New York 'Ghetto Tours' Canceled After Neighborhood Backlash
John Fekner, Wikimedia After protests from neighborhood residents and ...
Click on a label to read posts from that part of the world.
Experience America this summer with Andrew Burmon

This most recent Fourth of July, on a beach in South Carolina, a guy named Freddie handed me a beer after I took his photo in front of his American flag. He'd just done his best Iwo Jima pose, and as I tapped his email address into my phone, promising to send him the pictures very soon, he insisted I take a turn hoisting the stars and stripes. Road trip tip: Do whatever a beer-toting, banner-flying patriot asks on Independence Day and you'll be handsomely rewarded.
Two months ago, I couldn't have guessed where Folly Beach might be. Now, I'm singing its praises to anyone who will listen. I never thought I'd be planning my first trip to South Carolina, but after a short stay in Folly, I'm already thinking about my second.
The stay: I was staying at the Tides at Folly Beach, a converted Holiday Inn that enjoys an enviable position on the sand, right next to the fishing pier at the end of Center Street. Balconies look over the water. The beachfront bar bustles with activity as the sun goes down--a fantastic live act was jamming on July 4, and other combos are frequently on stage.
The crowd: These people are here to have a good time. That doesn't mean getting sloppy drunk--though there's some of that!--but rather that the crowds at Folly have a vacation mindset. Watches aren't necessary, and what kind of appointment would you have anyway? Rita's, an outstanding restaurant across the street from Tides, serves food all day, with the bar open until late. When that closes, head to Surf Bar, a pitch-perfectly themed spot just off Center Street that goes even later.
The vibe: On a scale of one to comatose, Folly is laid back, a step shy of vegetative, even after the morning's hangover has worn off. No shirt? Not a problem. Barefoot treks to the breakfast food truck? Sure. Drinking a beer on the beach? Just keep it in a plastic cup. Riding motorcycles without helmets? Wait, how do you do it where you're from?
The beach: It's enormous, particularly at low tide. On what has to be one of the busiest weekends of the year, I had no problem finding a patch of sand not just for relaxing but for frisbee tossing. The one knock could be that the water approaches bathtub temperatures, but that's actually a plus if you plan to spend all day swimming. (You should plan to spend all day swimming.)
The show: The night of July 4, I grabbed a bunch of sparklers and headed for the beach, where explosives experts were setting up the night's show. The casualness about the fireworks was amazing, as families set up towels and beach chairs right below the blast zone. Before the official show started, we were surprised by random flashes and bangs, as people lit their BYO fireworks.
The departure: Perhaps the best thing about Folly is that it feels so removed from real life--while being just nine miles from Charleston, a city well worth seeing in its own right. That makes the beach accessible but at a small remove, a short drive that lets you mind decompress and switch into surf gear. A couple, fellow hotel guests, told me they could see the bridge back to the mainland from their room. That's not a good thing, they said. It reminds them that the real world is just a few miles away.
John Fekner, Wikimedia After protests from neighborhood residents and ...
Courtesy Delta Air Lines. Things are looking up for those traveling through ...
Robert Reid You know the drill. Mid-sized city revives a long-dormant ...
Clearly Ambiguous/Flickr Travelers' rights are often difficult to define. ...
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
More from AOL Travel:
Airline tickets,
Hotel reservations,
Rental cars,
Vacation packages,
Discount cruises,
Travel deals
Travel Guides:
New York City,
San Francisco,
Las Vegas,
Boston,
Chicago,
Washington, DC,
London,
Venice,
Beijing,
Dubai,
Rio de Janeiro,
Bangkok,
Costa Rica
Travel Ideas:
Adventure,
Asia Travel,
Beaches,
Cruises,
Europe Travel,
Foodie Travel,
Healthy Travel,
Holiday Travel,
International Destinations,
National Parks,
Skiing,
Travel Blogs,
Travel Tips,
Travel Photography,
US Destinations,
Weekend Getaways
© 2013 AOL Inc. All rights Reserved. Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Trademarks | AOL A-Z HELP | Advertise With Us | About Our Ads
Reader Comments (Page 6 of 6)
Michael Jul 22nd 2011 7:37PM
Ahh yes a small beach should stay just that small, small enough to retain its charm and allure but just big enough to have fun!Back in the sixties was indeed an awesome time if you lived in, on, or near a small beach. The music was wonderful,
Groups like the Four Aces, The Tams,Sam the Sham and the Pharoahs and of course the California crooners : The Beach Boys. I was just a young one then but still remember the good times! I used to sit and watch the surfers wax up their boards, and the "chicks" bounce around in the then new style of swimwear: The Bikini. Didn't have to worry about gangs or pollution or many of today's problems. It was a most Magical time.
Thanks for the trip down memory lane!
djeanniemeyer Jul 22nd 2011 7:52PM
these guys should be fired. i would do a better a job at showing how much fun you can have just about anywhere...and i'm usually boring.
SC Gal Jul 22nd 2011 8:04PM
Growing up we spent the summers in Charleston. Of course you know that there is no R in Charleston. It's pronounced Challston.
