Showing posts with label #SanibelIsland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #SanibelIsland. Show all posts

Sunday, June 5, 2016

Sanibel Island Light House, Beach and other sites


Sanibel Lighthouse 
Sanibel Lighthouse 
Sanibel Lighthouse

The first permanent English-speaking settlers on Sanibel Island arrived from New York in 1833 as part of a colony planned by land investors. Although that settlement was short-lived, the initial colonists petitioned the U. S. government for the construction of a lighthouse on the island. No action was taken on that proposal at the time. By the late 1870s, sea-going commerce in the area had increased in volume. The U. S. Lighthouse Bureau took the initiative in requesting funds for a lighthouse for Sanibel Island, and in 1884, construction of the tower began. The station was lighted for the first time in August 1884. The significance of the Sanibel Lighthouse lies in the regular and reliable service it has provided for travelers along Florida's West Coast. Since 1950, the U. S. Coast Guard property at the lighthouse has been a wildlife refuge.

Beautiful sunset
Umbrellas on the beach 
Natures Landlord
NATURE'S LANDLORD 
Gopher tortoise Gopherus Polyphemus
Adult
Identification 
length 8-15 inches (20-38cm)
weight: up to 30lbs (14 kg) average 8-10lbs (4-5kg)
color: adults are grayish-brown, and juveniles are a yellowish-brown
Legs and feet: front legs and feet are flat and shovel-like which helps them dig their burrows, back legs, and feet are elephantine.
No webbing is present between toes.

Habitat 
Three key requirements
1. Dry upland habitat with sandy, well-drained soils for ideal burrowing and nesting.

2. Open the tree canopy so that plenty of sunlight reaches the ground.

3. Low-growing food plants for their herbaceous (plant-only)  diet including gopher apple and purple love grass.

Reproduction
Mating Season: April through July
Females reach between 10 and 20 years old.
Females lay a clutch of 4-7 ping-pong ball-sized eggs which are buried in the ground.
Gestation:80-100 days
Sex is determined by the temperature of the soil. Eggs. F 85 (30C) develops into females, and <F 85 develops into males.
Hatchlings are 1-2 inches (3-5cm) and grow 3/4 inches a year.

Keystone Species
Gopher tortoise burrow provides a home and refuge to over 350 vertebrate and invertebrate species.
Many share the burrow with the tortoise or use abandoned burrows.

Burrow 
Used to regulate body temperature and as shelter from predators and wildfires. 
Up to 50ft (15 m) long and 15ft (5 m) deep, depending on the water table. The width is about the length of the tortoise.

The Aron (or Mound) in front of the burrow is often used as the nesting site.

Multiple burrows may be used by individual tortoises.

Burrows provide shelter from the heat, cold, fire, and a safe place to raise young.

Why did the gopher tortoise cross the road?
To get to the other side! probable to graze


What can you do to help?
Watch the road for crossing tortoises
do not take or move them
Plant native plants in their habitat.
If you find them near water, leave them on land.

Cool facts
They live for more than 89 years.
They right themselves if flipped over.
They socialize in groups called pods.
They eat bones from dead animals, presumably to get calcium
they dig up to 9ft a day in sandy soils
They have a good sense of smell.

Conservation & Status
Gopher tortoises are a protected species

Their populations are declining due to habitat loss and fragmentation, disease, vehicle strikes, and predation by invasive species.
Gopher Tortoise Crossing
Tortoises are fairly abundant on Sanibel Island due to decades of conservation.
The gopher tortoise is strictly a land animal. It is related to the Galapagos tortoise, which can grow to 880 pounds and is also terrestrial. The easiest way to distinguish the gopher tortoise from another turtle is by its high, dark, rounded shell and its front feet, which are spade-like with heavy protective scales.
The gopher tortoise is known to stop traffic on occasion as it forages. If you discover a turtle or tortoise crossing a road and are unsure what kind it is, take it to the edge of the road and let it continue on but do not release it into any body of water. There is an empty shell at the Clinic for the Rehabilitation of Wildlife (CROW) on Sanibel from a gopher tortoise that was placed into the Gulf of Mexico by a well-meaning but seriously misguided tourist who found it browsing on beach-dune vegetation and thought it was a lost sea turtle. The combination of saltwater and wave action quickly drowned the poor gopher tortoise.
Welcome to the Sanibel Historical Museum & Village
was founded in 1984. The story is told from the Calusa and Spanish eras to the early pioneer families who settled on the island in the 1800s. It tells of warriors, adventurers, fishermen, farmers, and proprietors.
Shore Haven 1924, Morning Glories Cottage 1926, Bailey's General Store 1927, Bailey's Model T Garage, Post Office 1926, Parking House, Miss Charlotta's Tea Room 1926, Burnap Cottage 1898, Restrooms, The School House 1896, Rutland House 1915
Open Tuesdays thru Saturday

