Frugal Traveller : Even In Winter Provincetown Shines!
by
Matt Gross / January 20th 2009
“A dozen oysters, please,” I asked the man behind the seafood
counter in Provincetown, Mass.
He looked at me with consternation, pointed to a pile of steamer
clams and asked, “You mean these?”
I sighed. Normally, I would have fled
the store forthwith. But I had nowhere else to go — I was
on Cape Cod in early January and both Mac’s and Cape Tip,
nearby fish markets, had closed for the season and there
was no place in reasonable driving distance that sold oysters.
So here I was, at the new Provincetown Stop & Shop, trying
to buy Wellfleets from a man who didn’t actually know what
oysters looked like.
But instead of rolling my eyes, I was patient. After all,
these oysters — yes, they had them — were a mere $3.99 a pound,
meaning eight bivalves (all they had) came to a mere $5.53
— less than half what they’d cost at a restaurant.
Within an hour, I’d taken them back to my cozy-but-modern
bed-and-breakfast, the Aerie House and Beach Club, on a hill
overlooking the bay in Provincetown’s East End, where I shucked
them in the kitchen, doused them in lemon juice and carried
them upstairs to the fireplace-warmed room where my wife, Jean,
was tending to our month-old daughter, Sasha. I cracked open
one of the two complimentary mini-bottles of Champagne and
poured the wine into flutes.
Then, at last, I swallowed an oyster — a marvelous balance
of brine and cream and acid. A perfect Wellfleet.
Normally — which is to say, when it’s above freezing on Cape
Cod — I could not easily afford this. Provincetown in summer
is a nonstop party, a fashionable escape that draws New Englanders
of every color, stripe and proclivity — the lone exception
being frugal travelers. But Provincetown in the middle of winter
— “the dark period,” according to one year-round resident —
is a land of quiet bargains, where simpler pleasures emerge
from the frenzy of summertime, while out-of-reach luxuries
drop drastically in price.
Lodging is the most dramatic bargain of all. Rooms that run
$200 or more during the season cost half that on weekends,
and even less during the week. Jean and I were first tempted
by Admiral’s Landing (158 Bradford Street; 800-934-0925; www.admiralslanding.com),
a 19th-century Greek Revival whose gorgeous rooms — many of
them with fireplaces, a necessity during New England winters,
if you ask me — were all $100 or less, with a third night thrown
in free during the winter. All, however, were booked.
After searching Provincetown.com, I discovered the Aerie House
(184 Bradford Street; 800-487-1197; www.aeriehouse.com), whose
bay-view fireplace room was $115 (midweek, it’s $70). Still
on the high end, but we’d only stay two nights. The cool-looking
Enzo guesthouse (186 Commercial Street; 508-487-7555; www.enzolives.com)
e-mailed with an off-off-season rate of $75 for a fireplace
room, but I’d already put a deposit on the Aerie House.
Not that we regretted it. The house was beautiful and warm
(so warm, in fact, that our fireplace was superfluous). A bookshelf
full of DVDs let us catch up on films we’d somehow missed (e.g.,
“The Squid and the Whale”), and the breakfasts were a nice
notch above simple: juices, pastries, a frittata, an excellent
fruit salad of kiwi, pineapple, strawberries and blackberries.
Saturday morning, we awoke to a classic Provincetown sky,
startling in its clarity and depth. With Sasha snuggled into
her baby carrier, Jean and I walked down Commercial Street
and were stunned at the silence. What is Provincetown’s summertime
main drag, a place where tourists jostle for space alongside
drag queens handing out nightclub fliers, was virtually empty.
Most shops were closed, “70% off!” signs still hanging in
their windows from fall. A tattered old house had a sign in
the window: “For rent, year round.” At a bayside beach, rowboats
were flipped over, and across the water, MacMillan Pier looked
frozen in time. Even the bay itself seemed scarcely to move.
The town was in hibernation.
Well, not entirely. A few Commercial Street shops remained
open, catering to the occasional tourist (or local) in search
of jaunty sneakers (at All-American Boy, No. 210), high-end
home furnishings (at Shor, No. 277) or marital aids (at Toys
of Eros, No. 200). Surprisingly, the Marc by Marc Jacobs shop
(No. 184) is open seven days a week, and even had bargains:
fingerless wool gloves were $3, so I bought two pairs.
Nor does Provincetown’s art scene entirely shut down. There
were no plays running, but the Provincetown Art Association
and Museum (460 Commercial Street; 508-487-1750; www.paam.org;
admission $5) was open Thursday through Sunday. Housed in a
stunning new energy-efficient building, the museum displays
everything from the Cape’s master painters (Charles Webster
Hawthorne, Vollian Burr Rann) to the Muppets designed by Ed
Christie, a resident of neighboring Truro (the exhibition ends
Jan. 25).
If that $5 admission threatens to break the bank, visit the
Julie Heller Galleries, (2 Gosnold Street and 465 Commercial
Street; 508-487-2169; www.juliehellergallery.com), which I’ve
long thought of as Provincetown’s other art museum. The ramshackle
Gosnold Street building looks like an artist’s studio, with
prints and paintings lying helter-skelter on the wooden floor.
Except that these are works by legends — locals like Milton
Avery and Blanche Lazell, international stars like Joan Miró
— and you can sift through them as you would ears of sweet
corn at a farmers’ market. When was the last time you handled
a $65,000 painting?
It’s a remarkably laid-back scene, one duplicated at the handful
of restaurants that remain open all winter. These feel like
true locals’ joints: Fanizzi’s by the Sea (539 Commercial Street;
508-487-1964; www.fanizzisrestaurant.com), where $11 buys you
a massive bacon Cheddar cheeseburger and $8.99 a bowl of fat
mussels (don’t forget the 10 percent-off coupon in the Provincetown
Banner); the wood-paneled, fireplace-warmed basement at Jimmy’s
Hideaway (179 Commercial Street; 508-487-1011; www.jimmyshideaway.com),
which makes excellent chicken livers with red-onion marmalade
($9); and Chach (73 Shank Painter Road; 508-487-1530), a diner-esque
spot that closes by 2 p.m., ensuring that only those in the
know enjoy the fantastic tuna melt ($10.95).
In this environment, where frugality is a way of life, it
can feel weird to pay so much attention to money. The best
remedy is to head out to the dunes of the Cape Cod National
Seashore — those much-painted, much-photographed waves of sand
that front the Atlantic. (Vehicles are generally forbidden
in the dunes, but you can park in small lots on Route 6, and
follow trails into the sand.)
In winter, they are less welcoming but as stunning as ever
in their variety: Here, a stand of tall grasses arched by wind.
There, a stand of leafless trees. Farther on, a smooth valley
of untouched sand looking like newly scooped ice cream. And
finally, the sea itself, lapping at the shore with a regularity
that knows neither season nor budget.
Leave your wallet behind, but if you’re bringing a camera
or sketchpad, a pair of warm, fingerless gloves comes in mighty
handy.