Category: sandscript
-
By the bay
I like to play a game called “Before My Time.” The game involves a lot of imagination and at least a little knowledge.
-
Building better habitats
Dead fish on the shore gets attention — national media devotes coverage, gubernatorial candidates jab and dodge, business owners fret and tourists fear. But when the dead fish are clear and the red tide dissipates, so does concern for the health of our waters.
-
‘Extreme’ labor
After I wanted to be an architect like Mike Brady in “The Brady Bunch” and before I wanted to be a journalist like Bob Woodward at the Washington Post, I wanted to be a forest ranger. I don’t know how I got the inspiration but I was interested enough in the career path to subscribe…
-
Catching the breeze
Oct. 1 arrived and I threw open a window to bring in fresh air. Ah, autumn, I thought.
-
Ghost bird goes extinct
The ghost bird officially is extinct. A video in 2005 suggesting the ivory-billed woodpecker was in a swamp in Arkansas inspired legions of bird-enthusiasts to believe.
-
Going beneath the surface
Scanning the surface of Sarasota Bay, people see dolphins, pelicans and pleasure boaters.
-
Floridians favor …
We should protect the wild. And pay for our pollution. These are the opinions of a majority of Floridians, based on a University of South Florida statewide survey on conservation and environmental policy.
-
Cutting through the fog
We stood on the Anna Maria City Pier boardwalk, looking east but unable to see the T-end through the thick morning fog. We couldn’t see the structure ahead but the water under the pier was clear to the sandy bottom, where dozens of starfish appeared at rest.
-
Press for manatee protections
Question authority. We said so four years ago, when the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service moved to reduce the protected status for manatees.
-
Arriving to AMI, an anniversary
We have our origin stories. And many of us who’ve moved from place to place have our arrival stories, the recollections of when we arrived to arrange our lives in a new or unfamiliar location. Some people might remember the year they settled in a new home or a new community. Others might also recall…
-
Planting to plating
The idea of creating community gardens on AMI is taking root in Holmes Beach and I dig the enthusiasm. The Holmes Beach Parks and Beautification Committee is revisiting the concept of creating a community garden in Veterans Park at city hall, 5801 Marina Drive. The Islander reported Nov. 4 that committee members reached consensus to…
-
Collecting treasure
My three treasure chests line a wall in my living room. They’re wooden, stand about 6 feet tall and have five shelves each. And they’re filled with all types of jewels. The value of my treasure is immeasurable, priceless, even though the insurance payout on any loss might amount to less than $100. My treasure…
-
Naturally inspiring AMI
“Why can’t we pet him?” my nephew John asked. The man who’s now 22 was then an 8-year-old boy, standing at a railing around Snooty the manatee’s pool at a Bradenton aquarium. John would return year after year, visiting Anna Maria Island from Grayslake, Illinois, for family vacations and he came to understand why a…
-
Reading the bold print
The objectives are stated in bold, capital letters and numbered, so there’s no mistaking their importance. OBJECTIVE 1: PROTECT, RESTORE AND ENHANCE THE DIVERSITY AND ABUNDANCE OF NATIVE FISH. OBJECTIVE 2: PROTECT, RESTORE AND ENHANCE THE DIVERSITY AND ABUNDANCE OF NATIVE SHELLFISH. OBJECTIVE 3: MONITOR AND PROTECT THREATENED, ENDANGERED AND VULNERABLE WILDLIFE. Consider these objectives…
-
Celebrating a FLA-nniversary
Tacked to my office bulletin board is a gift certificate to a beachside restaurant. The sticky note attached reads: “Use for Florida anniversary.” The anniversary — marking the day my wife and I moved from Chicago to Anna Maria Island — arrives Sept. 2. Weeks earlier in 2005 I landed an editing job at a…
-
Creature feature
I pulled the blanket up to my chin and watched the shadows on the bedroom wall as the seconds ticked toward midnight. It’s been years since I’ve been too frightened to close my eyes and fall asleep, but the screaming at the end of episode five of “Midnight Mass” spooked me. If we still gathered…
-
‘America the beautiful’
