Friday, August 30, 2019

Helen of White Horse

Helen of White Horse
I.
Where beach plums waxen green and swell,
‘Till rich October ripes them well,
And Cape Cod Bay her sand dunes reach,
Heaps high along White Horse Beach,
Far back in thick old Plymouth fogs,
Love blossomed as flowers bloom in bogs.
II.
But not as plums were good to eat,
In Plum Glen where lovers meet—
Where Helen keeps with Roland tryst,
And lips have touched in love and kissed,
For it was August, and the growth
Of fruit and love lacked much in both.
III.
The fruit lacked purple mellowness,
And love lacked cleric hands to bless;
For Helen’s father would not bear
To give his child to Roland’s care,
And Helen could not bear to part
With all there was in her one heart.
IV.
And so she told her father so;
And every evening she would go
And meet with Roland on this road
Tradition tells Myles Standish trode;
This sunken road that used to run
Between two homes, once meant for one.
V.
Where the Alabama cot now stands,
The dune is one sharp ridge of sands
Protected by the tops and roots
Of beach-peas, grasses and the shoots
Of barberry bushes, and woodbine,
And thickets all along the line.
VI.
Below your feet, a deep down dell
Is red with roses, sparrows dwell
Secure on ground and bough;
Eludes the searcher’s half day quest.
Poor Helen’s home was near this spot,
Between the neighboring pond and cot.
VII.
 And this is Beach Plum Glen! The sea
Sounds in the dell incessantly;
One bounds this rugged height out o’er
The sparrows feed along the shore,
And towards the Gurnet’s double light
The White Horse Beach is full in sight.
VIII.
The Twenty-fourth of August dawns,
‘Twas young in ages long agone,
And Helen’s love was young and strong,
And life is love and love is long;
Young Roland must to sea again
And meets bride Helen in the glen.
IX.
His jaunty cap and sailor dress,
His bearing high, his manliness,
Were much to lose and sail from shore,
Poor Helen thinks, “Forevermore.”
And she must bear her father’s pride,
Her own loved Roland far awide.
X.
She warns her father yet again,
That he will grieve, but warns in vain;
The night shuts down and it is dark,
The midnight comes; the parents hark;
They listened once before to-night
And thought they heard before; were right.
XI.
Her bed had not been occupied,
The father could not find the bride;
The white horse was not in stall,
The saddle, bridle gone and all.
He hurries, shouting, to the beach;
The white horse swims her out of reach.
XII.
“Come back, my daughter!” loud he cries;
“I will no more oppose!”—but dies
The cry upon the sounding sea;
The white horse moves out steadily;
And Helen nevermore returns,
Nor beacon light for Roland burns.
XIII.
Where Beehive Cottage stands beside
The road that leads down to the tide,
But out to sea, a massive block
Has long been called “The White Horse
Rock.”
The horse that trusted Helen’s hand
Fled here and saw no more the land.
XIV.
But love will let no loves die;
And oft in all these years gone by,
Upon her steed, and late at e’en,
Bride Helen on this rock is seen
Looking for Roland through the mist
Until he joins her keeping tryst.
TIMOTHY OTIS PAINE
Elmwood, Mass

Monday, August 26, 2019

New Bedford Seagulls

Seagulls are ever present around SE Massachusetts.


We shared some Little Caesars with a dozen New Bedford gulls. I know that pizza crust isn't their ideal meal, but we were out of herring.


We couldn't get one to eat out of our hand, even when we held a crust out and pretended to be preoccupied. Those little sky rats can smell a camera.






Sunday, August 25, 2019

Rough Surf This Week As Storm Passes SE Of Massachusetts


A tropical system passing South and East of us should send waves at Massachusetts coastal regions this week.

An area of thunderstorms off of the Florida coast should organize into a tropical depression today or tomorrow, and it could evolve into a tropical storm as it moves along the coast into development-friendly waters off of the Carolinas.

