A Beach All Our Own

Took a boat trip to the lagoon and explored one of the Spoil Islands.

A boating trip south to the lagoon brought us to an island we had all to ourselves. My daughter came for a visit in November and we took a boat ride, with my son, to explore the islands.

If you Google Florida’s spoil islands, the links that come up have mostly to do with the islands made further south. Those islands have camping and are kept up for visitor. We were in the northern tip of the lagoon. In general the “spoil” islands were mostly manmade by dredging the ICW canal so large ships could pass through. The coquina rock chunks were piled up to create islands which are now filled with palm trees and vegetation. This is my understanding.

This area is very shallow, and you can only access these islands with a boat that has a low draft. We are not used to dealing with “rocks” and had to be careful as we approached the shore. These coquina rocks are made up of shells and sediment that are all tightly compacted.

A Whelk Unearthed

On the rocky beach side of this island I came across the pointed end of this whelk sticking up out of the sand. When I pulled, the smooth, worn, knobbed whelk shell came up.

Beach Erosion, From Hurricane Ian?

Hurricane Ian passed over this area the end of September (2022) and I am guessing that the erosion seen here was due to that storm. Hurricane Nicole didn’t come until November 10th, which was only a few days after this trip. Nicole was worse for the coast, so I’m sure more of this island beach was washed away. Hope we can go back soon. The wind and waves from hurricanes can wash up – or wash away to expose – some interesting things. In Daytona Beach Shores they are excavating a shipwreck that has appeared along the beach, and is believed to be from the 1800s.

Windy days have kept us off the water – that, and the fact that it’s just a busy time of year. I took a short video for the full effect of being on this beach.

Yes, many of the shells had hermit crabs inside, but the big whelks did not.

The water was still quite warm – around 78 degrees – and my daughter took a swim and did some snorkeling. I saw stingrays hiding in that grass and it kept me on dry land!

We spent a few hours walking around the beach area, then boated to another island and headed home. hadn’t seen my daughter in nearly two years, so it was a really nice week with her. The day she arrived we (along with my son) headed to Flagler Ave. for an evening beach walk. Every day was spent on or in the water!

I’ll be writing more about the shells we found here on my next post.

More Stories From the Blog

Our Camping Trip to Silver Springs

Our first trip to stay at Silver Springs Campground was a lot of fun. This is a beautiful spot to camp, and is just down the…

A Scary Walk in the Lagoon Where Alligators Call Home

A few weeks ago my son and I decided to try out a new boat launch down on Merritt Island. We put in at the Biolab boat ramp, which has a good size parking lot and one small ramp. The trouble was that the ramp is in shallow water, with a marked access out to the Lagoon which was also shallow with lots of grass.

The map below is something I made at Google My Maps, which allows me to show one of their maps on my blog with attribution back to their site.    This is how you are suppose to use a Google map.  I didn’t do a very good job, but clicking each icon will tell you what I have marked.

Map of Mosquito Lagoon Area We Traveled

We put the boat in, to begin our boating day, on the East side of Mosquito Lagoon (blue marker).  Then traveled north and east through the Haulover Canal (green marker). Boat ramps charge $10 on Merritt Island. I have yet to see a really good boat ramp in the area.

Haulover canal bridge
Haulover Canal bridge, heading to the West side of Mosquito Lagoon.

It was a beautiful day as we started out and we were looking for some of the Spoil Islands. That is not marked on my map. We headed further south and then backtracked to the railroad bridge. Our deserted island quest fizzled out, for various reasons, at the railroad bridge we veered right and stopped at a beach. This was a shallow area, so I walked in the knee-high water looking for shells while my son went a bit offshore to fish.

My goal was to find some awesome mollusks and maybe even a cool empty seashell.  I had my iPhone and did find some cool shells (another post is coming about that).

As I walked over toward, what looked like, a dark water hole (called Roach Hole on the map), I saw a skull (photo below). As I was getting this photo, I wondered what type of animal it could be.  The sun must have baked my brain because my first thought was “deer”.  I was still in my New England frame of mind, because this is obviously NOT a deer skull.  It is very obviously an alligator skull.  I didn’t give it much thought – I wanted seashells.

animal skull
Animal skull – Gator!

I continued shuffling through the shallow water, which was murky as the depth increased, in search of seashells.  The bottom was muddy and this was obviously a place where few people ever ventured.

The only excuse I can make for my complete ignorance of the fact that alligators lived there is that I have never beach-combed in this area… but… it is part of the Intracoastal Waterway system where I usually beach comb. Except, usually we are far north of the Lagoon area, where I have never seen a gator, nor have I ever heard of one being spotted.

