After
the Gilded Age millionaires (Morgan, Vanderbilt, Pulitzer,
etc.) left Jekyll Island and their “cottages” for destinations and
mansions more tony, the State of Georgia converted this smallest of the state's
barrier islands into a state park in 1947. Three years later Georgia
established the Jekyll Island Authority in an attempt to put the
island on a solid financial footing. For the next few decades Jekyll
Island became a low-cost, tranquil getaway for the middle class,
which found its beaches, golf courses and bike paths quite tony
enough.
Bike Trails... |
But
several years ago it became obvious that the island's decades-old
infrastructure and man-made assets were in decline, and in need of
repair and long-term upkeep. To generate the needed money the JIA initiated a revitalization program that this year has seen major changes
to Jekyll. There is a new, big and fancy Westin Hotel, a “Main
Street” that includes shops and a pub/sports bar. There is now more than two or three good places to eat on
the island.
And
while long-time residents complain of the loss of tranquility, Jake
and Stone found plenty of relaxation and repose. While realizing that Jekyll in times other than the dead of
winter might be quite different, they both felt that the charm of
Jekyll had only been burnished by the new facelift, and were thankful
for being able to get a good martini at at least one other place than
the redoubtable Jekyll Island Club Hotel.
Wednesday,
January 13: Wanting to go more than halfway from Jersey to Jekyll on their
first day's drive, Jake and Stone stopped in Hillsville, VA. Here the
Holiday Inn Express was not the usual good HIE experience, but the
Mexican food and beer at the nearby Rio Grande Mexican Grill was cheap and good.
Thursday,
January 14: After paying a week's entrance fee to the park ($26),
their drive to the island proper was highlighted by their first bird
sighting – an eagle no less! Their little 2BR apartment (yellow 4-apt building, here) on Brice
Ave was a minute's walk to the beach, and though less upscale than
their previous digs, proved to be adequate to their needs and
a very good overall value.
First
on the to-do list was the usual big and cold martini at the small and
warm Jekyll Club lobby bar. This has long been our couple's favorite
watering hole and this first night was hyper-typical of the convivial
scene usually found around this 10-seat arena.
They
fell into conversation with Tony, who was earnestly “traveling the
world for peace with tea,” (see his site: Humanity.org), but on
this night Tony was also celebrating a friend's test results of being
cancer free. Toasts all around!
"Harry's at the Reserve" Observation Deck at Westin Hotel |
After
the eagle sighting, Tony, and Harry, it seemed this first night was now
certainly out of wonderful surprises -- until Jake and Stone stopped
in at the Wee Pub on “Main Street” near the new Westin Hotel.
Stella Artois on tap! and perhaps the best fish and chips ever!
It
seemed only proper on such a miraculous first night that they
return to the Jekyll Club Hotel for a quiet sunset view while seated
on the large veranda. Then it was off to their almost-beachside
quarters to sleep – if not “the sleep of the just,” then the
sleep of the grateful, whose slumber is equally untroubled.
Friday,
January 15: Much as their first drink is always at the Jekyll
Club, our duo's first breakfast is always at the Waffle House in
nearby Brunswick, GA. The two venues are a sort of yin and yang of
their trips to Jekyll, with the yachtsmen and world peace
entrepreneurs of the Club now being replaced by truck drivers and
moms with kids in tow. Together the disparate two scenes form a sort of Jekyll Tao.
After
breakfast the nearby Winn Dixie provides all the fixin's necessary for their
apartment stay. The day turns rainy, which is OK by Stone as she
delights in a long beach walk back on Jekyll down to the “Main Street”
shopping area where she enjoys a haircut and local gossip at Kay's
Beauty Salon. The rain stops long enough for Jake to have round of
golf on a wet and windy Pine Lakes course. Then it's a quick dinner
for them both and out to the movies in Brunswick, GA, where they see
“Brooklyn,” which they both enjoyed.
After the movie it was time to try a martini at the new Westin. Here the long
bar serves as the entrance to the Reserve restaurant, and who should
they see at the bar as they walk in but Tony (of humanity.org) talking to
two women. He had been a ladies' favorite at the Jekyll Club bar last night,
so Jake couldn't resist kidding him about his wine-and-women path to
world peace. Being a man of a liberal and benevolent nature, he
smiled and raised his laptop as evidence in a trial he was bound to
lose – “But I'm really only here for the fast Wi-Fi,” he
laughed. The bar at the Westin is top-shelf, and like the hotel, very
stylish. As was the martini. Tony was still talking to the two women
as our couple left. But then the majority of humanity is, after all, women.