It is expected to move more NE than N, which will take it out to sea before it can start thinking "Cape Cod." Her closest pass to us should be a few hundred miles SE of Nantucket.



That means No Tropical Storm For Us. However, the storm can still touch us from far away.

A storm like this will churn up some rough surf. The South Coast will get it first, as the storm gets closer North to us, then the Outer Cape gets the waves as the storm pushes East.

This is great for surfers and surf-watchers, as the coast will get hit with slow rolling swells. A persistent East wind will help things along.

Added bonus: While we could pick up bands of moisture from this storm, it is also within the realm of possibility that you could have some tasty waves hitting on an otherwise sunny beach day. Tropical storm fun without the actual tropical storm.

There could also be bad rip currents, so swim all careful-like.

Unless something else forms quickly, the system will be Erin if she attains named storm status. Dorian is further South, sizing up the Caribbean. We'll keep an eye on both storms for you, and let you know if anything Massachusetts develops out of them.


Saturday, August 17, 2019

Plymouth Beaches Close After Shark Sighting



Alert Details

Sighted on 2019-08-17
Number Sighted: 1
Comments: Harbormaster received a report from a lobstermen reporting a 8-9' white shark at the surface alongside his boat. This is a confirmed sighting; Plymouth town beaches will be closed for 3 hours

Thursday, August 15, 2019

Marshfield Fair, Carnivals In General


MARSHFIELD FAIR

The 152nd Marshfield FairAugust 16 – 25, 2019


Admission  $12.00Children 6 & under  FREE
Parking Gate E only  $5.00

Presale Tickets $9.00
Available until 6:00 pm August 15 for sale below or by
calling 781-834-6629 or at the Administration Office

August 16 - 25, 2019

Open Noon - 10 pm daily

It's time for the Marshfield Fair!

The jewel of Marsh Vegas is the 152nd or so running of the legendary agricultural fair. The first one went down 2 years after the US Civil War ended, and nothing could stop it since.

It serves up an awesome combo platter of rides, fried food, games, animals, freak shows, demolition derbies, music, wrestling... you're not going to be bored at the Marshfield Fair.

The only way that you can be more Americana than the Marshfield Fair is if you travel back in time and get a thang goin' on with George Washington and/or Betsy Ross. Carnivals and agricultural fairs have been around in some form since before America was America. I wouldn't be surprised to know that a 5 year old Thomas Jefferson was running around happy/wild at some sort of travelling fair.

"Carnival" is a term that basically means "merrymaking before Lent." The modern travelling carnival has strayed from her religious base to be more of a seasonal thing. The Marshfield Fair, while definitely holding 100% legit agricultural fair status, is in the Travelling Carnival subgroup.

The modern carnival has many parents. The travelling circus is a direct ancestor, but Vaudeville, burlesque, and gypsies also get into the mix. The 1893 Chicago World's Fair was very influential, They had a whole section of the grounds devoted to rides, games of chance, freak shows, Wild West shows and even the first Ferris Wheel.

The public ate it up, and people began to develop similar events that could be taken on the road. There were 17 travelling fairs (I think Marshfield is included in this number) in the US during 1902, and there were 300 by 1937.

The difference between megaparks like Disneyland or Six Flags and a travelling carnival is that the carny rides are smaller, and can be broken down for quick transport.  Disneyworld is rooted to the spot they're in, while I'm pretty sure that the same carny stuff that is in Marsh Vegas today was in Barnstable last month and will be in Topsfield by October or so. Many carnivals cover a lot of territory, being a spring/autumn event in the South before/after moving North in the summer months.

Marshfield has been running their Fair in August for as long as I can remember. This lengthy Fair history page that I have no intention of reading all the way through says that it was a September event before Marshfield became a seasonal resort area. This owes to the agricultural roots of the fair.

It is the big shin-dig every summer if you're a South Shore kid. July 3rd owns July, and the Marshfield Fair owns August. I'm sure that a parent from 1868 would sympathize with a time-travelling 2016 parent as their kids ran wild around the same fairgrounds. Some things never change.

