Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Front Door vs Back Door With Waterfront Houses




We are here today to discuss matters of great importance.

Specifically... on a beach house or even a lake house, is the front door of the house the one facing the ocean or the one facing the street?

The fun part of this debate is that both you and I most likely have an opinion on the matter, and we feel very strongly about it... but one can make a strong argument for the other side of the debate.

This is also a debate where, unlike abortion or gun control, it is unlikely that people will hate each other after the discussion.

When building a house on the coast, you sort of design from the water back to the street. There is a reason for that, perhaps several.

There are safety reasons, because the home can be destroyed by the water, be it by the creek rising of the ocean waves crashing. Certain designs can actually save lives, or end them.

There are aesthetic reasons, as the water makes for a spectacular and lucrative visual. A good design takes advantage of that.

When it's time to cash in, and you have to take a picture for the realtor...ideally, you would head out on the water and get a picture of your house from the sea, showing the beach in front of it and the door facing the ocean.

This puts to the "front" in "waterfront," and stimulates the debate as to whether this is the front door of the house in question.

However, in non Venice societies, most travel is by the road rather than the water. The road, in most cases, leads to the house, unless you are looking at the cabin of a mountain man or perhaps the home of the Blair Witch.

As people prefer not to exit the car and then walk around the whole house to gain access, there is usually a door into the house near the street.

The design of the house is also based on this fact much of the time. The home''s entryway is usually near the door road. Most people entering the house approach from the road, especially people who have to knock first.

I know a few houses where a decision by a visitor to use the waterfront entry to seek access could result in a shotgun wound.

So, which is the front door?

I am the wrong person to make this decision. I think that the road entrance of the house is the front door... but when I lived directly on Duxbury Beach, myself and most of my neighbors would refer to the beach door as the front door... and when I bought a home on a lake, I unconsciously switched teams, instinctively referring to the lake-facing door as the back door. No logic or intention motivated this switch.

I ended this dissonance by moving to a cottage on Cape Cod. I only have one door, which I call "the door." While I live on a bay, the door faces neither the beach nor the road. The back door of my house is a purely theoretical concept, involving me jumping out of a window while fleeing a house fire or an unwanted visit by a Mafia enforcer.

In the end, thou shalt do as thou wilt...




Thursday, December 7, 2017

First Snow Of Season For Eastern Massachusetts?



https://cranberrycountymagazine.com/2017/12/07/first-snow-of-the-season-for-se-massachusetts/

Friday, September 29, 2017

Maria Surf Check, Horseneck Beach


We went to Horseneck Beach in Westport MA on Thursday to check out some of the long distance surf rolling in from Hurricane and then Tropical Storm Maria.


We picked a great day for it, amazing late September weather. I'd have gone swimming if I thought that I would have survived it.


The wind was cutting across the waves, rather than pushing behind them. Didn't seem to slow 'em down much...

Did make the waves a bit messy, but they looked good.

Tropical Storm Maria is steamrolling East out to sea, but she should throw swells back at Massachusetts for a while. She'll be soaking Irishmen as a non-hurricaney low pressure area by Monday.

There's a High Surf Warning through Friday night's 6 PMish high tide for SE facing beaches.

There is also concern over rip currents, although we turn more Fall than Summer Friday and Saturday, and no one is swimming if it is 50 degrees and raining.

When I was a kid, a storm like this would wash up 50 lobster pots for the locals to raid. They switched to metal pots in the late 70s, and storms don't beach as many of those.

Westport was on some Hawaii 5-0 ish Thursday...

I didn't see any surfers, as the surf was pretty messy. Someone told me maybe Rhode Island.

May be Outer Cape tomorrow and Saturday for waves...


Westport had 6 and 7 foot waves at times.

Good show, Maria!



Thursday, September 28, 2017

Fort Phoenix
































Sagamore Beach Jose Pics


We're a week late, as we've been having computer issues... but here are some pics of Sagamore Beach during Hurricane (or Tropical Storm) Jose. That tree actually looks like that all the time, but that doesn't stop our photographers.

Sagamore Beach was the cutoff point for Tropical Storm Warnings in Massachusetts for much of Jose's visit.

Keep in mind that Saggy B is somewhat sheltered by the giant barrier beach that is Cape Cod, but barrier beaches don't stop wind.

We were working with a rotten camera phone that didn't survive Jose, but we did our level best for you.

No major damage was done, although if the storm wobbled west or north a bit more...

A little beach erosion.

This surf isn't tearing down any houses, but it is very respectable for somewhat-sheltered Sagamore Beach.

We have some video below, notable only for the wind blowing over our 245 pound photographer....



Tuesday, September 19, 2017

Pre-Jose Surf Check


With Hurricane Jose lurking offshore, we went to a few beaches to see what's what. We met the Weather Warrior up by Bert's in Plymouth.

Plymouth is a big town, so we also stopped at The Lobster Pound in Manomet.

Manomet needs a little off the top, so to speak.

The Tropical Storm Warnings are no longer applying to the South Shore.

"I am a rock, I am an iiiiiiisland."

I had to crawl down on the rocks to get better shots than the lazy NECN people in the van.


It looks very menacing if I zoom in, but this wave was about 18" high.

See?

Things will probably be a bit more perky tomorrow.


From Plymouth, we then headed to Duxbury. Duxbury was a bit far north for storm waves, but we may return there, so it's good to have some BEFORE pictures.


Duxbury Beach was fixin' to get angry, but it wasn't quite there yet.


Two of those equals Steve's house, no joke... that one has a better roof.

My camera levels well if I have a 1700 foot flat level thing to aim at... three or four times.

Whenever I look at this bridge- and  grew up in Duxbury- I always wonder what Evel Knevil would do with it. Eventually, you realize that nothing could top putting a ramp at the beach end and jumping the shark off of it. It worked for Fonzie, although the term lives in infamy.

There's no way Jose that a puny tropical storm was gonna keep ol' Poop Deck Pappy here from his appointed fish. I'm not picking on PDP, he's way cooler than I am and is most likely having a nice striper filet as we speak.

There would be a certain irony to being killed by a wind-blown lifeguard stand, sort of  the anti-Hasselhoff. Not a worry in Duxbury, though... they tip that ish over.

Best wave I saw in Duxbury, hoping Thursday will be better.

Why I never jog in the dark on Duxbury Beach... OK, that and 300000 Newports.


We actually started in Fairhaven, but we'll end up there now to give this article a snake-draft feel.

New moon high tide, should be fun tomorrow. We'll be out there somewhere...

Front Door vs Back Door With Waterfront Houses

We are here today to discuss matters of great importance. Specifically... on a beach house or even a lake house, is the front door of...