Posted on Sun, Jul. 6, 2008
They call it America's Walking City. And indeed, it's easy to pass your days in Boston meandering from one famous site (the Paul Revere House) to another (the Union Oyster House). But follow the locals and you'll discover what makes Bostonians so loyal to their home town: a mix of green parks, elegant shopping and cozy pubs (and we don't mean Cheers). Here are tourist traps paired with their lesser-known equivalents that locals treasure.
Pubs
TOURIST: Cheers
Once known as the Bull & Finch Pub, this Beacon Hill bar changed its name to Cheers after the TV show made it the most famous bar in America. The catch: No one will know your name here; the only regulars are tourists.
INSIDER: Matt Murphy's Pub
Irish pub Matt Murphy's has built a real community in Brookline Village, the first town outside the city limits. The draw: a proper pint of Guinness, greaseless fish and chips and, most important, no cheesy leprechaun paraphernalia. For music lovers, there's a nightly lineup of local and up-and-coming national bands. The bar even has its own record label, Pub Records, so you can take a piece of your trip home with you.
14 Harvard St., Brookline, 617-232-0188,
www.mattmurphyspub.com
Nature
TOURIST: Swan Boats in the Public Garden
Boston's famous Swan Boats have been operating since 1877, and in all that time the ride hasn't changed. The slow, 15-minute paddleboat cruise is a Disneyesque tour of the city's central park.
INSIDER: Sailing on Jamaica Plain Pond
Far more entertaining is summer sailing or rowing on Jamaica Pond, a 68-acre lake in part of Boston's Emerald Necklace of parks. From the water, you'll see the 11/2-mile bike and running path packed with joggers and families, and a panorama of trees. (The pond is a stone's throw from the 265-acre Jamaica Plain Arboretum.) It's the best way to be at one with nature without tangling with Boston's notorious traffic.
Rowboats are available at the Boat House, Jamaicaway and Pond Street, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. ($10 per hour). Sailboats are available for rental from 3 to 6 p.m. weekdays, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. weekends ($15 per hour). Info: 617-522-5061, www.jamaicapond.com.
Theater
TOURIST: Wang Center
In the heart of the city's slightly gritty Chinatown, the Wang Center offers short runs of hit shows, many straight from Broadway. The theater recently wrapped a week's run of
Hairspray.
INSIDER: Theater at the Boston Center for the Arts
A mile away in the hip South End, it's as if all of Off-Broadway were housed under one roof. Each year, the center hosts more than 50 productions by nearly 20 small and midsize theater companies from around New England. The shows range from the offbeat to regional takes on acclaimed plays (see Steven Sondheim's
Assassins from July 11 through Aug. 9; tickets are $33 to $38). The BCA also houses the Mills Gallery, which hosts contemporary art exhibitions. When you've had enough, take a break next door at the Beehive, a bar and jazz club that's open till the wee hours.
539 Tremont St., 617-933-8600,