Indian Key Kayak Adventure

After a wrong turn and a reroute, we made our way out of a mess of mangroves and headed for Indian Key off of Islamorada in the Florida Keys. In retrospect, navigating our kayaks into a boat channel hadn’t been one of my better ideas.  But to our credit, we paddled very quickly once we discovered our mistake. And there’s nothing like a big sea-going vessel to put a little spring in your stroke.

To reach Indian Key we had to pass our launch point on Islamorada and then paddle beyond, under Highway 1 to the eastern side of the Keys. We glided by sea birds and glimpsed the occasional fish or crab below us, eventually attaining a rocky shoreline where we beached the kayaks.

The little island thrived during the early 1800′s as a wrecking port.  A whole town prospered upon the disastrous encounters of passing ships with an outlying coral reef.  Boat salvaging gave Florida its own version of a gold rush, and for a short time, Indian Key was the Dade County Seat.

Today, Indian Key is a state park dotted with the remains of Jacob Houseman’s boat salvaging empire, nesting ospreys and quiet beaches.

Missing in the Mangroves

Updated from August 1, 2011.

 

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Featured Photo: Don’t Ask Me

Featured Photo: Don’t Ask  (Ronda, Spain)

Don’t ask me the name of this petal-less dried-up flowery weed. Identifying the flora of a foreign country is a little more challenging than determining the plant species in my backyard woods. I only know that I found it to be beautiful, and that I found it on a hillside in Ronda, Spain. That was reason enough to bring it back home with me in this photo.

 

 

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Deceiving Distances

Up, down and across still extend in all the usual directions, but the distance between their visible limits is a bit deceiving at the Grand Canyon. At some points down is a drop of over a mile (the view back up from the canyon floor is one I aim to hike down to someday soon!). Width of the Canyon at any point ranges between 4 and 18 miles. There is no “stone’s throw” across that one!

Hance Rapid (pictured at right from Desert View) is rated an 8 in difficulty on a 1 to 10 scale. This mile long stretch of river features the Canyon’s greatest single drop. Thirty feet doesn’t sound like much in a place where everything else seems to be measured in miles, but in a kayak?  That could be excessively thrilling!

Updated from June 6, 2010.

 

Grand Canyon National Park Things To Do

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