It's a useful calibration tool for locals, and it gives Marshfield instant name recognition in the region. Someone from Weymouth or Brockton may never have been to Duxbury or Middleboro, and I managed to live 10 miles from Monponsett without ever having heard Monponsett mentioned until a realtor showed me a house there... but every kid on the South Shore has been to Marshfield, usually during mid-August.

It is a popular event. I have the numbers for 2006's Fair, and they come up at around 180,000 paying customers. The town profits from the influx of visitors, less in a hotel sense than in a gas/supper/smokes/passing-through sense. I know someone who makes about $5000 a year by letting people park on his lawn.

It's a people-watcher's paradise. You get a fine cross-section of the South Shore population base. Also be sure to check out the carnies.

Carnies are the people who work the fairs. They're a strange migrant horde who speak their own language. Much of it is from back when the carnivals were more of a gilded theft. The language is secretive, and it evolves enough that if you know the term, it's already out of date.

"Mark," which I first heard ascribed to wrestling fans, is from the carnival. If a game operator found a sucker ("rube"), he'd pat his back with a chalked hand, leaving a "mark" that other game operators could identify the man by.

Fairs are known for their rides, which are today's main attraction. Marshfield has all sorts of them. We'll try to get some pictures later, but the better ones are the Ferris Wheel, the Funhouse (Vegas usually has it more as a haunted house), the Tilt-a-Whirl, the Round-up, the Vomit Spewer, the Child Decapitator and a dozen other rides that i have no intention of getting on.

I took this girl Julie to the Marshfield Fair once, after dinner at the Ming Dynasty. I didn't hurl on the Sno-Bobs or whatever that ride is called, but I also did nothing more daring than slink through the petting zoo afterwards. I had to go back with her (and her sister Ashley) a few days later, so she could go on rides with someone who had courage. I did hurl at Rocky Point once, but we're not going there.

We do plan on doing a Game Of Chance article where we share tips on how to beat Carny Games, but we're running a bit behind. I still have to learn how to beat these games, I'm pretty much that Mark you read about. A marginally-bright Carny will outfox me 8 days a week.

Avoiding the rides gives me more time to focus on food. I rarely eat Fried Dough outside of Carnival context these days. I might rip a chunk off the kid's cotton candy if I can do so with stealth. I'm all in on caramel apples, funnel cake and vinegar fries. If someone's serving Fried Twinkies, I'm eating Fried Twinkies. I'm not opposed to a fried chicken stand attack, although I have never and will never eat a Corn Dog. Gotta draw the line somewhere.

The sad part, as you saw from my date with Julie, is that I try to go out to dinner before the Fair, so I don't go crazy and overeat.

Gates Open: Noon – 10 pm 
Everyday
No Pets Allowed Except Service Animals

Special Days

Marshfield Resident’s Day
Friday, August 16 & 23
Noon – 6:00 – discount with proof of residency

Friday, August 23 – wrist band special for residents ONLY
12 -6pm – $20.00

Senior Citizen Day
Tuesday, August 20
Seniors FREE

4H & Agricultural Awareness Day
Wednesday, August 21
4H members who wear their Plymouth County 4H t-shirts are admitted FREE

Children’s Day
Thursday, August 22
Children 12 & under FREE
Kiddie rides 50% off

Wristband Special – Kids up to 12 – 12-6 pm – $20.00** & 6-10 pm – $20.00**
Wristbands can not be used on the Bumper Cars, Bungee Jumping, Rock Wall, Giant Slide and Roller Coaster.
**There are two time slots for wristbands. 12-6 and then again from 6-1

Wristbands 
Friday, Aug. 16- 12–6 pm -$25.00
Tuesday, Aug. 20 – 6–10 pm – $30.00
Thursday, Aug. 22.



FAIR TRIVIA

- Presidents Warren Harding and Calvin Coolidge attended at different times.

