Watching
the Friday afternoon traffic crawling up I-95, I was struck with a
thought: there has got to be a better
way to get to the Cape and Islands than playing Mad Max on the bumper-to-bumper
interstate for endless hours.
Six
million people visit the Cape each year, four million of them in the summer and
fall. And on most summer weekends they
all seem to be directly in front of you on the roads, right? There’s got to be a better way.
There
used to be a direct Amtrak train from Washington DC to Hyannis, stopping at
major stations in Connecticut. “The Cape Codder” ran from 1985 to 1996 but only
carried 1200 passengers in its final season due to its 5+ hour running time
from Stamford. And once you detrained in
downtown Hyannis you were still miles from the beach.
There’s
still express bus service running from New Haven to Hyannis but it’s no faster (though
a lot cheaper at $42 one way). (All fares quoted are based on a June Friday
departure)
Manhattan to Martha’s Vineyard ($165 one way) and Nantucket ($175 one way)
in five and six hours respectively. Nice
boat, but still a long ride even with the flat screen TV’s, full bar and comfy
seats. .
Seastreak
also operates high speed from New York to Port Jefferson LI where you can
connect with the Hampton Jitney (bus) to that tony beach community in 3 ½ hours. Or you can chug across to PJ from Bridgeport
on the traditional ferry, and then hop the bus.
If
money is no object, you could always fly.
JetBlue flies non-stop in an hour from JFK to Hyannis or the Vineyard
for as little as $179 one way.
Or
there’s Cape Air
whose Cessnas will whisk you from White Plains to the islands in just over an
hour for $565 one way. Faster and more
exclusive are charters from firms like Trade Winds
whose fleet includes private jets.
Really? Are we this desperate to decamp to the sun
and surf when we have perfectly lovely beaches right here in Connecticut?
State-run
Sherwood Island is right off I-95 in Westport and bikeable from the Greens Farms stop on
Metro-North. And Bridgeport’s city-owned
Pleasure Beach reopens in June after a two decade
absence. The free water taxi runs seven days a week.
Another
alternative is the Jersey shore. Catch
Amtrak to Newark (or Metro-North to Grand Central and switch to Penn Station)
and NJ Transit’s “Coast Line” will easily get you to all the shore
communities from Long Branch to Bay Head.
So
wherever you’re heading for fun and sun this summer, don’t be a slave to
bumper-to-bumper traffic. Try transit!
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