Some days, “when you come to the fork in the road, take it” is good advice.

On Thursday, August 24, we left Richmond for the long drive to Connecticut. We were heading north for the memorial service to celebrate the life of my mother-in-law on Saturday, August 26 in West Hartford.

A little after eight that morning we were on the road. We usually take I-95, but we learned a traffic accident near the Parham Road interchange had traffic backed up for miles.

So, we opted to head west eventually connecting with I-81.

Coming off 288, we realized that we could have taken 295 and missed the Parham Road backup, but I kept going connecting us to 522.

We were clipping along passing through Lake Anna, when we came to an abrupt stop. In front of us was a truck with this sign on the back: Line Painting Ahead DO NOT PASS.

Our traffic stopper (Photo by Bill Pike)

For thirty minutes, we sat. Occasionally, the truck would inch forward. Once we cleared this hurdle, it took us three hours to connect to I-81.

On I-81, you quickly zip through sections of West Virginia and Maryland before crossing into Pennsylvania. By a smidgen, I-81 is less stressful than white knuckling the steering wheel on I-95. Lots of trucks use I-81, and sometimes a driver can be trapped behind one.

Today, we were clipping along I-81 pretty well. Some rain showers hit us, but splotches of dense fog pushed us to a slow slog a couple of times.

We made it to Scranton where we depart I-81 for I-84 east. As soon we made the swooping right turn onto I-84 traffic stopped. A signed flashed “incident ahead.” Six lanes of traffic had to scrunch into two. At some point, our stubborn driving habits vanished, we begrudgingly started to be polite and let other cars squeeze into the travel lanes

Once we cleared this slowdown, we started rolling again. Pretty Pennsylvania hills passed quickly, and soon we were in New York state crossing the Hudson River and inching closer to the Connecticut state line.

The closer we came to the Connecticut border, the more concern was shown by my wife, the Commander Supreme. I-84 was a parking lot, cars were moving at the pace of a tortoise. Way up in the blue yonder, the travel gods in the communication satellites were recommending alternate routes other than I-84.

Near Fishkill, New York we left I-84 heading toward the Taconic Parkway. From there we took a series of local roads and two lane state highways through New York into Connecticut.

Along the way, we were escorted by the Ten Mile River which feeds into the Housatonic River. We also saw signage for the Appalachian Trail. As pretty as the little towns were through New York and Connecticut, the best surprise came near Kent, Connecticut.

There we crossed the Housatonic River by driving through the single lane wooden covered Bull’s Bridge. According to Housatonic Heritage, Bull’s Bridge dates back to 1842. Only 109 feet in length, the short drive through it was a refreshing contrast to the madness on an interstate packed with late afternoon commuter traffic.

The refreshing Bull’s Bridge (Photo by Bill Pike)

In all our drives to Connecticut, we had always wondered out loud if there was an alternate route to I-84. Now, we know there is.

While this route was slower, I don’t think I ever topped 55 mph, the key was we kept moving. Mile by mile we crept closer and closer to Farmington.

On this too long day of driving, we did follow the famous words from Yogi Berra: “When you come to the fork in the road, take it.”

I’m glad our frayed and weary nerves gave us the nudge to try this alternate route. In truth, this decision provided us a jolt of energy and endurance that we needed.

Luke Chapter 3 verse five might be worth pondering here:

“Every valley shall be filled in, every mountain and hill made low. The crooked roads shall become straight, the rough ways smooth.”

Earlier in the day, the start to our journey had a rough start. And yet, when we made the decision to depart the interstate with the alternative routes, it seemed that our travel became smoother.
Way up in the sky, we put our trust into technology to guide every turn on the back roads of New York and Connecticut, and some how it worked.

Whenever we take a road trip, I have a silent prayer: “Help me to be a safe, alert, and courteous driver.”

After today, I will always wonder if the good Lord was part of the intervention that nudged us to pursue the fork in the road.

Hey Lowes, it’s not Christmas

On the afternoon of September 3, I needed some hardware items for projects at our house. Even though a Home Depot store is closer to our home, I opted to drive into Richmond to shop at Lowes.

Having grown up in Burlington, North Carolina, I admire how Lowes evolved into a retail giant from a small hardware store in North Wilkesboro.

Hardware stores from my youth had a unique character. From hardwood floors, ceiling fans, and inventories with unique items, the hardware store was often the heartbeat of a community.

In those days, I believe hardware store managers were wiser regarding traditional seasonal shifts. They did not rush the cycle of seasonal holidays upon their customers.

