Wednesday, September 4, 2019
The Boardwalk of Santa Cruz Essay -- Observation Essay, Descriptive Ess
The Boardwalk of Santa Cruz      "Keifer Sutherland blockbuster Lost Boys filmed on this spot," proclaimed   the self-important plaque. It was mounted on a wall along a long flight of  log stairs. As I looked back, miles of beach stretched out before me and,   across the bay, I could see red, blue, orange lights whirling high above the   crowds upon a huge wheel. We made our way back to where the steps met back up   with the sidewalk alongside the highway. We were hit by the smell of the   city, of the freeways, re-invading our senses. I took one final look back   and studied once more the long progression of wooden planks stretching off   into the distance. It had been like no place I'd ever experienced. The   Boardwalk. Santa Cruz.     It was the summer of 2000 and I had moved in with my sister Jana in Santa   Cruz, California for the summer. I had taken a 32-hour bus ride to get   there and was completely exhausted from it, but Jana wanted to show off her   city, so the next day she gave me a tour. She had an apartment right on the   beach, and we could go swimming anytime. We went downtown and I took in   this unfamiliar environment. The people were so much more diverse than I   was used to. Growing up in a town of 280 people in western Colorado does   not exactly allow one to experience many types of people. In one glimpse   down a street in Santa Cruz, I could see a sampling of the world. People of   all colors and creeds wearing turbans, sarongs, and other exotic clothes   mixed right in with the type of people I had grown up with. California   does not have mental institutions, so most mental patients end up homeless   in the streets--another wrinkle to the cloak of humanity of this particular   street. I witnessed one man...              ...s and blocks of shops, restaurants,   bowling alleys, bars and emergency medical stations for those who needed   assistance, such as having their stomachs pumped, after a night on the   Boardwalk. The people milling about were just as varied as those downtown,   if decidedly younger. The beach was filled with rides and volleyball nets   all along the coast. We started out in a bowling alley and progressed on to   numerous other establishments, including a Falafel place where none of the   employees spoke anything but Farsi. As the night wore on and the bars   became less and less selective, the night became hazier and hazier. One of   the memories that remained in my addled brain the next morning was riding   the Ferris wheel high above the crowds and feeling the wondrous ocean breeze   coming in. It was one of the most fun nights I had while I was in   California.                         
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