Bailey-Matthew National Shell Museum

The National Shell Museum is the leading authority on Sanibel and Captive Shells.  They offer information on how, and where to look for shells, and how to clean and transport them.
Exotic shells from around the globe, World Record Size Shells, Sailor's Valentines, Fascinating Fossils, Live Mollusk Tanks, Predators and Prey, Hands-on Learning Lab.
Bailey-Matthew National Shell Museum
SCCF

Over 65,000 people each year are reached through our educational offerings. These include tours, talks, landscaping for wildlife, classed special events, lectures, cruises, house calls, kayak adventures, orientation for new land residents, and outreach to schools. Please join one of our programs. 
SCCF
The Sanibel Captive Conservation Foundation is dedicated to the conservation of coastal habitats and aquatic resources on Sanibel and Captiva and in the surrounding watershed. SCCF manages over 1300 acres of land on the islands. 

Thursday, June 2, 2016

2015 October 10-20, Edison/Ford Winter Homes-Sanibel Island-Cape Coral Florida

Day 15: Saturday, October 10, 2015   
I was up before 8:00AM but my daughter slept until almost noon.
I ate a bagel with cream cheese for breakfast. For lunch, I fried some potatoes with onions and I cut up tomatoes, onions, and cucumbers.  
Around 2PM we rode to Edison/Ford Winter Home Estate, laboratory, gardens, and museum. 
The cost was $19.00 per person and I bought a book about the Edison home.
At the entrance, we saw a silver statue of Thomas Alva Edison he was standing in front of the Banyan tree. Next to him was a marker that reads: Thomas Alva Edison February 11,1847-October 18, 1931. He was named the Twentieth Century Man of the Millennium by LIFE Magazine.

Mina Edison, Thomas's wife, her statue was sitting on a bench in front of the Heritage Gardens. As we strolled through the gardens we saw a butterfly garden, Papaya Trees with fruit hanging from them. Edison called this fruit his “Paw Paw.”

We visited the 15,000-square-foot Edison & Ford Museum and Laboratory which houses a collection of inventions and artifacts. We saw a bust of Henry Ford and Thomas Edison. We saw Thomas Edison’s 1916 Model T. Displayed in front of the Model T was a cross-section of the car Ford built showing the location of different parts. 
In the museum, we saw the displayed Henry Ford’s Inspiration & his impact over 150 years of innovations & Do you know Henry Ford? 
There was an entire room showing pictures of Edison after forty. The area shows Thomas Edison's family history, The Child Wizard, the huge light bulb, a display of his love for fishing, a hall of inventions that displayed some of his early photographs, video recorders, telephones, projectors, his telegraph and so much more. 

We crossed the street to tour the Edison/Fords winter homes and gardens.
Historic markers were telling the history of each area as we walked through.
First, we saw the Edison Restoration and Rebirth describing the Edison Seminole Lodge which is made up of the family home, the pergola, the guest house, the Edison Moonlight Garden, the Little Office, the Edison Caretakers House, the Pool, the teahouse, and seawall. 

