Anonymous wrote:https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.oregonlive.com/travel/2020/05/crowds-return-to-cannon-beach-as-oregon-coast-town-begins-to-reopen.html%3foutputType=amp
“Crowds return to Cannon Beach.” Lol.
That’s not a crowd.
Anonymous wrote:I'm outdoorsy so there's nothing boring about going to the beach for me. I love swimming in the ocean, playing, and surfing, with little breaks laying on the warm sand reading, chatting with whoever you came with, and picknicking. Just bliss.
That's what's so great about east coast beaches- you can do literally anything you want.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah. I’d skip it. Summers on the warm soft east coast sand beaches, with their people sitting under umbrellas enjoying a sea breeze and reading books got nothing on a rocky west cost beach with its waves crashing on large rocks. And the numerous food places, games, rides, and bars and restaurants are nothing like the pristine desolation of coastal Olympic peninsula.


Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's not to understand? On the east coast people do what you're supposed to do on the beach- play in the water, lay in the hot sun (great for bringing a book), swim, collect shells.
I've never understood west coast beaches where you can only stare out at the water- it's very bizarre and BORING.
Maybe try going to the actual beach and stepping in the water and your basic human instincts will kick in and you'll do what comes naturally! Enjoy.
No that’s actually what I’m saying exactly. I have no interest in spending a day staring at the ocean or even getting in but only in the surf. When we went in my childhood it was to windsurf or kitesurf or boogie board.
NP. OK, good for you? My kids love going to the beach and have tons of fun without windsurfing. Like, what do you want? No one needs to explain something that is clearly so popular that people pay thousands every summer to do it. A few days at the beach followed by cracking fresh crabs sounds pretty good right now.
+1
And actually, I'm always shocked by the number of Europeans that flock to Florida for the beaches. Just yesterday Tyson Fury was caught by the dailymail getting sunscreen rubbed on him by a woman in Miami while his gf is back home in London. And I see so many European celebrities hanging out in Florida. I'll tell you what, they are not flocking to Cannon Beach and spending days hanging out in those little rundown Oregon seaside towns
Anonymous wrote:"I grew up going to the coast for windsurfing and boogie boarding (in a wetsuit even in August) and then for fishing and crabbing"
Well I can see why you're confused. No one has ever, ever, once done this stuff on east coast beaches and in fact these activities are banned for the entirety of the atlantic ocean. You're only allowed to lay comatose on the beach in dead man's pose or you'll be fined or possibly thrown off a bridge mob style.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's not to understand? On the east coast people do what you're supposed to do on the beach- play in the water, lay in the hot sun (great for bringing a book), swim, collect shells.
I've never understood west coast beaches where you can only stare out at the water- it's very bizarre and BORING.
Maybe try going to the actual beach and stepping in the water and your basic human instincts will kick in and you'll do what comes naturally! Enjoy.
No that’s actually what I’m saying exactly. I have no interest in spending a day staring at the ocean or even getting in but only in the surf. When we went in my childhood it was to windsurf or kitesurf or boogie board.
NP. OK, good for you? My kids love going to the beach and have tons of fun without windsurfing. Like, what do you want? No one needs to explain something that is clearly so popular that people pay thousands every summer to do it. A few days at the beach followed by cracking fresh crabs sounds pretty good right now.