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My husband and I couldn't afford a home in the DC suburbs. We moved to the Chesapeake Bay and never looked back.

My husband and I couldn't afford a home in the DC suburbs. We moved to the Chesapeake Bay and never looked back.

My husband and I welcomed our second daughter in November 2012 and started house-hunting for a bigger space shortly after. Our townhouse in the DC suburbs was great for three, but would become cramped with our growing family.
However, even with two full-time incomes coming in from me and my husband, we couldn't find a house in the DC area within our budget of $430,000 that didn't need major repairs. One house we toured looked like the kitchen had been engulfed in flames and left untouched.
At this point, in the winter of 2013, we started considering moving outside the DC area.
I worried about moving away from my friends, losing access to all the conveniences, shops, and international cuisines, and moving to a place with likely less diversity.
However, my husband's friend suggested visiting Calvert County, located on the western shore of the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland, and after checking it out, we were instantly sold. What I was leaving behind didn't seem to matter as much after that.
We were charmed by the Chesapeake Beach, Maryland
My husband found the house we ended up buying and visited the area by himself before we took the rest of the family. One family visit is all we needed to decide this would be our new home.
The 4,000-square-foot house had plenty of space for our family to grow. I finally had a place to put my mother's piano, which I'd inherited, so our kids could take lessons on the one my siblings and I learned on.
The house came with a beautiful sun-filled kitchen, was one mile from the Chesapeake Bay in an area with a good school system, and, best of all, was within our budget. (The housing market here has since gone up, and prices are much higher.)
We found a community
Soon after selling our townhouse and buying the house in Chesapeake Beach, our new neighbors stopped by to welcome us and bring hot meals, candles, and kitchen towels.
This never happened anywhere we'd lived before. We were good friends with our neighbors in the DC suburbs, but our neighbors in Chesapeake Beach feel like family.
We shuttle each other's kids to and from practices, go on trips together, and I know I can count on them when I'm short on butter.
We're truly grateful to be part of this community, especially since we do not have family who lives close by.
I feel like I'm reliving the best part of my childhood
My favorite places are beaches. I grew up in Cape May, New Jersey, one of the country's oldest seaside towns, known for its local seafood, pork roll and egg sandwiches, and Jersey tomatoes.
So, anytime I'm at the beach, any beach, I return to the best parts of my childhood. Luckily, there's a tiny beach just a mile from our house.
In Chesapeake Beach, we paddleboard and collect fossilized shark teeth, which this area is known for. A local man is famous for discovering a Megalodon tooth when he was fishing at a nearby beach, which is estimated to be millions of years old.
For me, paddleboarding takes courage and balance, and it's taught me to be more patient with myself. My kids, though, have gotten pretty good on the water. I'm grateful that I get to raise them with a similar love of sand and sun.
I also discovered a new love of cracking crabs. Maryland is known for its seafood, especially blue crabs and oysters. On summer weekends, I spend time with friends dipping the Old Bay-seasoned crab meat in melted butter and apple cider vinegar. It's always an afternoon well spent.
We've now lived here as long as we lived in the DC suburbs, and while I occasionally miss some of the conveniences we used to enjoy, the trade-off has been worth it. We have no plans to move anytime soon.

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My husband and I couldn't afford a home in the DC suburbs. We moved to the Chesapeake Bay and never looked back.
My husband and I couldn't afford a home in the DC suburbs. We moved to the Chesapeake Bay and never looked back.

Business Insider

time3 days ago

  • Business Insider

My husband and I couldn't afford a home in the DC suburbs. We moved to the Chesapeake Bay and never looked back.