ROb Jul 22nd 2011 11:39PM
Man Folly Beach is wild on the 4th. I missed it this year but made it out a couple years back. Found a video of the fireworks when I was there: http://www.follybeach.com/videos/folly-beach-fireworks
patti Jul 23rd 2011 3:37AM
IT'S WOK- AH - MA not WACK A MA....seriously! DUDE!
Leonard Bullock Jul 23rd 2011 5:47AM
Pawleys Island, Litchfield Beach, Murrells Inlet,
Dibourdieu (pronounced Di-bah-du)... all
are like a resonant song directly from my childhood, but the last time I was by
Pawleys I was depressed by how cheap commercial outlets had been put up
that ruined the old Carolina rawness of the place. The residents used to call it their ghetto on the sea. So many elegantly unpainted, or whitewashed houses with their patina of salt. You've got to get through a ton of prefab crap before you get to the old front. The estuary, which used to be one of the most charming, run down like the old south, has been swept aside by new places that look like they came out of adobe photoshop.
Folly Beach isn't so bad because it was always white trashy. When I lived in Charleston in the 70's I used to go down there to get away from everything. That was when the tides were still pulling some of the houses out in the undertow. From some of the houses you could step directly into the ocean from the porch.
Folly was the only place on the coast that had no respect for natural fauna, & flora. It was the only place I ever saw down there where people would nail planks & signs advertising concerts to the noble Palmetto tree.
In Folly you could always find a few drifters who'd landed there & given up,
and that's why I loved it. It gave the beach a piquant entropic feel, and made you
feel that any time of day was the right time for a beer.
Hazelmotes
Basel, Switzerland
Cheryl Benson Schoettner Jul 23rd 2011 10:01AM
I grew up on Folly Beach. My family has been on Folly since the early 50's, we still have a home out there. However taxes are driving the families that were the foundation of this wonderful piece of heaven off of the island. Our family loves the island and you can't begin to imagine our memories. We didn't have air conditioning when I was a child (in the 50's) so I fell asleep at night to the sound of the breakers on the beach and the music from the Folly Beach Amusement Park. My children grew up as Follyislanders and some of my grandchildren. It's home and as they say there is no place like home.
frank Jul 23rd 2011 11:01AM
For a great picture book about Folly get a copy of "Humors of Folly" a "snap shot" of Folly.
any of the on-line book store carry the coffee table book.
Bill Jul 23rd 2011 11:15AM
I agree with Frank about Humours of Folly; it's a great photo book about one of America's most interesting beaches. I would also recommend the Folly Beach Mystery series--five light, humorous, mysteries that are set on Folly Beach.
michael Jul 23rd 2011 2:06PM
well, it's ruined now!
Julie Jul 23rd 2011 4:01PM
Love Follly! Go to OnlyAtFolly on facebook and share your Folly story.
tom baxter Jul 24th 2011 9:39AM
As a young reporter at the Charleston paper years ago, I covered the Folly Beach Town Council. Talk about fireworks!
I was on the beach at Trouville-sur-Mer on a Bastille Day and that's a blast. You can see the fireworks from Le Havre, Deauville and Cabourg at the same time.
Paup Deed Jul 23rd 2011 8:17PM
Crescent Beach lived on 2n row at the old pier. Loved it. USAF 56/57
bakergirl9 Jul 24th 2011 8:33AM
We just came back from there. It's a great place and it's nice to see you giving it an enthusiastic thumbs-up, but the majority of it's charm is that it isn't super commercial and overrun with douchebags - yet. Shhhh... not so loud!
mary Jul 25th 2011 5:18AM
Monclersnowclothing.com has been a worldwide business leader in selling high-quality consumer goods since 2005. Beginning as a professional Cheap Moncler Jacketsseller , we achieved great success in this field. We have a pretty good team who have been devoting themselves into reducing the costs by constantly looking for a best and steadiest manufacturer.By the year 2006, we had expanded our line from Moncler Jacketsto a wider range, They are Moncler Coats,Moncler Boots,Moncler Scarf. From Monclersnowclothing.com, people all over the world enjoy buying stuff and give high praises.http://www.monclerdownvest.com
redheadindixie Jul 25th 2011 11:16AM
Wish he had kept it a secret, 'cause the above reader is correct- it's bumper to bumper now to get to FB on the weekends anyway (I live in Beaufort, 72 miles south). I remember it in the 70s when it was a mainly middle-class community, quiet, the province of surfers and second home owners mainly. Oh, those were the days. Chas. in the '70s was truly magical too- still a small town in many ways with few big-deal restaurants (Perdita's was it), but nobody cared. One, short tourist season too- now it's year-round. AND the cruise ships have discovered Chas. A type of tragedy really. Now Chas/FB are "hip". Save me from hip ok?
Btw, both Gershwin AND Poe spent time at Folly composing/writing.
Eddie Ellis Jul 26th 2011 6:33PM
I came to Folly July 2 1992 to house sit and never left. I own a landscaping company in which I mainly work locally including often the city contract. Most all those hot pink oleanders lining the causeway I planted. Since 2004, I have been serving on city council. Legislation I have introduced and passed is prohibiting any further condo development, limiting beachfront venders to only one jet ski rental, limiting and controling the type of commercial activity in our island's commercial district, property tax relief, and providing senior citizens with free smoke alarms including installment. Our main problem is progress so please don't tell your friends how good we have it hear on Folly!