- One of the wrecks from a 1930s car race made it into Ripley's Believe It Or Not.

- The Fair started off as the South Marshfield Farmer's Club. It was founded by Levi Walker and George Baker.

- Attendance for the first year was 19. In 1865, it was 200. In 1866, it was 9000.

- Exhibition Hall, the main building of the fair even today, went up in 1867. You could rent it yourself for 50 cents a night. It hosted town meetings for many years. It had an upstairs basketball court until 1939.

- Thomas Lawson ran things for a while. A lumber "magnet," he oversaw much of the building there. He was also into horses, and developed the race track you still see there. That was 1905. Racing lasted at the Fair for 100 years, and the track was considered to be one of the best in America for a while.

-While there are many contenders, betting on Fair horse racing is said to possibly be the genesis of Marshfield's "Marsh Vegas" nickname.

- In 1912, they used to have motorcycle races, as Merze motorcycles were made in Brockton. They evolved into Model T races, which led to the Ripley's accident.

- Attractions during the 1940s included pig races, lumberjack shows, high wire acts and birds of prey.

See you at the Fair!



Wednesday, August 14, 2019

Wendy's vs Wareham


A leaked customer service complaint blows up in the face of a Wareham fast food franchise.

Birds have an expression, which translates into human pretty much as "Never sh*t where you nest." I don't know who runs the Wendy's in this district, but he certainly isn't a bird.

A Wareham resident had a bad visit with the Wendy's franchise on the Cranberry Highway in East Wareham. Rather than go over the counter to maul someone, he chose the more reasonable path of writing to the district manager.

The district manager immediately shouldered the blame, sent the guy a stack of free Son Of Baconator coupons and the problem was solved with no social media backlash.

Just kidding. The manager instead said that Wareham was full of junkies.

I'm not making this up.


“Not an excuse but the town of Wareham has little to no talent pool to hire from. This is an ongoing issue in that area.
“We are constantly interviewing and hiring any and all qualified candidates. Unfortunately, those candidates are hard to come by, as most are recovering addicts, and we cannot hire them.”
That, my friends, is a declaration of war.

Wareham had a philosophical social media reaction, as long as you count "rage" among the philosophies.

As the story leaked onto Facebook and then WCVB and WBSM, the recoil hit. Wendy's suspended the district manager, but that wasn't enough.

As you can see below, the parking lot was empty after 7 PM.


McDonald's, KFC and even Burger King were busy when the shot was taken.

They say that Colonel Sanders used to drive across the country, visit random Kentucky Fried Chicken outlets and have dinner.

If the dinner was poor, Sanders jumped up in a hell of a rage. He'd haul the entire staff into the kitchen, where they would get a cooking lesson from Mister 11 Herbs And Spices himself.

Does that sound like the kind of man who would answer a customer service complaint by saying, "Ah, ya know, this town is full of junkies."

Dave Thomas and his hot daughter also seem to be cut from that cloth.

Even the ever-complaining Where's The Beef lady never blamed Oxycontin for the shabby burger that she got.


There are four factors at play here.

1) Fast Food is a low prestige occupation.

Their workers are usually at the front line of any Fifteen Or Fight rally, the pace is breakneck, the rate of injury is astounding (just the teenage section of the fast food workplace sent 28000 kids to the ER in 2017, while the Afghanistan war has produced 22000 wounded Americans in 18 years... 44000 teens were injured if you count all restaurants) and only the lowliest masochist wants to be seen frying up some McChickens by someone they went to high school with.

There's a reason those jobs are hard to fill... and the reason is that they suck. They tend to hire exclusively from a pool of kids, Mom hourlies and adults with no other option. I doubt that Mitt Romney wasted much time choosing between "Taco Bell cook" and "Senator."

2) Wareham has a drug problem. So does every other town in America.

We wouldn't have to go too far back in the archives to show you a Dead Kennedy getting pulled out of the ritzy Hyannis Port Compound with painkillers in her autopsy. Robert Downey, Jimmy Page, Kurt Cobain, Rush Limbaugh and many other millionaires played the fool to opiods at one time or another.