Alligators are known to live around the Kennedy Space Center, Mosquito Lagoon waters, which is where we were, but on the west side. ……. I simply forgot about that.  This water is not as salty as the water in the northern Indian River.  To the North, ocean tides move the water level, whereas the Lagoon water level does not move according to the tides.  I believe that gators prefer less salty water, which would explain this.

Screen Shot 2018-04-19 at 9.55.28 AM

The photo above was taken near my yellow map marker.  Water was flowing toward me out of that dark blue lagoon.  In fact, it was looked more black than blue.  I shudder to think that I actually walked over that berm of sand to check out the water on the other side!  

Alligators Are The Creepiest of Florida’s Wildlife

It wasn’t until later when I began reviewing my photos and saw that skull photo again that I realized I had been strolling casually through water that most likely held gators.  You don’t have to see them to know they are there.  Alligators will sit on the murky water bottom and wait for their next meal to come along.  When they bite, they mean business.  They will drag their prey underwater and roll until it drowns.  They are creepy creatures.

The recent story of the woman who died after a gator pulled her into the water is the type of thing I think about whenever I am near fresh water in Florida.  As the story says, it’s rare, but I can recall many such stories over the years.  They mainly target small prey such as children and dogs that are near the edge of the water.  Or bite when swimmers invade their territory.

Nearly every bit of freshwater in Florida contains alligators.  My son and I just saw a small one alongside the highway, Route 528, on our way home from the airport.  We’ve had a lot of rain so the ditches were full. Although Florida is mainly a swamp, I would not purposely live near any freshwater pond or lake.  And I would never swim in one!

Alligator facts you should know:  They are fast.  They may sit still on riverbanks and look lazy and complacent, but they can move when they decide to.  According to Jack Hanna, who commented at the end of this post, which was written after the boy was killed by a gator at Disney World, a gator can outrun a human over a short distance – 20 feet.

Once a gator chomps down on something he is not willing to let go.  They migrate on land and in water.  They mostly attack in and around water, but can be encountered anywhere.

By the way, in my opinion, Disney was completely at fault here.  Visitors cannot be expected to know about Florida’s fresh water dangers, but those who run Disney World would.  It’s all about appearance.  A fence, or warning sign, would have sullied the “La-la land” atmosphere, but would have kept visitors away from the water.

Hiking Trail at the Lagoon

While creating my map for this page, I discovered a hiking trail located just to the north of where my story takes place.  The Alan Cruickshank Memorial Trail – is not far from where we docked the boat.  You can see it on my map above (purple hiking man icon).  The National Park Planner site has a blog post about this Florida hike (link above) with great photos (including the Roseate Spoonbill).

Personally, I can’t see any reason to hike in Florida.  First of all, it’s often very hot and muggy.  Secondly, alligators are everywhere, not to mention snakes and lots of bugs.  The writer and photographer, Steve Marcos, did his hike in March and he did see one alligator.  I’m betting there were a lot more he didn’t see.

 

Manatees Playing at Haulover Boat Ramp

manatees haulover canal
Manatees at Haulover Canal

Nick and I took a ride over to the Mims and Titusville area the other day and one place we stopped was the Haulover Canal boat ramp. It’s a much smaller place than I thought, with only one ramp, but a nice trailer parking area. We walked out on the metal dock and that is where we watched the manatees play.

It was hot so we didn’t stay long, but the small bay area, where the boats launch and dock, was full of manatees. The water is brown and murky (brackish) but the manatees could be seen breaking the surface, splashing and rolling around. I got a short 30 second video – it was too bright for me to easily see what I was filming.  It was also really hot – did I say that?

The boats go very slow in this little bay, so the manatees just move out of the way when they hear the motors. We drove over the bridge and went to the eastern side of the canal where there is a “Manatee Watching Deck” and didn’t see any manatees there. The boat dock was the best place to see them. (The observation area had port-o-potties, fyi.)

The Haulover Canal is a channel for boats to go between the Indian River, on the west, and Mosquito Lagoon, to the east. Both are wide open bodies of water. The canal is part of the Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge. On the opposite side from the boat launching area is a long dirt road. We traveled down to the end and saw cars stopped and little camps set up where people were fishing along the canal. At the end was an area to put in canoes and kayaks. This is the view from the end of that road which looks out into the Indian River lagoon, which is a huge area.

Haulover canal, Indian river lagoon
Indian River Lagoon

This is an aerial view of the area we visited. Click the picture below which takes you to the public boat ramp page.

aerial view of haulover canal
Aerial view of this area – click to view the page at Florida Fish and Wildlife public boat ramp finder

I can’t wait to have a boat so we can check out this area from the water!