Many in America observe July 4 customs — picnics, parades and fireworks orchestrated to the “1812 Overture.” And some keep a July 5 tradition. They walk a section of beach or circle a parking lot at a boat ramp to collect litter. The cleanups may be organized by a city or a nonprofit in some…
-
Keeping watch over Tampa Bay
“Life’s a beach” is one motto on Anna Maria Island. So is “get ’er done,” a saying I’d not heard until I went to work for The Islander about 15 years ago. A lot of folks I know are more in the “get ’er done” mindset these days. They’re righting a struggling business or organization…
-
Over the rainbow for outdoors
My family celebrates rainbows in June. We fly rainbow flags. We wear rainbow-themed T-shirts. And we go looking for rainbows. We’re just over the moon for rainbows in June. So I found myself wishing for rain the day after Memorial Day and every day since. Rainbows inspire pride, dreams, imagination, curiosity and artistry. To quote…
-
Firing up for Father’s Day
On Mom’s holiday, we picnicked in a field of wildflowers at Myakka River State Park. On Dad’s day June 20, we’ll fire up the grill in the park. She said: Pâte, please. He prefers barbecued brisket with a side of steak. So Father’s Day will involve turning up the heat on our grill for his…
-
Not loving lovebugs?
Love doesn’t keep them together. But sex does. Yes, lovebugs are at it again, coupling in the air and on window screens, patio furniture and especially vehicles. The bugs — a march fly now common to the southeastern United States and Central America — show up in large numbers in late April and May and…
-
Bloom time
Spring just arrived March 20 but for weeks I’ve been sweeping away signs of the season. Tree pollen — yellow, powdery and sticky — is layered so thick on my patio that it looks like splotches of oil paint. The live oak flowers on the ground in my backyard are piled so thick they look…
-
Walking into 2021
Tick, tock. When the countdown to the new year reached the final 24 hours, I began a final review of 2020, taking stock of promises made last Jan. 1. Then, I resolved to volunteer more and lounge less. Sadly, when I wasn’t walking or working in 2020, I seemed to be lounging. I volunteered for…
-
About those oaks
Keyword: Treehouses. I routinely search the archives of the Manatee County Public Library for island-related historical photographs to share with readers. I use keywords and categories and usually come up with something interesting, or at least relevant, for the “looking back” feature in The Islander. Sometimes I come up with a “wow!” or a “what?”…
-
In the ‘red tide’ toolbox
“Florida Gulf beaches are closed,” one erroneous Facebook comment read. Another made the false claim that “the Gulf is blood-red with red tide.” What next? Communist scientists manufactured and released K. brevisfrom a lab in China? Red tide can be a menace, deadly to aquatic and avian life, harmful to human life, creating environmental and…
-
Lovey-dovey day
Birds do it. Birds fall in love, so goes the popular song by Cole Porter and so says the poem by Geoffrey Chaucer that proceeded “Let’s Do It (Let’s Fall in Love)” by about 550 years. Chaucer wrote “Parlement of Foules” — “Parliament of Fowls” — in 1382 to honor the anniversary of King Richard…
-
Smoking session issue
The 2021 legislative session could involve a smoking hot debate. State Sen. Joe Gruters, R-Sarasota, will ask colleagues in the Legislature to pass a bill authorizing local governments to ban smoking at public beaches and parks. State law preempts regulation of smoking to the state but, in Senate Bill 334, Gruters proposes that “counties and…
-
Beachbound mothers
Helicopter parent? Not my mom. Free-range parent? Not my mom either. I grew up with a lot of nurture and also abundant freedom to better my nature. So maybe you could say I grew more like a whale calve than a loggerhead hatchling. Loggerheads are totally free-range. They mate. The male swims. The female nests…
-
The ostrich paradox
“We’re surrounded by water.” A former public works boss on Anna Maria Island would offer the remark, responding to inquiries about flooded roads, parking lots and buildings. Without question, the island is surrounded by water, but we can plan and adjust to be more resilient and need to create a stronger community to deal with…
-
Big find, big concern
