By Sam Burnham @C_SamBurnham Summer is here and for so many throughout the South that means fun in the sun and surf along the Gulf Coast. Growing up in Georgia, when people said they were headed to the beach they meant Panama City. Occasionally you'd encounter someone who was headed to Destin or maybe Ft. Walton Beach. My family had enough of a peninsular Florida influence that this infatuation with Panama City was bizarre. My childhood beach experiences included Daytona, Ormond, Jacksonville, and St. Augustine. In fact, I visited South Beach on Martha's Vineyard and a secluded beach on Salt Cay, Bahamas before I ever stepped foot in Bay County Florida. These days, Panama City, and Daytona for that matter, is a picture of an urban center with a strip of white sand. There's just not much there for a small town guy looking for some relaxation that only comes from some peace and quiet. But all the cool kids are doing it. Even Gulf Shores/Orange Beach (our go-to since 2001) and Ft. Walton (our other choice) have really picked up in traffic, crowds and noise. I can get all that in Atlanta and spend a lot less money. Enter Summer 2017, stage right. I think I have found an ABG approved option to the summer beach vacation. It's options plural, really, as is usually the case. I often say that big problems tend to require many small solutions and the beach is no exception. Let's talk about The Beaches of South Walton along scenic Highway 30A. The highway is part of what makes the area great. It's a two lane blacktop that veers off US 98 in Walton County and connects a string of small communities that each have their own feel, personality, if you will. Some of the places are old. Some are recent developments. This is by no means an exhaustive critique of the 30A beaches but I would like to offer a few of my insights on the places I was able to observe. Blue Mountain Beach Blue Mountain was our base of operation on this trip. Far removed from the high-rise condo structures in Panama City and Gulf Shores, this neighborhood is peppered with houses with very few businesses of any sort. The colorful structures rise up from the thickets of scrub oaks and spiky palms. But there is nary a mountain in sight. There is an ice cream shop, the Creamery, that I never made it to because the line was stretched out into the street all three times I dropped by. I'm guessing it is good. I can vouch for the ice cream at Buddy's Bike Rentals. The wait was much shorter and the treats good. WaterColor Developed by the St. Joe Paper company and designed by the same folks who produced the Disney town of Celebration, WaterColor is a lovely splash of color as well as brick streets. The community has an architecture that mashes well with the landscape. Speaking of landscape, the use of trees and other plants is excellent. The neighborhood has a very homey feel to it. It's very classy without being too posh. When I passed through on bicycle, there were people walking and biking around. There were a few places with tents set up offering kids activities and such. It's still a relatively quiet destination that is just a short walk or bike ride to Seaside, which we'll discuss next. Seaside Seaside is a planned (er...mostly) community that you may have seen in the Jim Carey movie The Truman Show. There is talk that it earned that role because it came across as fake, almost too good to be true. If it is too good to be true, it still convinced me that it was, in fact, true. Along 30A, Seaside is the happening place. That is the one stretch of the road that had moderate traffic. It slowed but it was not the parking lot you experience in other places. It is easily navigated by bike or on foot. Much of the architecture is based on the old Florida designs and that tugged on the heart strings a bit. The community's center is a park that includes a stage area for open air music and drama, restaurants and shops, food trucks made from old Airstream campers, and a quaint little post office that I dare you to try to not photograph. I had to grab a few pictures, I just couldn't help it The interfaith chapel is a breathtaking wedding venue. Seaside was a little crowded for my taste. A good place to drop in, have a little fun, and then slip back down to a place more my speed. A touch busy but beautiful just the same. Alys Beach Let's talk about Alys Beach. When you pass through Alys, it will absolutely grab your attention. The stark white structures and statuary put a modern twist on the beaches along this highway. The cars and amenities indicate that there is money in Alys Beach. I'm honestly not a fan of the architecture. I don't think it blends well with the landscape. I don't think that I could get comfortable there. Between the harsh angles and bleached appearance, I'd be scared to sit down anywhere. It seems sterile, perhaps even starched. Don't get me wrong, it's a sight to see. I'd suggest a ride through. If you're into the modernist thing, I'd say stay there. But I'd feel much more at home in Grayton. Grayton was my favorite of all the communities along 30A. It appears to be the oldest with the first homesteader showing up in the 1880s. The homes have a vernacular feel to them. Even the larger buildings fit neatly into the design scheme of the village. There are a few places for food and drinks. The beach offers an access for boat launching for the gulf while another ramp gives boat access to the lake on the east end of town. There is a lot of shade along the streets. The whole feel of the place is relaxed. Grayton seems to look at you from the porches and call out for you to slow down, take a load off. I'm not saying it is the 12 Southerners with a sand dune but it is about as close as I expect to get to that. I thought so much of this place that I visited it just about every day on bicycle. I'd recommend a stop there for anyone. I plan to dive deeper into the finer points of 30A this summer. There is more to discuss but this is an overview of the area.
See you soon.
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By Sam Burnham
@C_SamBurnham My oldest son came to me last tight with a question. He was curious about a time in history that I remebered well. He was asking me about the Irish Republican Army. I didn't learn about the IRA from history lessons. I learned about the IRA from the NBC Nightly News. Dad would often mumble about the left leaning bias of the media but choices were few in those days and Tom Brokaw was his go-to. My apologies to Peter Jennings. Back to the present. My son was curious about this time when "Northern Ireland looked like Syria." We discussed the animosity between the IRA and the British government. We also discussed the end of that era and the two sides talking and making peace while looking for more humane solutions to their disagreements. Growing up, I was a curious kid. I enjoyed watching the evening news with my dad and keeping up with current events. My kids are similar. While we use online sources for news and don't even have cable at home, they still enjoy keeping up with the news and discussing it with me. Our age has its own struggles and conflicts but I have been thinking about things that happened in my youth that my kids see only from the perspective of history. Here are a few: 1) The conflict in Northern Ireland 2) The Berlin Wall 3) The Polish Solidarity Movement 4) The war between the former Yougoslav republics 5) The Cold War & arms race 6) The conflict between the Sandinistas & Contras 7) The Iran-Iraq War 8) War in Lebanon 9) The L.A. riots 10) Recurring Lakers vs Celtics for NBA Championship Names of players and locations may change but the more things change, the more they stay the same. By Sam Burnham
@C_SamBurnham There has been a lot of anger directed at the President for his decision to remove the United States from the non-binding Paris Climate Accord that former President Barack Obama entered via executive action. The accord was not a treaty, as all treaties require a 2/3 vote in the Senate for ratification. My purpose here is not to comment in regard to the Paris Accord. I'm not here to opine on the merits of the accord. But a very pleasing byproduct has arisen from the fallout of the exit. California, NewYork, and Washington, three of our most liberal-progressive states have expressed their intention to exert their 10th Amendment rights to take a different direction than the over centralized power in D.C. Such independent thinking by these three states seemed unthinkable just six months ago. Seeing states whose acquiescence to Federal rule bordered on sycophancy step out and do their own thing is very encouraging. This may prove to be one of the best developments of the year. I'm hoping it is a trend that will continue. While the Constitution prohibits states from entering into treaties with foreign powers, there is nothing that would deny them the right to set the goals laid out in Paris and hold their states accountable to those standards. For far too long the Left has demanded that everything be compulsory, nationwide. This was not the intent of the Founders and goes against the very principles of America. In short, Federal mandates are un-American but Federalism is uniquely American. So a toast: to these liberal states forming an agreement - a confederacy even - and stepping out on principle and putting their money where their mouths are! Cheers! |
Sam B.Historian, self-proclaimed gentleman, agrarian-at-heart, & curator extraordinaire Social MediaCategories
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