In those days, Camp Ellis was an expanse of endless sand and
surf. There I spent my summers,
from just after sunrise to sunset.
I wore a two- piece bathing suit with ruffles on my bottom. Bare-footed.
Freckles danced across my nose.
Walking along just where
the sea and sand meet, I bent to
pick up purple prickly sea urchins or tightly bound periwinkles plopping them
one by one in my red plastic pail. On rare occasions I found a tiny hermit crab
that would not peep out, unless I held my breath for the longest time in
trickery. Then he would emerge showing bulging round eyes and antennae. This is
how I spent the hour after lunch-the longest hour of the day when my mother said it was important to
digest my food before swimming again. Torturous!
I spent all other hours in the salty swell of the ocean.
Hearing my name against the roar of the sea, meant the hour was up and I could
safely swim. I tossed off my terry robe and kicked up the sand behind me as I
raced plunging, my speckled Styrofoam kickboard leading the way in, keeping me
afloat.
On the car ride home, my skin stiff with salt and parched
from the sun, the kickboard settled across my bare belly, I steadied it, shifting to drape my arm
across its’ width. Ready for
another sunny day.
These days, I visit the sea near my home searching for sea
glass, interesting rocks and shells.
Now and again, I stop and let the waves gently ripple over my bare feet,
until soon they are numb from the cold.
I no longer count my time at the beach by days, but by hours, alone with
my thoughts of an earlier time.
3 comments:
This is lovely...you caught the day of many days at the beach. How lucky to be able to spend so much time at the ocean...swimming and collecting shells, etc. And the the transition of now...as a adult...stilll at the ocean...but thoughts of the past. Jackiehttp://familytrove.blogspot.com/
Thanks Jackie for your kind words.
I love the last part not counting the beach by days but hours alone in thoughts. The beach has that affect on us.
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