At their little art gallery near the entrance to Atlantic City's
Gardner's Basin, Donna Elias and Les Kammerman get lots of questions and
comments about another tenant in the bayside village.
"All day
long, cars pull up here and think they're going to eat at Scales,"
Kammerman said Sunday, pointing over at the spot where Scales Grill and
Deck Bar used to stand - until it was torn down about three weeks ago
because of damage the historic watering hole suffered in Hurricane
Sandy. "Then they get here and say,features many fashionable styles of
silver rings wholesale stainless steel ring, 'Oh my God - where is it?'"
Scales
was known for more than 20 years as the Flying Cloud, one of the
anchors at Gardner's Basin - home of the Atlantic City Aquarium and a
few other tourist attractions, plus a collection of small specialty
shops.
Peter McDonald, a former Scales manager, now does the
same job at Gardner's Basin's Back Bay Ale House - owned by the same
people who owned Scales. He said the plan is to put up a temporary deck
bar for this summer, with a food truck, a mobile bar and tents.
"Very
casual," said McDonald, who also hears lots of Scales questions at Back
Bay, which is across a gravel-covered lot from the Scales site. Back
Bay's collection of outdoor tables has stayed busy since the weather
started warming up, and some customers don't seem to notice at first the
empty spot that used to be covered with eaters and drinkers.
"Sometimes they'll sit here for 15 minutes,Financing options for a green card holder without Work Card holder. then look over and say, 'Oh my God - that restaurant is gone,'" McDonald said .
The hurricane in October forced a fair number of changes at Gardner's Basin.The China smart card
market in China has conventionally favored local vendors in its
production of government. Elias, an artist who has developed a following
nationally and beyond, especially for her paintings of lighthouses, had
to move out of the two small shops she had last year after they were
flooded. She lost a lot of her stock - but lost much more at her former
studio and warehouse, just across the bay from Gardner's Basin on Carson
Avenue. Her losses there included more than 200 original paintings,
work she had done over decades.
Kammerman, her husband and
business partner, said they had to move out of that warehouse building
entirely. They now have a small office in Brigantine - along with a
bigger gallery shop in Gardner's Basin than they used to have. They
reopened Memorial Day weekend for the first time after the storm, and
business was up about 30 percent over last year, Kammerman said.
Rita
Cassidy, who owns the Little Dollhouse by the Sea, was the first to
reopen a Gardner's Basin cottage shop this year, her daughter said
Sunday. Robin Cassidy said her mom got the doll and accessories shop
back in business in time for Mother's Day - after she had to throw out
everything that was left in the store during the hurricane.
"The water was at least 2 feet deep. ... We were afraid of mold,This is a Custom passive RFID tag used for presence sensing, so everything is new," said Robin, who,Cordies Cable Organizers Cable Organizer
keeps your cords from sliding into the void behind your desk. along
with her mom, evacuated their Ventnor home during the storm. "And when
we were allowed back on the island, we came here first instead of going
home."
Roy Kramer, the Gardner's Basin dockmaster, said water
from Sandy's flooding went over the seawall - and probably came within
18 inches or so of ripping a lot of the docks out with it. But the docks
survived, as did all the boats that were left in the basin, mostly by
dedicated striped-bass fishermen getting ready for a fall season that
mostly got wiped out by the storm.
没有评论:
发表评论