ANNETTE HANSHAW:
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By Eileen and Paul Goldfinger, Editors, Blogfinger.net. Contact; Blogfinger@verizon.net
We are beginning to collect addresses for the June 27, 2026 Town-Wide Yard Sale.
We anticipate an enjoyable and rewarding sale as we have had for the last 14 years.
From now until the sales, we will have this post in place, and this will be where we will communicate information and this is where we will begin posting “THE LIST.” which will contain the addresses of all participants including cross streets and, eventually items for sale. If. you want to have a sale, contact us by email at Blogfinger@verizon.net.
We will post the “LIST” here and add new addresses as they come in to Blogfinger@verizon.net New participants can be added to “The List” as the addresses arrive to us from now through June 26. Tell your friends; give them Blogfinger.net to find basic information.
You can send us your address sign-up now, and add your items for sale whenever you wish. We will save the item “List” until 1-2 weeks before. We don’t want early birds knocking on your doors. The List will be published here starting in early June. But you can start signing up now. We will not post your names unless you request that. Send your list to Blogfinger@verizon.net
Only addresses and, later, sale items will be on the list. The latter will be revealed about one week before touch down.
We are leaving this post here until June 27 so that those who go to Blogfinger.net for yard-sale information will not get lost. The content of this post will vary until the sale.
About parking it should be OK. If you drive into town, bring a bike and park anywhere.
This an Ocean Grove event run by We-The-People, and we expect that mostly Grovers will show up as before, but out-of-towners are always welcome to our historic town . Bring the kids, the dogs, your band, or your saxophone or flugelhorn. Have music at your sale.
Sellers will need a Neptune Township yard sale permit for $5.00. Get them at the Neptune Township Town Hall-building dept.
We have fliers now to help publicize the event and we welcome efforts by participants to publicize the sales. If you want to have some fliers, stop at our porch at 113 Mt. Hermon Way at Delaware. Help yourself to fliers which will be in a box. You can attach them legally to your porch columns.
Seller groups of neighbors or friends will enhance the success, fun and games. We can use some volunteer citizen reporters with bikes who could monitor and photograph the sales and report back to the Blogfinger headquarters.
QUESTIONS? Email to Eileen and me: Blogfinger@verizon.net
This post will be evolving, so stay tuned.
Eileen and Paul Goldfinger. Editors at Blogfinger.net
BRENDA LEE:
FATS WALLER
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There used to be a jazz festival in Sunset Park years ago, but now it is back, The A. Park music scene needs more jazz. In Ocean Grove, home to the Great Auditorium, it is sad that there is so little jazz–it is a perfect venue for jazz.
“Just Squeeze Me…” Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington
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THE TWO OF US: “The Rainbow Connection.”
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A. Park as seen from Ocean Grove across Wesley Lake. Paul Goldfinger photograph © c. 2014. click to enlarge RE-POST 2018.
By Paul Goldfinger, Editor@ Blogfinger.net Photos and text. Relevant in 2018 regarding the contrasts between Asbury Park and Ocean Grove.
In case you haven’t noticed, according to last Sunday’s NY Times, Asbury Park, at least the part by the ocean, is a huge success attracting hot-shots from all over the mid-Atlantic to this “beach destination.” It seems that the turning point is the new 110 room Asbury Hotel, a brilliantly conceived venue which the chief designer, Anda Andrei, calls “luxury with modesty.”
According to the Times, the “City by the Sea” has officially risen from the ashes and has become a place where “everyone and everything” is happening. Below are some of the observations reported by the Times in their featured article in the “Next Stop” series on Sunday, July 10, 2016, written by Eric Lipton, a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist:
“IStar is the NYC based real estate company that owns all 35 acres of beachfront land. Madison Marquette is the company in charge of leasing retail space at the beachfront. These companies plan to invest over $1 billion in AP over the next 10 years.”
Regarding the demographics of those who populate the scene in AP, it is described as an “eclectic mix of professionals, families, young bar hoppers, and a large gay population—-all of them across income levels.”
The author of the article said, “Now the rebirth of Asbury Park is no longer in question. The only question that does remain is how much of Asbury’s character will be retained as it becomes a summertime mecca again.”
The executive in charge of iStar told the Times that “his company is determined not to turn Asbury Park into Disneyland.”
You can already get a feel for that when you check out the eating establishments on the boards—no pizza slices and French fries for them.
“The music scene is still the element that holds Asbury Park together with at least eight venues featuring live music.”
Downtown more than two dozen restaurants and bars comprise an eclectic collection of fine shops, galleries, and bakeries. The Festhall and Biergarten across the lake from OG is filled with “over 700 patrons on busy weekend nights.”
Clearly this Times article was aimed at a crowd that would respond to the “Brooklyn by the beach” nickname, but when Eric Lipton wondered about retaining the original AP “character,” it wasn’t clear what image he had in mind.
The article failed to consider that AP is a city that consists of more than just a destination for glitterati. There are people who live there who are ordinary folks—not hipsters, and they bring a beautiful down-home, multi-racial sensibility to the City which has deeper roots than fancy restaurants and cool destinations. There is a tapestry in Asbury Park, not just designer clothes.
Also there is no recognition in the article of the state of affairs in some parts of town west of the tracks, the poverty, the unemployment, the poor condition of Main Street, and the pervasive crime problems, primarily surrounding the considerable drug scene over there.
And as we all know who live in this area, Asbury Park is not isolated—it has neighbors. Regarding the “eclectic mix” that visits A. Park, the author says that the mix is “in striking contrast to the more stuffy (and staid) nearby beach towns, like Spring Lake.”
Uh, excuse me, but if you are going to contrast Asbury to a nearby town, there is an actual striking contrast with next door Ocean Grove, just south of A. Park—-a much more interesting place than “staid” Spring Lake.
