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- A Journey Through The Heart Of New Jersey
A Journey Through the Heart of New Jersey
Efraim "Abe" Abramov
Forest Hills, NY Travel Agent· 5 Years of Experience
Areas of expertise
Destinations:
New Jersey, Newark, Cape Liberty, Cape May, PrincetonInterests:
Couples & Romance, Holiday Travel, Culinary & Foodie, Family Vacations, Beach VacationsAbout Me
I began my journey through New Jersey in Jersey City, where the Manhattan skyline unfolded before me like a living postcard. Standing at Exchange Place as the sun dipped below the Hudson, I felt the pulse of the city in the breeze off the water. The next morning, I wandered through the historic district, where cobblestone streets and 19th-century brownstones whispered stories of immigrants and industry. A ferry ride to Liberty State Park offered a breathtaking view of the Statue of Liberty—not from the usual New York vantage, but from the Garden State’s own proud shoreline. I spent hours there, watching ferries come and go, reading plaques about Ellis Island, and feeling a deep sense of arrival, as if I were not just visiting but reconnecting with something long forgotten. The park’s quiet paths and open fields were a surprise—so much green in a place so close to the urban roar.
From there, I drove south to Princeton, a town that felt like stepping into a different era. The university campus was alive with students biking under ivy-covered arches, and I lost myself in the quiet dignity of Nassau Hall and the serene beauty of the Princeton University Art Museum. I had coffee at a small café on Nassau Street, where locals debated politics and professors graded papers in silence. That afternoon, I visited Morven Museum & Garden, once the governor’s mansion, now a peaceful retreat with manicured lawns and exhibits on New Jersey’s political history. As dusk fell, I walked along the towpath of the Delaware and Raritan Canal, where the water shimmered under a pale moon and the only sounds were crickets and distant laughter from a backyard grill. It was in these quiet moments that I began to understand New Jersey—not as a place people rush through, but as one worth slowing down for.
My next stop was the Jersey Shore, where I spent three days immersed in the rhythm of coastal life. I started in Cape May, America’s oldest seaside resort, where Victorian homes painted in soft pastels lined the streets like something from a storybook. I toured the Emlen Physick Estate, a grand mansion filled with period furnishings and ghost stories, then walked to the lighthouse at sunset, the sky ablaze with color as boats bobbed gently in the harbor. The next day, I drove north to Wildwood, where the boardwalk stretched for miles, alive with music, neon lights, and the smell of saltwater taffy. I rode the giant Ferris wheel at Morey’s Piers, my feet dangling over the ocean, and ate a classic Jersey-style hot dog—deep-fried, topped with onions, mustard, and sauerkraut—at a stand that had been there since the 1950s. That evening, I attended a Doo-Wop concert under the stars, the harmonies echoing across the sand, and for a moment, I felt the golden age of the Shore come alive.
I continued inland to the Pine Barrens, a vast, mysterious forest that covers over a million acres. Driving through Wharton State Forest, I felt the world grow still. I hiked the Batona Trail, where pine needles muffled my footsteps and sunlight filtered through the canopy in golden beams. I stopped at Atsion Lake, where I rented a canoe and paddled in silence, watching turtles sun themselves on logs and herons stalk the shallows. That night, I stayed in a rustic cabin near Chatsworth, where the only light came from a kerosene lamp and the stars blazed overhead. Over a campfire, I spoke with a local who told me stories of the Jersey Devil, of bootleggers during Prohibition, and of families who had lived in the Barrens for generations. It was humbling to realize how little I had known about this hidden heart of New Jersey—a place wild, ancient, and deeply rooted in legend and solitude.
My final days were spent in the north, exploring the cultural and industrial soul of the state. I toured the Thomas Edison National Historical Park in West Orange, walking through the inventor’s laboratory and home, amazed by the sheer volume of his creations—phonographs, motion picture cameras, thousands of patents. I visited Grounds for Sculpture in Hamilton, a 42-acre oasis where art and nature intertwined, with whimsical bronze figures rising from gardens and ponds. In Newark, I explored the Newark Museum of Art, one of the oldest in the country, and had dinner in the Ironbound, where Portuguese and Brazilian restaurants lined Ferry Street, their windows fogged with the steam of feijoada and grilled sardines. On my last evening, I returned to Jersey City, this time to the rooftop of The Asbury, where I sipped a craft cocktail and watched the city lights flicker on. New Jersey, I realized, was not just a place I had traveled through—it was a place that had traveled through me, leaving behind a quiet, lasting impression of beauty, resilience, and unexpected grace.
Areas of expertise
Destinations:
New Jersey, Newark, Cape Liberty, Cape May, PrincetonInterests:
Couples & Romance, Holiday Travel, Culinary & Foodie, Family Vacations, Beach VacationsREVIEWS
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