Scientists identified a new whale species in the Gulf of Mexico. The animal now known as Rice’s whale was formerly known as the Bryde’s whale. The name change doesn’t change the species status — the whale remains endangered. News of the new species broke this winter, with publication of an article in the Marina Mammal…
-
Peace and contemplation
“We remember.” Across the country, religious groups and community organizations, artists and activists, neighbors remembering neighbors, families mourning family are creating COVID-19 memorials. Some memorials display wooden crosses, some contain paper butterflies, others incorporate videos and photographs. White flags surround a church in Greenwich, Connecticut. American flags fill a lawn in Grafton, Massachusetts. Green ribbons…
-
Sunny, hot and still keep your distance
Chipped beef on toast served with a side of Tater Tots, black coffee and tomato juice. I placed that breakfast order at a local cafe March 15, 2020. How can I remember the date for such a breakfast? Because that meal with my wife and parents was the last time I dined inside a restaurant.…
-
Treemendous trees
My family tree? A crabapple, which blossomed with bright purplish flowers and blanketed the backyard with tiny, wormy fruit. The tree stood at my childhood home when we moved into the house in 1971 and remained standing until 1982, the year I graduated high school. A blight of some kind forced my parents to take…
-
Vroom, vroom
Vroom, vroom Shhh, don’t tell Speedy. Speedy is my sparkling blue 2011 Ford Fiesta that I determined years ago I’d drive forever. Yet another car has caught my eye, or rather another type of car has caught my eye. I’m proud to say Speedy is no gas-guzzler, as she gets about 37-40 miles to the…
-
Sustenance in a storm
This month, you’ll read and hear a lot about hurricane readiness. Be prepared with enough supplies to last seven days. Be prepared to evacuate. Be prepared to shelter with a hotelier, family, friends with a hot tub. Be prepared to weather the peculiarities of those with whom you may be confined. Be prepared to drink…
-
You say tomato?
I once savored a $120 tomato. I was eating lunch in my kitchen, not dining at a restaurant with Michelin stars. I calculated the $120 cost based on the yield from an effort to grow a container vegetable garden in Anna Maria. One tomato was salvaged before the nematodes invaded the yard and destroyed an…
-
About bathers, boats, birds and bombs
Cause for concern among conservationists across the country is the federal government’s move to diminish regulations and policies protecting wild lands and waters in its trust. But one of the nation’s first wildlife refuges, a small meandering key about a mile from the north end of Anna Maria Island, likely will remain safeguarded from new…
-
Daily dose of nature
I keep an early schedule, rising before the sun and sometimes falling to sleep before the sun sets. So my day often begins and ends watching the sky change from dark to bright and bright to dark, and listening to birds sing to the start and finality of the day. I’m not paying more attention…
-
Teach them well
A few weeks after the first Earth Day observance occurred April 22, 1970, Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young released the album “Déjà Vu,” which contained the folk rock single, “Teach Your Children.” The song for the times became an anthem for many movements — for peace, for justice, for equality and for the environment. We…
-
Pocketful of good luck
Tucked into my wallet is a lucky charm, a metal tag engraved with “WWED?” — which stands for “what would Elvis do?” I also carry a chestnut that my aunt gave me a few years ago with the suggestion that I rub the nut whenever I wish for good luck. I don’t panic if I…
-
Can we get a witness?
The reward is posted. Now, to get word to the witnesses. The federal government is offering a reward of up to $20,000 for information that leads to a civil penalty or criminal conviction of the person or persons responsible for the deaths of two dolphins on Florida’s Gulf Coast. Biologists with the Florida Fish and…
-
About mighty mangroves
Listen. That’s an alarm sounding on the west end of Perico Island. A Harbour Isle resident is raising concerns about construction work taking place in the mangroves on Perico, as reported in this issue of the newspaper by journalist Kathy Prucnell. But the city of Bradenton apparently isn’t dispatching any aid to the resident’s call.…
-
Wondering about winter weather?