There is a small reference to OG in a side bar which, like most inattentive media, gets it wrong about us—painting us as some shriveled-up museum-like religious town. He says, “Ocean Grove is a dry town built around religious summer camps—God’s Square Mile is its slogan—-so no bars with music there. But it is a museum of Victorian architecture.”
Eric Lipton mentions our ” more than a dozen bed and breakfast options,” but who would want to visit our embalmed town? The dynamic interaction between these two beach towns which is developing, goes unrecognized by the media. Ocean Grove may not be where the cool crowd goes, but our history, diversity, beauty, quietude, and family lifestyles provide quite an impressive and favorable comparison to the sparkling high life going on across Wesley Lake.
So, what will Ocean Grove become by comparison as AP morphs into a very special place with its own character, fame, and attraction? Will we evolve into a historical prototype of small town America with a famous Victorian architecture, a religious flavor, a unique character, a classy culture, and a wonderful personality of its own that will complement what is happening to the north?
Or will we be left in the dustbin of history as a place with stifling crowding, insoluble parking concerns, a has-been Victorian success story, condos all over town, a pseudo-Asbury at the North End, and a town devoid of community—– known for gizmos and Abba on the Pathway but no art, culture, or values of its own? All that will be left to focus on will be the Camp Meeting Association with its specific mission and lifestyle—worthy as part of the community, but less impressive all by itself.
CELIA CRUZ: (Live) Turn on the music and then look at the gallery below.
An Asbury Park gallery—-the other side of A. Park, by Paul Goldfinger @Blogfinger.net. Click on one and follow the arrows. Use the small X upper left to return to Blogfinger proper (or improper as the case may be.)
Posted in Asbury Connection, Asbury Park, Asbury Park Connection Photo Gallery, Blogfinger Presents, Ocean Grove lifestyles, Photograph by Paul Goldfinger, Photography Asbury Park lifestyles, Photography at The Jersey Shore, Photography in Asbury Park, Photography nocturnal Asbury Park, Photography the other side of Asbury Park | Tagged Asbury Park reborn, Ocean Grove compared to Asbury | 8 Comments »
Hi Paul:
Greetings from Manhattan. There is a common aid to navigation — often used in coastal waters — that has always had a special meaning for me as a poet. Here is “The Bell Buoy,” a poem from my 2008 collection, Father of Water.
Best wishes,
Charles Pierre

“Shivering Sand.” Photogravure by Wylie. Undated. Click once to see the bell buoy more clearly. Reposted this poem from 2015 Blogfinger.net. ©
BELL BUOY
By Charles Pierre.
There is something singular in the rhythms
of the bell buoy, as it rings in the wake
of an unknown vessel already passing
on to its destination. The restless gestures
of this solitaire, anchored in the routine
of the sea, are a directing presence,
even in this hostile chopping,
metal on metal clanging from its heart,
clanging down the chain to the muddy anchor,
clanging out above the waves, creating
a point in the pointless sea, echoing out
to another, its clanging a song
of hope through these splintered waters,
a hard human song in an inhuman place,
something with a ringing truth to it
of who we are, something to sustain us,
wherever this imagined drifting leads.
Sounds: bell buoy ringing; waves hitting boat:
Music on the water, from the film The Sand Pebbles (1966) with Steve McQueen.:
MATT MONROE
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Main Avenue, OG, 9 pm Friends singing loudly–full of life. 5/28/22. Paul Goldfinger photo. Click once to enlarge.

A crowd develops at Days. 9 pm, Saturday night. It is quiet as the line edges forward. Everyone is patient because they anticipate something special. Paul Goldfinger photo.
By Paul Goldfinger, Editor Blogfinger.net. May, 2022.
Main Avenue was quiet at 9 pm on Saturday night 5/28/22. It’s the Memorial Day weekend.
The concert was over, and a long line had developed at Days. Seagrass was winding down as was the pizza shop.
The sound of music was heard wafting softly from Asbury Park. Nagles remains shuttered, and that wonderful Saturday night presence is missed.
And then there’s always window shopping:
A few teenagers moved quickly west on Main, singing and chattering as they went by.
Not much to be expected of a Saturday night scene in May at the Grove but……
But for many Grovers, that’s how they like it. Night life rings true in A. Park; here it’s different…..
Here you can find satisfaction just walking on the boards, strolling downtown, patrolling our windy streets, or merely enjoying friends and family on our porches.
It could be lonely, but maybe a knock on the door could change things dramatically. Ask Frankie:
FRANK SINATRA.
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Days today is superficially identical to how it was with the old owners. But our readers will be the judge of that.*
The new owners are ice cream purveyors from Neptune City. They are :”Callie’s” homemade ice cream.
Their flavors are home made or purchased from other sources. We are told that their prices are a bit higher than before. Today business was slow. We tasted two flavors served on tiny plastic spoons. We took home two pints: Chocolate coffee mocha and rocky road. The samples were creamy and tasty. They were a bit soft, so bring a cooler bag and hit the freezer soon.
*Let us know your reviews: send to Blogfinger@verizon.net. or hit the comments button below.
This song by Julie Styne is fun, but it has nothing to do with ice cream. Sung by Judy Kuhn/
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Days Ice Cream Saturday night. July 19, 2025. Paul Goldfinger photo. Ocean Grove, NJ, USA. One click to enlarge.
From Stephen Sondheim’s Follies:
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Yet another open space to be eliminated in town. This view will be lost forever thanks to OGNED, the CMA, the HOA and the Neptunites. These are more or less the same people who brought us the Greek Temple on Main Avenue.
She and Him: “Stay Awhile”
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MEN’S CHOIR from Sex and the City movie soundtrack.
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