Sunday, August 19, 2018

Silver Sands & Milford Point

After we left the Milford Oyster Festival, I drove around the shore areas of Milford and reminisced  about the times when we lived at the shore (when Richard was a child). We were amazed and saddened at the number of gigantic mansions being constructed in the Fort Trumbull Beach and East Broadway neighborhood. The quaint old beaches cottages are disappearing and being replaced by expensive castles for the wealthy.

Map of Silver Sands State Park. At the right you can make
 out the sandbar (in gray)  to Charles Island (not shown on the map).

Panoramic view from the boardwalk. If you click on the picture, it will enlarge
and Richard (in orange shirt) can be seen at the right.

A little further on, we stopped at Silver Sands State Park and got out and walked the boardwalk. There were only a few people there (due to the weather?) and the stillness was awesome. The sky was cloudy and threatening and occasionally we could see spectacular lightning off towards Long Island. The water was flat as glass and the sea and the sky almost appeared to merge seamlessly in the distance.

View of Charles Island from Silver Sands State Park (Milford CT).

The beach was essentially deserted except for a few stray gulls.

At high tide, the sandbar to Charles Island is submerged.

Another view of Charles Island from farther west along the boardwalk.

Looking east, the sea and the sky blend together.

At one point along the boardwalk, we encountered a stretch of mysterious mounds of sea stones . They appeared to be arranged by hand but the purpose was obscure but appealing. So we added a few stones in order to continue the joke (?).

The mysterious rock garden.



We walked all the way to Walnut Beach Park (City of Milford) and turned around to return to our car at Silver Sands.

Richard and me with the Long Island Sound in the background.
If you look carefully, in the water at the right are some swimmers.

Unfortunately, Silver Sands is in the process of being developed by the State into a more formal park which will mean an admission charge to offset the new snack bar and restrooms and expanded boardwalk. The people of Milford begged the state not to do it but the state felt the need to spend the taxpayers money anyhow.

Coastal Center at Milford Point.
[Obviously this picture was not taken on the day of our visit. I found it on the web.]

Continuing our trek along the shore, we bopped over to the Walnut Beach area and drove along Broadway through the Wildermere Beach neighborhood  to visit the Connecticut Audubon Society Coastal Center at Milford Point. I have always enjoyed this place even when it is closed. The views are awesome (on one side is the marsh and the the other side is the Sound), especially from "the tower."

View of the marsh from the tower at the Coastal Center at Milford Point.

We continued on to the Stratford side but due to the approaching dusk we did not stop and take pictures.  We drove past the train station, library, Shakespeare Theater (we continue to be amazed that it is still standing after been abandoned for so many decades), Short Beach (remembering mini-golf and the skateboard park), the seawall, and  Sikorsky Airport. On the way back home, we drove past Two Roads Brewery and were stunned at the scale of operations. A return trip for a tour may be warranted.

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Links:
http://ricketwrite.blogspot.com/2018/08/milford-oyster-festival.html
https://www.ct.gov/deep/cwp/view.asp?q=325262
https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/cursed-charles-island
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Island
https://www.ctaudubon.org/coastal-center-home/
http://www.ct.gov/deep/lib/deep/gis/coastalaccessmaps/Coastal_Access_Site_515.pdf
http://www.townofstratford.com/content/39842/42086/
http://bridgeportct.gov/airport
https://tworoadsbrewing.com/
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Written Wednesday 31 October 2018.

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