User talk:Cape Cod Cowgirl

What does Cape Cod mean to you, and what is it about the Cape that makes it a highly visited area, with many repeat visitors? To many people as they cross the two bridges over the Cape Cod Canal it is almost like immediately entering an unlike any other. Thoughts of Cape Cod often include images of beautiful beaches, bike riding on the Cape Cod Rail Trail, ice cream, shopping in quaint villages, Whale Watching tours, fresh and salt water sports, and the wide ranging roster of Natural Resources that are available from Brewster's Natural History Museum, The Grist Mill and Herring Run, 45 miles of marked hiking, biking and bridlepath trails throughout the Punkhorn Parklands, to the variety of diversely beautiful terrains in the areas operated as part of the National Seashore, which covers much of the Lower Cape's outer beaches. The National Seashore's Visitor's Center explains why the Cape has the diverse terrain so many have come to love over the decades. The historical Lighthouses on Cape Cod are also an important part of the Cape's history, and are among the many sight that are off the beaten path, yet are must see place, as are the Glasworks which using the sands of Cape Cod Bay to form much needed glass centuries ago, until fairly recent times.

The Cape's beauty attracts many artisans who create and sell their one of a kind wares in their studios and galleries along roads such as Rte 6-A. The experience of seeing the artist at work with their studio a virtual gallery of previous works is a remarkable, unforgettable experience sure to result in a desired work of art to be brought back over the bridge to the homes of the Cape's visitors as a permanent reminder of its beauty.

There is no doubt that Cape Cod offers a roster of diverse experiences for all to enjoy experiencing. The purpose of opening this dialogue is to see what fellow Cape Codder's and visitors to the Cape find to be what Cape Cod means to them. Cape Cod Cowgirl (talk) 21:54, 11 July 2013 (UTC) ww.sweetwaterforest.com/