A Day at the Beach Restores and Renews
The quiet of an early June day at Lambert's Cove.
Mark Alan Lovewell
Views of the Makonikey bluffs.
Mark Alan Lovewell
Sandals left at the end of the path is a longtime tradition.
Mark Alan Lovewell
Luca Fishman and Liam Crannell enjoy the sun at Menemsha Beach.
Mark Alan Lovewell
Green water stretches out to Vineyard Sound.
Mark Alan Lovewell
Chilmark's scenic north shore.
Mark Alan Lovewell
Pick up volleyball game at South Beach.
Mark Alan Lovewell
Any time is a good time for sandcastle building.
Mark Alan Lovewell
Mark Alan Lovewell
Fragrant rosa rugosa blooms at the Katama Bay boat landing.
Mark Alan Lovewell
The old Katama herring run makes its way to the shore.
Mark Alan Lovewell
Nathaniel D'Agostino of Oak Bluffs spends his afternoon at Squibnocket.
Mark Alan Lovewell
What could be finer than conversation and a beach stroll.
Mark Alan Lovewell
There is something timeless – and therefore reassuring – in a Vineyard beach as the air warms again and invites return to the ocean's edge.
"I just loved sitting still," the narrator of Barbara Kingsolver's book, The Bean Tree, says at one point; and that's the way it is at the beach. With the swirl of the water around you, sitting still at the beach is a powerful restorative; one leaves regretfully, but renewed.
