OCEAN CITY – A new Winter Wellness promotion is encouraging locals and visitors alike to rest, relax and rejuvenate by the sea.
Throughout the months of January and February, local hotels, fitness studios and organizations will offer packages and activities as part of a resort-wide Winter Wellness promotion.
Ocean City Hotel-Motel-Restaurant Association (OCHMRA) Executive Director Susan Jones said the goal of the Winter Wellness promotion is to encourage locals and visitors to visit the beach and support the hospitality industry.
“If someone needs to change their view and get out of their house, there are plenty of places in our own backyard to see and experience …,” she said. “It also gives an opportunity to hotels that are really struggling.”
A walker and bicyclist are pictured heading north on the Boardwalk. File photo by Chris Parypa
OCEAN CITY – A new Winter Wellness promotion is encouraging locals and visitors alike to rest, relax and rejuvenate by the sea.
Throughout the months of January and February, local hotels, fitness studios and organizations will offer packages and activities as part of a resort-wide Winter Wellness promotion.
Ocean City Hotel-Motel-Restaurant Association (OCHMRA) Executive Director Susan Jones said the goal of the Winter Wellness promotion is to encourage locals and visitors to visit the beach and support the hospitality industry.
“If someone needs to change their view and get out of their house, there are plenty of places in our own backyard to see and experience …,” she said. “It also gives an opportunity to hotels that are really struggling.”
Life-Saving Station Museum launching new project, will help preserve memories of COVID-19
December 9, 2020
The project is called “Save Our Stories.”
Here’s how it works, people log on to the museums website and write their stories of how the pandemic has impacted them.
They can also send the museum a video describing their stories.
We are told COVID-19 has affected everyone in a different way and each story will help future generations understand how the pandemic changed people’s lives.
“I think it gives you an opportunity to get things off your chest, it gives you an opportunity to share,” Nancy Howard, the President of Museum Board, said. “Then it will be there forever and people years from now, kids, who were maybe too young to experience it or wanted to know later how their grandparents experienced it.”