In Front of the Crane "Cottage" |
After
biking back to their 2BR Jake and Stone strolled through the Brice
Lane “neighborhood,” where a resident invited us to pick two
oranges from his tree. (Full of seeds but tasty.) Dinner was
hamburgers prepared on the provided BBQ. Sweet.
Sunday,
January 17: As sometime Unitarians, Jake and Stone usually try
to visit a UU place on their vacations. This Sunday they went to
Brunswick for breakfast at an IHOP (after their hoped-for breakfast
place was closed), then attended a very nice MLK-Day service at the UU of Coastal Georgia. The service was lead by an energetic
great-grandmother, Jane Page, who splits her duties with UUCG and the
UU in Statesboro, GA.
(In
a bit of happy coincidence, the Pastor Emeritus of UUCG is none other
than the Rev. William “Bill” R. Phillips. In 2007, just after
they had both retired, Jake and Stone took a long motor trip down to
Florida. Along they way they stayed one night at Rev. Bill's Jekyll
residence (the rent went
to the UU building fund). That visit was
their introduction to the wonders of Jekyll (the Rev. showed them
around Jekyll's historic district in his golf cart) and serves as the
starting point for all of Jekyll that has followed.)
Green With a View |
After
a snooze back on Jekyll, our duo had a wonderful twilight round of
husband-and-wife golf on the best nine holes on Jekyll – the GreatDunes Course. (Stone was really killing the ball all late-afternoon
long.) Then it was back to the ranch for some drinks, dinner, and
some Sunday NFL football before bedtime.
Swing Time |
After
lunch and a snooze it was movie time again, this time The
Big Short. In the same
mall as the movie complex was the Copper Pig BBQ & Smokehouse, which they had heard
described as a “red-neck sports bar.” The pulled pork was tasty
and the beer nice and cold, but there was little evidence of a
rural/country flavor until several kids delighted their parents by
trying to stay on the mechanical “bucking pig”
inside the restaurant, while outside the restaurant several more kids
squealed in delight as they fed the live “gators.”
Tuesday,
January 19: Near the exit for
Brunswick on I-95, Jake and Stone had spotted the largest Denny's
they could remember seeing, so this morning they gave it a shot for
breakfast and found the service, food and atmosphere quiet pleasing.
While Jake played 18 holes at Jekyll's Indian Mound course, Stone
once again biked the paved paths and walked the low-tide beach. After
an afternoon of relaxation and reading, this typical Jekyll day
was finished with drinks at the Jekyll Club and dinner at the
Driftwood Bistro with the best shrimp and grits of the trip.
Jacksonville-Baldwin Trail |
Back
in Jekyll, Jake and Stone did some shopping at the brand new Jekyll Market, which is a mainstay of the “revitalized Jekyll Island.”
It is quite large (especially for Jekyll) and offers lots of stuff,
including some six-packs of Jekyll Beer, which make for handy gifts.
Thursday,
January 21: Another
standard Jekyll day. The morning featured a 10 mile bike ride,
with coffee and pastry at the Club Cafe making for a needed rest. After biking back to the ranch, Stone again explored the beach and read, Jake played 18 holes
on Oleander, the third of Jekyll's 18-hole courses. Because it is
often wet, Oleander is the least favorite layout at Jekyll, and on
this day the play was slow as well.
(Jekyll's three 18-hole golf courses are all similar. All are player-friendly with very wide fairway, but quick greens. The costs are reasonable and the setting is wonderful -- tall trees, lush fernery, bird, deer and n occasional gator. Jekyll's golf is hardly spectacular, but it is very recreational, and that is a good thing.)
Recreational Golf in a Park-like Setting |
(Jekyll's three 18-hole golf courses are all similar. All are player-friendly with very wide fairway, but quick greens. The costs are reasonable and the setting is wonderful -- tall trees, lush fernery, bird, deer and n occasional gator. Jekyll's golf is hardly spectacular, but it is very recreational, and that is a good thing.)
Before
dinner our couple repaired once again to the bar at the Jekyll Hotel
where conviviality was again in full flower. Dinner this night was at
Tortuga Jack's, where the new owners seem intent on making this Baja
Mexican place worth of its beachfront location. The food was good,
and the service was earnest if not particularly coordinated. On the
beachside of this eatery a new tiki bar is being installed, which
should add to the festive atmosphere, especially in the (likely crowded) summer.