Our next stop was at the caretaker's home and yard then onto the Moonlight Garden. 
The Moonlight Garden consists of about 25 separate flower beds, laid out in a neat geometric pattern.  
We looked at the Edison Study, which was the original site of the Edison 1886 Laboratory. 
Next, we stopped at Edison’s Water Systems, in 1919 a large concrete cistern was built to capture rainwater for drinking only.
Next, the Motor Generator Edison’s inventions and business life included extensive and successful work with integrated power systems. 
We stopped to look at his Pool Complex, in 1911 Edison had a pool built right on his own estate. 
We walked down to Edison’s Pier, the pier was originally called the Wharf, and it was used as a working area to off-load boats carrying materials and contents for the home and laboratory. 
Edison had fire control, he had a stand-pipe at the main house, the guest house, the caretaker house, and the laboratory with a hose rack and a reel with 100 feet of 2-inch hoses. 
We peeked inside the Edison Home and guest house.
Then we walked next door to the Henry Ford Florida Estate where we saw a statue of Henry Ford placed in one of the gardens. We also peeked inside the Ford Estate and then onto Clara Ford’s Michigan Rose Garden. 
We stopped at the Cottage Shoppe where I bought a book about the Edison and Ford Estates. Palm trees were blowing in the wind, and there was ripe fruit hanging on the trees, Valencia Oranges, Coconuts Trees & Meyer Lemon Trees. 
We walked through Orchid Lane and Friendship Walk was we saw mango trees, Orchids, Phalaenopsis, Dendrobium, and Cattleyas.
We exited the Estates and walked back across the street and rode into Fort Myers stopping at Joe’s Crab Shack. We had to wait a few minutes to be seated. Joe’s was located along the riverfront. Our seats were next to the glass wall that overlooked the river. We could see people getting off their boats and walking up the pier to Joe’s for dinner. 
Our waiter brought us an appetizer of Crab Nachos with crab dip piled high on tortillas chips, topped with pico de gallo, black bean corn relish, Monterey jack, and avocado lime dressing.
Our main course was Crispy Jumbo Shrimp hand-breaded and served with hushpuppies, fries, and coleslaw. 
My daughter ordered a Category 5 Hurricane, with rum, Bacardi 151 Rum, red passion fruit, and orange juice, topped with Myers’s Dark Rum.  
Our last stop of the day was at the Edison Mall.
My daughter was out of makeup so she went into Macy’s.
I walked to Finishing Line, I had a twenty dollars coupon so, I used the coupon to buy a Nike Shirt. 
I finished my shopping and went to the middle of the mall to sit and wait for my daughter.
While I was waiting I updated my iPhone and uploaded some pictures to Facebook. 

Another great day of fun. 
Thomas Edison
Thomas Edison Winter Home

Category 5 Hurricane
Crab Nachos
Day 16: Sunday, October 11, 2015 
I went to Sanibel Island beach with my granddaughter, her boyfriend, and her mother.  
My granddaughter parked the car, and we carried everything we needed down to the beach. We each had a chair to sit in and an umbrella to protect us from the sun. We waded in the water looking for seashells.  
For lunch, we ate ham & cheese sandwiches at about 11:00AM.
I saw a sandy path leading up to the Sanibel Lighthouse.
Along the path, I saw a sign that read: Nature’s Landlord Gopher tortoise, Gopherus Polyphemus. The sign identified the different turtles, their habitat, their reproduction, and how they burrow. 
I walked a little further down the path and saw several signs posted on a large board, one was describing Sanibel & Everglades Restoration on the Caloosahatchee River Connection. There was another sign that read: There are more than shells living on the shore, beach plants may look scruffy but they’re important. They help stabilize the sand and provide shelter for wildlife. Another sign that read: A beach is a wild place, beyond the beach, Molluscan Reproduction and Egg Cases, Mollusks and the Environment, Seashells of Sanibel and Captiva Islands and Sea Turtles on Sanibel. The path leads up to the Sanibel Island Lighthouse. 

The Sanibel Island Lighthouse is a 98-foot above-sea-level iron skeleton tower built in 1884. 

I walked back to the beach and we stayed until about 1PM. 

On our way back we stopped at Sun Harvest Citrus located at the intersection of Six Mile Cypress and Metro Parkway in Fort Myers. 
Where we sampled their freshly squeezed juices. We tried Orange Juice, Grapefruit Juice, Orange Strawberry Juice, and Orange Cranberry Juice.
We each ordered two scoops of orange and vanilla ice cream in a cone. 
  
