The Legacy Institute of Nature and Culture (LINC) in coordination with Florida Forever is closing in on finalizing the design of next year’s calendar. If you don’t remember, the Florida Forever Conservation Photography Calendar is an annual project that involves 12 of the state’s top nature photographers that use their images to promote conservation. We are trying to decide on the cover image for next year’s calendar and we could use your help. Your vote counts, so please help us and let us know which one you would like to see on the cover of the 2012 calendar. Thanks!
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Restore Florida Bay
Moonlit Stage
One of the best shows to see down here in the Keys is the full moon rising over the ocean. Yesterday, however, was the first time I saw it accompanied by a soundtrack. Rob Clift from EcoMariner, in coordination with KeystoPeace, hosted a drum circle of talented percussionists and musicians at Coconut Cove. If you’ve seen Swamp Stomp, then you know how much I love to make music outside. We all brought our favorite instruments and played for two hours on the best stage in the Keys. I can’t wait for next month!
Returning the Favor
It’s easy to enjoy Florida Bay and Everglades. The large expanses of shallow water and open space make this area critical for fisheries and the livelihoods of countless people. There’s always a challenge, however, with managing such vast landscapes and protecting them from misuse. The Fish and Wildlife Commission as well as park officials, do a great job enforcing laws and holding citizens accountable for their actions. However, there are far too many boat ramps and backcountry hideouts to stay vigilant all the time. Often times, the burden falls upon the shoulders of individuals to step up and do their part in protecting what they have come to love. When people pool their efforts together, there’s so much you can accomplish.
Last Sunday 35 people from the Keys to Homestead met at the Card Sound boat ramp to clean up the basin. This area is particularly abundant with stone crabs, blue crabs, and lobsters which attract trappers in the open season. When the season closes, however, the unmarked crab traps are often forgotten about or left to harvest illegally throughout the year. Derelict crab traps are a huge problem in the area as they pose major threats to terrapin, fish, and crabs that continue to enter the traps. After four hours, with the help of the airboat community, concerned boaters, and volunteers from Audubon we managed to pull out 230 traps. Not to mention various articles of trash including 8 tires, a TV, buckets, PVC pipes, a machete, and other items. It was a good day for the Everglades and a proud day for everyone that got to pitch in and protect something they love.
Mangroves
I’ve been obsessing over mangroves lately. They are the unyielding force of the Everglades. Each of them with a unique footprint and a character all their own. Constantly bending and stretching to reach fertile ground, they posses a certain ingenuity, an intelligence, even.
Mangroves are tricky subjects to photograph, though. Their waxy leaves reflect harsh light in the afternoons and around sunset, even the slightest wind will move their outstretched branches during long exposures.
One of the more bizarre landscapes I’ve seen was right at the end of the dry season at the top of Florida Bay. For a week, North winds pushed water into the mangrove swamps along Taylor River. The ground, still parched from the months without water, stayed defiantly cracked and broken regardless of the water that now filled the area. I’d been to this place dozens of times and never seen it this way.
"Swept Away"
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| Swept Away – Florida Bay |
Honduras
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| Me and Simon Olaleye with Jader and Zahid in Las Mangas, Honduras photo by Mari Whilkolm 2008 |
I left Honduras three years ago and it broke my heart. The kids I taught were so far along in their learning and were just coming of age. I had never learned community in the way they showed me community and leaving my small river village of Las Mangas after two years was one of the hardest things I’ve ever done.
Over the years I’ve kept Las Mangas and the kids close but only so far as phone calls, facebook, and skype allowed. From their first encounters with a mouse and keyboard, they’ve come a long way. Now, I get monthly updates from my top photographers who send me Photoshopped images over email. I’m so proud and impressed with the way they continue to grow and yet saddened I can’t be there to see it. Last month my schedule cleared up enough to spend a week in Honduras with my old students and help Guaruma (the non-profit that employed me) with its mission. Mostly, however, I went to reaffirm my roots.
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| Camilo Lopez enjoying one of the many water holes of his community |
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| School children walk by a stand of palms in Las Mangas, Honduras |
Las Mangas is my Macondo. Instead of the Buendia family, the Lobos are the central social and genetic pillar of the village as everyone seems to have an uncle, cousin, or brother within the family. The dirt road winding up the Cangrejal River valley cuts through several villages just like this one, but Las Mangas is unique. The streets are clean, the houses are beautifully adorned with wildflowers, and primary tropical forest still remains on both sides of the class five river. While the people struggle just to put rice and beans on their plates you would have to pry the indomitable smiles off their faces to find any bit of shame or remorse underneath. If Las Mangas breeds anything as successfully as more Lobos, it’s pride.
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| This photo would be impossible in the wet season when the Cangrejal River climbs its banks as surges towards the Caribbean |
Nestled between two national parks, the village is an ecological hotspot for insects, venomous reptiles, birds, amphibians, and several rare or endangered mammals. Precious hardwoods make up the canopy and provide ample habitat for diverse wildlife. Potable water rushes down the mountains through granite-laden creeks giving way to lush tropical life in every direction. But Las Mangas as well as the other communities along the watershed are not safe from the ever-growing needs of the population.
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| Camilo Lopez climbs the vines next to a large hardwood in the protected area of the forest |
As you might infer, there is quite a bit of exploitation that goes on along the Cangrejal River. Large tracts of dense forests are slashed and burned to make room for black beans and other crops. Jaguars have been nearly extirpated from the region as well as iguanas, monkeys, deer, and tapir. The dollar speaks, as they say, and in a bad economy there is no taboo when it comes to putting food on the table.