Groundhog Day came and went Feb. 2 without fanfare on Anna Maria Island. Islanders who woke up to chilly temperatures Feb. 1 were confident that a warmer temperature would arrive with high noon’s sunshine. “What do we care how long winter lasts?” one might ask the groundhog. In fact, longer winters in the Northern Hemisphere…
-
Uprooting tree protections
I walked into a Holmes Beach city park searching for one type of memorial and came upon another. Under a leafy canopy at the edge of the park near the 63rd Street boat ramp stands a “Trees of Memory” plaque. The memorial recognizes the people for whom trees have been planted in Holmes Beach. Anna…
-
Study: 4 billion microplastic particles pollute Tampa Bay
New research estimates about 4 billion microplastic particles exist in Tampa Bay. The study from the University of South Florida and Eckerd College in St. Petersburg provides the first measurement of microplastic “abundance and distribution” in surface waters and sediment in the bay. The microplastics, about the size of plankton, can be ingested by birds,…
-
Spouting silliness, seriousness
Waterspouts certainly stir up excitement on Anna Maria Island. To confirm, just ask to see the March 27 analytics for The Islander’s Facebook page. That morning, a waterspout formed in the Gulf of Mexico and moved east, toward the island. Witnesses posted photographs to their social media accounts, as well as to The Islander’s Facebook…
-
Share the road, share a bike
“Too much traffic.” “Just wait until season.” I hear these complaints on Anna Maria Island at least as often as I hear this statement, “What a beautiful sunset.” Local officials — elected and hired — hear the complaints as well, which is why they have called on state, regional and academic transportation planners for advice…
-
Rising sea and coastal living
The big-wheeled trucks rolled over the Anna Maria Island Bridge. Two flatbeds hauling housing lumber and materials crossed the bridge and rolled into Holmes Beach. And just minutes earlier I’d turned up the radio to listen to another report on sea level rise, news about climate change slowing the Gulf Stream, causing more rise in…
-
Parakeets find paradise
Dress up the backyard bird feeder with sunflower seeds and cracked corn — and wait. Parakeets just may flock to the feeder, if squirrels or other critters don’t get there first. The parakeets most likely to visit include the blue-crowned parakeet, the nanday or black-hooded parakeet and the monk, also known as the quaker parrot.…
-
Milkweed for the monarchs
A monarch butterfly fluttered past The Islander’s office window to settle on a hibiscus petal. Monarchs can be found year-round on Anna Maria Island, yet when I see the butterfly, I still think of spring and summer, because that’s when I saw them as a child in Illinois. Sadly, I see fewer monarchs than I…
-
Good trees, good people
An osprey walked into the property appraiser’s office. Could be the opening line of a joke, right? Ospreys don’t own property, they can’t obtain deeds or qualify for homestead exemptions or apply for permits to improve their nests. So we have the responsibility — legally and morally — to safeguard the habitat of the birds…
-
Fish food for thought
Proponents of a plan for the first fish farm in the Gulf of Mexico call the project innovative, sustainable aquaculture. Opponents say the project would pollute the Gulf and raise economic concerns for Florida’s Gulf coast. Any and all could hear the pitches and the protests at a meeting set for Jan. 28 at Mote…
-
Fighting fracking in Florida
Broaden the ban in the bills. That’s the call of the environmental activists, elected officials and business leaders who joined April 4 in a statement supporting a comprehensive fracking ban in Florida. More than 150 officeholders and more than 235 representatives from businesses in the state signed letters calling for a comprehensive ban, according to…
-
Fall migration intensifies
Even before the first snow of the fall fell up north, the big migration began. I attended two parties in October to welcome the first flocks of friends and neighbors arriving from Wisconsin, Illinois, Ohio, New York and other locations already recording below-freezing temps. And, also in late October, I trekked through Perico Island’s Neal…
-
Enviro-lutions for 2019
