today was my sojourn to the the
Rockaways - and i'll say this - it was far, but oh so worth it!
i'll share with you of my journey in detail as i recommend the same trip for all.

first of all, it was a gorgeous day for a mini-trip!!!! okay here we go:
3:18 PM - i boarded the 4 train from 86th street-Lex stop (i was teaching before that). i was all ready with some pastries and a bottle of water. prior to my trip, i was given all sorts of advice: DON"T GO THERE! IT"S DANGEROUS! IT"S FAR! so, w/o the recommended mace, flashlight and other gadgets, i went ahead
3:36 PM - i caught the A train at Fulton Street/Brooklyn-Nassau station...but...

i had to get off at High St/Brooklyn Bridge stop (1st stop in Brooklyn) because i realized that i need the A train for "Far Rockaway," not "Ozone Park"
3:44 PM - i finally caught the right one and settled in for a long trip. i noticed that the train was full of all ethnicities, but i was the only of the EASTERN origin.
i started to listen to
D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones' sermon on Ignorance, Prejudice based on 1 Tim chapter 1 (Paul was prejudiced and blinded by ignorance, and MLJ used that example in comparison to the non-believers of this time. "They don't see the fact, defensive in their unbelief" etc.)
i noticed a crazy looking man (isn't there always at least ONE in your subway car?) reading a
Hilary Duff fan magazine (yes, that's what the cover said). he was around in his 60's. yes, i'm not kidding
4:05 PM - just passed the Grant Avenue stop and then train went above ground!
4: 07 PM - just passed the 80th Street stop and first thing i see? A HUGE & VAST CEMETERY. found out it's a jewish cemetery (no link available for those who are truly morbid,
and morbidly curious, yours truly included)
4:15 PM - houses near the
Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge are big with boats - some are in bad shape but can you believe that i went through a "wildlife refuge" - within 10 miles of manhattan??

anyway, i was riding on the train parallel to the
cross bay veterans memorial bridge (for cars) - it seems like a long one - probably a lovely drive during the summer
4:23 PM - arrival at Broad Channel station and started to wait for the S train to take me to Rockaway Park Beach 116 St stop. if it was during the summer, i could've taken a seasonal A train to that stop, all the way from the city, but because it's not, that A line only goes to the other side of the Rockaways (north) - which i was told to stay away from.
now do you see the seagull in the next picture? yes, i actually saw a seagull flying around the subway station...that meant i was near nature! perhaps if one lives near Coney Island you'll see something like this...MTA & seagull existing peacefully together...

4:29 PM - the S train (which is only 4 cars long) sped through the jamaica bay area. here are some pictures


after Beach 90 St stop, i started to see the Manhattan skyline so so clearly! it was actually so gorgeous! and it looked so tiny...and my thought was "and we all live there?? that's just crazy!!!"

4:37 PM - arrival in Rockaway Park Beach 116 St stop!

okay, so even counting the conductor, i was the 3rd and the last person coming off the train. i guess not many people come this way.
after coming out of the small subway stop, it looked like i was on 116th Street, which looked like a happening place. i spotted a Dunkin Donuts and a firehouse among many chinese restaurants and other mom & pops stores (i am being sarcastic...)
population-wise, it was all white - very strange, as my ride TO was pretty black. i felt like i was transported to some other era. everybody was all so friendly.
since i'm a right-y, i looked to my right. sure enough, a friendly store sign, that you know that you'll be okay. i'm talking about DUANE READE - OPEN 24 HOURS. so naturally, i walked towards that. that and also i saw the water, towards manhattan. it happened to be a park:

it's called the Tribute Park - for the fallen 9/11 heros - how fitting as it overlooks the Manhattan skyline.
then i walked back towards the station, asked how i can get to Fort Tilden, which they had no idea what i was talking about. i asked about the Park and they said, oh go over there. good thing it's pretty condensed (concise?) there, because i actually knew what they meant. i took Q22 (i was getting confused because i had just taken the A train through brooklyn, but then i realized, i crossed the borough line and now i'm back in queens) down the Rockaway Beach Blvd to Jacob Riis Park, which is near where i wanted to go.
to my utter but happy surprise, the houses on the Rockaway Beach Blvd were gorgeous, pristine and victorian. HUGE and well-kept, the streets reminded me of the houses in San Diego

passed 2 large synagogues. and i was the only passenger in the new bus - i felt like he was my driver! sure enough, he started to chat with me, and i found a ton of stuff! that:
- this peninsula (NOT an island!) used to be part of Long Island (not part of Queens) and had a different name!
- breezy point is the area name for the military base which is now defunct but for some reason people still live "inside of the base" (and i saw too)
- that those houses i just saw are true victorian houses, renovated (therefore huge), usually handed down by generation to generation, millions of dollars!!
- that in order to get to fort tilden (the place i wanted to go - read that article i linked under fort tilden above), one must walk (or bike)
- and beyond fort tilden is ANOTHER residential area, which you can only get by driving and very exclusive and that there's a mini shuttle bus that leaves right in front of the train station for $1 to whisk people there (now i'm curious)
- that there used to be a ferry service between the Rockaways and South Street Seaport
- when i asked about summer beach goers, whether if it'll be really crowded, he said, not really. not many people know about to come here
he was wondering if i were a journalist because i was taking photos of everything and writing down what he was saying! ha ha. he was flattered that someone from "the city" would come visit just for the sake of it. he said it's a great little neighborhood. and he was maybe in his 30's, a nice dude. friendliest MTA bus driver yet!
then i got off the breezy point final stop on the bus and he pointed to the STATE beach (jacob riis park), which looked pretty close so i started to walk...
it was about 10-15 min walk TO the beach, but it was so worth it! it was very isolated for me to walk there...but this is what i wrote in my journal later:
Beach was so tranquil and deserted. It was as if civilization didn't catch up to it. Seagulls lazing around, only moving as crashing waves came in - big cruise liners sitting majestically in the ocean, Atlantic Ocean! and to have sand beneath my shoes/feet in the middle of winter, while blistering wind slapping me in the face was exhilarating. I picked up 2 broken shells off of the beach and I felt so loved and treasured by my creator. Dusk was setting into the sand dunes and as I walked for another 10-15 min back to the bus, i felt a mix of apprehension of being so completely isolated and feeling so one with the nature.
earlier on, i had spotted a diner right near the train station, named (somewhat appropriately, i think) Last Stop Gourmet Shop. i went in, totally empty of course, but oh so friendly, and i ordered a beef gyro, without tomato. they gave me a magnet that was in a shape of a train with their name on it. ha!
coming back was a breeze, now that i've experienced it so far. i listened to D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones' Power of Persecution (on Acts - first days of early church planting - and how churches these days should think, etc.)
overall, i highly recommend this trip. it's a lovely little getaway and it was really peaceful to be somewhere so far yet so close. A trains were pretty zippy too and i was surprised that so many people in the Rockaways were asking "how are you" to me. a true small town sign.
if any of you would like to see the pictures i took, please let me know. it was fun! and relaxing :)