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Ocean City/Somers Point Archives

May 12, 2008

Our girl Jen barely survives attempt to get salt water taffy...

One of our favorite shore bloggers, Jen Miller of Down the Shore with Jen fame and newly published Jersey shore guide author, barely escapes back to shoobie land after trying to get authentic salt water taffy today in Ocean City for her book party (to be held in Rittenhouse Square...?). It was a windy rainy mess down the shore. We barely survived the parking lot of Pathmark earlier in the day, with winds threatening to take the contents of our cart and our car out to sea. Glad you made it back, Jen. Here's her harrowing report, with excellent and soggy photos.

November 14, 2007

The First Street Cafe?

Word around our favorite cafe at 4th and Atlantic in Ocean City _ which announced its imminent demise months ago, but obstinately refused to stop serving coffee, scones and an increasingly full lunch menu _ is that a new location has been found. The owners, who bought a vineyard in California but apparently still have a jones for importing La Colombe coffee to Jersey, have reportedly signed a lease for a building at 1st and Asbury, the old Cousin's, beginning in February, when the old Fourth Street Cafe lease is up. Looks like a nice spot, with an enclosed porch and outdoor patio, pretty much the same neighborhood. Should satisfy the many bereft Fourth-Streeters who left their email addresses and pleas in a little notepad at the old location. Just goes to show you, some things are too good to let go of.

September 19, 2007

Going, going...

4streetscone.jpgOur beloved Fourth Street Cafe in Ocean City, captured in a rare snowy moment from its illustrious past, is down to just scones and coffee, open only until 1 p.m., and only until the end of the month. Then, it's supposed to be shutting down at that corner for good. Over the summer, the cafe collected hundreds of email addresses of bereft loyalists and even had a tribute to itself in words and artwork, but still seems destined to fade into history, its owners off to California to make their mark in wines. Employees are still dangling the possiblity of a reincarnation at another location, though any place that doesn't look out onto the perennially imperiled and then rescued historic old lifesaving station at 4th and Atlantic surely won't be the same. Until then, goodbye to chicken salad platters and foccacia specials, no wifi or air conditioning, the inimitable buzz from a Mexican chocolate scone. We will keep you posted, and, in the meantime, make our peace with the fine fish and steak taco combo at the Ocean City Surf Cafe, still going strong in a parrothead kind of way on 8th street.

August 19, 2007

On the books, an embarrassment of riches

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Avalon Free Public Library director Norman Gluckman with a page-turner. A law mandating a percentage of taxes for libraries has some towns wanting a share of surpluses. (Tom Gralish/Inquirer)

Town leaders in Avalon and Ocean City are singing the blues precisely because their libraries are in the black, reports the Inquirer's Maria Panaritis. They say the extravagant Shore real estate market, combined with an age-old state law requiring that a fixed percentage of local taxes go to libraries, has created piles of unspendable cash. They want the ability to transfer surplus bucks away from books and onto the municipal ledger, even as libraries around the state struggle for adequate funding.
Read the full story.

July 30, 2007

Aw...c'mon you guys...

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...Shoobies are so sensitive! (See comments from that link). You can put a local in her place! We were just having a little fun by describing the shoobie-themed boat from Saturday's Night in Venice, decorated with that annoying, er, colorful PA plate on the back. Really, we love the shoobies down here at the shore. See, here's a story I did that's practically a LOVE letter to my neighbors from Philly. I forgot you guys can sometimes feel like locals have some underground secret society thing going on. I know sometimes it looks like there's an EZ-pass lane for locals at the bagel store. (There is). Believe me, we appreciate all the money you spend down here and the joie de vivre you bring as you turn our Boardwalks into the Schuylkill (in a good way!) and our beaches into Rittenhouse Square. I'd be lost without you. And now that I have your attention, here's a helpful hint: the streets in Margate run al-pha-bet-i-cally.

Boardwalk Art Show this weekend in Ocean City

The Ocean City Arts Center will present its 45th Annual Boardwalk Art Show this weekend. One of the largest summer art shows on the East Coast, the event will be held Friday to Sunday on the Ocean City Boardwalk, between Seventh and 14th streets. The show will feature the work of artists from Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware and 10 other states will offer oils, acrylics, watercolors, pen and ink, photography and mixed media. The show is limited to fine arts only and does not include three-dimensional art such as pottery, carved art, glass or sculpture.

Artists begin setting up at dawn Friday and judging begins at 10:30 a.m. Hours are from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday.

