Tag: Singing Beach
Singing Beach
Went to Singing Beach on Wednesday and almost blew away. It was very pretty but cold.
New restaurant Antique Table opening and summer programs in Manchester by the Sea
Antique Table tratorria opening soon in downtown Manchester on 7 Central Street where the restaurant 7 Central had been for decades. Established in 2008, additional Antique Table locations include Lynn, Winthrop and Salem. Dinner menu here and lunch menu here
Manchester by the Sea Public Library summer schedule offers recurring Monday, Wednesday and Thursday programs interspersed with special library events on site and at Singing Beach. Notices on display at Essen
Almost spring time at Singing Beach
Another sunset
After a rainy and dreary day, as sunset approached the clouds parted and the sun made an appearance. Went over to Singing Beach and White Beach to catch the sunset.
Singing Beach
Driving by Singing Beach stopped to see what the beach looks like. Lots of rocks on the soft sand. Here is a surfer diving into a wave and the Hiram Walker House in the background of a wave.
Long Beach shifting sands and seawall: Rockport DPW targets nature and infrastructure
The other Singing Beach
As with Manchester Singing and other North Shore beaches, the white or “dry” sand of Long Beach sings a musical sound as you scuff ahead. Lately though it’s whistling a shorter tune because there’s an astonishing loss of the dry grains.
Over the last 10 years, so much sand has been washed away from Long Beach most every high tide hits the seawall. Boogie boarders need to truncate their wave rides else risk landing on the rip-rap. It’s become a competitive sport to lay claim to some beach chair and towel real estate if you want a dry seat. On the plus side, low tide is great for beach soccer and tennis, long walks and runs. Bocce ball has replaced can jam and spikeball as the beach games of summer 2017.
Seasoned locals recall having to ‘trudge a mile’ across dry sand before hitting wet sand and water. In my research I’ve seen historic visuals that support their claims.
Vista: Entrance from the Gloucester side of Long Beach
Historic photos and contemporary images –from 10 years ago– show a stretch of white sand like this one looking out from the Gloucester side of Long Beach to the Rockport side.
photocard showing the pedestrian walkway prior to the concrete boardwalk. Historic prints from ©Fredrik D. Bodin (1950-2015) show the damage after storm, 1931. See his GMG post and rodeo (ca. 1950)
After the Storm, Long Beach, 1931 Alice M. Curtis/©Fredrik D. Bodin (1950-2015) “Printed from the original 5×7 inch film negative in my darkroom. Image #88657-134 (Long Beach looking toward Rockport)”
Vista: Facing the Gloucester side of Long Beach
This next vintage postcard flips the view: facing the Gloucester side of Long Beach –looking back to glacial rocks we can match out today, a tide line that shows wet and dry sands, and the monumental Edgecliffe Hotel which welcomed thousands of summer visitors thanks to a hopping casino. The white sand evident in front of the Edgecliffe bath houses (what is now Cape Ann Motor Inn) has plummeted since a 2012 February storm and vanished it seems, perhaps temporarily, perhaps not. It’s most evident where several feet of sand was cleaved off from the approach to the boardwalk.
Seasons of sand
I find the annual sand migration on Long Beach a fascinating natural mystery. It’s dramatic every year. Here are photos from this last year: fall (late Sept 2016), winter (December- sand covers rip-rap), spring (April -after winter storms with alarming loss), and summer (today)
FALL
WINTER
SPRING April rip-rap uncovered, exposed. Climbing to the boardwalk is an exciting challenge for two boys I know (when the sand is filled in like the December photo it’s a short drop)
SUMMER July 14 sand is coming back though all boulders are not entirely submerged
Storms (namely February) strip the silky soft top sand away and expose the boulders strengthening the seawall. It’s easy to feel alarmed that the beach is disappearing. By summer, the sand fills back, though not always in the same spot or same quantity. Some rip-rap expanses remain exposed. Most is re-buried beneath feet of returning sand. New summer landmarks are revealed. One year it was a ribbon of nuisance pebbles the entire length of beach. The past two years we’ve loved “the August Shelf”. (Will it come again?)
This year there’s a wishbone river.
“Apparently you do bring sand to the beach, according to the selectmen appointed committee ascribed with repairing the Long Beach seawall, which could cost up to $25 million.”
In case you missed the Gloucester Daily Times article “Rockport Looks to Fix Long Beach Sea Wall” by Mary Markos, I’ve added the link here. They hope to finish by 2025. I look forward to learning more and reading about it. If extra sand is brought back will high tide continue to hit the seawall? (In the past it could hit the wall or blast over in storms, but dry sand remained lining the wall.) Will the new wall occupy the same general footprint? Will it be higher? Thicker?
A nice day for a stroll on Singing Beach
Singing Beach and Eagle Head, Manchester
Sunset By The Sea – In Manchester
While Singing Beach showed an almost pastel, soft set of colors with a little fog blowing in, the Harbor was sharp and bright! Always interesting how different things can look within a half mile!
Singing Beach
Singing Beach Beat Up From Recent Storms- Photos From Allison Sigrist
Hi Joey,
Here are some storm damage photos from Singing Beach, if you’d like to post them. Several feet of sand just left, and lots of rocks exposed. You can see just how much, since the recreation area line is now way above ground level. The beach was literally flattened by the storms.
-Allison Sigrist
Eagle Head from Singing Beach From Jim (Penn State guy) Diedrich Updated With 1880 Photo From Fred (Syracuse guy) Bodin
Joey,
Eagle Head from Singing Beach on a beautiful Sunday afternoon. Sony Alpha 55 using a 35 mm lens w/ UV filter.
Jim (Penn State guy) Diedrich
and this from from Fred (Syracuse guy) Bodin-
Eagle Head Manchester circa 1880
Bodin Historic Photo
82 Main Street, Gloucester, MA 01930