Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Capt. Matt" wrote in message .. . Hello, The wife & I are looking at a week of sailing (bareboat charter, ours is too small for a comfy trip) and a visit to the Dry Tortugas Nat. Park. This will be our first trip, and I'm looking for any suggestions. Hi Matt. It's been about 12 years since I've visited the Dry Tortugas. I assume that the biggest change lately is the amount of visitors there. I'm sure much has been said and written about the history of Garden Key. I thought I might help with some tidbits on Loggerhead Key, 2.5 nmiles to the west. Last time I was there was with my father, who was a Biology Professor for Eckerd College in St.Petersburg. He took a class of students down there every fall semester. Of great interest to him was an old marine reseach station that was located on the north end of the island. We hiked through the brush and saw several old test-tubes and other gear, and one dilapitated old shack eroding into the western shore. In recent years, all the non-native foliage has been stripped. That should make the foundations easier to find, but the artifacts more scarce. The marine station was run by an Alfred Goldsboro Mayor, and there is a plaque there in his honor. I can't remember what his field of study was, I think marine invertibrates and general observations of the local ecosystem. I might be able to get back to you with more if you're interested. The more obvious attraction is the huge lighthouse, which is about 160 years old. As a young child back in the 1970's, the Coast Guard fellas that were stationed there let me climb to the top. My parents have some old slides of that somewhere. Today, the park service watches the lighthouse. Maybe they'll give a tour, but they are under no obligation to. Before sailing back to the shelter of Garden Key, spend the hot afternoon snorkling off the west side of the island. I remember a large reef just off the shore there. You'll find more finger-type coral and active fish than you will near Fort Jefferson. have fun, Ferg. |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Get a boat with shallow draft and get inside the Marquesas to spend a
very pleasent couple of days on your way down there. "Ferg" wrote in message . com... "Capt. Matt" wrote in message .. . Hello, The wife & I are looking at a week of sailing (bareboat charter, ours is too small for a comfy trip) and a visit to the Dry Tortugas Nat. Park. This will be our first trip, and I'm looking for any suggestions. Hi Matt. It's been about 12 years since I've visited the Dry Tortugas. I assume that the biggest change lately is the amount of visitors there. I'm sure much has been said and written about the history of Garden Key. I thought I might help with some tidbits on Loggerhead Key, 2.5 nmiles to the west. Last time I was there was with my father, who was a Biology Professor for Eckerd College in St.Petersburg. He took a class of students down there every fall semester. Of great interest to him was an old marine reseach station that was located on the north end of the island. We hiked through the brush and saw several old test-tubes and other gear, and one dilapitated old shack eroding into the western shore. In recent years, all the non-native foliage has been stripped. That should make the foundations easier to find, but the artifacts more scarce. The marine station was run by an Alfred Goldsboro Mayor, and there is a plaque there in his honor. I can't remember what his field of study was, I think marine invertibrates and general observations of the local ecosystem. I might be able to get back to you with more if you're interested. The more obvious attraction is the huge lighthouse, which is about 160 years old. As a young child back in the 1970's, the Coast Guard fellas that were stationed there let me climb to the top. My parents have some old slides of that somewhere. Today, the park service watches the lighthouse. Maybe they'll give a tour, but they are under no obligation to. Before sailing back to the shelter of Garden Key, spend the hot afternoon snorkling off the west side of the island. I remember a large reef just off the shore there. You'll find more finger-type coral and active fish than you will near Fort Jefferson. have fun, Ferg. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
A Commodores Meanderings | General | |||
Where to find ramp stories? | General | |||
ICW and Dry Tortugas | Cruising | |||
Life in Congo, Part V: What a (long) strange trip its being.... | General | |||
Decided on Dry Tortugas | Cruising |