More Montauk Money Madness...

Roccus7

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Invasion of the Money Managers...

In Montauk, Big Money Moves In On a Surfers’ Paradise

The acres overlooking a prize stretch of Long Island’s East End were empty for years. Now they’ve been sold in multimillion-dollar deals. It’s been the talk of the beach all summer.

MONTAUK, N.Y. — Ditch Plains Beach is the heart of the surf scene in Montauk, a two-mile stretch of dunes and sea at the tip of Long Island’s East End with views of sand cliffs to the east and west.

It is also where, on summer weekends, a group of longtime Montauk residents and vacationers gather to drink, smoke pot, toss Frisbees and dance till dark, as if staging their own mini Burning Man festival. The patch of beach where they congregate has a nickname among locals: Clown Town.

With its surfers and revelers, the scene recalls Montauk as it was more than two decades ago, before private equity executives, social media stars and other moneyed newcomers put their stamp on this formerly rustic beach town of dive bars and tackle shops. Those who settled in the area before real estate prices shot skyward now lament the passing of the scruffy outpost they used to know.

This summer, the major topic of conversation among many longtime Montauk residents and vacationers hasn’t been the waves, the weather or the problem of coastal erosion. Rather, they’ve been talking about the big house rising above Ditch Plains Beach. They wonder aloud about how big it will be once it’s completed. They speculate about who will live there.
 
coastal Maine is next…
Already happening, but very different from LI. Beach access wars have been going on in southern Maine for decades and are especially heated in that in Maine, like Massachusetts, waterfront property owners own up the the mean LOW TIDE mark, not the mean high tide one. If you got there through public access your can fish, dig worms/clams and duck hunt in the intertidal zone, but you can't put a towel down and go for a dip.

Once you get past Portland sandy beaches are extremely rare and they have already been purchased by the town/state. The vast majority of the ocean coast is rock ledge so there is absolutely no recreational value beyond putting up a house with a big deck to sit on and look out from...

On the estuary side of things, where I am, it's ledge down to mudflats so once again, no "beach recreation" potential unless you're a retired mud wrestler, but we get to put docks in for our floating toys.
 
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