I spent a week on an island in Southwest Florida, at Sanibel. I was warm there. The days weren't much longer - sun rose about 7:15 am and set about 5:35pm.
But the midday warmth made all the difference. And the warmth slows things down, including people, who are warmed up and friendly. The friendliness begins with a joke at the Chamber of Commerce.
There's a beach there. It's not groomed, ever, except for the guy in the truck who drives on the beach and picks up pig knuckles (crabbers use them for bait and they wash up with the tide). The beach has no lights, so no one's there at night except stargazers. The reason is because on summer nights sea turtles crawl up the beach and lay their eggs in the dunes. Then 35-40 days later the baby turtles burst from their shells and scamper back to the sea, at night. Lights would disorient them and they'd go the wrong way. But why is the beach not groomed? I couldn't get an answer to that. But here's what it looks like. Some of that stuff is red-brown macroalgae washed up in the storms a week before, but most of it is shells. Lots and lots of large pen shells, many white scallops and small whelks and others that I cannot name.
Despite what it looks like, this is not man-made trash. It's mostly large shells and macroalgae washed in by storms. |
A funny beach creation has pen shell goatee, scallop shell nose, barnacle-crusted sunglasses, and macroalgae hair. |
Ardent sheller at early morning low tide |
Also shore birds galore. Long-legged willetts, three kinds of gulls, and there are terns and little tiny things that scoot along just at the edge of the waves, stitching back and forth so quickly their legs disappear.
And in the wildlife refuge or out on Tarpon Bay, I see great large birds - cormorants and egrets and herons and the wonderful white pelicans.
cormorants and white pelicans share one of the oyster shell bars in the bay |
And at the end of the day, the sun goes down behind the palm trees.
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