The driver brought his vehicle so close to my rear bumper the headlights illuminated my dashboard. He tailed at about 2 feet as we traveled west on Manatee Avenue toward the island and then he swerved left, crossing the centerline to pass at about 65 mph. My grandma would have offered a remark like, “He’s…
-
Beachgoing for the birds
From time to time, especially in the spring and summer, I see a kid race across the beach, hoping to send the birds on the sand into flight. And there, crouched on the shore, to capture the moment the birds take flight, I’ll see an adult with a camera. Smile. You’ve encouraged a kid to…
-
Backyard birders to aid scientists
Six blue jays hopped from branch to branch in a pine tree on Magnolia Avenue near the beach. Overhead, three crows circled. Unseen, a cardinal sang a cheery tune. Why might scientists care about these observations made on a recent Saturday morning in Anna Maria? Because the numbers alone might raise questions about the strength…
-
Turkeys taking flight
You can be my witness. I know turkeys fly. But I’m embarrassed to admit that I didn’t come by that knowledge until just a few years ago. I’d lived for years under the false assumption that turkeys have wings but too much weight to use them. And I blame that false assumption on an unforgettable…
-
Spinning wheels, spinning policy
I took a Spin scooter for a spin on a Sunday in July. I had a heck of a good time. And , I promise I posed no menace to society. I’d watched news reports on Tampa’s pilot program for shared electric scooters that indicated abandoned electric scooters were piling up on Tampa sidewalks, that…
-
Signing up to clean up
But why? the kid asked. Because you’re the superhero and someone else is the villain, a woman replied to the child’s question about why they were picking up someone else’s litter at the Kingfish Boat Ramp in Holmes Beach. Her answer made me want to applaud. Why should we clean up messes made by other…
-
Producing public produce
The wagons, hitches and 4H volunteers arrive May 19 to the Bradenton Area Convention Center in Palmetto. No, the rodeo isn’t in town. Neither is the county fair. The Manatee Rare Fruit Tree Sale, presented by the Manatee Rare Fruit Council, takes place 10 a.m.-4 p.m. at the center, 1 Haben Blvd. The first year…
-
No butts left behind
A black-and-white poster of a man — his face wrinkled, his hair greasy, his eyes dull — adorned the wall of the principal’s office in my elementary school in the mid-1970s. “Smoking is very glamorous” read the print on the American Cancer Society PSA depicting a decidedly unglamorous guy. The message was not lost on…
-
Mapping a way into nature
For as long as I can remember, I’ve loved maps. I remember a chain of diners in Illinois that set the tables with paper placemats showing Route 66. My pancakes would go cold while I traced the black line that began at a dot in Chicago and ended at a dot in Santa Monica, California.…
-
Keeping track in 2020
The first gift bag I opened Christmas morning contained an autographed Jack Elka 2020 calendar of the new year. The vivid color photographs celebrate island life. Essential to that life is the natural environment, depicted in Elka’s calendar with bold blue skies, a golden sunrise, a multicolored sunset and the aqua-blue Gulf of Mexico. The…
-
Happy campers pitch a tent
Bug spray? Check. Matches? Check. Sleeping bags? Check. At least two times a year, wife Connie and I pack our hatchback with food staples and supplies and speed off to sleep in the woods amid raccoons, rabbits and other critters common to state parks in southwest Florida. Work schedules allow us to put up the…
-
For the good of the Gulf’s birds
After the Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded in April 2010, local tourism officials worked to convey to the rest of the world that the oil gushing from the well — for 87 days — didn’t taint Anna Maria Island’s shoreline. Islanders also expressed relief that the disaster occurred up north, but we shared common grief…
-
Wild about wild turkeys
The turkey stood on the grass, looking up in the drizzling rain. I stood on my patio, watching and wondering and wowed. What’s a turkey doing in west Manatee County? I didn’t expect another sighting of the bird, but I now see the wild turkey almost daily. The turkey is a “she” now, not an…