Glory Beach (Parts of the 1989 movie "Glory" were filmed here |
Friday, January 22: With rain predicted for most of the day Jake and Stone make a return early-morning trip to St. Andrews Beach, stopping along the way for a windy walk on the long and deserted Glory Beach. St. Andrews Beach rewards them with not only a great view of a heron, but close-up, thrilling views of two dolphins cruising a low-land inlet not 30 yards from the beach.
As
the rain starts, The Revenant proves to be a long enough(!)
movie to let the clouds be gone by the time Jake and Stone exit the
theater. Back in Jekyll it's a sunset bike ride around the Clam Creek
trail, then back to the ranch for a dinner of pork, yams, veggies and
wine. The night ends with a quick but delightful moonlight view of
the beach.
Saturday,
January 23: Frost this AM on our couple's car! My oh my. And it
was windy also. And there was talk of a historic blizzard back home.
When the going gets tough, the tough get going... to Savannah!
Another
good thing about Jekyll is that it is but 80 interstate miles to one
of our duo's favorite cities, Savannah (GA). When they finally ended
their cold and windy walk to Goosefeathers (downtown parking can be a
bit of a challenge on Saturday) their glasses fogged up from the
sudden warmth of this go-to breakfast place. By the time they had
finished their soup, eggs Benedict, oatmeal and coffee, they were
properly armed for the weather, which actually got considerably
better as the day went along.
Jake
and Stone visited the UU church on the west side of Troupe Square.
When they had visited last year the building was being worked on; now
it was completed and looked great. Continuing their idle walk around
town they stumbled upon the Owens-Thomas House on Oglethorpe Square.
Finished in 1819, the house is one of the best examples in all of
America of English Regency architecture. In 1825 Marquis de Lafayette
stayed here, and the very worthwhile tour lets you stand in the room where he stayed, see the bed he slept in, and view the balcony from
which he addressed the adoring crowds. A Savannah must-do.
First of Two Whelks |
After
watching Denver beat the Pats in game one of this big NFL Sunday,
Jake and Stone start game number two with martinis at the Westin bar.
Carolina quickly gets this game in hand and our duo falls into
conversation with the bartender, who happened to go to school with
the brother of Stone's favorite PGA player, Davis Love III. He
assured her that DL III is as gentlemanly as he seems. Back at the
ranch, pizza in the oven completes the day and night.
Monday, January 25: Jake and Stone start the day with a sunrise drive down Beachview Drive to get coffee at Flash Foods Then it's a bike ride up Beachview Drive to see their lodging place last year in Villas by the Sea. From here they walk down to the beach to view on-going construction work on The Cottages, Jekyll's new upscale residences, many of which have already been sold, even though not one is yet occupied.
Monday, January 25: Jake and Stone start the day with a sunrise drive down Beachview Drive to get coffee at Flash Foods Then it's a bike ride up Beachview Drive to see their lodging place last year in Villas by the Sea. From here they walk down to the beach to view on-going construction work on The Cottages, Jekyll's new upscale residences, many of which have already been sold, even though not one is yet occupied.
A Red-tailed Hawk Takes Off |
Tuesday,
January 26: Today is our couple's 36th wedding
anniversary. First is another sunrise drive for java, then a great
round of golf at Great Dunes (Stone killing it, yet again), and
then a fancy dinner at the Reserve at the Westin.
Sometimes a Cigar is Just a Cigar |
Thursday,
January 28: The good
times continued at their Jersey-bound road-trip stopover in Roanoke, VA. The HotelRoanoke and Conference Center is a historic, upscale, Tudor-style
hotel that dates to 1882. It sprawls across a hilltop overlooking
Roanoke
and its railway lines. Walking about the grand hotel allows for
many discoveries: the cozy elegance of the The Pine Room Pub, official pictures of three previous Misses Virginia who each went on to be Miss
America (1979, 1999 and 2010), terrazzo flooring, wall and ceiling
murals, and antique phones that can still be used as house phones. To
stay here and not take a walk around is to miss a great opportunity.
Walkway View at Sunset |
A
great opportunity for good food is also available but a 10 minute
walk from the hotel. The Market Street Walkway, a glass enclosed
pedestrian overpass with nice views,
quickly gets one to downtown Roanoke where the restaurant Lucky
provided our duo with a delicious last dinner and drinks.
Before their last night's sleep in Jekyll, Jake and Stone casually looked over some real estate pamphlets and on their laptop for next year's rental nominations. Perhaps on the river side of the island next time. Perhaps some place else. Whatever and wherever, it will be a memorable time, and a perfect spot to celebrate #37.