Alleged toe sucker apprehended in Ocean City

Ocean City police may have closed the bizarre case of the toe-sucker, NBC10.com reports. On Friday, officers investigated a reported sighting of a man who harassed a juvenile on June 25. The man, who police said matched the description of a man who allegedly sucked and licked a 12-year-old girl's foot after helping her untangle her kite, fled police. He was taken into custody after a short chase.

Read the full story.

July 29, 2007

Show us your ... boats?

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I went to Ocean City's annual loopiness on the water boat parade for the first time ever this weekend. In 12 years down here, I had avoided the thing as it would violate a cardinal rule of local-hood: Do not leave your home island in the summer for any reason at all. And I had always pictured the "Night in Venice" ritual as an elegant and sophisticated parade of lit up boats sailing peacefully past houses on the bay, all with Gatsby-ish parties on the deck. Well, the Gatsby part I got right. Kudos to all the party planners and hosts, especially the ones at the party we were at, right at the start of the route along the bay, lovely evening all around. Sorry, duplex-for-a-week shoobies, but this side of Ocean City you'll never see. Tres elegant-o! But the boat parade part itself took me by surprise for being, you should pardon the expression, so entertainingly and unabashedly stoopid. Felt at times like watching the campy old Miss America Parade of shoe-revealing beauties, except at sea, an inimitable spectacle still greatly missed. Kudos to the Imus-tribute boat, with Imus hanging in effigy and a sign advertising something that rhymes with happy hour which we won't print, and to the Tony Soprano bada bing boat. Excellent work on the shoobie boat, decorated to look like a car with that annoying Pennsylvania plate on the back. Only thing the shoobie boat didn't do to complete the picture was slow down every two blocks to try to locate their destination. Also dug the boat decorated as a downer-channel tribute to the Phillies' 10,000 losses. Hey, a parade's a parade, you got a problem with that? Black balloons, nice touch.

July 24, 2007

Goodbye beach tag, hello electronic wristbands

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Fifteen-month-old Jeffrey Friedel of Philadelphia plays alongside a lifeguard boat on the beach in Ocean City, N.J. The city is considering eliminating beach badges and issuing electronic bracelets to paying customers. (Mel Evans/AP)

If Ocean City's plans come to fruition next summer, the resort would be a place where an electronic wristband can pay for access to the beach, food, drinks and parking, and can even send a text message to a mother's cell phone if a child strays too far away from her beach chair, the Associated Press reports.
Read the full story.

Inspectors examine log flume ride after accident

State amusement ride safety inspectors Monday examined a log flume ride one day after an accident injured five people at Gillian's Wonderland Pier in Ocean City, N.J., the Newark Star Ledger reports. The accident occurred when a car on the Canyon Falls Log Flume that was being pulled on a conveyor belt to near the top of a steep ramp unexpectedly slid backward and struck a car at the bottom of the ramp.
Read the full story.

July 19, 2007

Making waves

Surfing is bigger than ever at the shore this season, Philadelphia Weekly reports. And it's just swell after Labor Day. In Ocean City, N.J., surf culture is a year-round sport ingrained in the indigenous community.

Read the full story.

July 16, 2007

Lollipop Concert in Ocean City Thursday night

The Ocean City Pops will perform a Lollipop Concert with the Youth Opera of South Jersey at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, July 19, at the Hughes Performing Arts Center, 6th Street and Atlantic Avenue. The production is H.M.S. Pinafore by Gilbert and Sullivan. Admission: Adults, $5; children free. For tickets, call 609-525-9248 or order on-line at www.ocnj.us. The event is sponsored by Gillian’s Wonderland Pier.
And there's plenty more events this week at the shore.

July 12, 2007

In Ocean City, Miss New Jersey reigns supreme

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At an Ocean City press conference today, it was announced that Amy Polombo will retain her Miss New Jersey title. She is seated between her mother, Jennifer Wagner, and her attorney. (David M Warren/Inquirer)

Amy Polumbo will be allowed to continue her reign as Miss New Jersey and to represent the Garden State in the Miss America pageant, local contest officials announced Thursday afternoon in Ocean City, reports The Inquirer's Rita Giordano. Polumbo's future was put under a cloud after she went public with what she said was an attempt to blackmail her with embarrassing, personal photos.
Read the full story.
Photo gallery: The blackmail photos revealed.
Poll: Do you agree that Miss New Jersey should retain her crown?

July 3, 2007

Ocean City home sales climb on Philly ad blitz

The national real estate market may be sluggish, but agents in Ocean City are bucking the trend, the Press of Atlantic City reports. The resort city’s Board of Realtors can point to a 17 percent jump in residential sales through May 31. Nicholas Marotta of Academy Real Estate, board president, give some credit to a marketing campaign in February targeting Philadelphia. One recent home buyer, Keith Hausknecht of Warminster, Bucks County, told the Press he and his wife wanted to buy in Ocean City because of its small-town vibe and its family atmosphere.

