My new home is in Ormond-by-the-Sea, Florida. It is separated by the Inland Waterway from Ormond-not-by-the -Sea where most of the rest of my family lives. They just call it Ormond. As I drive A1A up the coast, I look out at the billions upon billions gallons of water in the omnipresent sea or Atlantic Ocean as some call it. It is so vast that I stand by-the-sea and gape.
It is a
big change from Cheyenne-by-the-Prairie which is also a vast land that,
coincidentally, was once an inland sea where plesiosaurs pursued prey under my
patch of dry ground. A better name might be
Cheyenne-pretty-close-to-the-mountains which is the Laramie Range and then the
Snowy Range and if you travel south the Mummy Range and Rocky Mountain National
Park. Beautiful, beautiful places where our family spent a lot of time and
those memories will be forever lodged in my heart.
Vedauwoo
was our favorite. Son Kevin learned to free-climb there and our daughter Annie
loved to hike and camp. We watched UW’s Vertical Dance on a rock face of
1.5-billion-year-old granite. I’m pretty sure Florida will be underwater by then.
I recently saw a map that showed Florida twice the size 18,000 years
ago due to a 30 percent drop in sea level. Ormond-by-the-sea would
have to move east to maintain its name and dignity.
Yesterday Chris
and I drove to Flagler Beach. You can see the waves break from A1A. The day
before, a stretch of this road was swamped by a monsoon rain and traffic had to
be rerouted. Once we reached Flagler, we had to slow down for construction. The
Army Corps of Engineers brought their massive equipment here to refurbish the
beach and roadway washed away during the last two hurricanes. They are piping
in beige sand from a huge barge. The current sand is red which has its origins
in coquina rock and is a rougher sand that washes away easily. The beige sand
is more stalwart.
After six
or seven miles of construction, we get to the Flagler Pier and summer crowds.
Surfers have arrived in droves to ride the waves which break better near the
pier. My brothers and I surfed here in the 1960s and ‘70s. The crowds were
smaller and the locals pretty welcoming unless you took off in front of them on
a wave and then they would kick their board at you trying for some decapitation
or maybe just a few bruises. We did the same thing at our beach in Daytona. All
in fun.
Chris and
I were on a mission to get our Florida driver’s licenses and tags and also
register to vote. We didn’t want to miss out on the most important vote of our
lifetime. We volunteered for election day duty. Some say it’s going to be a free-for-all
but ruffians will think twice when they see this gray-haired man in a walker sent
to keep the peace or die trying. It’s easy to come unglued at times like this.
MAGA people and Christian Nationalists have followed Trump’s lead and issued
threats. The other side (my side) tries to keep cool heads and say only
positive things online. We often fail.
Chris and
I accomplished two of our goals. The tags had to wait due to additional
paperwork. We celebrated by taking naps and ordering take-out from Stavro’s, a
fine Italian place just up the street and in sight of the sea. I should say
by-the-sea.
No comments:
Post a Comment