West Palm Beach

By Susan Scharfman

What We Already Know

Palm Beach is an island. I’s chic; it’s quiet. It thumbs its old bluenose at Miami’s glitzy South Beach. It shrugs off L.A.’s Rodeo Drive with exclusive Worth Avenue, where art galleries are pricier and polo players spicier. The privileged winter residents shop at smart boutiques, never carry cash, and party on yachts the size of HMS Queen Mary. Dinner at home is akin to an evening with the Queen and Prince Philip at Buckingham Palace. You can pass it on the highway and never know it’s there.

Best selling author James Patterson enjoys living on Palm Beach thanks to the regular folk who buy his books. The Kennedy estate has become the Palm Beach Historical Society, not yet open to the public. And while Donald Trump cannot be called old money, no one ever told him that, and no one ever will.

Culture

There are the standard but good “cultcha” spots: the Henry Morrison Flagler Museum, the Hibel Museum of Art, the Royal Poinciana Playhouse, and the coveted Palm Beach Invitational International Piano Competition each spring.

Secrets You May Not Know

Palm Beach’s elegance and grace; its secret places and its quietness. How beautiful are its secret gardens and how welcome its refinement and tranquility to visitors from hectic other places. Crossing the Flagler Street Bridge from West Palm, the first thing you’ll do is slow down and breathe. Directly to your left is a haughty sounding entity called The Society of The Four Arts. Palm Beach likes titles that include society and royal, but we don’t care. The Four Arts is a nonprofit cultural organization founded in 1936. Every season, from November through April, it presents notable speakers, concerts, films, educational programs, and art exhibitions.

The Four Arts

When you walk into the silent library there’s no one there but a lady at the front desk; she barely nods. You take the elevator to the second floor and you are in the Children’s Library, which is hosting a rare photography show of the Buddhist Kingdom of Bhutan in the Himalayan Mountains. There’s no one there. In mere seconds photographers Tom Sterling, Kathleen Sweeney and Dr. L. Samuel Wann whisk you to one of the remotest places on earth.

Cloud Kingdom

You are no longer in sun-drenched Palm Beach. You are in “The Cloud Kingdom” of the Drukpa people. You are in the presence of lamas. You hear the constant flapping in the wind of prayer flags. Women weave multicolored blankets for winter, children’s faces are red as apples. Glassy-eyed yaks gaze at you from medieval hill towns where red robed monks till the soil. You are in what is now called, “the last Shangri-la.” And yes, it’s quiet and you’re breath is slow and even.

The Garden of Oriental Delights

Across the lane from the library building are countless concealed gardens, one merging into another. You walk through an exquisite wrought iron gate. There’s some activity in the temple garden of the Chinese female Buddha of Mercy and Compassion, Kuan Yin. A live photo shoot is taking place in and around a sacred pool with a blond model posing for the cameraman. Watching over the action are sculptures of Kuan Yin looking beautiful and serene while the unfortunate model wilts in the sun.

Other than the camera crew, no one else is there. Splashing fountains and murmuring pools are surrounded by hundreds of species of tropical plants that attract chirpers on the wing. A multi-colored mosaic tile bench is waiting for someone, and shady walkways lead to quiet gardens within gardens.

Your Own Walking Tour

You’ll find more local flora in the botanical Pan’s Garden on Hibiscus Avenue, where a beautiful bronze of Pan playing his pipe guards the entrance. But it’s the many secret gardens you’ll want to discover. Some are hidden behind homes of residents; others will surprise you in unexpected courtyards that lead to shops and galleries and more gardens. The architecture of the town is old refined elegance, strongly influenced by 20th century architect Addison Mizner and his Moorish-Mediterranean-style.

A Town Dedicated to the Pursuit of Green

The local people and enormous capital devoted to maintaining nature and the environment, as well as the cultural enrichment of the population, are what continue to make Palm Beach a treat to be enjoyed by every visitor. But it is the ocean and sparsely populated, well-maintained beaches that continue to lure me here.

Pristine and magnificent, fringes of sand dunes with hammock flora line the powder white beaches. The pounding surf of the dark blue Atlantic turns a languid teal blue in summer. Unlike some other cities and towns on the coast, the road than runs along the beachfront is residential—no shops or restaurants to clutter the natural splendor. Palm Beach has strict codes that even the Donald finally agreed to when he succumbed to moving his Mar-A-Lago flagpole inward from the oceanfront; big news here.

Time to Dine

Now that you’ve fed the soul, you can follow me back across the Flagler Street Bridge and head west by northwest to Palm Beach Gardens and some of the best restaurants for people that work for a living. In addition to P.F. Chang’s and Seasons 52, there are many restaurants costing more and many for less, including the ever-popular vegetarian Sweet Tomatoes, 1900 West Palm Beach Lakes Blvd.

In case you’ve won the lotto, I’ve listed a few Palm Beach suggestions for the upper crust palate.

Café Boulud

The Brazilian Court (attended a conference here; fab place)

301 Australian Avenue

Palm Beach, FL 33480

Four Seasons Resort

2800 S. Ocean Blvd.

Palm Beach, FL 33480

Bice Ristorante

313 1/2 Worth Ave.

Palm Beach, FL 33325

Nightlife

Taboo (sort of expensive)

221 Worth Ave

Palm Beach, FL 33480

McKenna’s Place (sort of nice sports bar)

4636 Jog Road South

Palm Beach, FL

If you can get in for just a peek, visit The Breakers Hotel on Palm Beach. Established in 1896, it is THE Florida landmark from the pioneer days of Henry Flagler. The Sunday Brunch will have you shell out a mere $75 per person. Ouch! Just think of all you’ve enjoyed without spending a dime.

A writer/editor, I work with one client at a time for a cost effective solution to your writing and editing needs. Visit me at http://www.susanscharfman.com My novel The Sword & The Chrysanthemum is available in paperback and in ebook.

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