Read the full story.

June 28, 2007

At the shore: Where the fireworks are

So where can you see fireworks on the Fourth of July at the shore? Philly.com has compiled a list for you:

Atlantic City: Fireworks after the Atlantic City Surf baseball game, which begins at 7:05.

Cape May: Fireworks shot off on a barge on the ocean, visible from the beach, no charge. For tickets to an All-American picnic to be held on the lawn of historic Congress Hall, held before the show, contact Congress Hall at 888-944-1816. Tickets $20.

Lower Township: Fireworks at the Cape May Ferry Terminal Grounds, 9:30 p.m., with live music, and food available for purchase beginning at 7:30.

Ocean City: Fireworks after a kite-flying contest and other entertainment, beginning at 9 p.m., at Carey Stadium, 6th Street off the Boardwalk.

Sea Isle City: Fireworks at 9 p.m., JFK Boulevard and the beach.

Stone Harbor: Fireworks and band concert at the 80th Street Fields, 9 p.m.

Wildwood: Fireworks at 10 p.m., Boardwalk at Pine Avenue.

Ventnor: Fireworks at 9 p.m., raindate Saturday July 7.

For a list of fireworks displays scheduled throughout the region, see our Fourth of July guide.

June 22, 2007

Better safe than sorry

If you see something that looks like a gun, maybe your best bet is to err on the side of caution and treat it like a gun ... In Ocean City, a teenager found what she thought was a toy gun on an amusement park ride. Turns out, it was the weapon reported missing Wednesday by an off-duty Philly police officer, AP reports today. Full story.

In other news, police plan to crack down on underage beachgoers trying to buy alcohol at the Shore this year with a "Cops to Shops" program that 26 towns have signed on to, according to the AP. And those who are caught face more than just a lecture from mom or dad: Fines start at $500, and the punishment could also affect driving privileges. Read the full story.

June 21, 2007

Summer, solstice, and surfing

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I finished my Shore/Summer solstice day at the 59th Street beach in Ocean City, where the Surfrider Foundation held its annual International Surfing Day Festival. Hundreds of people surfed, ate, played Frisbee, and listened to music. The weather was stunning, and I wasn't sure if everyone knew each other or this was just a really, really friendly group of people. I think it was a little bit of both.

Surfrider is a nonprofit organization that's about more than just surfing. Jen Zappone, a member from Linwood who doesn't surf herself (her husband, Mark, does) explained: "For our family, it's about keeping the beaches and oceans clean so we can enjoy surfing." While her kids Charity, 5, and Bodhi, 3 (means "peaceful warrior") ran around in swimsuits, the family dog Bailey, a chocolate Lab, appeared to be the most joyful creature on the beach. Dogs, who are normally banned from O.C. beaches, were given a temporary reprieve for the event. Life was good.

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Steve Muller, president of the South Jersey chapter of Surfrider, expounded on Jen's philosophy: "We're promoting clean water, environmental activism, and surfing access."

Gun lost by off-duty police officer reportedly found

A .22-caliber revolver that an off-duty Pennsylvania police officer reported losing Wednesday in Ocean City has been found, KYW 1060 is reporting. According to a report in the Press of Atlantic City, Gillian's Wonderland Pier on the boardwalk was shut down for two hours Wednesday night as a precaution after the officer, whom police did not identify, reported the handgun missing.
See the full story.

June 18, 2007

On the Ocean City boardwalk, a pizza challenge

They make a pizza so large at “3 Brothers from Italy Pizza The World's Largest Pizza” on the Boardwalk in Ocean City, they have a daily contest challenging people to eat the entire pie in less than an hour, the Press of Atlantic City reports. Patrons who can finish the 26-inch, 5½-pound pizza get their money back, and 10 free pies. The pizzeria is between Ninth and 10th streets.
Read the full story.


Ocean City votes to use tropical hardwood for boardwalk

After hours of public comment, Ocean City Council last Thursday night voted 4 to 3 in favor of purchasing $1.3 million dollars worth of the tropical hardwood Ipe, to re-deck a one block length of boardwalk, NBC40 reported. The harder Ipe would replace yellow pine, a relatively soft wood that requires much maintenance, on one block of the boardwalk. The issue has sparked emotional debate, including protests, between those for and against the use of the wood, which grows in equatorial rainforests.
See the full story.

