Half a mile off the Connecticut shore, a powerboat cuts through the choppy surf as it nears a 135-year-old lighthouse. “Imagine doing this in a 12-foot rowboat,” says 70-year-old Frank Sciame, one of the boat’s passengers, noting that lighthouse-keepers once rowed to shore.

The boat pulls up to a pile of seaweed-covered rocks, where a small, temporary dock bobs amid the waves. In Top-Siders and a button-down shirt, Mr. Sciame steps onto the dock and grabs a rope to help tie up the boat. Then he nimbly ascends a rickety steel ladder and steps inside the lighthouse, grinning.

This post first appeared on wsj.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Rishi Sunak has turned into a social media star, but who is he trying to influence? | Marie Le Conte

His latest slick self-promotional video shows a politician trying just a little…

Karen Joy Fowler: ‘I’m a bossy writer; I’m not going to not tell you’

The 2014 Booker nominee on her new novel about the family of…

Barcelona cracks down on outdoor drinking parties with €600 fines

City raises upper limit of penalties for causing disturbance after botellones grow…