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Jersey Shore
built 818 days ago
The Jersey Shore is a term used in the mid-Atlantic region of the United States to refer to the Atlantic Ocean- facing coast of New Jersey, together with the adjacent resort and residential communities. Its popularity as a tourist destination is due in large part to the nearly continuous stretch of beaches along its length, classic themes (antique, quaint, and classic), and boardwalks filled with hundreds of rides. The shore represents one of the most booming real estate markets on the East coast as its prominence as a tourist destination and vacation spot has risen greatly in the past decade.
The Jersey Shore is 127 miles of public beachfront stretching like a pointing finger along the Atlantic Ocean from the Sandy Hook Peninsula in the north to Cape May at the southern tip. There is no one description of what it's like "down the shore." Things change town by town and sometimes season by season -- winter storms have a habit of rearranging beaches and boardwalks.
The demographics of the Jersey Shore are changing. In Monmouth County, rental properties are being purchased by either former tenants or investors and turned into year-round residences. This results in a reduction in both the number of renters, as they become year-round residential homeowners, and the number of rental properties available on the market. Concurrently, investors purchase homes at the Jersey Shore with the expectation of renting them at a price reflective of cost and overhead. Because of the limited supply and high demand beach property in Monmouth County, the price to acquire property is now so high that investors are having difficulty achieving profitable rentals. The laws of supply and demand will eventually straighten all of this out.
Leading scientists of the American Museum of Natural History in New York City debated the threat posed by sharks before and after the 1916 Jersey Shore attacks. The Jersey Shore attacks compelled scientists in the United States to revise their assumptions that sharks were timid and powerless. In July 1916, ichthyologist and editor for the National Geographic Society Hugh McCormick Smith published an article in the Newark Star-Eagle describing some shark species as "harmless as doves and others the incarnation of ferocity." He continued, "One of the most prodigious, and perhaps the most formidable of sharks is the man-eater, Carcharodon carcharias. It roams through all temperate and tropical seas, and everywhere is an object of dread. Its maximum length is forty feet and its teeth are three inches long."[63]
The Jersey Shore attacks immediately entered into American popular culture, where sharks became caricatures in editorial cartoons representing danger. The attacks inspired Peter Benchley's novel Jaws (1974), an account of a great white shark that torments the fictional coastal community of Amity Island. Jaws was made into an influential film in 1975 by Steven Spielberg. The attacks became the subject of documentaries for the History Channel, Discovery Channel, and National Geographic Channel.
A vast ocean beach replenishment project has helped Monmouth Beach grow from an ever-so-narrow strip of sand in the early 1990s, to a wide stretch of New Jersey shoreline attracting thousands of visitors. With four beaches to choose from, a blissful day of relaxation and tranquility begins the minute your feet hit the warm sand. Or for thrills off the beach, visit the race track.
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