June 13, 2007

Ocean City bridge project

The Route 52 causeway project is almost a year old, but still years away from completion. NBC40 reports that work continues to move along on the New Jersey Department of Transportation's biggest project. In the first phase, two bridges will be built to link Somers Point and Ocean City. Completion is scheduled for December 2009. The second phase, causeway replacement and circle elimination, is in its final design phase.
See the report.

June 7, 2007

Ocean City to offer free wireless Internet for residents

Ocean City officials said residents and local businesses could enjoy free wireless Internet access by next May, the Ocean City Gazette reported today. The city's Library Board has contracted with a firm to create a "Wireless Wave" that would cover the entire city. Visitors to the city would have to pay $6 daily or $25 weekly for access to the Net.
Read the full story.

Click here for a related story from the Press of Atlantic City.

June 5, 2007

The Dogs Are Not Going To Like This

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One minute, the dogs are living large, hanging on the sands, fetching balls from the surf, keeping order among warring flocks of seagulls. The next, in the name of progress and summer tourists, it’s this: a barren, pebble-lined, fenced-in desperate stretch of land nestled in the shadow of the Ocean City’s sewage waste treatment facility (ok, fittingly nestled, but still). Its own website euphemistically and apologetically describes the park as “sterile.” Even my dumb dogs would know this is not exactly doggie heaven.
Officially known as the Cape May County/Ocean City Dog Park, it was unveiled last month to the backyard-challenged dogowners of the shore as a refuge during summer, when their dogs are suddenly canis non grata on the beaches. They are promising some trees at some point. It’s located at 45th and Haven Streets, with the scary-big pipes of the treatment facilities as the view, complete with the sounds of sewage being treated as you scoop your dog’s poop. Four blocks away, the beach beckons.
Once the dog lovers of Ocean City dreamed of getting a stretch of actual beach front declared open for dogs, even just in the early morning hours. But all their efforts _ and they were considerable _ resulted in this penitentiary-like setting on the bayside of the island. There are a few amenities: a tire to jump through, a cute little water fountain at dog height, double entrances so your dog doesn’t go chasing after a new friend, and, eventually, the company of other dogs. There’s lots of room to throw a ball and to run. It costs $35 a year for out-of-county folks to get a “Paw Pass,” $25 for locals and $10 for a week. Mandy, a 9-year-old miniature pinscher, was the only dog there today. “It is kind of bleak,” her owner, Gene Hall, said. “It’s all gravel. But if you try to take them to the beach anymore, it’s like a federal case.”

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This is Mandy, walking the perimeter of the park. I say, better off jumping in the car and heading for that beach on the other side of the Ocean City-Longport Bridge, one of the rare ones where dogs are actually welcome. Or, doing what most people do, sneaking the dogs on the beach in the wee hours. www.oceancitydogpark.org.
UPDATE: Dog owner paranoia running high in Ocean City, with rumors of dogs being taken into custody from the beach and whisked away in caged trucks, reports one reader. In fact, that has been known to happen, Sgt. Dan Dubbs of the Ocean City police told me this morning, though he could not say if animal control had been on the case recently. "If the dog's running at large and the owner's not near it, and somebody reports it, they take it until they can find the owner. Nine times out of ten when the dog's running down the beach, the owner's within half a block, and you see the person."
As to the alternative of the new dog park by the waste treatment plant, Sgt. Dubbs said; "I have no comment on that."


May 31, 2007

Shore home foreclosures skyrocketing

A cooling real estate market is spurring a growing number of home foreclosures at the Jersey Shore, reports CBS3's Cydney Long. Foreclosure rates - affecting homes of all shapes, sizes and prices, according to mortgage brokers - are up 110 percent over last year, according to the story.
Go to the CBS3 report.

May 29, 2007

Boardwalks at the Jersey Shore

Check out this nifty multimedia presentation on Jersey Shore boardwalks by the Asbury Park Press. This seven-part series, done in 2006, includes sections on the boardwalks in Atlantic City, Ocean City and Wildwood.

Boardwalk business as hot as the weather

Business on the boardwalk in Ocean City was booming thanks to great weather at the shore this weekend, the Press of Atlantic City reports.
Read the full story.

The Press also has an interesting story about the McDonald's Restaurant in Somers Point, which has put music on the menu.
Read the full story.

A last day of fun as holiday weekend ebbs

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Shore visitors enjoyed themselves to the end with taffy, pizza, mini-golf and even a wedding, reports the Inquirer's Lini S. Kadaba. That's Mark and Denise Mullineaux, both of Trooper, walking back after their wedding on the beach in Ocean City.
Read the full story.

