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The Cape May Lighthouse has become a favored destination for many
engagements and weddings. The weddings are held early in the morning before the
Lighthouse officially opens to visitors. Only 15 guests are allowed because
that’s all the room there is at the top.
It was a spectacular day in July 2007 when Debbie Goulden and Craig Scardaville tied the knot. The bride and groom are fascinated with lighthouses and intrigued with the lighthouse keeper lifestyle. Debbie, a nursing instructor in Baltimore, fashions her vacations around trips to lighthouses all around the U.S. and abroad. She tries to visit 10 a year, and has toured 65. She collects lighthouse miniatures, books, pictures and memorabilia. Her favorite lighthouse? Cape May, of course. The couple met 12 years ago and fell in love, but life propelled them in different directions. Earlier this year their paths crossed again and said Craig, a teacher, “It was just the same as before – we were meant for each other.” He proposed to Debbie, down on his knee, at the top of the Cape May Lighthouse in April, presenting her with her favorite gem, an emerald.
In autumn of that year the newlyweds were off to Michigan to visit the Great Lakes lighthouses. Next on the agenda was a trip to lighthouses in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii. Why the fascination with lighthouses? “I love the sea,” said Debbie, “and all the metaphors that go with lighthouses. Guiding light, port in the storm, and from the top, looking out at the sea, the realization of eternity, infinity. “Sitting in gridlock on I-95 outside Baltimore,” she said, “I fantasize I am a lighthouse keeper. How sweet the isolation.” She mused: Time to read by firelight, fish the empty beaches, listen to the weather, write poetry, words reflecting sounds of the waves, shorebirds, the winds. Not everyone climbs the 199 steps to heaven. On August 3, 2007,
Nikolay Zhelyazkov wanted to find the perfect place to ask Macy Andrews
to marry him. Flashback to two weeks before when the couple were
planning their usual Sunday beach date. “Niky,” recalls Macy, “said,
‘Why don’t have a picn “He picked the perfect spot. It was just at sunset. We were facing the beach with the lighthouse behind us. No one was on the beach. He was acting very nervous and kept asking me if the seagulls would bother us. There were no seagulls. It was a perfect sunset and after we finished eating he pulled out a Tiffany’s ring box and handed it to me. I unwrapped it and saw a white gold ring with an aquamarine stone –later he told me he chose it because it matched my eyes.” But he never really got around to the words. Instead he asked, “You know what I mean, don’t you?” And Macy said, “Yes.” But then, she thought about it and said, “Well, what do you mean?” “Will you marry me?” And that, as they say, was that. The couple sealed their wedding vows May 18, 2008.
Cheers and good luck to the pharologists! That’s the word that describes people interested in lighthouses. The basis of the word is the famous Pharos of Alexandria, Eygpt, one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. It is the first lighthouse recorded in history, built about 280 BC, and the tallest at 450 feet, equivalent to a 45- story skyscraper. An open fire on the top was used as the light source to guide ships.
Q: How long will it take me to climb to the top?
Q: What is that concrete thing on the beach? Q: Does the lighthouse still work? Q: How far does the light shine at night? Q: How many bricks in the lighthouse?
Q: What is a Watch Room? Q: If this is the lighthouse, asks a child, where is the darkhouse? |