June 17 - Shark Valley
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Day Two began as warm and hazy as we loaded our bus with suitcases, backpacks and duffel bags. After checking out of the Hampton Inn, we traveled across the Tamiami Trail (Hwy 41) to another section of the Everglades. Memories of my many past experiences flashed through my mind as we drove the well traveled route westward. I remember the narrow road of 1968 and 1969, dotted with Seminole and Miccosukee villages, the water-filled "river of grass" and the many canals that were built by the Army Corps of Engineers draining the homes of alligators, kites and ibises for agriculture and development. And then in the '90s when our family returned to see many of those villages replaced by tourist traps and air boat rentals as well as the birth of a Seminole casino industry. The road is much wider now, in 2011 and road construction is all over. I guess to accommodate the tourists, the commuters to workplaces, the housing developments and CVSs and Walgreens that seem to be everywhere. The canals did their job well...the watery saw grass is brown and the canals are low on water. Emily R was counting alligators, David was identifying birds, Susan would occasionally point out wildlife to some of the interested kids. Some of them were sleeping and others just didn't seem to care. Still, the anticipation of our first full day in Florida was there.
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"There are no sharks in Shark Valley" are the words printed in our journal. The valley gets it's name from the Shark River S
lough, an area of water that runs through this part of Everglades National Park. Cutting the slough in half is a 15 mile long trail that can be hiked, biked or experienced by riding a tram. With 38 middle school kids we would be riding the tram. After we met Julio, our "tour guide / educator" the kids were issued binoculars and we headed out for the 90 minute journey to the observation tower. Along the way Julio pointed out different habitats; the slough itself, the saw grass prairies, the cypress hammocks, hammocks of sweet bay magnolia and swamp willow. Birding was our primary goal here and we weren't disappointed. Birds of prey included ospreys and red-shouldered hawks (but no Everglades kite). Great blue herons, great and snowy egrets, Louisiana and green herons, red-winged blackbirds and boat-tailed grackles were abundant. Near the visitors center we saw anhingas (including one in a tree nest), purple gallinules, moorhens, a limpkin and others.
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Somebody may have kept count of all the alligators we saw as well, but I don't know that number. All I can say is that they were very abundant, ranging from small newborns (near the conduits that took water from one side of the road to the other) to 11 feet or more (sunning in dry areas or swimming in wet ones). We also saw two species of turtles: Yellow-bellied sliders and Florida soft-shelled (at least one of these was preparing to lay eggs). Insects were also abundant; mosquitoes from time-to-time and deer flies. But the dry weather and lack of rainfall made this a very enjoyable experience. We also saw a few more lubber grasshoppers, an occasional swallowtail, Gulf fritallaries and the queen butterfly. The latter mimicked the monarch and was so abundant that some bushes had 5 or 6 clustering together on nectar producing blossoms.
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On one stop most of the students, going barefoot, followed Julio through a dry mat of periphyton. Maddie was the "guinea pig" selected to hold a large clump of the algal colony as he explained the importance of these organisms to the health of the Everglades and the organisms that call it their home. Later we would read and write in our journals about periphyton.
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At the half-way point we embarked once again to climb the observation tower, look at much of the same, read the story of the Miccosukee and Seminole people that still inhabit much of the Everglades and walk a nearby borrow pit where we found that nesting Florida softshell turtle. The trip back to the visitor's center did not include any stops so it went pretty quick. After a visit to the gift shop we boarded the bus and headed east for the Keys.