It’s a nature bonanza here on the coast of Florida!
Last night, we fell asleep to an owl’s hooting. As I walked to the bath house this evening at dusk, I heard a mockingbird going nuts, singing a crazy medley of migrating birdsongs one after another fast and furious.
This Great Blue Heron hangs around near the fishermen. So regal. He moves with smooth confidence.
Fishermen along the beach keep plucking things from the water—things we’re not sure we want to know are swimming nearby. One boasted that he caught a stingray, a sand shark, and a sea turtle. We weren’t sure what to think, since the information first came to us via the fisherman’s 8-year-old son. Exaggeration?
Then we watched his line go taut and he started reeling in, struggling, pulling, reeling.
This is what he pulled out.
This impressive ray was about two feet wide.
This fellow provided me with my first “faces-in-places” shot; but I’m not sure it counts, as it actually is his face, if a stingray can have a face. Oh, and if you’re squeamish, maybe scroll past. He’s just had a hook plucked from his mouth.
He looks so sad, doesn’t he? He deserves to be sad, snagged from his home like that by a sport fisherman.
I think he’s crying.
I decided to share my lonely place with my extended family. My brother and I walked with the kids around the bend to what we coined “The Cove,” and there the kids discovered a sandbar. As they walked out to the sandbar in knee-deep water, they saw beautiful shells, perfectly formed. Plucking them from the water, they discovered that the shells weren’t empty.
They found dozens of hermit crabs in the shallow water of the cove of the lonely place.
Even I found one and took a self-portrait with him–he’s a little camera shy. Or maybe he’s embarrassed to be seen with the lady wearing that ridiculous red sun hat.
On our way back to the main beach, my brother and I were in front of the kids. I spotted a jellyfish. At first, I straddled it, so that they kids wouldn’t accidentally step on it.
“Kids!” my brother called out, “watch out for the jellyfish!”
They didn’t hear us or weren’t paying much attention, so to visually alert them, I used my toe to draw a big circle around it in the sand.
They were delighted with this communication, and started writing and drawing circles of all kinds. Here’s what our walk back ended up looking like:
The Boy saw all the scribbling and pictures, and starting drawing fish. “The kind that the Christians used to draw.”
“They called it an ‘ichthus,'” I said.”Oh! I wonder if people will see all my ichthuses and think, ‘Hey, somebody’s a Christian!'”
“Maybe.”
Then he saw all the messages his sisters and cousins were writing, and inspiration hit.
“Wait right here, Mama! Do NOT look at what I’m doing!”
He ran down the beach a short distance, then ran back to me.
“How do you spell ‘love’?”
“L-O-V-E.”
He repeated it to himself. “L-O-V-E.”
I repeated it. “L-O-V-E.”
He repeated it and took off to his spot. “Are you looking? Wait! Don’t look!”
“I’m not looking.”
He ran back to me. “How do you spell ‘you’?”
“Y-O-U.”
“Y-O-U…Y-O-U.” He ran to his spot repeating it. “Y-O-U. Hold on. Almost ready. Okay!”
LeeAnn (Frazzmom) says
I’ll never forget the time we took a then-4-year-old-but-now-Teenage-Daughter to the Monterey Bay Aquarium and stopped at the manta ray touch tank. As she was leaning over, trying to touch a ray- another swam up to her, reared up out of the water, and looked right at her. She screamed in terror and ran away! To this day she does NOT like that touch tank… LOL!
Anywho- that was a very sweet message that your son left you in the sand… So glad you’re all having such a nice time!
Stretch Mark Mama says
I am such a softie for the “I love you Mom” notes. 🙂 I think my six-year-old has finally figured out that if he writes me those notes on a regular basis, I become Nicer Mommy. Who gives him candy.
But in the sand. Now that’s love!
Jen @ irrationallove says
what a fun post! and such a blessing to have a camera ready to capture that precious message in the sand. it’s frame-worthy.
Shalee says
I agree with Jen. That last picture is worthy of the best frame you can find, even if you did spell it yourself.
Prairie Chick says
GREAT pictures Ann, so glad you’re having nice weather.
annkroeker says
It’s so fun to check out your comments on this interactive, online postcard!
Did you notice that even though I spelled L-O-V-E, he still went with the phonetic sound of it? L-U-V-E?
There was only so much he could hold in his head in that moment…
Carrie says
What a ton of fun it looks like you’re having! Makes me long for ocean breakers and tide pools myself.
I love rays. And you’re right, he does look a little sad. Dare I ask if he was able to go back home?
annkroeker says
Carrie: Yes! The ray made it back home to his beloved Gulf water. They kind of shoved him with nets toward the next wave that rolled close to him, and his undulating sides splashed as he worked his way back in.
greenchickadee says
Oh, oh oh the love of nature vacations! We have taken two major trips in the last 12 months and both were full of glorious discoveries and creation. We can most recently recommend Monterey Bay area because that was where we saw the most incredible marine life EVER! So glad you had such a sweet time in the gulf. Isn’t the white sand amazing? And what a darling conversation from your precious one.
Do you ever feel like there isn’t enough time in life to see all the amazingness that the world has to offer? Maybe that’s why we’re supposed to look forward to heaven . . .
Julia says
I love hermit crabs!! Those are so cute!! :Db
best travel says
well this is useful… (at least for me)
very thanks
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best travel