As I worked my way around the Lowes in Richmond, at one point, I stopped and stared in disbelief at a display of artificial Christmas trees. There must have been ten of them, standing at attention with their lights sparkling.

I thought to myself this is nuts. Its 96 degrees outside. Lowes is already pushing Christmas. Just a few yards down on the same floor, Halloween products were displayed. On September 3, it was 58 days until Halloween and 112 days until Christmas.

Lowes, I know you aren’t the only retailer in America to rush Christmas. But as a longtime supporter of Lowes, I respectfully request that Christmas products don’t appear in your stores until November 1.

This is a reasonable request, and one I believe the hearts of your founders would support.

Christmas trees on display September 3, 2023 (Photo by Bill Pike)

Some days God, I think you are out of touch

On Friday, July 14, a family in our church said goodbye to their son who lost his fearless battle with colorectal cancer. Not only was he a son, but a brother, husband, father, nephew, cousin, and friend.

Sixty days later, the same family announced that their son’s father has been diagnosed with colorectal cancer.

Sorry, but announcements like that make me wonder God if you are really in touch with what is going on down on planet Earth.

Friday, September 8, a massive earthquake struck Morocco. To date, media outlets have reported 2,946 deaths from the 6.8 earth shaker.

Two days later on Sunday, September 10, torrential flooding hit the country of Libya. A week later, the government announced that 11,300 people have died from the flooding.

The cancer diagnosis, earthquake, and flood form questions for me God—why do I continue to pray, why do I read the Bible, why do I keep prayer lists, why do I read a devotion everyday, why do I go to church?

I do not know the answers to my questions, but I sense that I’m not alone in my thinking.

Psalm 86 verse six states: “Hear my prayer, Lord;
    listen to my cry for mercy.”

That cry for mercy is heard from people around the world.

God, I’m sorry to tell you this, but a family who lost a son to cancer in July doesn’t find your mercy in the same cancer diagnosis for the father in September.

Psalm 33 verse twenty reads: “We wait in hope for the Lord; he is our help and our shield.”

Where is your shield, your hope, and help for this family, the people of Morocco, and the people of Libya?

Yes, God, I know you are tired of my whining.

Yes, I know I am on a slippery slope in confronting you with these human questions.

I know in a blink a bolt of your lightning can send me to the devil.

But, God here is what you really need to understand, other good people, with good hearts have the same God fearing questions in their souls.

Fortunately for them, those good people and their good hearts are much wiser and not as loony as me. After all these years of writing, you know, I will ask.

And yet, they are quietly asking too.

They like me want to know—are you still in the game, do you still have your touch?

Is your shield too worn, weary, and overwhelmed?

Has your stock of mercy become an empty shelf?

Are your angels flying on fumes?

Yes, I know life is an imperfect journey with struggles on its path.

But maybe, this is the most persistent struggle in life— trying to understand the why in the cancer diagnosis, the earthquake, and the flood.

Even though we’re struggling to understand, and some days we feel like we are hanging by our fingernails, I’m still hanging on to Psalm 62 verse five: “Yes, my soul, find rest in God; my hope comes from him.”

A quiet place to reflect (Photo by Bill Pike)

Never Missed A Meal

Scripture: John 14:27

In June, I turn 70. Unless I was sick, I don’t ever recall missing a meal or not having food.

My parents always provided for my sister and me.

Similarly, my wife and I have been able to feed our family.

But, that isn’t always the case for people in our neighborhoods.

We continue to spend billions exploring space, building extravagant skyscrapers, and paying professional athletes millions, and yet, we are unable to ensure that people have food to eat on a daily basis.

John 14, verse 27 states: “Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid.”

At this very moment, someone in our neighborhood has a troubled heart wrapped in fear because this individual has no sustainable access to food.

You, me, we, us need to take action to find the means to ease that troubled heart wrapped in fear.

There are multiple opportunities all around us to make a difference in the life of a person who is experiencing food insecurity.

Making that difference can be found in our hearts.

It is recognizing how we have been blessed by turning our good fortune into support.

That might be buying essential items for a food pantry, volunteering for a nonprofit in a food desert, or finding the courage to advocate for the voiceless when food is an issue.

There are many things in this world that can trouble a heart, but not having access to food shouldn’t be one of them.

Father of us all, we thank you for our blessings related to food, and we pray that you will guide and strengthen our hearts to help the people in our communities who are in need of food. Amen

Bill Pike
Richmond, Virginia

Note from author: On September 13, I was honored to have this devotional published in Hunger Action Month for the Society of St. Andrew.

