Home sweet cove
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Despite muggy weather and overcast skies Monday, the mood was jovial as the first guests checked in and got ready to enjoy their ocean views at the all-new beachfront accommodations at Crystal Cove State Park.
Reservations for the Crystal Cove beach cottages began at 8 a.m. on April 27. Later that same day the entire lot of them had sold out through October. The cottages are currently booked through December.
“This is so cute!” said guest Mackenzie Fager, 15, clearly smitten with the décor of her family’s temporary cottage home, which included a kitchen with an old-fashioned refrigerator and stove, a coffee table made of a lobster cage and wooden walls decorated with boat oars and stuffed fish.
Mike Fager of Temecula planned the trip in secret to surprise his wife and their four children as a way to celebrate their wedding anniversary and two family birthdays. The family was the first group to move their belongings into cottage #37, Fisherman’s Perch.
Said Mackenzie’s brother Drake, 17, the trip was just right for the family.
“We love the beach,” he said. “We’re always at the beach, camping or hanging out. We figured it’d be cool, and we like it here. It’s very rustic.”
There are 22 cottages that have been renovated. Thirteen of these are available to guests for short-term stay, and the other nine are shops and buildings for educational and management services. There are 24 more cottages still in need of funding for renovation, before they will be suitable for guests.
In the cottages that are renovated and receiving guests, the focus is on details. It’s the little things that really bring the cottages to life, said Crystal Cove Alliance president Laura Davick.
“We tried to give each cottage something unique and special,” Davick said. “The Dive Shack has a beautiful big copper dive helmet, the Painter’s Cottage has painter’s palettes ? the Shell Shack has a huge shell collage that my grandmother made by hand.”
Davick, who grew up in Cottage 2, feels that it is important to decorate some of the cottages with her own family’s beach heirlooms so that people can better appreciate and understand the history of Crystal Cove and the cottages.
Though the cottages are open, exhibit designer Sandra Farrell says that finishing touches like “period pieces, historic photographs [and] historic anecdotes” have yet to be brought in.
Both Davick and Farrell pointed out that visitors will find a rich coastal history if they just look.dpt.27-crystalcove-3-dl-CPhotoInfoOI1SC87B20060627j1ho88ncDON LEACH / DAILY PILOT(LA)Paul and Cindy Goymerac head to the beach after checking in to their beachfront cottage at Crystal Cove State Park on the first day of overnight stays. dpt.27-crystalcove-1-dl-CPhotoInfoOI1SC87420060627j1ho79ncPHOTOS BY DON LEACH / DAILY PILOT(LA)After settling in, Pam Jones pauses on the deck of the “HI-DE-HO” house above the beach to take in the view. She and her husband Steve are among the first visitors to stay overnight at the Crystal Cove cottages.dpt.27-crystalcove-2-dl-CPhotoInfoOI1SC87820060627j1ho81nc(LA)Dwayne Ulloa reads about the history of the Crystal Cove cottages in a coffee-table book.
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