I was dropped off at my daughter's apartment so, I could take a shower to wash off all the sand and change clothes. 
I was going to ride with them to Tampa Airport, and they would be picking me up at 2:45PM.
The drive took a little over two hours, and we arrived around 4:45PM.
My granddaughter and her boyfriend were returning home on the 5:30PM flight.
They rushed to go through security and to the connecting gate only to find their flight had been delayed. 

I rode back to Fort Myers with my daughter-in-law and one of her dogs. 
We arrived around 6:45PM, she dropped off her dog and we rode to Miller’s Ale House located at 4400 Kerne Circle Fort Myers. 

Where we both enjoyed a grilled chicken breast covered in dried tomatoes, with sour cream and cheese. We both ordered a  Marguerite.  
She dropped me off at my daughter's apartment at about 8:30PM. 
My daughter and her roommate were getting ready to go out dancing.  
They stayed out until 3:30PM, and I was still up watching TV when they came home.
They brought me a bagel with sausage and cheese from McDonald's. 
I washed a few clothes and went back to bed until 10AM.

Enjoying Sanibel Island Beach
Grilled chicken covered in dried tomatoes with sour cream and cheese
Day 17: Monday, October 12, 2015
We rode to the Farmers Market Restaurant, located at 2736 Edison Avenue Fort Myers. They serve the finest food you have ever tasted since 1952. 
For lunch, we ordered their homemade Dreamsicle pie, fried zucchini, collard greens, onions cornbread, and tea.

Our next stop was the Calusa Nature Center and Planetarium, which is an environmental education organization on 105 acres, with a museum, three nature trails, a Planetarium, butterfly, and bird aviaries, a gift shop, and meeting and picnic areas. 

We watched a live animal presentation.
The animal handler brought out a skunk and a boa.
He walked around the group, letting everyone who wants to, hold the snake and the skunk.
He told us about how he went into the marsh or woods to retrieve snakes and other non-native animals.
We walked a short distance on one of the trails.  We saw cages, buzzards, eagles, and hawks.
Inside we saw fish, turtles, and a very irritated rattlesnake.
We saw deer, ducks, river otters, turtles, wild boars, alligators, snakes, large lizards, frogs, a collection of butterflies, a collection of shellfish, and collection of different rocks, the cycle life of a crab, and a live alligator swimming in the pond outside.

A Sign about the American Alligator.
Adult alligators average six to twelve feet in length. Feeding on fish, birds, and even whole turtles, alligators live in freshwater areas in the southeastern US. 

In the Planetarium, we watched a couple of movies, Autumn Skies, and the Space Station.
We saw Land and our changing earth, Ice Global Ice & Snow, Water the basis for life, and Light pollution and our fading night sky.
We also saw the Spiral Galaxy Messier, Star’s Death Blows Oxygen into Space, Hubble Chandra,  
Spitzer radio Microwaves Infrared Visible, Ultraviolet, and X-ray. 
We saw Earth’s Atmosphere, Junior Museum, and Planetarium of Lee County.
We saw the Galactic Center Region NASA's Great Observatories, a Picture of NASA’s Shuttle, Several NASA Telescopes (Great Ball of Fire)Zeiss Binocular Refactor, 


We went to Walmart, where we picked up a few groceries. We cooked cabbage, potatoes, tipple, chicken, and zucchini for supper.  

Dreamsicle pie
Day 18: Tuesday, October 13, 2016
My daughter worked ten hours.
Got up early because my back and legs were hurting, took a nap.
Worked on the computer typing up historical markers that I had taken pictures of, then I watched some TV. I mopped the floors and took out the garbage. Later I walked to the entrance gate but my legs were hurting so, I came back to the apartment.  
I watched TV and fell asleep on the sofa.

Day 19: Wednesday, October 14, 2015 
My daughter worked ten hours.
Got up after my daughter left for work. I worked on the computer updating historic markers. I walked to the clubhouse where I met Michelle, she talked about her Pentecostal church, about Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit. Michelle said she moved here about three years ago, from New York. She was with her eleven-year-old daughter. Michelle had been in a bad relationship. She said she was originally from Jamaica.
I ate cream cheese on a bagel for breakfast. For lunch, I ate a salami sandwich with, muster cheese, and a slice of tomato, I drank a diet coke. I ate a banana and some strawberries.
Jackie took me to Edison Mall where I bought a cup of yogurt from Yogurt Mountain.  
My daughter went out to eat with a friend, and it was very late when she got home.  

