The Keltic Lodge is perched on a narrow spit of rock that juts out into the Atlantic. Run by the same outfit that owns the Liscombe, it's pricy and could stand a little updating in spots (furnishings in our cabin are vintage 1970) but the location makes it easy to forgive any shortcomings.
Just book early for dinner. We get shut out until 8:45 the first night.
Melanie strikes off to explore the rest of the rocky point while I noodle on my travel guitar and call the office to find out more about the HP/Compaq deal (don't worry -yet). Melanie returns within the half hour and heads back toward the lodge to take some photos. Restless and with an hour and a half to kill before dinner I head off to find the end of the spit.
The trail is rugged and narrow and slices through some thick overgrowth. In a clearing I spot a yellow fishing boat in the distance and race through the next little forest to find a closer spot to set up some photos. The little forest isn't as little as I thought. When I finally emerge at the end of the trail the yellow boat is long gone, dusk is gathering and the ocean birds are coming home to the rocks for the night. I realize that I haven't seen another human on the trail since I left the parking lot - everyone's in for the evening. It's desolate out here; I can see lights popping on across the coves miles away to either side, and I'm separated from the lodge by the thick woods. The water is a deadly couple of hundred feet below, and as the breeze picks up I back away from the edge. I turn around and for a few panicked moments I can't find the trail in the fading light. When I do pick up the path I race back toward the mainland, feeling like a little kid as I approach each pitch black cut in the overgrowth. It's not going to get any lighter if I wait. Dark + isolation + hundred-foot cliffs = wee bit of tension... which melts away at the first sight of streetlamps through the thick evergreens.
Melanie's a little irked that I didn't leave a note. That's understandable.
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