Painting Wareham as a unique den of sin is disingenuous at best.

3) As we said before, you never sh*t where you nest. You end up with bloggers shooting rush-hour pics of your empty restaurant and parking lot.

Wareham is voting with their purses. AIDS-burger was probably busier last night.

You do not want to insult the entire town that your fast food business is in, especially if McDonald's, Burger King, KFC/Taco Bell, Papa Ginos, D'Angelo's, Subway, Chili's, Charlie's, Rice Bowl and Pizza Boy are within 200 yards of you.

You especially don't want to do so in a response to a complaining Wareham resident who might share the letter on social media.

The no-longer-open Sagamore Beach BBQ showed us how social media storms can wipe out a business. Nobody is rooting for Wendy's to be shuttered.

Speaking of which...

4) How does Wendy's get out of this jam?

I have some ideas.

- For the rest of the year, you get free fries with every purchase if you flash a Wareham ID.

- Wendy's pays for the Onset fireworks in 2020.

- Wendy's sponsors and supplies a Beach Day in Onset with free food.

- Double down. Hire a punk rock grrl, name her Wendy O. Wendy and have her sing commercial jingles about junkie cooks and one dollar baked potatoes. Her showstopper could be her "Brockton By The Sea" ballad.

- Sponsor every rec league team in Wareham. I want to go to any little league game in town and see the Wendy's Yankees taking on the Wendy's Reds.

- Dis-inter Dave Thomas, and re-inter him in East Wareham somewhere, perhaps at Wendy's.

**********************

This column goofs on Wareham from time to time, but we do it because we love Wareham. If you take a left outta my house, you end up in Wareham. If you take a right, you hit a rotary where two of the exits will send you back to Wareham eventually.

I've dated Wareham girls, I shop there and even buy my legal weed there. My last ER trip was Tobey Hospital. I even run the Onset Facebook page.

Wendy's has a week to adopt (or top) at least one of those ideas I listed. Otherwise, we'll be back, and we'll be talking Boycott.





Sunday, August 11, 2019

Route 105 Sunday Drive

We took a Sunday drive up Route 105. 


Route 105 is a decidedly rural area. Her only "urban" area is Middleboro Center.


Corn, you say? Just happen to have some right here.


If someone knows the story behind this single fenced-in tree in an empty field, let me know.


That tree is spooky at 10 AM on a summer Sunday. I wouldn't go near that house on Halloween night... unless they had Kit Kats.


I didn't actually count the miles, but this was the first Dunkin that we saw heading north on 105. This may be the longest no-Dunkin stretch in Massachusetts, or at least Eastern Massachusetts. By contrast, Bourne has 3 within 100 yards of each other. This is why we publish out of Bourne.



Best garden on 105.




Wednesday, August 7, 2019

How To Not Get Eaten By A Shark



I don't know about you, but it is the opinion of this column that the worst way to die naturally would be a shark attack. I use "naturally" differently than you might, but you get the idea. You are seized out of nowhere, dragged beneath the sea and torn to pieces by a torpedo with teeth.

It's on us to help you avoid that.

We'll mix in tips from experts and officials with some of our own observations and inclinations.


Never Swim With Seals, And Do Nothing At All Seal-Like

One thing that our recent shark attacks had in common was that the victims were messing around near seals. Sharks eat seals, as eating seals is the whole reason they're hanging around Cape Cod Bay.

There wasn't that much time between when Americans first began recreating by the sea and when we had our first fatal modern shark attack. One of the reasons we hadn't suffered one until 2018 is that we had a bounty on seals. Fishermen hate seals, who compete for the same fish. Up until 1962, you could kill seals and get cheddar for it.... not too shabby, as long as you aren't a seal. 

