Sunday, February 21, 2016

Wild and Scenic Loxahatchee

Yesterday I think I dropped the best-spent $16 of my trip so far. I rented a kayak for a couple hours here at Jonathan Dickinson State Park and went up the Loxahatchee River and Kitching Creek. I wish I had photos to share, but I won't take my phone/camera out where I'm concerned I can't keep it dry. It was a beautiful 75 degree day, and Kitching Creek is too shallow for motorized vessels, so it was calm and peaceful.

I ended up taking basically the same route at the same pace as two other kayaks and two canoes, and the nine of us had a fun rapport going up and down the creek, testing out the best pathways thru the vegetation and pointing out the wildlife as we spotted it. There were manatees, an alligator sunning itself within what was certainly and thrillingly striking distance of the narrow creek, turtles, several raccoons that had come down to the water's edge to forage (how can they be so adorable out in the wild, yet such a menace too close to the house?), and countless birds of many varieties. The further up the creek, the swifter the water, and it was fun to play around up and down with the current. I had asked a ranger about the advisability of using my own inflatable kayak, and they mentioned there were a lot of sticks to be concerned about in places. Good advice--I wouldn't have had nearly as much fun as I did in the rental.

The day before, I had taken a guided boat tour farther up the Loxahatchee to Trapper Nelson's cabin. Trapper Nelson was at first, and in the end, sort of a recluse, but for many years in the 40's and 50's he made a good living and his reputation as a legend charging a fee to people who wanted to see how the man lived a subsistence life along the river in the wild, selling what he'd trapped and grown, and displaying local exotic animals.

Trapper Nelson's cabin with hurricane log inscripted to the right of the door.
First home the trapper built on the site
The trapper had many display cages, labeled with the types of animals they held.
Sometimes he'd take them out to play and pose for photos with them.
At Jonathan Dickinson State Park, the Hobe Mountain lookout tower
is on the highest elevation point in southern Florida, at 86 feet
How the other half lives.
View from the tower of the InterCoastal Waterway and the Atlantic.
Before going the Jupiter area, I had gone into the Everglades National Park with the intent on a quick stay at the Long Pine Key Campground, which I hadn't been to. However, the campground was full so I made a snap decision to make the long drive down to the Flamingo Campground at the southernmost part of the Florida peninsula. I'd been there last year and it's beautiful and interesting (and horrifically buggy).
Crocodile or gator? This one's a croc, but Flamingo is rare habitat to both.
I don't know why I'm thrilled to see grey blobs in the water,
but a manatee sighting is always great!

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