My husband and I welcomed our second daughter in November 2012 and started house-hunting for a bigger space shortly after. Our townhouse in the DC suburbs was great for three, but would become cramped with our growing family. However, even with two full-time incomes coming in from me and my husband, we couldn't find a house in the DC area within our budget of $430,000 that didn't need major repairs. One house we toured looked like the kitchen had been engulfed in flames and left untouched. At this point, in the winter of 2013, we started considering moving outside the DC area. I worried about moving away from my friends, losing access to all the conveniences, shops, and international cuisines, and moving to a place with likely less diversity. However, my husband's friend suggested visiting Calvert County, located on the western shore of the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland, and after checking it out, we were instantly sold. What I was leaving behind didn't seem to matter as much after that. We were charmed by the Chesapeake Beach, Maryland My husband found the house we ended up buying and visited the area by himself before we took the rest of the family. One family visit is all we needed to decide this would be our new home. The 4,000-square-foot house had plenty of space for our family to grow. I finally had a place to put my mother's piano, which I'd inherited, so our kids could take lessons on the one my siblings and I learned on. The house came with a beautiful sun-filled kitchen, was one mile from the Chesapeake Bay in an area with a good school system, and, best of all, was within our budget. (The housing market here has since gone up, and prices are much higher.) We found a community Soon after selling our townhouse and buying the house in Chesapeake Beach, our new neighbors stopped by to welcome us and bring hot meals, candles, and kitchen towels. This never happened anywhere we'd lived before. We were good friends with our neighbors in the DC suburbs, but our neighbors in Chesapeake Beach feel like family. We shuttle each other's kids to and from practices, go on trips together, and I know I can count on them when I'm short on butter. We're truly grateful to be part of this community, especially since we do not have family who lives close by. I feel like I'm reliving the best part of my childhood My favorite places are beaches. I grew up in Cape May, New Jersey, one of the country's oldest seaside towns, known for its local seafood, pork roll and egg sandwiches, and Jersey tomatoes. So, anytime I'm at the beach, any beach, I return to the best parts of my childhood. Luckily, there's a tiny beach just a mile from our house. In Chesapeake Beach, we paddleboard and collect fossilized shark teeth, which this area is known for. A local man is famous for discovering a Megalodon tooth when he was fishing at a nearby beach, which is estimated to be millions of years old. For me, paddleboarding takes courage and balance, and it's taught me to be more patient with myself. My kids, though, have gotten pretty good on the water. I'm grateful that I get to raise them with a similar love of sand and sun. I also discovered a new love of cracking crabs. Maryland is known for its seafood, especially blue crabs and oysters. On summer weekends, I spend time with friends dipping the Old Bay-seasoned crab meat in melted butter and apple cider vinegar. It's always an afternoon well spent. We've now lived here as long as we lived in the DC suburbs, and while I occasionally miss some of the conveniences we used to enjoy, the trade-off has been worth it. We have no plans to move anytime soon.

Megalodon Tooth Millions of Years Old Found in Florida (Video)
Megalodon Tooth Millions of Years Old Found in Florida (Video)

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Yahoo

Megalodon Tooth Millions of Years Old Found in Florida (Video)

Call me crazy, uneducated, or what-have-you, but I thought the ancient Megalodon shark was just a myth. A fabled creature, akin to the kraken, trumpeted by Shark Week and other fear-mongering media, to entice viewers with shock and awe into their programming. Alas, I was wrong. Recently, a diver off the Gulf Coast of Florida made the find of a lifetime, discovering a six-inch tooth from the early Miocene to early Pliocene epochs, ranging from 23 to 3.6 million years ago. It was so rare, shark experts called it: 'Like winning the lottery. One chance in a million or more.' 'We were really close to the ground,' said Kristina Scott, who found the tooth while diving off Venice in Sarasota County with her boyfriend. 'I saw just the root of it, covered in barnacle. I knew the shape. And I pulled it out of the dirt, and started freaking out. I pulled his [her boyfriend's] arm. I was trying to yell with the regulator in my mouth. But yeah, we were just stoked.'When compared to other shark teeth, this megalodon fang makes modern sharks look like sardines. But how big, exactly, were these ancient behemoths. Well, there's only fossil records to go off, but scientists have some ideas. According to a Smithsonian report on the carcharocles megalodon: 'Carcharocles megalodon was once the most fearsome predator to reign the seas. This ancient shark lived roughly 23 to 3.6 million years ago in nearly every corner of the ocean. Roughly up to 3 times the length of a modern-day great white shark, it is the largest shark to have ever lived. It had a powerful bite with a jaw full of teeth as large as an adult human's hand. They likely could tear chunks of flesh from even the largest whales of the time. It should come as no surprise that upon discovery in the fossil record, the massive shark was named Carcharocles megalodon or 'big toothed glorious shark.'' As for the rarity (and potential price tag) of such a find from the diver in Florida – as in, could she cash in on it? – the newscasters could only fathom: 'From our understanding, this is, like, museum-quality stuff…it's a big deal.'Megalodon Tooth Millions of Years Old Found in Florida (Video) first appeared on Surfer on Jun 2, 2025