(Image provide by Wikipedia)

The Lure Of Money Has Killed The Atlantic Coast Conference

On September 1, the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) announced the conference was expanding by taking in two teams from the collapsing Pacific Athletic Conference, the PAC -12, and one from the American Athletic Conference.

ACC Commissioner, Jim Phillips, his staff, college presidents, chancellors, and athletic directors in the conference who voted to expand must be proud of their work. The original ACC that was founded in 1953 with eight teams will now be an eighteen team league.

Geographically, this latest move shows how boneheaded the thinking has become by conference and university leaders. The new members—California, Southern Methodist University(SMU), and Stanford are nowhere near the new Atlantic Coast Conference headquarters in Charlotte.

Lookout Charlotte with these new members, Commissioner Jim Phillips will probably start lobbying to move the headquarters to a more central Midwest location like Chicago. After all Chicago has two major airports as opposed to one in Charlotte. An airport with more flight connections to larger cities was cited as one of the reasons the conference moved its offices from Greensboro.

My guess is the only people who are truly happy about this expansion are the travel agents who work to schedule airline flights for these teams. Their eyes must be spinning with dollar signs.

And speaking of money, this expansion is not about common sense or loyalty. This conference survival move is all about money—nothing else.

(Photo by Bill Pike)

Several media outlets reported that former political heavy hitters were involved in the lobbying for Stanford and SMU.

America’s 43rd President, George W. Bush, lobbied on behalf of SMU, and his Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice, pushed for Stanford.

If Mr. Bush and Miss Rice can strongly advocate for two universities to be admitted into an athletic conference, what keeps them from speaking out about the current state of their Republican Party? Do they care more about college athletics than the condition of America?

From “sea to shining sea” America is fraught with challenges.

I wonder how vehemently college presidents in the ACC fight to sustain research in their schools where students and professors are working to find cures for cancer, housing shortages, food deserts, and under served communities?

How much of the predicted revenue gains from this expansion deal actually trickle back into classrooms and research labs? If these revenue gains only serve to enhance and balance the financial books of athletic departments, then the ACC presidents who voted in favor of the expansion should be ashamed.

If Commissioner Phillips and his clever team so desperately wanted to expand the conference, did they think about trading Notre Dame, Syracuse, and Boston College for the return of two founding ACC members South Carolina and Maryland, and attempting to lure Vanderbilt from the South Eastern Conference?


Geographically, those teams are a better fit. Oops, I forgot, this expansion is only about money, not making travel less cumbersome for student athletes and less expensive for the conference.

Growing up in Burlington, North Carolina, I remember my parents grocery shopping at the A&P. That was the short name for the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company. I hope leaders for the ACC don’t consider changing the name of the conference to the A&P-18.

According to the Wall Street Journal at one time, A&P was an American icon. For years, both the ACC and the PAC-12 were icons in American college athletics with their teams excelling and winning championships. In 2010 and 2015, the once mighty A&P filed for bankruptcy. If this latest ACC expansion fails in its projected revenue gains could the conference falter like the A&P?

When I was a kid, ACC basketball and football captured me. I loved listening to the play by play on a transistor radio or watching a televised game on a Saturday afternoon. Those were moments etched in my old heart forever in a less complicated world.

(Photo by Bill Pike)

Today, the fear of missing out makes the impatient hearts of commissioners, presidents, chancellors, and athletic directors think differently about money.

Why trust your common sense when money drives your thinking?

Maybe Agatha Christie said it best: “Where large sums of money are concerned, it is advisable to trust nobody.”

This moronic money move has confirmed my lack of trust in the ACC leaders.

Back To School

This time of year, I can feel a tension, a stress returning to my old bones. My soul knows another school year is starting. For thirty one years, I was part of going back to school as a teacher, assistant principal, and principal.

No matter where I served, I was nervous, worried on that first day. I attribute those feelings to wanting the first day to be a good start for everyone.

Through the media, we hear stories about students, parents, teachers, superintendents, school boards, and the educational agendas of politicians. However, we rarely hear about the essential personnel in every school system who work behind the scenes.

Yes, teachers are the critical ingredient for every student’s success. But, any teacher, superintendent, or school board member with an ounce of common sense will tell you—the school system employees who work behind the scenes are the heart and soul of the system.

When schools shutdown for summer break, men and women who are responsible for the daily care of the building start preparing for the first day of school. Floor work, detailed cleaning, and moving furniture are nonstop.