There were 40,000 bounties paid in Maine and Massachusetts between 1888 and 1962, when Massachusetts stopped paying bounties. Maine stopped in 1945.  Experts say that 70-130K seals were killed once you factor in data fraud, boat strikes, and so forth. That's a lot of shark food exiting the ecosystem.

The region suffered a huge decline in seal activity, and they only really started turning up in large numbers on Cape Cod around the turn of this century. It, in turn, took the sharks about a decade to figure it out.

Humans are pretty easy pickings for a shark if he wanted to have some People Food for a change. We can barely move at all in the water. Even a crippled, drunken, lazy shark could swim circles around Michael Phelps. Other than the slow-motion punch of an underwater boxer, we have no natural defenses against the shark. We're a free lunch, at least from June through September in these parts.

The fact that we have so few attacks means that sharks aren't interested in us as a food source. Neither of our recent human-attacking sharks was killed in the attack... they just went away on their own. They had no interest in continuing the meal.

So, you can really lower your chances of attack by not swimming or boating near the shark's primary food source. Seals are fun, cute, and can even be friendly. They also do tricks, like the one where they disappear faster than you can if a shark comes into the area. Don't be the guy left standing when sharks and seals play Duck Duck Goose, lest your goose be cooked.. 

If seals are around, we can not stress strongly enough that you should make like a TV show and be St. Elsewhere.

Never Swim Near Fishing Boats (Or Fishing Men)

Sharks also have a tendency to follow fishing boats. I suppose they are after table scraps or something, who knows? 

Two of the regions's fatal shark attacks involved people swimming to or from a fishing boat. Two others involved sharks swamping smaller boats and devouring the occupant.

Sharks are attracted to several things associated with fishing. Fish, naturally, lead off the list. Injured fish writhing in pain on a fishing hook are also on the list, as an injured fish means an easy meal to a shark. Fishing can be bloody, and blood in the water is like doing a rain dance for a shark. Smarter sharks may know that a fishing boat will throw away smaller fish, who then become almost like delivery food at that point.

Don't Go Over Your Head

Almost all of New England's shark attacks involved the shark hitting someone in deeper (10 feet or more) water. Massachusetts doesn't have a shallow-water shark attack fatality on her books, and most of the non-fatal attacks involved fishing boats or surfcasting.

Sharks like to come up under their prey for the Hit. None of our shark attack victims had any idea there was a shark around until it attacked them. Only one attack I read of had the shark coming at the victim in a manner where witnesses reported seeing a dorsal fin before the strike.

As we just saw with the recent Chatham stranding/rescue of a Great White, they do go close to shore. However, the very rare shark attack becomes very, very rare if you stay in the shallows.

Shark Repellent

If you can get Bat Shark Repellent like Batman has, do so. He's smart, and his repellent probably works.

Scientists began work on shark repellents after WWII, when shipwrecks like that of the USS Indianapolis saw hundreds of people eaten by sharks. They've been working at it ever since, and generally can't come up with anything that is 100% efficient. They've tried electricity, chemicals and even magnetism.

It may or may not amuse you to know that Coppertone was one of the big investors in shark repellent research. Your sun tan lotion may have been doing double duty if someone hit the right chemical signature in the repellent lab. SP-40 may have had a more Sharkish meaning to it had they stuck it out.

They did find one thing that repels almost all sharks all the time... dead sharks. Fishermen and scientists both agree that sharks don't like to be around dead sharks. Glandular secretions from dead sharks are the current focus of shark repellent research.

Of course, that was in a 1994 article I found. I assume that someone from Coppertone pointed out that A) you can't swim around with a dead shark, and B) "Honey, would you rub the lotion with the decaying shark liver oil into my shoulders?" sort of takes the fun out of sun-tan-lotion application.



Swim With People Who Are Fatter Than You

Sharks around New England aren't sick, lost, old or demented. They are exactly where they are supposed to be and where they have always been. However, one attacking a human is generally making a mistake.

The mistake is thinking that the human is a seal/tuna/sea lion/sea turtle or whatever else it eats. It's unavoidable, and the shark- to his credit- usually breaks off the attack once he realizes his mistake.