May 28, 2007

Sunset, Memorial Day

Sunset, 12th Street beach, Ocean City

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So I am nearly at the end of my Memorial Day odyssey. Tonight, the Ocean City boardwalk was filled with people like me, who were trying to squeeze every last moment into their holiday weekend. There were last ice cream cones, and last boardwalk lemonades, and last handfuls of Johnson's popcorn. In a way, these three days are an illusion - it feels like summer, but it's not.

"I don't WANT to go back to school," I heard a little boy cry as his parents steered him off the boardwalk.

We know what you mean, junior.

May 26, 2007

Boardwalk bliss

Mack and Manco's pizza is my perfect food. Now, I have already talked about this several times, so I promise to be silent on the subject for the rest of the weekend. But: I ate at the 9th Street Mack's for dinner tonight, and even I, a veteran, was astonished at the line to get in. I'm talking two dozen people for a boardwalk storefront that is not that large. Now mind you this was not for free pizza. My sister, brother-in-law, niece and two other friends came down for the day, and generously got in line while I was finishing up some work in my hotel room. I timed it just right: they waited 20 minutes or more, I only had to wait 5 minutes. Score!

And at the end, the perfect mix of sweet sauce, cheese, and thin, thin crust. Boardwalk bliss.

This is Julia Barth, not quite 3, enjoying our favorite pizza. She's my niece so she doesn't mind me snapping photos of her while she eats!

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Hot! Hot! Hot!

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After a half-day of combing the beaches and strolling the boardwalk (is it really strolling if you have a camera, two notebooks, and a backpack to lug along?) I have come to some conclusions:

1. It is entirely too hot for Memorial Day weekend. I'm sure the lemonade vendors and water purveyors are loving it, but let me tell you - 88 degrees feels like July weather, not warming-up-to-the-summer weather. I saw plenty of people leaving the beach because it was Too Darn Hot.
2. The water is another story entirely. We're talking frigid - about 60 degrees.
3. Although I come to the Shore every Memorial Day, I'm always struck by how crowded it is.
4. People are in such a good mood when they're here. There is something about the holiday weekend, short as it is, that makes everyone I approach cheerful and happy to talk.

Ocean City is my first Shore town stop - I hope to get to as many as I can. I got my first taste of the Shore here as a kid, and it's still got the best boardwalk in town. One of the people I interviewed this afternoon remarked that while other towns seem to gentrify and change character, Ocean City stays the same, and that's what's great about it. It's for families. It's got a terrific boardwalk, size-wise and mix of shops-wise. OK, maybe the house prices have gone sky-high, just like everywhere else at the Shore, but it's still essentially the same place this woman grew up coming to in the 50s and 60s. And the same place I grew up coming to in the 80s and 90s.

(Oh, and the adorable pooch pictured is one Abby, a Red Bone Coonhound whose mom, Christine Petrillo, drove her from Williamstown for Barks on the Boards, a dog walk and contest.)

Memorial Day Services at the Shore

From Belmar to Cape May, shore towns and organizations will honor the memory of those Americans who have died in military service to our country. A list of services scheduled for Saturday and Monday follows.

Continue reading "Memorial Day Services at the Shore" »

May 25, 2007

Jersey beach rules: No camel riding in Wildwood

Jersey Shore communities have a whole bunch of crazy rules about what you can and can't do on the beach, the Associated Press reports. Did you know you can't draw dirty pictures in the sands of Belmar, or ride a camel on the beach in Wildwood? And keep your ruler ready if your kids are digging in the sand on Long Beach Island.
Read the full story.

49th Street, Ocean City

Reader Chris Johnston writes in:
"Kristen - this is a picture I took a few years ago on 49th St. and it has not left my computer desktop wallpaper since! I look at the photo and can just feel Ocean City. I relocated from Ocean City to Rochester, NY so I spend a better part of my day staring at this picture and wishing I was there. Maybe we'll see you there this weekend!"

Here's the shot:


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Copyright © 2006-2008 Philadelphia Newspapers L.L.C. All Rights Reserved.

Author

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The Downashore Team is a group of Philly.com producers. Some of us grew up vacationing at the Jersey Shore, and others came to appreciate it later. Either way, we know our Mack and Manco's from our Prep's Pizza, and we'll do our best to share news, information and musings from up and down the coast. Please do post a comment with your Shore thoughts, or shoot us an e-mail by clicking on the link above. (OK, so we're not really at the beach in this photo, but armed with the power of a good photo editing program, we can dream, right?) We're joined by Inquirer staff writer Amy Rosenberg, who as a year-round Shore resident, knows a thing or two about the scene, and the Shoobies.

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