San Rafael Valley, AZ ~~ Photo by Bill Haas

Saturday, June 13, 2009

FLOWERS AND BEACHES

FLORIDA FLORA
As I explore unfamiliar areas in different seasons and in changing elevations, I love finding and photographing new and unfamiliar flower varieties. Then the rest of the fun is throwing myself into regional flower guides in an attempt to identify the blooms. Sometimes no matter how many references I consult, I still come up empty handed. I refer to those unidentifiables as "unknowns"..."UNKS" for short.  If you know what they are, please email me.  I don't like having UNKS!
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IN THE GARDENS
Chenille
Painted Leaf  Flower
The red part is the "painted leaf"; the tiny greenish cluster in the center is the flower; its milk is poisonous.  Whew!  Glad to know that before I put any in my coffee!
Jamaica Caper Tree
Common Hibiscus, Uncommon Color
Plumeria
Royal Poinciana Tree
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ALONG THE ROADSIDES
Bay Lobelia
Common Tickseed
Garden Phlox
Phlox "gardens" were ubiquitous along the roads, in every imaginable shade of pink, red and purple...acres upon acres of them.
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IN EVERGLADES NATIONAL PARK
Sweet Bay Magnolia
Castor Bean
Glades Morning Glory
Swamp Lilly (before)
Swamp Lilly (after)
Saltmarsh Fleabane (flowers are nondescript, but the leaves have a delicious, pungent camphor-like aroma)
Wild Petunia
Primrose Willow
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The UNKS!
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Strangler Fig  -- sound ominous?  Well, it should!  It starts out as a vine-like shrub, then watch out!  It eventually strangles its host, in this case a sweet, unsuspecting Ficus!  They can grow to 65' and produce a fig-like fruit.  This is one I found on Captiva Island; I found another in the Everglades.  It didn't play nice either!

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THE BEACHES

St. Joseph Peninsula
Sanibel and Captiva Islands
Visiting Sanibel and Captiva Islands for the shelling has been on my bucket list since the first wanderlust bug bit me.   Besides, shells don't weigh nearly as much as rocks!
The shelling was only ho-hum, but it was fun to see how the other half makes do in these hard times!  This is a home, not a hotel!
Sombrero Beach (Marathon, The Keys) had pink, embossed sidewalks.  Only in Florida!
Bajia Honda State Park
I personally think Florida's beaches are superior to California's for swimming, sunning and sand castle building.  But I like California's orange juice better!

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

FLORIDA'S UNDERSEA RAINFOREST

Flying in and out of the Miami Airport had hitherto been my only Florida experience.  I have spent countless vacations snorkeling all over the Bahamas, Hawaii and both coasts of Mexico.  So it's no surprise that my primary goal while visiting Florida was to swim in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, the location of the world's third largest coral reef.  Not only does the warm, undulating ocean water soothe me and take me to nether regions not accessible when my feet are firmly planted on the ground, but swaying and bobbing in a vibrantly colored underwater garden with a kaleidoscope of brilliant little jewels flitting around me, is one of my most cherished pursuits. When I enter this submerged, tranquil, magical kingdom it is with great anticipation that awakens in me an even greater appreciation of the world that surrounds us.
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Some cap'ns and dive masters are more fun than others. These guys on the John Pennecamp Coral Reef State Park's, "Encounter" were my faves:  Rick and Robert.

Snorkeling Florida's reef requires a boat to reach it, and most accessible sections are at least five miles, and a 45-60 minute boat ride, from the parks.  I had allotted the entire month of May to explore this very interesting state and ended up spending more than two weeks in the Keys.  Who knows when I'd be able to return to this unique underwater wonderland.

An assortment of mooring buoys have been sunk in sand here and there along the reef (that extends from Miami to Dry Tortugas) to facilitate anchorage of dive boats. Boats aren't REQUIRED to use the buoys, but if they don't there are strict guidelines they must follow: they MUST anchor in sand so that the anchor, chain and line does not come in contact with the coral or sea grass beds.  We were constantly admonished not to stand up or touch the coral.  The reef is passionately protected, and even the lightest touch by hands or equipment kills sensitive polyps.  In this picture the light colored ocean has a sandy bottom, the dark areas are sea grass meadows.  The reef is not visible in this photo. 

Photographic notes:  Those photos taken underwater were taken with a very chintzy $12.00 instamatic-style re-usable camera in a leak-proof housing.  I tried both 400 and 800 ASA Kodak film (made no difference), fiddled with most of the photos to adjust the prevalent bluish tint, and cropped almost all of them. They still came out grainy, fuzzy or out of focus.  And you certainly won't see any detail at all unless you click on the photos to enlarge them. Absolutely none of these photos come anywhere near accurately representing life on this marvelous reef; they simply reflect another joyful experience in Florida!  

Don't walk on the deck in your fins; sit on the steps to put them on. The water's warm and inviting; the pool's open; JUMP IN!
Schooling Silversides -- more like a silver blizzard than a "school"!


Most of the fish were familiar to me because they are indigenous to other warm-water tropical regions. But here in Florida, for the first time, I spotted bright orange sponges and a ribbon-like green eel slithering back to its hiding place, swam with several different varieties of Sharks, an enormous Goliath Grouper and sleek silver Barracuda. Every trip to a different part of the reef, was to visit a fresh coral garden richly alive with delicate corals I'd never seen before, in water unimaginably clear.


There are colonies of hard corals that look like rocks, such as brain, finger and staghorn coral and the rare pillar coral; and soft corals and Gorgonians, that look like feathers, plumes and fans, that sway with the current.  So many soft corals resemble plants, it's hard to believe they are living animals.




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AAAAK!  Watch out for Very Scary Creatures in the Deep Blue Depths!




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The OTHER Aquarium...

...where one can view details of the coral polyps up close, without color distortion, because they were taken with a REAL camera!