by oncapemagazine | Jul 12, 2023 | July 2022
By JOHN H. HOUGH When you look out on the Cape’s sounds and bays you see pleasure craft crisscrossing the water, streaks of white against the blue-green of the sea. Sleek fiberglass-hulled sailboats meander, going nowhere in particular with no sense of urgency. The...
by oncapemagazine | Jul 12, 2023 | July 2022
Story By CALLI REMILLARD • Photos By DAN MCKEON For reasons that go beyond phonetics, Provincetown and Pride are synonymous. A land far beyond the likes of the bustling city of Boston, the tip of Cape Cod is a land like no other. For decades it’s been regarded as a...
by oncapemagazine | Jul 12, 2023 | July 2022
By DEBORAH G. SCANLON During World War II, Cape Cod’s Camp Edwards received about 5,000 German prisoners of war. They worked at a camp constructed to hold them much of the time, but they also picked strawberries in Cape Cod’s fields, worked at an Army-owned laundromat...
by oncapemagazine | Jul 12, 2023 | July 2022
By CHRISTOPHER KAZARIAN On an annual basis, the Cape Cod Regional Transit Authority (CCRTA) conducts an average of 121,500 trips, equating to roughly 2,350 trips a week and 330 trips a day. Its services range from taking passengers off-Cape to medical appointments to...
by oncapemagazine | Jul 12, 2023 | July 2022
By JULIA BURNS There was a giant trout who could hear the singing of a Native woman with a beautiful voice. She would sing at the edge of Santuit Pond every day, and eventually, the trout fell in love with her. He made his way from the ocean, digging a trench that...