Day 20: Thursday, October 15, 2015 
My daughter worked ten hours today, I think she was late after her long night out the day before. My daughter's roommate had a flat in her car. She wanted me to go to the gas station with her so she could air up the tire but the tire was too flat. We started walking toward the clubhouse when we saw a young man eating his lunch in a Comcast truck. We ask him if he would help us. My daughter's roommate had an air compressor in her car, but her cigarette lighter would not work and she could not air up her tire. 
The young man from Comcast aired up her tire and we thanked him for his help. We rode to Chick-fil-a, where I bought two chicken sandwiches, I gave one of the sandwiches to my daughter's roommate. Back at the apartment, we were getting to know one another as she was getting ready to go out.
My cell reception was not very good, so I went outside. I set on the steps in the front of the apartment, while I talked to hubby and sister. 
I met the couple from upstairs and their little girl. I hear their little girl every night walking across the floor at bedtime.  
I watched TV until my daughter came home from work.

Day 21: Friday, October 16,2016
We went to Verizon to get My daughter’s bill straighten out but, they said we would have to come back on Tuesday. We went to Walmart where my daughter sent her son and daughter a hundred dollars each for their birthdays.  
My daughter bought a glue stick, and a suction cup to make a sticker. We went to staples to make two copies, and to punch holes in the two copies. For lunch, we grilled chicken, boiled cabbage, & potatoes. I cut up some tomatoes, and onions to make an avocado salad, but the avocados were spoiled so we ate the salad without avocados.  

We rode to Manatee Park in Fort Myers around 3:11 PM.
The Manatee Park is on a small river that branches off in the Caloosahatchee River. There are three observation areas along the river. We did not see any manatees because they usually come to this area in November thru March.
The park had a playground, huts rentals for parties, and a visitor center which was closed. There were several walking trails to see wild animals and wildflowers.  
There were a couple of boardwalks that extended out into the river. 
There was construction going on across the canal and a beautiful ranch house across the river. It was a great place for canoeing.
  
Ethnobotany Trial is a study of how people use plants. 
We saw several signs that said to not feed the alligators, other wildlife, and Manatee. We heard a loud noise it was a squirrel gnawing away at a bamboo tree.  
We left at 3:47PM. 

We arrived at 4:06 at the Shell Factory located at 2787 N. Tamiami Trail North Fort Myers 33903
There we saw a large collection of Seashells. Pirates cove with a Black beard, Rosie's Gourmet shop, Museums of Natural History with shells, fossils, Military Museum Betty Boots, Animals, and a Christmas Shop.
We rode to Cape Coral to attend the Oktoberfest (thirtieth annual) The German American Social Club of Cape Coral.
There were three stages with nonstop bands, and a dance floor, featuring Zimmerer Kapelle Biberach and KauogeL.

The sit-down dinner was served in the von Steuben Hall, which cost $11 each.
Our choices were Schnitzel, over Sauerbraten, which was Sour beaten, served with either noodles or dumplings, with red cabbage or vegetables. 
We chose Schnitzels, with dumplings and vegetables with water to drink. 


We each ordered a four-dollar Margaritas, and we found a place to sit where, we listened to several different bands, and watched everyone dance.
There was a carnival area for kids, featuring rides and games. 
There were many vendors, exhibits, and handmade crafts. 
There was plenty of Imported German Bier, Domestic Beer, and German wine and spirits. 
Miss Oktoberfest Nikita Chadwick addresses German American Social Club.

Mayor Marni Sawicki, who for the second year tapped the keg to get the festival started. Once the keg was tapped it was time to party. 

We left around 9PM.
Manatee Park
Day 22: Saturday, October 17, 2015
We rode to Edison Mall where I bought a pair of black and white stretch pants, and a Nike shirt at Finishing Line. I bought a Star Wars scarf at FYE. My daughter bought her makeup, and boots at Macy's. We came home and got ready to go to the Zombicom in downtown Fort Myers from 4-10PM. 
On October 17, 2015, from 4-12PM, the dead will again rise. There were five stages with over 30 live performances including DJs, dance troupes, zombie queens, & fire dancers. There were street vendors with food and merchandise. 
Zombicom is not only about raising the dead but about raising funds for the community.

