Anonymous wrote:For all of you who get bored at the beach, why aren’t the mountains boring to you? I am the opposite. The beach is so easy to me and the mountains so buggy, slippery, dirty, poison ivy ridden and cloudy/cool. To each their own, I suppose.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For all of you who get bored at the beach, why aren’t the mountains boring to you? I am the opposite. The beach is so easy to me and the mountains so buggy, slippery, dirty, poison ivy ridden and cloudy/cool. To each their own, I suppose.
If you're at a lake in the mountains, there are so many options -- swimming, kayaking, canoeing, sailing, biking, hiking . . . totally the opposite of boring. As for "buggy, slippery, dirty, poison ivy-ridden", well, up north and out west, it's not so buggy; with good trail shoes or hiking boots, you won't slip; and it's pretty easy to recognize and avoid poison ivy. OTOH, at the beach, you're sweaty and have sand in your bathing suit and are swatting away those nasty little sand flies or whatever the heck they are. Finally, cool weather is awesome to me -- I loathe feeling sweaty -- just ugh. But, yeah, in the end, I agree with you -- different strokes.
Anonymous wrote:I like the Caribbean but hate the Atlantic beaches. Snokeling is interesting. Cold, rough water where you can't see a thing is not fun. I also have zero interest in paying a mortgage payment for a week at the beach when I could go to Caribbean for the same.
Anonymous wrote:My brother and family recently purchased a gorgeous beach house. He laughingly says that the actual beach is boring to him. Instead, he does local-centric types of activities solo or with his kids. His DW loves the beach and swimming and being outside.
Anonymous wrote:It’s awful.
I can’t be the only one.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, you are the only one…except there are at least four of these threads each and every summer.