Growing up Mangas means a barefoot youth spent boulder hopping, waterfall climbing, and the reassuring ever-flowing sound of water. It’s the same freshwater that balances the estuaries along the coast, attracting tourists from all over the world. The same freshwater that keeps tidal ocean flows from rushing into the aquifers and contaminating the water supply. It’s the same freshwater that gives life to endemic fish and makes the Cangrejal River so unique. But there’s another plan for this water.
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| The Cangrejal River overlooked by Pico Bonito National Park |
Energy companies backed by contractors, government officials, and teams of engineers have determined the mighty torrent of the Cangrejal is the perfect place for a hydroelectric dam. The communities are confused because while promised employment, they would be placing the fate of their natural heritage in an on/off valve.
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| This water line is what attracts energy companies to the region. The promise of a raging river in the wet season may provide enough energy to power the city of La Ceiba |
It seems no matter where I go, water management is a prevailing force. In the Everglades, we’re shamefully backpedaling because a lot of money was to be made by controlling water. I would hate for the same regret to fall upon Las Mangas and the families of the Cangrejal River.
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| Orlin Murillo, past winner of the NANPA high school photography scholarship frequents the river in hopes of communicating the beauty of the watershed |
Over the seven days I spent in Las Mangas I thought about water constantly. I thought about how it sculpts our landscapes as it does our cultures. I thought about the millions of artists and poets who spent lifetimes trying to give it a voice. And regretfully I thought about our slow disconnect from it, much as we have disconnected from what we eat. I don’t claim to know all the benefits or risks of building a hydroelectric dam. Maybe in the long run more jobs for the citizens of the river and “cleaner” energy for the people of La Ceiba will be worth the trouble. What I do know, however, is that the Cangrejal is beautiful as it is and doesn’t need our improvements.
Savage Race Promo Shoot
I’m always so inspired by people who have stability in their lives, walking a paved path, and instead of closing their eyes letting the road unfurl beneath their feet, they opt to get off trail and go bushwhacking. My cousin, Sam Abbitt, woke up this year and decided his dream was not the one he was living.
Determined to create something new, he started a business plan for what would become Savage Race. It would be an endurance race designed to test even the toughest competitors all in the name of crossing the finish line to feel alive, complete, muddy, and hungry for more. He did this while his brother Hank was training in the most hardcore regimen this country has to offer: Navy SEALS.
I wrote Sam to congratulate him on his divorce from the everyday and offered to help in any way that I could with his new career. A day later we decided he would come down to South Florida to do a promotional photo shoot for the race. He needed photos of people running, jumping, and crawling through mud to supply his website, but he was unsure that my friends would be willing to put themselves through the ringer pro-bono. Obviously he doesn’t know my friends.
Complete with lingerie nightgowns, pink moo-moos, devilish masks, fairy wings, indian headdresses, ripped shirts, Hawaiian leis, and trojan battle garb, my friends brought the heat. As the main event would eventually sponsor a band and various beer tents, we were sure to bring a few beverages if not to incentivize, but to lubricate their desire to crawl in the thick and rocky mire while wearing women’s clothes in rural South Florida.
It was certainly a day to remember and I’m so fortunate to have such a dedicated cousin and even more so, friends who would spend their weekend crawling through the mud under barbed wire just for a few photos.
Of course, I wasn’t allowed to just shoot photos, my friends simply wouldn’t stand for it.
So if you’re into pushing yourself, eating BBQ, listening to music, and getting dirty then Savage Race is something you will not want to miss. Check out the official website to learn more about the gnarly event Sam is putting together this August. Sign up! I’ll be there!
Backyard Visitors
Don’t you love it when wildlife just comes to you?
These little guys have probably been living off our fish scraps the last few weeks. While cooking, my roommate heard a scratching in the leaf litter. Looking down, he saw various paws trying to reach under the fence to break through to the other side. Knowing that our neighbors have several dogs, we ran downstairs and corralled the baby raccoons to let them back out into the mangroves.
It’s easy to hold a grudge against the larger raccoons that seem to employ SWAT-like tactics to get into garbage cans and recycle bins, but how could you ever hold malice against a face like this?
Venture Out! Megalops atlanticus
I live in the sportfishing capital of the world. Millions of people fly halfway around the globe each year just to get out on the emerald waters of Florida Bay and try their luck with a rod and reel. Deeper water charters run trips for sailfish, kings, grouper, mahi, and tuna, but in my opinion the best bang for your buck is running off Islamorada and into the bay for the Altantic tarpon (Megalops atlanticus). These “silver kings” as they’re called, can reach lengths up to 8 feet and weigh up to 350 lbs. Dive bars and fishing outposts line their walls with vintage photographs of the historic fights that famous anglers, actors, sports heroes, and past presidents have had while fishing for these coastal monsters.
Once on the line, a tarpon is known to explode out of the water in attempts to break the line or shake the hook. This the angler’s most tense moment and as well, the reason they came to the Keys.
A few weeks ago, coworker Adam Chasey and I set out to film and photograph tarpon for a short documentary series we’re working on with National Audubon and Disney. Knowing that we didn’t have the time or money to invest in a month-long trial and error process of hiring fishing guides, we went to the one place we knew we could find the megalops.
For years, Robbie’s Marina has been known as the tarpon hotspot. With access to both Florida Bay and the Atlantic ocean coupled with a constant stream of fishing charters disposing of their leftovers, tarpon arrive in droves along with jacks, snapper, and of course, brown pelicans.
The image I envisioned was a tarpon lunging out of the blue water with jaws open straight towards the camera. I didn’t know how I would accomplish this considering the logistics of enticing a wild tarpon to jump, or the risk of losing another camera, or even just battling the hot Florida sun for hours on end, but I welcomed the challenge. Check out the next Venture Out! video to see how we did it.





































