Tutto quello che vale la pena sapere prima di partire.
Rehoboth Beach is a small beach city on the Delaware coast, one mile long and twelve blocks wide, that has served as the premier gay beach destination for the Washington DC, Baltimore, and Philadelphia metropolitan areas since the 1970s. Its designation as the "Nation's Summer Capital" — a reference to the tradition of DC politicians and officials summering here — takes on additional meaning given the substantial gay population of the federal city, whose members discovered Rehoboth early and have been returning each summer for half a century. The gay community in Rehoboth concentrates in two areas. Baltimore Avenue, running perpendicular to the beach and parallel to Rehoboth Avenue about one block south, is the gay commercial street — a dense concentration of gay bars, restaurants, and shops including the Blue Moon, Aqua, and several guesthouses. The other gay territory is Poodle Beach, the informal designation for the section of the main beach at the south end of the boardwalk, beyond the amusements and snack concessions, where the gay community has gathered for decades. Poodle Beach has no formal designation and no signage; its status as the gay beach is maintained by the accumulated social practice of fifty years of DC-area gay people knowing where to put their towels. CAMP Rehoboth — an acronym for Creating A More Positive Rehoboth — is one of the most successful LGBTQ+ community organisations in the United States and the institution that has most shaped Rehoboth Beach's contemporary gay identity. Founded in 1991 by Steve Elkins and Murray Archibald, CAMP Rehoboth has spent 35 years building a relationship between the gay community and the broader Rehoboth Beach community that has been remarkably successful: the organisation operates a community centre, a volunteer corps, a community newsletter, a health clinic, and a programme of events that includes the annual Pride festival. CAMP Rehoboth's approach — building relationships with the straight community rather than positioning the gay community in opposition to it — has made Rehoboth Beach one of the most genuinely gay-welcoming small beach communities in America, rather than merely tolerant in the way that commercially motivated tolerance operates. The Blue Moon Restaurant and Bar at 35 Baltimore Avenue is Rehoboth's most iconic gay institution — a restaurant and bar whose pride-flag-painted exterior makes it the most visually distinctive building on Baltimore Avenue and whose decades of operation have made it a fixture of the gay Rehoboth summer. The Blue Moon operates as a full-service restaurant with serious kitchen credentials and a bar attached; it is not merely a gay bar that happens to serve food. The combination of quality dining and the gay bar atmosphere has made it the correct choice for couples and groups who want a complete evening at a single address. The seasonal character of Rehoboth is pronounced even by the standards of American beach towns. The city's year-round population of approximately 1,500 swells to 25,000 or more in the summer season, and the gay community follows this rhythm: Baltimore Avenue is full from Memorial Day to Labor Day, Poodle Beach is occupied from June through August, and the Pride festival in September marks the end of the season. From October through April, Rehoboth Beach is a quiet small town, and the gay bars and guesthouses are largely closed or operating on reduced schedules. The geographic accessibility of Rehoboth is its key advantage in the gay travel market. Washington DC is 175 kilometres away — about two hours by car on US Route 50 and Route 1, or three hours on a summer Friday when traffic on the shore road is at its worst. Baltimore is slightly closer; Philadelphia is 200 kilometres to the north. The combination of proximity to three major metropolitan areas with substantial gay populations and the quality of the beach and gay infrastructure makes Rehoboth the most day-trippable gay beach in the Mid-Atlantic. Many visitors come for a single weekend rather than a week; the share house model common in Fire Island is less prevalent here, replaced by a mix of B&Bs, gay guesthouses, and vacation rental properties. Cape Henlopen State Park, immediately north of Rehoboth, provides additional outdoor recreation — hiking trails, a naturist beach section, and the opportunity to experience the Delaware coast in a less commercialised setting. The Rehoboth boardwalk, a mile-long wooden promenade along the oceanfront, is the town's central public space and is used by the full range of summer visitors without any particular gay character; the gay social life is concentrated a block inland on Baltimore Avenue and at Poodle Beach at the southern end. For Mid-Atlantic gay visitors looking for a manageable, welcoming, and genuinely pleasant beach destination within easy driving distance of their home cities, Rehoboth Beach is the answer.