Staff in the school office are busy closing out the previous school year, getting ready for a financial audit, and ensuring they are ready to assist new families in registering their students.

Over at the school board office curriculum specialist and their support staffs have been tracking the arrival of instructional materials and fine tuning staff development workshops.

Facilities management personnel carefully monitor small and large construction projects. They understand the importance of completing projects before students return.

In human resources, pupil transportation, and technology the intake of antacids is on the uptick.

Human resource specialist are working to find bus drivers, nurses, family advocates, and an AP Calculus teacher.

For personnel in Pupil Transportation and Technology, their nerves are the most frazzled. In these departments, they deal with the loss of human patience and temperament when technology fails or they are short of bus drivers for the first day of school.

Approaching the first day of school, perhaps the most frazzled nerves are reserved for the parent with a kindergarten student and a rookie kindergarten teacher.

Like drinking from a fire hose is how some rookie teachers describe their quest to absorb advice on starting a new school year.

It is a similar experience for a kindergarten parent. The parent carefully reviews all the information provided by the school. Both the teacher and the parent want that first day to be perfect.

Unfortunately, for some kindergarten students, finding perfection on that first day will be challenging. By the end of the first week, a kindergarten teacher has learned who is starting the year behind.

If we want our kindergarten students not to start the school year behind, then we must realize the first gasp for air taken by that student at birth and each subsequent breath leads to the first day of kindergarten.

A March 2023 article in Mid-South Literacy reviews The Relationship Between Incarceration and Low Literacy. In the article, a report from the Annie E. Casey Foundation—Warning Confirmed cites factors that impact learning proficiency. Here are three:

Readiness for school in terms of the child’s health, language development, social-emotional skills, and participation in high quality early care and learning programs.

Family oriented stressors such as family mobility, hunger, housing insecurity, and toxic stress.

Quality of teaching the child experiences in home, community, and school settings.

If we want our kindergarten students not to start the school year behind, then we must address these concerns that have been lurking behind the scenes for too long in our communities.
We know how critical the school employees are who are working behind the scenes everyday. School systems can’t survive without their support.

Correspondingly, we have important behind the scenes work to do for students before entering kindergarten. Readiness for school, eliminating family stressors, and improving the quality of Pre-K learning experiences are critical needs for every student in Virginia.

If we continue to neglect, avoid, or disregard the formative years prior to a student entering kindergarten, then we can expect more challenges for our public schools and eventually our communities.

Thomas Edison once stated: “Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work.

At the start of this new school year, my old bones hope that superintendents, school boards, and our politicians can agree to put on their “overalls” to do the required hard work and not miss an opportunity to prevent kindergarten students from starting the first day of school behind.

Author’s note: If you have worked in public education or know someone who currently works in our public schools, please share this post.

A school building quietly resting before the start of school (Photo Bill Pike)

Some days you need a rainbow

Back on Tuesday, August 8, I felt like the world was piling up on me.

I arrived at Trinity early to open the building and to drop off my old back pack.

Next, I made the short drive to the Mobil station on Forest Avenue to leave my wife’s car for an oil change.

The station wasn’t open yet, so I put the car keys in an envelope and slid them into the mail slot in the door.

From there, I started my walk back home.

As I walked, my brain swirled.

At Trinity, the church where I work, a motor on an interior HVAC unit had clunked out from a recent power failure. I knew replacing it would be expensive.

Back on June 27, I turned seventy. For some reason, I’ve thought about that birthday more than the others I have experienced.

I’ve always had good health, but over the last few days my eye doctor, urologist, and dermatologist had some words of caution for me.

As I started walking up the hill on Stuart Hall Road, I noticed an empty, plastic water bottle along the side of the road.

Uncharacteristically, I walked by it.

But, a few steps later, my conscience turned me around to pick up the bottle to recycle.

When I arrived at our house, I walked down the driveway to where we keep our trash cans and recycling bin. That’s when I looked up and saw in the backdrop of our neighbor’s yard a stunning rainbow.

From where I was standing, there were no raindrops. However, to the west dark clouds must have been dropping a rain shower. The rising sun in the east was cast at the perfect angle to form the graceful rainbow.

At that moment, I thought about God’s timing.


If I had not been nudged to turn around to pick up that discarded water bottle, I would have never seen this rainbow.

Was God attempting to signal me with the rainbow?

Had God or an alert angel been eavesdropping on the spinning self-talk in my old brain?

I’m not sure, but when I saw that rainbow, despite my whining woes, I did feel a smidgen of relief.

Yes, the HVAC repair was expensive.