Largest Shark To Ever Swim In Our Oceans Was Not A Picky Eater
Largest Shark To Ever Swim In Our Oceans Was Not A Picky Eater

Forbes

time26-05-2025

  • Forbes

Largest Shark To Ever Swim In Our Oceans Was Not A Picky Eater

Fossil O. megalodon tooth compared to a recent-day great white shark tooth. Otodus megalodon, the largest shark to ever swim in our planet's oceans, still inhabited the sea up to around 3.6 million years ago. Despite its fame in pop-culture, surprisingly little is known about the anatomy and behavior of this species. Sharks have only a cartilaginous skeleton that quickly decays after death, only their hard teeth survive the long and arduous fossilization process. Based on the fragmentary remains, length estimates for a full-grown O. megalodon range from 50 to 100 feet (15-30 meters). Special evolutionary adaptions including warm-bloodedness (an organism's ability to maintain a relatively constant internal temperature) and giving birth to fully-developed newborns likely led to this gigantism. The living animal required around 100,000 kilocalories per day. Scientists widely assumed that O. megalodon's main calorie intake was in the form of whales, large preys providing also a high-caloric input thanks to their fat reserves. However O. megalodon was not a picky eater, says Dr. Jeremy McCormack from the Department of Geosciences at Goethe University Frankfurt. McCormack and colleagues extracted zinc from the fossil teeth, an element that occurs in isotopes of different weights. Zinc is ingested with food, but the specific isotopes preserved in muscles, organs and skeletal tissues depend on the animal's place in the food chain. The tissue of large fish that eat smaller fish absorbs significantly less zinc-66, and predatory animal which, in turn, hunt them for food absorb even less. "Since we don't know how the ratio of the two zinc isotopes at the bottom of the food pyramid was at that time, we compared the teeth of various prehistoric and extant shark species with each other and with other animal species. This enabled us to gain an impression of predator-prey relationships," explains McCormack. The fossils they used for their study mostly came from marine deposits in Sigmaringen and Passau (Germany). Analyzing the zinc isotopes in the fossil remains of different species, they reconstructed the food chain as it appeared 18 million years ago. "Sea bream, which fed on mussels, snails and crustaceans, formed the lowest level of the food chain we studied. Smaller shark species such as requiem sharks and ancestors of today's cetaceans, dolphins and whales, were next. Larger sharks such as sand tiger sharks were further up the food pyramid, and at the top were giant sharks like Araloselachus cuspidatus and the Otodus sharks, which include megalodon," explains McCormack. The zinc signal in fossil O. megalodon teeth is more variable than expected. 'Our study tends rather to draw a picture of megalodon as an ecologically versatile generalist; … by all means flexible enough to feed on marine mammals and large fish, from the top of the food pyramid as well as lower levels — depending on availability.' "It gives us important insights into how the marine communities have changed over geologic time, but more importantly the fact that even 'supercarnivores' are not immune to extinction," adds Kenshu Shimada, a paleobiologist at DePaul University in Chicago, U.S., and a coauthor of the new study. The study,"Miocene marine vertebrate trophic ecology reveals megatooth sharks as opportunistic supercarnivores," was published in the journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters. Additional material and interviews provided by Sadie Harley and Robert Egan, Goethe University Frankfurt am Main.

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