Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Manatees and Mermaids – Homosassa Springs FL and Weeki Wachee FL [August 27 and 29, 2017]



Would you mistaken this creature as a mermaid?


Somewhere along the line in both of our lives, someone told us that the myth about mermaids may have originated when sunstruck sailors saw manatees swimming near their vessels.  After observing enormous manatees lumbering through shallow water at the Homosassa Springs Wildlife State Park and after meeting pretend mermaids at Weeki Wachi State Park, we think that you would have to be pretty badly sunstruck to imagine a manatee as a beautiful half woman, half fish.

Their backs look a little like rocks

Yummy romaine lettuce lunch
2 manatees viewed from an underwater viewing area

Manatees weigh over a thousand pounds, their nearest relative is the elephant.  They have a somewhat elongated prehensile nose that they use to grab grasses off of the bottom of the springs, rivers and ocean shoreline.  They eat 100 pounds of greenery a day, so they need to stay in shallow areas where they can graze.  Even though they are huge, they don’t have any body fat, so they migrate to warmer waters to stay comfortable; 75 degree springs in the winter and 80+ degree Gulf of Mexico in the summer.  They move slowly, gently undulating their tails and walking along the bottom using their front flippers.  Manatees are mammals and need to come to the surface to breathe, even when they sleep.  In spite of the fact that they can’t be mistaken for mermaids, they are fascinating animals.  We spent a good part of a previous trip to Florida unsuccessfully looking for manatees, and were happy to finally see them.
Burrowing Owl
Flamingos

Homosassa Springs Wildlife State Park was once a roadside zoo, that got taken over by Florida State Parks in the 1990s.  With one exception, they relocated the exotic animals, and populated the park with animals native to Florida.  The animals that we saw (manatees, bears, panthers, deer, and more) were either born in captivity, orphaned in the wild, or badly injured in the wild so that they would not be able to survive on their own.  They were brought to the park to teach us about the wildlife that we may or may not see outside of the park.  There is a large outdoor water bird area, and it seems that some of the birds have just decided to move in there on their own.  There are colorful flamingos there, which are rarely found in the wild anymore, but which used to be found in South Florida.
Homosassa River just outside the Park, humans like the cool water on a hot day

The park is located around Homosassa Springs, and the manatee area is in the Springs themselves.  During the winter, the resident manatees are put in a holding area in part of the basin, and a barrier is lifted allowing wild manatees to come into the Springs to warm themselves.  The wild animals are not fed and can come and go as they please.
Lu the Hippopotomus

The one exception is a 67 year old hippopotamus named Lu.  He was born in captivity and used in movies, residing at the roadside zoo between gigs.  As he got older, he became more reluctant to act, so he retired here.  He became a favorite with the locals, who petitioned the state governor to let him stay in the park when it transitioned over to being exclusively Florida wildlife.  He was granted Florida citizenship and was allowed to remain (as the only Florida hippo).  Hippos generally only live to be 60 in the wild, so Lu seems to be doing pretty well.
Weeki Wachee mermaids as seen from the underwater ampitheater
Acrobatic mermaids

Ariel and her prince

Several days later we traveled to another former roadside attraction, turned state park, Weeki Wachee Springs State Park.  Since the 1940s, pretty girls with (or without) mermaid tails have done synchronized ballet moves, smiled, danced, lip synced to songs, eaten bananas and drunk soda (non-carbonated) six feet under water while catching breaths of air from hoses laying on the bottom of a stage set at the edge of a very deep Class 1 Spring  that gushes out huge quantities of water (150 million gallons each day).  You view the show from an underwater amphitheater with music piped in.  These young women (and a few men) are marvelous athletes, and the tricks they did (twirling and swirling and making a rotating wheel of 3 mermaids) were pretty astonishing.  We saw them perform a version of the folk tale (wait for it…) The Little Mermaid.  Prior to the show you are greeted by dry merfolk in matching aloha shirts or dresses.  We didn’t realize who they were (even though their pictures were on the wall) until later in our visit.  If you go to Weeki Wachee (which you really should do) and if you want to meet a mermaid in person, this is the time to do it. 
Where you can swim in Weeki Wachee Springs
A mermaid entering the water during a show
Russ practicing his mer-moves

Also, at the state park you can take a 25 minute boat tour of the Weeki Wachee River.  There was an animal show where a naturalist introduced us to a snake, a turtle, a tortoise and a baby alligator.  You can also swim in Buchaneer Bay, a built up swim area in a part of the Springs adjacent to where the mermaids perform.  We watched the merfolk dive in from a platform on the surface for another show.  The Springs are 74.5 degrees warm, and so were very refreshing on a hot Florida summer day.

The Weeki Wachee theater
What fun we had!

Saturday, August 26, 2017

Camping On a Lake Under the Eclipse Totality – Hornsby Hollow Campground, Ten Mile TN [August 18-22, 2017]



We all have eclipse glasses, even the baby

Solar eclipses are miraculous, fascinating and awe inspiring, and the Great American Eclipse on August 21 brought this amazing astronomical experience, in some form, to most of the United States.  We were fortunate to camp on beautiful Watts Bar Lake in Tennessee where the sun was totally eclipsed by the moon for 2 minutes and 38 seconds.  We were especially fortunate because we got to share this unique experience with Leslie, Natalie and little Asher, though Asher (being 2 months old) will likely not remember the experience.
Under the awning and the baby shelter in our campsite by the lake
Out looking at the sun
The young family drove in from Knoxville early in the morning to beat the hordes of eclipse peepers moving south from city hotels to the tiny rural towns an hour away where the eclipse would be “total”.  Highway signs all around Knoxville warned of increased traffic and admonished drivers to plan ahead.  So, they arrived for breakfast, and had plenty of time to set up an eclipse friendly shelter for their young son before the main event started at 1:03.  Our campsite was situated so that we could drag our chairs out from under the awning, don our protective eye wear and look up at the sun to see the eclipse. 
Russ took some great photos of the eclipse


The "diamond ring"
Darkness during totality




"Snake shadows" made by the eclipse through the leaves
At first, when the moon started to move in front of the sun, it looked like a tiny nibble had been taken out the bright yellow sun.  Over the next 1.5 hours, the nibble turned into a bigger bite and it started looking like someone had made a meal out of this yellow cookie.  Gradually the world around us became darker.  The birds and insects got quieter.  The breeze stopped blowing.  It became absolutely still.  Then suddenly, it became dark as the moon moved fully in front of the sun.  Not middle of the night dark...at the end of sunset dark.  Yet, unlike sunset where the colorful sky is in only one direction, the colors here were in all directions.  Then, 2+ minutes later, the moon moved a little further along, and it became bright (even with only a tiny sliver of sun showing) again.  Slowly the sun became more exposed and the world returned to normal.
A delicate sunrise viewed from our front porch
Our campsite from the water
We witnessed this once in a lifetime experience in a delightful campground on a beautiful lake.  We rarely promote campgrounds in this blog, but Hornsby Hollow Campground is so wonderful, that it deserves a mention.  Built on a peninsula, most of the campsites are right on the water’s edge.  We launched our kayaks from our campsite to go for a paddle each day.  A good part of that section of the lake is still undeveloped, so there are fun, undisturbed coves to explore, and birds to watch.  Though it was a holiday weekend in Tennessee, and though the campground was full of campers for the eclipse, the lake never felt over run with boats.  When we got too hot, we swam in the swimming area a few steps across the peninsula from our campsite, or just jumped in the lake off our campsite.  Campground staff were kind, humane and thoughtful, and our experience staying there was effected by that.
Our boats by the water
Happy Us on Watts Bar Lake