My eye doctor and urologist have a plan for further assessment.

The dermatologist successfully removed the basal cell on the back of my lower left leg.

And God when you least expect it sends a rainbow to remind rapidly aging old fools like me that he is still around.

And maybe, that’s why on some days these three words from 1 Thessalonians chapter five verse seventeen stumble into what’s left of my crumbling mind: “pray without ceasing.”


Don’t cease your prayers.

Some days, your prayer might be a person’s silent rainbow.

The unexpected rainbow (Photo by Bill Pike 8/8/23)

Some days you need a gardenia bloom

August is a long month.

Even though other months in our calendar year have thirty one days, August seems to drag.

Maybe its slug pace is tied to the sweltering heat and humidity that always accompany August.

August also signals that students will be returning to their classrooms.

Also in August, nervous politicians start their incessant advertising in pursuit of being elected in November.

Before spending lots of pennies on creating these ads, politicians should understand how frequently the mute button is pushed when an ad appears on our television screen.

But, August captures me for another reason.

On August 31, 1992, our mother passed away.


Ten years later on September 1, 2002, our father said goodbye.

Our father came within an hour of leaving this world on August 31.

Yet, when my sister, our Uncle Ralph, and I met with the director of the funeral home, we learned that since he passed on September 1, he was entitled to receive his social security check.

We chuckled when we learned this news. It was another example of how our father’s generation squeezed pennies.

Lots has happened since Louise and Bill left this world. They now have four great grandchildren. I know they would have cherished getting to know each of them.

When our parents were growing up, they endured multiple hardships. I think those hardships were at the heart of the perseverance that drove how they chose to live their lives.

God, family, sacrifice, and love were at the core of their daily living.

Clearly, I didn’t understand it at the time, but they were working to instill those traits into my sister and me too.

While I’m sure my parents would marvel at the advances in technology, I also think they would be worried at the erosion we currently see related to God, family, sacrifice, and love.

I worry about this mess we are leaving our children and grandchildren.

And despite this mess, I do have hope.

Our mother and father both had green thumbs.

They were proficient with flowers, vegetable gardens, fruit trees, and scuppernongs.

In our Richmond yard, we have three gardenia shrubs. Two of those shrubs came from gardenia shrub cuttings in our yard in Burlington, North Carolina where my sister and I grew up.

Our father loved the the fragrant bloom of a gardenia.

Depending upon the harshness of our Richmond winter, we usually see our gardenias start to bloom in late June or early July.

Back on August 10, I was walking around our yard, and I noted that the gardenia shrubs with North Carolina roots had singular blooms.

I was surprised to see these pretty blooms. I’m not a horticulturist, so I have no explanation for the two stragglers.

But, I thought a bit further, and I said to myself—its August, maybe this is the work of Louise and Bill.

Maybe, it is their way of saying hello.

Maybe, they are letting me know that they are still watching over their knucklehead son.

Maybe, they are saying to me, you just turned seventy. You don’t have much time left, this world is a mess, you better wake up, and get busy.

Makes me wonder, does the world weigh on you, like it weighs on me?

I’m pretty sure I know your answer.

As I write this, a powerful hurricane will land on the Gulf coast of Florida, another senseless mass shooting has occurred in Jacksonville, Florida, our politicians are out of touch with reality, and a weariness hovers over America as we wonder—when are we going to wake up?

Some days, I need an unexpected gardenia bloom to give me hope, and to remind me of these words from Romans 5 verse three: “We even take pride in our problems, because we know that trouble produces endurance, endurance produces character, and character produces hope.”

Don’t let your hope die.

A single August straggler (Photo by Bill Pike)

A little brighter over there

In truth on June 1, I was relieved when my wife received the sad news from her sister, Abby.

Early that morning, their mother, Elizabeth Crosby Cloud, told the cancer “go to hell, you can’t make me suffer anymore, I’ve booked a flight into the blue yonder—heaven.”

Despite this second struggle with cancer, at 95, Liz Cloud lived a full life.

For forty eight years, she put up with me. As we worked to figure each other out, I’m sure there were many early moments when Liz could have clobbered me. Yet, her gracious heart didn’t let that happen.

Liz and her husband, Ken, were as Forrest Gump said of his friend, Jenny, “they were like peas and carrots, always together.” Liz and Ken made a good pair, a good team. Even when they disagreed, Liz had a way of wearing him down.

They had lots in common, but the brine of ocean water was a tidal pull for them. That pull to the shore, the coastline trickled into the bloodstreams of their children too. Cape Cod, Sanibel, and Duck were gathering spots.

