The Vineyard was the place to be this summer, or so it appeared.
The crowds came, jamming Island roads with traffic and filling restaurants, shops, farmers’ markets and shorefronts. Summer cultural events were filled to capacity. Perfect beach and swimming days stretched on as if they would never end. Farmers and gardeners decried the lack of rain, but the weather refused to budge from its summer agenda: relentless sunshine ruffled by cool sea breezes, foggy mornings and starry nights. Harbors and ponds were filled with sailors, kayakers and lazy-days fishermen. The Vineyard was the place to be this summer, or so it appeared. Since the annual exodus began a couple of short weeks ago, each day has seemed less busy than the last; soon, all that will be left are footprints in the sand.
Although the hard numbers are not in yet, by most accounts it has been a very good summer — for visitors eager to soak up the rays, for businesses on and off the water for whom eight weeks can make or break a year; but perhaps most importantly for the community at large. Despite the heat and crowds, for the first time in recent memory there were no fatal accidents and few major mishaps of any kind, although a spate of fires at the beginning of the summer tested the mettle of volunteer firefighters and emergency responders. As the official end of summer approaches, hurricanes have stayed offshore (so far), beaches have remained open (so far) and people have mostly behaved (so far).
Each year, congestion at the Triangle seems worse, lines grow outside coffee shops and restaurants, bulletin boards fill up with new and bigger events, more strollers and bikes appear on sidewalks and roadsides. But tourism is the lifeblood of the Vineyard, and for one glorious summer the Island’s circulation system seemed to work flawlessly. Some of it was luck, but it takes more than that to get through a summer on the Vineyard with so little drama. In large ways and small, the Island community worked together to absorb, manage and sometimes just endure another annual incursion, and made it look easy.
For year-round Islanders, many of them bone-tired from working long hours, September marks a distinct seasonal shift in rhythms. Neighbors greet one another these days as they pass on the streets — Happy September, we survived another one is the familiar refrain. This is the season Islanders look forward to. Traffic jams are gone for another year, parking spaces are suddenly available down-Island and at Menemsha, ocean water will stay warm enough for swimming well through the fall equinox.
Labor Day is Monday, and the Island joins the rest of the nation in celebrating the national holiday that recognizes the achievements of American workers and their contribution to the country. Post offices, banks and government offices will be closed. So will the Gazette office, as the hardworking staff takes its first official break since Memorial Day.
There are no parades or special events to mark Labor Day on the Vineyard, but as is the case in other resort communities, the holiday annually signals an unofficial end to the summer season. Outgoing ferries are full; incoming not so much. For visitors and summer residents still here, that means one last swim, one last sunset, one last bucket of clams. Then it will be time to head to the mainland for another year, or at least until Columbus Day or Thanksgiving. For Islanders, it means back to school and a return to other off-season community routines put on pause during the busy summer months.
Public schools open on Tuesday.
Derby days and bay scalloping lie ahead; soon the heat and humidity will give way to crisp mornings and evenings cloaked in mist.
Before we chalk up another season, however, let us pause to congratulate each other on a near-perfect summer, one that brought out the best in the Vineyard.

Comments
Most congested parking ever
Judy Kranz Oak BluffsMost congested parking ever and when will Reliable give up those single use garbage bags for multiple use bags? when will tourists stop leaving their refuse on porches and steps in OB? Thats what we need to work on for next season in Oak Bluffs. More garbage cans and a park and ride so town congestion is lessened.
I'm happy for the businesses
Geraldine Brooks West TisburyI'm happy for the businesses but I think this summer was a red alert: we CAN kill the golden goose. The traffic jams in West Tisbury on Saturday and Menemsha Harbor every night, the absolute crush at the Farmer's Market and the circus on Menemsha beach at sunset--this is not the peaceful, bucolic place that has lured people and made us fall in love with the Vineyard. I for one stopped going to both beloved places, stopped participating in two of my most beloved summer rituals, and I can't believe that I am alone in this. Who else feels that this summer was a tipping point?
I wholeheartedly agree with
Susan Desmarais Oak BluffsI wholeheartedly agree with you Geraldine. I found myself feeling sadness from time to to time this summer. And for the very first time thinking, "I wonder if anyone else is thinking we are losing something precious". Thank you for your writing.
Of course it is all relative.
Robert Skydell ChilmarkOf course it is all relative. I gave up on both the Farmer's Market and Menemsha over fifteen years ago when the overwhelming feeling went from relaxed to decidedly tense and harried. But I'm also reminded of the time I hitched a ride with Capt. Donald Poole in 1976 who lamented the same thing.
Add to that the fact that schools are starting earlier and earlier and the season has gotten needlessly compressed. But we'll always have September and October!
After getting stuck in a
Ellen Miller Vineyard Haven, MAAfter getting stuck in a traffic jam in the parking lot of Chilmark Chocolates in July, I was not surprised to see that they had closed for a few weeks in August. I agree this summer was unbearably crowded. I too stopped going some places until after Labor Day, and was shocked to be told to "burn in hell" when I waved a thank you to a red BMW driver for stopping so I could cross North Water Street! A lot of people have reported dangerous and/or nasty incidents, including an elderly couple who became verbally abusive when asked to stop riding their mopeds ON THE SIDEWALK (again in Edgartown) on a busy day! Things seemed to have gotten a bit out of control...
As a resident of Long Island,
Pamela Jacqueline Friedman Long Island New YorkAs a resident of Long Island, and frequent visitor to the "Vineyard" for many years, I too, have experienced that feeling of "things getting out of control". It is sad, but i'm afraid, a sign of the times. People behaving in a reckless, indifferent manner. living in this subjective reality, "I am what I feel". It's as though an atomic bomb hit the "moral" center of the universe!
Yes, what we need is a good
Rob Burnside Kingston, PAYes, what we need is a good recession...(?) An excellent piece of writing in any case!
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