Showing posts with label Florida. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Florida. Show all posts

Friday, June 16, 2017

Birds of a Feather: Double-Crested Cormorant

Great Blue Heron and Double-Crested Cormorants at NAS Pensacola
On a dreary January day strolling the waterfront at Naval Air Station Pensacola while waiting on my son to check-in for the week, I was treated to a variety of birds going about their daily business.  On one pier, a heron and a bunch of double-crested cormorants were trying to stay dry.  Cormorants have no oil glands to help waterproof their feathers, so they have to air dry their feathers after swimming and are often seen spreading their wings to do so.  The double-crested cormorant is named for the two tufts of feathers on its head during breeding season.

Double-Crested Cormorant in the Eagle Pool at Loess Bluffs NWR
Cormorants are very distinctive swimmers.  Riding very low in the water, their heads and upper backs are the only things visible in the water.  They dive quickly and can stay submerged for up to 70 seconds and reach depths of about 30 feet.  Small fish can be swallowed under water, but most are brought to the surface before they are swallowed.  In addition to fish, they may hunt frogs and salamanders, as well as crayfish and crabs.  Indigestible materials such as bone and crustacean shell are regurgitated in a pellet like those of owls.


I first remember hearing/reading about cormorants on Captain Kangaroo in "The Story About Ping" by Marjorie Flack and illustrated by Kurt Wiese.  It stars Ping the Duck, who lives on a wise-eyed boat with his family and human master on the yellow Yangtze River.  The master lets the ducks out to feed and when they come home, master swats the last duck on the backside.  Ping, being chronically late, decides to hide rather than go home and get his spanking.  The next day he sees a lot of boats, but not the wise-eyed boat.  One of these boats has black fishing birds with hooked beaks.  These are cormorants.  The bird would catch a fish, then return to the fishing boat, where the human master would give them a bit of fish for pay.  (What the book isn't telling you is that the fishermen tie snares around the necks of the cormorants or place rings around their necks to keep them from swallowing big fish - learned that in elementary school).

Ping dove for fish, but surfaced far from the cormorants, and followed a trail of crumbs to a houseboat, where Ping was promptly caught, trapped in a basket to await becoming supper.  SUPPER?!! No wonder we were so screwed up as kids.  I can understand a witch eating bad kids, but cute little ducks?  Yeah, I know.  As an adult, I found out that ducks are delicious.

Anyway, the little boy on the boat felt sorry for Ping, and let him go.  Ping found his way home, and swam towards his family, only to find he was going to be last again.  This time, however, he accepted his swat. Not real clear about the moral of the story, but it made an impression.  I remember this story from almost 50 years ago.  It has real staying power - first published in 1933 and made the National Education Associations "Teachers' Top 100 Books for Children" list in 2007.

Narrated Story of Ping

Double-crested cormorants overwinter in the United States south of Missouri, especially coastal areas.  These birds breed in the north-central United States and south-central Canada.  In the mid-central United States, these birds make stopovers at waterholes during Spring and Fall migrations. 

Range Map of Double-Crested Cormorant

Double-Crested Cormorant Sunning at Loess Bluffs NWR

Tuesday, June 6, 2017

It's Our Thing: The Pelicans of Pensacola

Having traveled over a million miles in this country, I have noticed that many communities have adopted some kind of theme or mascot for branding or advertisements.  A small group of these have gone all out, creating team-building experiences for businesses, community esprit de corps, art in public spaces and tourist traps (I say that affectionately).  It might be cows or bears or even big boots.  As you walk around Pensacola, Florida you notice the abundance of pelicans.  Pelicans on signs, pelicans flying overhead, and pelican statuary.

The brown pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis) is a year round visitor in Florida.  It is warm enough during the winter that they can fish and after nesting season is over, the birds may fly up to North Carolina (they fly as far north as Nova Scotia, but only rarely).  Pelicans then return with the New Yorkers for the winter.  They are at once peculiar and graceful in flight, adopting a posture of head resting on shoulders.  They stay in large groups of both sexes throughout the year and tend to fly in groups.  They may adopt a v-formation, but are usually in a line.


It is a real treat to watch brown pelicans fish.  Flying over the ocean looking for prey, these birds pull their wings back and dive headfirst into the water, knocking fish unconscious with the shock wave generated when they hit the water.  They scoop the fish up in their pouch, return to the surface, dump water out of their pouch, swallow their prey and fly off again.  They have to watch the darned kleptoparasites - gulls, skuas, and frigatebirds have been known to swipe food from pelicans.  Pelicans can become conditioned to approaching humans for a food handout at seaside restaurants and fishing piers.

The GrandPelican - "Press"ton
2 N. Palafox
One of the most successful public art project is CowParade.  A contest to place a design on a fiberglass cow (standing, reclining, or grazing) is held and the winning designs produced and displayed throughout the host cities.  The first CowParade took place in Chicago in 1999.  Over 75 cities, about 5000 cow and 250 million viewers later, CowParade is still going strong.  After the event, cows are auctioned off as fundraisers.  The 2002 Portland event was seen by Pensacola News Journal president and publisher Denise Ivey, who thought that something similar would go over well in Pensacola.  Since Florida is not really associated tightly with cows, they came up with something unique - Pelicans in Paradise.  A Pelican Parade.