Liz had multiple gifts.

Once her mother, Bertha Avery Crosby, passed, Liz became the chief knitter of Christmas stockings for spouses new to the family and newborn grandchildren.

Liz was quite a cook. The culinary skills of her mother and auntie, Helen Loring Thompson, rubbed off on her. I never had a lousy meal when Liz was in the kitchen. Her meatloaf was perfection, and I enjoyed every crumb of the mincemeat cookies she made for me at Christmas.

In a different life, Liz could have been a professional stager for real estate agents. She had sharp, knowing eyes. Those eyes could rearrange a room in a blink, or make a stunning arrangement of flowers in minutes.

Liz was a leader, an organizer, a volunteer, and a dedicated parishioner at St. James’s Episcopal Church in West Hartford, Connecticut. No matter your age, at St. James, chances are that Liz knew you or you knew Liz.

Her children and grandchildren respected Liz’s intelligence and wisdom. They often sought her advice about the ups and downs of life.

Liz’s stamina and perseverance could be found in her daily working of the crossword puzzle in the Hartford Courant. No question that word work helped to keep her mind insightful.

After the passing of Ken, I sometimes had the assignment of driving her to Richmond for Christmas or driving her back to West Hartford after Christmas. On those long drives, Liz was a good co-pilot.

Liz loved a good party. No matter if the location was a backyard deck or a special family event, her personality and beauty brought those gatherings to life.

Honestly, my old southern bones needed time to adjust to the Cloud family’s annual trips to Cape Cod. Growing up in North Carolina, my family’s treks to the beach were always the North or South Carolina coastlines. But, the Cape did eventually hook my heart.

I remember one dreary week in the tiny, saltbox cottages at Mashnee. Gray clouds full of rain hid the sun. The discouragement of cabin fever had hit us.

Yet, one morning, Liz stood at the glass paned storm door and looked out at this soaked, bleak landscape, and proclaimed— “I think it looks a little brighter over there.”

On the morning of Monday, July 24, 2023, thirty-two family members gathered in Patuisset, a spit of land, connected by a single, narrow road on the Buzzard’s Bay side of Cape Cod. We walked down to the sandy beach in front of the friendly house where the family had stayed for multiple summers.

That was an appropriate place for the family to gather and say cherished, heartfelt words about their mom, grandmother, and mother-in-law.

After those teary words, some of Liz’s ashes were gently scattered on to the surface of the lightly rippled saltwater by her grandson, George.

I will hold that morning forever.

The low tide slowly revealed my favorite fishing sandbar with a boat channel at its tip, and a sleepy Bassetts Island in the backdrop.

In that snapshot, I will take with me the optimistic brightness that Elizabeth Crosby Cloud brought into this cantankerous old world.

May we never forget the flicker of her brightness.

That brightness made us, and the people she encountered better.

Sand spit Patuisset, Cape Cod, Massachusetts with Bassetts Island in the background. (Photo by Bill Pike7/24/23)

Thanks Falmouth, Massachusetts on Cape Cod

August 1976, I made my first visit to Cape Cod with my wife’s family. That was quite a transition for an old southern boy who grew up making family trips to the beaches along the North and South Carolina coastlines. But with each subsequent visit, Cape Cod continued to hook my heart.

After a seven year hiatus, thirty two family members returned to the Cape in late July. We descended upon Falmouth. Disappointment never intruded.

From our first glimpse of the rugged Bourne Bridge to the last spoonful of clam chowder at Pier 37 Boathouse, we made the most of our week.

Scrunched in three houses, our daily treks to the beach required the logistical precision of a military landing. But once there, we appreciated the well maintained beaches and the attentive lifeguards.

We loved our outing to watch a Cape Cod League baseball game as the Falmouth Commodores battled the Hyannis Harbor Hawks. It was clear from the attendance that your citizens appreciate what this league brings to each community.

No matter where we ventured, the merchants and local residents were polite and helpful.

On our last morning, some of us took the short hike to The Knob. We were not disappointed with the spectacular water views.

And in all honesty, I think that is what I admire the most about the character of Cape Cod—the capacity to hold and preserve cherished land.

I pray your hearts never let go of that gritty grip.

Looking out at The Knob near Woods Hole on Cape Cod. Photo by Bill Pike

Author’s note: This post was submitted to the Cape Cod Times as a letter to the editor. I thought the editor/s might take a complimentary letter about the hospitality we experienced while vacationing there. Clearly, I thought wrong. Be safe, Bill