“It was my mother’s lifelong dream to one day have the Shore house, so it did all stem from her,” the longtime Evesham Township resident said. “I’ve been taking my girls to the beach literally since they were babies in the Pack ’n Play. I grew up going to the beach and renting a house in Ocean City for a week every summer. We all lived for that week — it was the best week of the year. After all of us kids graduated college, my mom got her own Shore house for the whole family, like she always wanted.”
From her childhood in Eastern Pennsylvania to her young-adult years spent in Philadelphia to starting her own family in the South Jersey region her husband has always called home, her grandmother’s and parents’ Ocean City Shore house has been a comforting constant and familiar getaway that Jacqui Kinney doesn’t hesitate to describe as “her happy place.”
“When you’re home, you follow your schedule: Go to school, go to work, do it all again the next day,” she said. “It’s just different down the Shore, even when my grandmom and my parents were living at the Shore house full-time, even when we went in the winter and it was a ghost town. It was still nice because we got to be there with my grandmom and walk up and down the boardwalk when nobody else was there.”
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Both Kinney and Holden agree that the Shore has given their families, both the ones they grew up in and the ones they’ve made for themselves, a strengthened bond that unites generations — one that Holden says she’s even starting to see reflected in her eldest daughter’s creative writing pieces about her own love of the Shore.
“It’s given me a chance to see my parents with my girls and realize that they are such special people and amazing parents who really bend over backward for their kids and our kids,” Holden explained. “Getting to spend so much time with their grandkids gives them something to look forward to, whether we’re going to dinner or my dad’s building sandcastles with my kids like he did with me. I feel like we’ve come full circle, now that they’re doing the same things with my girls that they did with me every single summer since I was born.”
The Garden State’s 130 miles of shoreline isn’t the only body of water with an unignorable call beckoning generation after generation to fall in love with a locational constant that’s almost a family member in its own right. For Lawrenceville native Joe Cermele, his most significant childhood milestones were measured in both the watering holes and fishing gear that got bigger as he grew older, a passion he ultimately turned into a career.
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Few fishing traditions match the first day of trout season, always a second Saturday in April that arrived with Christmas-morning fanfare heralding those annual excursions to Jersey’s freshwater lakes, rivers and streams he made with his father just as the elder Cermele had done with his own father in the ‘50s and ‘60s.
And after losing his father just days after last year’s trout season kicked off, this year&...