Twenty-one pelicans made up the original "flight" from 23 June - 3 July 2004.  The second flight of 15 launched November 15-19 and another flight of five were installed in 2005.  Many more have been added in the years since, totaling about 70 in all.  These fiberglass statues stand about five feet tall, weigh about 70 pounds and stand on bases that are about 450 pounds.  Most of these statues are concentrated into downtown Pensacola, although there are many in far-flung locations around the area.  Finding all of the pelicans has become a kind of scavenger hunt, and several people have created maps with photos of the various pelicans.  If you find a new one, you can add it to the maps along with your pictures.

Semper Fi - The Marine Pelican
N. Palafox and E. Garden
The first group that I saw were those honoring the US Armed Forces at the intersection of North Palafox and East Garden Streets.  It would take some doing to find and see all of the Pelicans on Parade.  Some have been vandalized, damaged or moved through the years.  Recently, the concrete base of many of these statues have been replace with pier pilings, giving them a much more nautical look.  If you visit downtown Pensacola - see how many you can catch!

Getting There 


Downtown Pensacola is most easily approached from the east (Tallahassee) or west (Mobile) from I-10.  The Downtown Pensacola exit (I-110 South) will take you into downtown onto Garden Street.

Waypoint: Latitude: 30.413097 N; Longitude: 87.215351 W

Street Address: N. Palafox Street and E. Garden Street

Further Reading


Do Pensacola Page
Visit Pensacola Page
Roadside Wonders Page


Marine Detail - Bac
Wild Blue - Air Force Pelican
N. Palafox and E. Garden
Wild Blue Back
Blue Angel-1: Navy Pelican
N. Palafox and E. Garden
Blue Angel 1 - Back
Salty - Coast Guard Pelican
N. Palafox and E. Garden
Salty Back

Army Pelican
N. Palafox and E. Garden

Wentworth Museum Pelican
S. Jefferson and E. Zarragossa
Florida Tourism Pelican
213 Palafox Place


Lighthouse Service Pelican
Pensacola Lighthouse

Monday, January 18, 2016

Pensacola Lighthouse

Pensacola Lighthouse from the beach
My Dad was in the Navy when I was growing up, and we moved all over the country in those first years, literally from sea to shining sea.  Some of my first memories are of the sounds of Newport, Rhode Island:  The sirens that sounded nothing like those on Dragnet (but sound like those in England); and the foghorn:  BAAAHHHHHHH-rummmmmmmm; silence;  BAAAHHHHHHH-rummmmmmmm.....  The foghorn works with a lighthouse to mark rocks/reefs/shoals and safe entrance to the harbor.

Lighthouses have always proved interesting to me.  At once utilitarian in function and aesthetic in design.  The sweeping beam that shows this navigational point to mariners for miles out to sea.  The earliest lighthouses were platforms upon which fires were built and lit at night.  The Argand lamp brought a smokeless light that could be placed in an enclosed tower, powered by whale oil.  Thorium lantern mantles provided a much brighter source of light.  Steam driven magnetos allowed electricity to be used to power carbon arc lamps.  The sun valve (which turned off gas flow during the day) and associated technology allowed the use of gas as a light source, until electric light technology became the standard.  Lights were rotated using multiple light sources and a clockwork system.  If the clockwork system failed, the works had to be turned by hand.

The first Pensacola Lighthouses



View next to Carriage House
The current Pensacola Lighthouse is the third example of a navigational light placed near this point.  The first Pensacola Light was a lightship, the Aurora Borealis, and was placed on the harbor side of Santa Rosa Island.  Although protected from the rough sea, it was often difficult to see from outside of the bay.

The second lighthouse was a 40 foot tower built on a 40 foot bluff at the mouth of the harbor, just west of Fort Barrancas and about a half mile east of the current lighthouse.  This building was entirely white and had 10 whale oil lamps in two clusters of five rotated by a clockwork and strengthened by a 14-inch reflector. An advantage of this light was that ships could follow the beam to enter the harbor, which was not possible with the placement of the light ship.  Despite the higher position, views of the  tower could still be blocked by trees close to the tower and those on Santa Rosa Island.  This first light would appear very stocky, 30 feet wide at the base, 15 feet wide at the top and 40 feet tall.

The third and current lighthouse

Lamp and lens - see the rainbow?
The current lighthouse was built in 1858 on the north side of the harbor entrance and entered service on 01 January 1859.  This tower is 150 feet tall on the side of a 40 foot bluff currently located on Naval Air Station Pensacola.  The light is 190 feet above sea level, which provides a considerable boost in visibility distance.  The lighthouse placement allows it to serve as the rear range light for the harbor entrance.  Range lights work in pairs, front and rear.  The rear light is always placed higher than the front light.  When the two lights form a vertical pair, the observer is on the navigation line.  If the front appears to the left of the rear, then the observer is right of the range line; if the front appears to the right of the rear, then the observer is left of range line.

