had places up north, on a lake with tall trees and big rocks, with boats and fishing and all day swimming, and all just two hours away from home. There were enchanting tales, some of them much taller than others I'm sure, of fishing derbies, water skiing, boat races, swimming competitions and campfires that lasted long into the night.


BUT then came August and our annual trip to the beach. Talk about a long commute! This one involved taxis and planes and a foreign country! My mother's family had a cottage on Long Island, New York. Perhaps you've heard of  "The Hampton's" - well not there, but rather a more modest community on the southernmost tip, just east of Manhattan, called Breezy Point. Sadly the Point is now famous for the great fire spawned by Hurricane Sandy in October 2012, which turned to ashes every cottage in the old original Breezy Point, including the cottage of my childhood. But memories are forever and there are photos too!

1970

It was always an adventure every year to make the trek to 147 Oceanside. We always dressed up in our fancy duds (dresses, white gloves, and hats!) because in those days air travel was fancy stuff. From Toronto, we flew TCA (Trans Canada Airlines, later Air Canada) to New York's Idlewild (later JFK) airport on a Vickers Viscount or Vanguard prop job, a flight that took about ninety minutes.

Mom 1963

The cottage was far from grand but I didn't mind. At Breezy we had the Atlantic Ocean, with waves great for body surfing contests. Getting clobbered by a big one was as thrilling as it was humbling. We had the best beach in the world - white sand that stretched for miles.

Mom & Dad, 1957

Me 1961

Me 1970

On a hot day, the walk from the end of the boardwalk to the firm sand near the water's edge was ... well hot, sole burning hot. And it's not easy to walk quickly on shifting sand carrying all the beach gear - big umbrella, chairs, tarp, food basket (containing pop tins wrapped in tin foil, sandwiches wrapped in waxed paper and all full of sand anyway), and towels. Sometimes a hike all the way to the jetty was on the menu.

Mom and I, 1958

Mom and I, 1970

Mom, my older sister & I at the jetty, 1956

My younger sister and I at the jetty, 1970

We had lifeguards on the beach, tall bronzed men in bright red swim trunks who sat atop blue lifeguard stands, or sometimes underneath them in the shade, whistle at the ready.

My older sister and I, 1961

We had parties - fancy hat, and card parties at Christ Community Church (Auntie Lilian always won 'The  Basket of Cheer', the one full of booze), fashion jewelry parties and clothing sales (Aunt Lilian hosted and gave the profits to charity). There were friends and neighbours who were always thrilled to welcome the 'Canadian Invasion' each August. One was president of a large bakery in Brooklyn that catered to the Jewish market. When he came to visit he always brought a huge paper sack, almost as tall as eight-year-old me, filled with bread (pumpernickel and light rye), rolls and chocolate donuts. He was the biggest man I'd ever seen - quite tall but also quite wide - and his shoes were the biggest shoes I'd ever seen - must have been six inches wide and fifteen long. As big as he and they were, his heart was bigger. He spoke slowly, thoughtfully and everybody listened.



We had doctors that made their rounds on motor scooters and delivery boys that rode bikes, front baskets loaded with bottles from the liquor store and prescriptions from the drug store. We had cops who drove around in jeeps equipped with big tires to get through the sand.

1961




AND, we had a volunteer fire department (Point Breeze Volunteer Fire Department), with trucks with names like 'Big Jack' and 'Sand Flea'. When the big air raid type siren went off summoning fire and/or ambulance crews, it also summoned at least half the beach residents including us.


Late one night a fire started in the hardware store off of Market Street, opposite the drug store and we all trooped out to have a look. Dad carried a big red flashlight. He managed to make himself look so official that the fire crew from Brooklyn (they had to cross the Marine Parkway Bridge to get to Breezy) asked Dad,  "Is it all right if we set up over here?" Dad mumbled something and waved his red flashlight around a bit before discreetly disappearing into the crowd.




We had ferries that we could ride from Rockaway Point to Breezy for free, or take to Sheepshead Bay to check out the catch from the fishing fleet.

1958

1967

1967

From there, a subway took us into Manhattan - the United Nations, Times Square, Battery Park, the Staten Island Ferry, and the Statue of Liberty all there to behold. We had fireworks -  actually Coney Island had the fireworks, but we could see them from the bayside.

My older sister on the Staten Island Ferry, 1958

We had the best pizza ever at a real soda fountain store that was just beside the Trunz grocery store. We had Ebinger's crumb cake! The competition for the crumbs is the stuff of family legend.

My version of THE crumb cake

Mom bought real butter and the steak, chicken, and fish (mackerel and flounder fresh from the Sheepshead Bay fleet) all tasted better. We had the best food ever at Breezy Point, or so it seemed.

Maybe it was the sand, maybe it was the salt air,
probably it was the love.



©2018 April Hoeller

6 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. Indeed they are, Leueen. Each one a story in itself.
      Thank you for coming along with me.

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  2. I love these photos!! I can almost read the story with just the photos - almost no words needed. I love how the ladies are "dressed up"!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks Lisa! Those were the days... families dressed up for any and all occasions. I have to say though that the white gloves I was expected to wear, often got me in trouble - they were never white for very long! LOL
      Take care.

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  3. Nice memories, It's so nice to recall summer vacation when you were a lucky kid and you had a place somewhere to move. I was one of them too. My beach place was in Laredo, Spain, just 60 kms. from our hometown Bilbao. Although it was so close, It would take around 90 minutes to drive there. It was the trip of the year and I would be so exited counting down the days left for the trip.

    It must have been such an experience for you flying and visiting the 60´s Manhattan when so were young.

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    Replies
    1. Jon, it was indeed a marvelous experience though perhaps better appreciated in hindsight. I don't think as a ten year old, I realized just how incredibly fortunate I was. Now of course, I do. It was indeed the trip of the year just as your beach trip was. We were blessed to have such experiences.
      Take care.

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