Sunday, August 3, 2008

A town in need of a scooter shop



I had the luck to take a spur of the moment trip to the town of Lake Placid in the Adirondacks, N.Y.
It's a former frontier town with its past displayed in its architecture: the Olympic stadium where the 1980 games were held, old german churches with unique square shaped steeples that look like hats, and Queen Anne style buildings that now house a vibrant downtown business district.
It reminded me of Key West, but surrounded by mountains and pine forests. There were outdoor restaurants everywhere and all the hotels had balcony rooms so you could take in the gorgeous view of the mountains surrounding the lake, much like in Key West, though there the view is the aquamarine ocean. But both have towns full of people in love of flowers. Almost every house had windowboxes dripping with them and even the empty storefronts were well-kept and had flowers blossoming all around.
Lush is the perfect word for it.
And the rains can be just as fickle.

As we drove down the main street through Lake Placid, I noticed they had electric cars. Little four seaters with no doors and open roofs, just like in Key West. And while there were many people on their own scooters and motorcycles, I didn't see any scooter rentals.
The towns are close together because you can only build in certain areas since the towns are surrounded by parkland. And there is very little street parking, making it the perfect place for scooters. I was very surprised, therefore, when my boyfriend, who goes up many weekends for work (which was one of these), told me they don't have any scooter rental places in any of the Adirondack towns!
I was very surprised.
With all the empty storefronts and the perfect driving conditions for scooters, Lake Placid is certainly in need of a good scooter rental shop.
There is one setback — the winter. I'm sure there'd be no business in the snow; but why not have a scooter rental place in the summer and a ski rental place in the winter? As it stood, I saw many of the empty storefronts were still decorated with advertisements for skates, skis and other winter sport offerings. I'm guessing they didn't figure out a way to keep the cash flowing. It's plenty touristy in the summer, too. So why not take advantage of the lack of scooters?
After some discussion, my boyfriend and I agreed. If we had the money, we'd certainly relocate and take advantage of the market.
We'd always discussed taking off and living in Key West with a scooter rental store supporting us. But there are so many of them in Key West already.

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