Lens detail
The first lens for this light was a first order Fresnel lens.  These lenses had a large aperture and short focal length, this lens allows for more light to be collected from oblique sources.  These lights project a beam over a much broader distance.  The lens is divided into concentric annular sections.  A first order lens has a focal length of 920 mm and height of 2.59 meters.

When the US Civil War broke out in 1861, the harbor and the adjoining Navy Yard became a military target.  Union forces withdrew from Fort Barrancas and Fort McRee to Fort Pickens on Santa Rosa Island, leaving most of the harbor defenses and the Navy Yard in Confederate hands.  An artillery battle between Confederates in Ft. Barrancas and Ft. McRee on Perdido Key and the Union forces in Ft. Pickens on Santa Rosa Island broke out on 22 November 1861.  Shore batteries around the lighthouse became targets for Ft. Pickens.  During this time, the tower suffered about 6 hits.  Fortunately, none of the damage threatened the structural integrity of the tower. The Confederates evacuated Pensacola in May 1862. When Union forces came back to the tower, they found that the Confederates took the Fresnel lens with them.  On 20 December 1862, Union forces placed a fourth-order Fresnel lens in the tower, putting the tower back into service.

Entrance to Pensacola Bay
At the end of the war, the original Fresnel lens was recovered and put back into place in 1869.  The lightkeeper's residence was also built in 1869.  The daymark (paint scheme) of the tower was originally completely white, making it difficult to distinguish against a cloudy sky.  During the 1869 upgrades, the daymark was changed so that the lower third of the tower was left white to contrast it with nearby trees and the upper two-thirds of the tower was painted black to stand out against the sky. Electricity was installed in the light tower in 1939, which eliminated the need to rewind the clockwork by hand every 4 1/2 hours.

Fort Pickens on Santa Rosa Island
The light signature of this lighthouse is one white flash every 20 seconds.  The beam is very strong, being visible for 27 miles out to sea.  The lens continues to rotate during the day, even though the light is not powered.  This is necessary because the lens can focus a beam of light onto the wall of the lighthouse, creating a spot hot enough to damage the metal and masonry of the light room.  If the lighthouse loses electricity, the lens has to be moved by hand every few minutes to prevent this.

Stairs going down --- gives me the willies
The first lighthouse tower was constructed under the supervision of the Department of Treasury's Lighthouse Establishment (1791-1851).  The US Lighthouse Board of the Department of Treasury (1852-1910) was in charge during the construction of the second tower.  A more civilian Lighthouse Service within the Department of Commerce.  The Lighthouse Service was merged with the US Coast Guard in 1939 and light keepers were able to choose to remain civilians or join the Coast Guard.  The last civilian lightkeeper at Pensacola retired in 1953.  The Coast Guard operated the lighthouse from that point.  Automation reduced staffing needs in 1965.

End of Santa Rosa Island
The lighthouse was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.  By the 1980s, the site was in disrepair and a push to dismantle the outbuildings and perhaps the tower was increasing. The tower was seen as a potential hazard to jets flying out of NAS Pensacola.   Push-back from a preservation movement saved the Keeper's House and outbuildings from destruction.  In 1996, Coast Guard Auxiliary 17 started conducting tours of the lighthouse.  These were discontinued in 2007 due to liability concerns, and the grounds closed to the public.  The spiral staircase can be treacherous, with a railing only on the outside edge of the staircase.  The inside edge is unlined.  During the 177 stair climb, downstairs traffic has the right of way.  It is best for upstairs traffic to move toward the inside and hold onto a step at about eye-level, unless you can step into one of the deep window wells to let traffic pass.

In 2008, the Coast Guard allowed tours to resume under the supervision of the Pensacola Lighthouse Association.  Renovations continue on site.  The guide at the top of the tower was very well informed and helpful.  A small entry fee is charged to the site: $6.00 per adult when we went there.  The site is becoming increasingly popular, and there are a variety of tours with limited openings available at night, during Blue Angels practices and for Ghost tours.  Looking for a good place to propose?  This might be it.  Check the beach to see if someone has stomped out your message already, might save you some time and effort.

Getting There


The Pensacola Lighthouse is on the grounds of Naval Air Station Pensacola.  You will be required to present a valid picture ID for every adult in the vehicle and perhaps allow a search of the vehicle.  Have the IDs ready when you pull up to the gate.  The way is well marked, just follow the signs.  It is easy to see from the Museum of Naval Aviation.

Street Address: 2081 Radford Blvd, Pensacola, FL 32508

Waypoint: Latitude 30.3461433 degrees N ; Longitude 87.3104028 degrees W

Further Reading:

Pensacola Lighthouse and Museum


More views from the top


Lens detail

Fort McRee eroding into sea at end of Perdido Key


Above the airfield water tower

Carriage House - visitors center

Tip of Perdido Key


The kids at the top