Friday, November 01, 2013
This morning we awoke to the sound of rain on the RV. After breakfast, I took the garbage out to
the dumpster and discovered the humidity was quite high. This is the first day in over a week that the
wind has died down. Since Jim was hoping
to take the snorkel tour to Looe Key from Bahia Honda State Park, we were glad
for the calmness of the ocean and Gulf.
We took our bikes with us to Bahia Honda State Park. We arrived and checked in for the snorkel
trip. Weather was still calm. We rode bikes around the State Park and
walked up to the Henry
Flagler Bridge . Flagler was a big name in the Keys as he put
in a railroad all the way to Key West years
before there was a road to drive to Key
West . In the
photos, you will notice a gap in the bridge.
The hurricane of 1935 shut down the railroad and it was never
rebuilt. The gap is not from the storm,
it is a gap to allow taller ships to sail through. The uniqueness of this
bridge is that there is a road for cars atop the railroad portion.
After our picnic lunch, it was time to board the snorkel
trip. The State Park has a very large
pontoon boat which serves as the snorkel boat.
The boat goes about 18 to 20 mph and it takes about 35 minutes from the
bridge to the reef at Looe Key The captain says it
is 8.35 miles.
Read more about Looe Key at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Looe_Key
Also, have a look at the under water webcams maintained by TEENS4Oceans at:
www.teens4oceans.org
If you look under webcams, you will find Bahia Honda State Park
We pulled up to the anchor buoy at the reef and almost
everyone on board exclaimed how clear the water was and how you can see corals
that are 40 feet deep. I must say, this
was the best snorkel I have done except for the snorkel days in the South
Pacific. There were thousands of
tropical fish. Schools and schools. All sorts of corals. The only disappointment would be the
bleaching of the corals. The State Park
allows 1-1/2 hours in the water and I used every minute of it. I was the second
one in the water and the last one out when the whistle was blown. No one made fun of my shorty fins after the
trip. You see, most people use those
huge scuba fins. They get tired really
quickly, and they are awkward. If you’ve
gone to scuba school, you learn to train in scuba fins to get good with them
and scuba divers need big fins because they have all that gear.
You will have to wait for photos… Or maybe I’ll get a few posted here and add
some more later.
Back at the dock at 4:30 pm…. Linda and I had snack, then rode our bikes
to the other end of the park. We really
liked the campgrounds and beaches. You
have to book the campgrounds on the first available day which is exactly at 12:01
am 11 months before your reservation request.
All sites are booked within minutes after midnight. The only other way to get a camping spot is
to be lucky to get a cancellation or take on a volunteer position.
Sunset at 6:41 pm. We
watched another sunset and took more sunset photos. This time, we have the Flagler Bridge
in the scene.
At the RV Homebase, we fired up the Weber grill and cooked
our salmon on a cedar plank. It was
delicious.
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