For a fish with such a ravenous reputation, sharks don't eat that much. They expend a lot of energy attacking, and risk significant injury. They want the most bang for their buck when it comes to Epic Meal Time.

That means smoking a Fatty.

Fat people swim slower, and look more like seals than thinner people. They have more flesh, which makes them less crunchy (sharks don't do crunchy if they can avoid it) to the shark, as well as more filling.

I actually asked Dr. Gregory Skomal about this. He did admit that it made perfect sense, but that no research had been done on the subject.

This is a steroid-powered version of the Don't Ever Swim Alone rule. Sharks will pick off soloists if they can. However, given a choice, they will always Super-size their meals.

Remember this, use it to your advantage, and waste little pity on the run-stopper. You don't have to swim faster than the shark... you just to swim faster than whoever else the shark is chasing.

Avoid Guido-like Bejewelment

I'm not sure if there is a noun for what I'm trying to say there, hence the odd sub-title. I had no way to tie Only Built 4 Cuban Linx to anything sharky.

Things like necklaces and bracelets shine sort of funny in the water, and will look like fish scales to a shark in the wrong conditions. Fish are right at the top of the shark's menu, and he may come closer to see if you are worth biting. You want to avoid being in this calculation if at all possible.

Experts say only the filthy, polluted waters of Boston Harbor prevent more shark attacks from happening at Revere Beach, which has a lot of guidos running around. Boston Harbor had an attack in colonial days, and a Boston kid was the meal in 1936.

Be Local

Just as "Swim with fat people" is probably my advice and not the official advice offered by experts, this one also springs exclusively from my research.

Here's a list of who was bitten in Massachusetts shark attacks... guy from England here courting a woman, a guy from Swampscott, a Boston kid, a Nahant local, a bunch of tourists chartering a boat, a NYC guy, a pair of Truro rental guys, two Plymouth girls... and it didn't bite the Plymouth girls, just their kayak. A guy from Brazil was the most recent victim.

You see the pattern. 

It's not just a Cape Cod thing, where there are masses of tourists. Three of the last four fatal attacks were in Mattapoisett, Scituate, and Boston. Sharks seem to go out of their way to avoid locals, even passing on the two Plymouth girls (who were cute, I might add... I don't have records of the charisma of the other victims, but it may or may not be important) after knocking them both into the water.

Maybe we have Spider Sense from living near the water, and we can subconsciously read the signs of imminent danger. Maybe "exotic" people taste better. Maybe tourists lack tans that locals have, and stand out more in the water. Who knows?

What I do know is that sharks seem to favor out-of-towners.

The Other White Meat

I so wanted to find a racial trend I could exploit for laughs here, but I was amazed to find that sharks- at least our sharks here in New England- attack pretty much along the demographic averages regarding skin color. We've had about 20 attacks in our post-colonial history, and maybe 2 were on black people.

The number might be one, I'm not 100% sure of a Connecticut attack. Even with just one Black Attack, you have to crunch the numbers with the knowledge that white people beach out more than blacks do, at least around here. "Like I need a tan," as my black roomie used to tell me.

I think the sharks have bitten at least one Jew. He may have been feasted upon by a shark who wished for a kosher meal. He was taken on the Sabbath, I believe.

Anyhow, your race or your God won't save you if Ol' Toothy thinks you look tasty. To my knowledge, he doesn't give a damn about such things. We all look alike to apex predators.

Swim During The Day

Sharks attack with power and speed,but they hunt via stealth. They also don't really sleep, to my knowledge. 

While they hunt all day, they are more active and more successful at night. The shadows work in their favor, and they work against the prey. 

What weak and pitiful defenses you have in the water vanish at night. Even if it swims around you with his fin out of the water, you won't see him coming.  They started Jaws the way they did for a reason.

In Conclusion,,,,

Follow these rules, and you'll have mad bread to break up. 

If not, 17 feet on the wake up....