We ate dinner at United Cafe Bar and Bistro. I ordered the Chef’s Handmade Garden Quiche which was served with fire-roasted red peppers, baby spinach, cheddar, and mozzarella cheese enveloped in a savory egg custard. Served with hand-cut roasted redskin potatoes. 

We walked up and down the streets of downtown Fort Myers until I could walk no more. My daughter took me home around 10PM.
She went back to being with her friends. I watched TV until I fell asleep.
She said that she and her friends left a little after 11PM which was a good thing because there was a shooting around 12PM. 


Day 23: Sunday, October 18,2015
We went to Sun Harvest citrus where we tasted different kinds of juices. Strawberry/Orange, Grapefruit/Orange, Orange juice. I bought a Danish cheesecake at 1:53PM. 
We rode to Six Mile Cypress Slough Preserve and we walked 1.25 miles on the boardwalk that is above a swamp. We saw turtles, hawks, and birds. We also visited the Interpretive Center and Gift Shop. 
At 4:11PM we stopped at Bahama Breeze Restaurant for dinner.
We ordered the Mojo Marinated pulled pork, slow roasted served over sweet plantains with their signature sweet and Smokey barbs sauce.

We also ordered the grilled salmon and mixed greens which are in a bed of crispy baked tortilla served with melted cheese, fresh greens, tomatoes, salsa, and avocados, drizzled with vinaigrette.

We rode to Lakes Regional Park where they were having a Fall & Halloween Festival.
We saw people riding the Halloween express train. We saw how the locals displayed their creativity in Scarecrows, a Pumpkin Patch.  
We saw bounce houses, there were hayrides, face painting, Scarecrow contests, activities, and games.
We saw people riding bicycles, taking boat rides, and fishing.
We walked all around the park including taking the bicycle trail. 
  
On the way home, we stopped to fill up with gas.
We stopped at CVs, I needed some cash so, I bought a box of Oreos and Ice Cream.

Day 24: Monday, October 19, 2015
My daughter had to work twelve hours from 7AM-7PM. I made the bed, mopped, washed all my clothes, packed, wrote in my journal, and watched TV. Took a nap, and ate Munster cheese, cream cheese chips, Somali, bagel with cream cheese, for breakfast I ate Oreos with monkey ice cream.  
My daughter’s friend, Sam, came over, and we watched a movie. Sam stayed the night, he slept in the roommate's room, and she went home for the weekend.

Day 25: Tuesday, October 20, 2015 
We arrived at the airport in Fort Myers around 4AM. My flight leaves Fort Myers at 5AM.
I am flying to Atlanta, on flight 1380 Delta. Sitting in seat 42D next to the window. The couple that sat next to me sleep most of the way. 
The stewardess served refreshments, and I took packages of cookies, pretzels, & Cranberry Apple juice.
At the Atlanta International Airport, I had to walk to the next gate which was downstairs. I took the escalator, then the tram missed my stop on the tram so, I rode to the end of the line and back, A, B, C, D, E, F & T. I took the escalator back upstairs to gate 35.

The plane departed the Atlanta airport at 10:29AM and arrived at 10:25 AM Huntsville International Airport. 
Hubby was waiting for my call, and he picked me up at the door.
We rode to Golden Corral in Huntsville. I ate turkey, collard greens, beans, cornbread, shrimp, carrot cake, and ice cream. 

When we finished eating, we rode to Cabela’s Outdoor Store.

That night we met him at Texas Roadhouse to celebrate the people having a birthday in October.  
I ordered a six-ounce sirloin steak, baked potato, and a Caesar salad.  

We were finally home, it was 9:00PM. 

Church made out of shells
Pirates cove with a Black beard
Zimmerer Kapelle Biberach and Kauogel
Zombie comb in downtown Fort Myers
Sun Harvest Citrus
Bahama Breeze
Lakes Parks
Flying over Huntsville Alabama 
Flying over Atlanta, Georgia 

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