Shark Valley 03/06/19

Markham County Park, Sunrise, Florida

Live in harmony with one another.  Do not be proud, but be willing to associate with people of low position.  Do not be conceited. ~  Romans 12:16

The gps finally got it right today!  We arrived just three minutes later than our original ETA.  But cars were flying by us at 90-100 mph!  No joke.  There were no fewer than three who blew by us at speeds that rattled our Jeep a bit.  And lest you think they were sports cars, they were just normal cars and even an SUV.  What are they thinking?

This Park entrance was much easier to get to! Hardly any traffic on these roads!
What in the world is that black streak? We saw it, I took a picture of it, but we never found it’s origin. Weird!

So we arrived at the Everglades National Park Shark Valley entrance on time – – – only to find a closed gate.  For another half hour.  It seems we’re destined to always be a half hour off around here.  So Blaine took us on a scenic drive for 15 minutes and then back again. 

Now the gate’s open, but there’s a line.  Not too bad though.  To pass the time, they put an alligator right by road for people to gawk at.  😊

Waiting to get in.
Well, looky there!
And we’re in!

And now we come to Blaine’s surprise.  Sort of.  Remember the other day when I told you his lips were sunburned and blistered a bit?  Well, it got worse.  Much worse.  It was either stay inside the coach for the remainder of our time here, or find a way to protect them.  He took a trip to the local pharmacy and bought a box of surgical masks.  He’d look a bit silly, but he’d be safe. 

However. 

Once we arrived, we couldn’t find the mask he’d brought anywhere.  He was certain he’d put it in the Jeep, but it wasn’t there.  So now what?

Fortunately, I keep a long-sleeved lightweight shirt in the Jeep at all times (except when it gets washed of course 😊), so we tied that around his face and off we went on our 15-mile bike loop.

The masked knight! : )

That handy 15-mile Loop Trail through Shark Valley was constructed in 1946 when Humble Oil drilled for oil here. Fortunately, the company decided oil wells here weren’t economic and the land joined the national park system.

To build the trail, workers dug a trench alongside the road and used the dirt to slightly elevate the path. The trench filled with water and, as the rest of the Everglades dries out in winter, the water here became the perfect habitat for wildlife, who concentrated here. ~ fellow blogger, floridarambler.com

This is where we are today.
This is the bike trail. We did the curvy part first.

We encountered many gators on our ride around – quite a few more than we even took pictures of!  And of course, the various herons and egrets and the ever-present vultures.

Our first encounter. It was so still, we wondered if it was even real! We even said that maybe it was a plant for the end of the tram tour – – just in case they hadn’t seen any gators. : ) Little did we know, the tram goes the same way we’re going . . .
An oasis!
It was a little chilly when we left! Two shirts, long pants, a hooded sweatshirt . . . and gloves! It warmed up enough to remove the gloves after about 5 miles. : )
Gators and egrets fishing together.
I hadn’t noticed until I uploaded this picture – – The Great Blue Heron has a fish! And you can’t really see it in the picture, but all the way at the top in the middle, there’s a very large gator!
We stopped to look at this one a little more closely.
A little too close, Blaine! Just because most of your face is covered, doesn’t mean he can’t see you!
He just couldn’t help it. He just had to touch it. Such a little boy! : ) It didn’t seem to notice, by the way.

And there was also something new.  Roseate Spoonbills!  From a distance – and our sightings of them were all from a distance – they look a little like flamingos because of their color.  But in flight, they’re gorgeous!  Unfortunately, our pictures don’t show that, but there’s always the internet!  😊

There are at least three types of birds in this flock that got scared when we road by.
Ibis and egrets and spoonbills. Oh my!
Roseate Spoonbills Odd-looking and beautiful at the same time!
They were very common in parts of the southeast until the 1860s, spoonbills were virtually eliminated from the United States as a side-effect of the destruction of wader colonies by plume hunters. Began to re-colonize Texas and Florida early in 20th century. Still uncommon and local, vulnerable to degradation of feeding and nesting habitats.

Halfway around the trail, there’s an observation tower.  Nice break, but the top part was sealed off!  Bummer!  It was built sometime between 1956-1966 as part of a 10-year program to improve park services for the 50th anniversary of the National Park Service.

Off in the distance is the observation tower. We’re about 3 miles away!
About a mile away now.
And here we are.
We were forced to remain on the bottom level. : (
In the shadow of the tower.
Look at them choppers!!
There’s the tram! The people were all walking to the Observation Tower as we were walking back. Good timing on our part!

At the foot of the Tower, there’s a trail.  We really needed to walk after biking 7 miles, but there was this sign. . . .

Of course, that didn’t stop Blaine.  It was just a caution after all.  I was more nervous about it, walking slowly and carefully eyeing my surroundings, while Blaine took off ahead of me.  We may have seen the aforementioned gator in the water, but it was so far away, we can’t be totally certain.

This is a green heron. Remember how pretty it was with the proper lighting when we saw one up close at Silver Springs?
We kept seeing gobs of these giant snail shells along this trail. All of them empty. Hmmmm . . . .
That dot in the water is most likely an alligator.

And so, it was here at the Observation Tower, as we turned the corner of the trail on our bikes, that our experience grew exponentially more difficult.  We were suddenly faced with 10-15mph headwinds!  We (especially me!) were so glad to have the ability to “power down” our bikes.  (That’s what I call it when I have to move the gears down to lower numbers, in order to push myself along.)  It’s also when we started seeing more and more people.  Turns out, we were riding the trail backwards from everyone else!  Typical Blaine and Terri, right?  😊 And we wondered how those who rented ‘plain’ bikes from the Park would be able to make the return trip.

It’s best to go the ‘right’ way, because there’s a tram ($25/person) that also uses this trail, and bikers and walkers are instructed to stop and wait for it to pass.  It’s a whole lot easier to see it coming if you’re facing it.  We were not.  But there was only one the entire time we were out there, and Blaine heard it coming long before it got to us.

More egrets and spoonbills.
We caught this heron fishing on the opposite side of the trail, but when we rode up, it flew off to the other side – fish in mouth. And then suddenly, the fish was gone! Swallowed whole by the heron!
Ity, bitty baby gators. Awww . . . . No mom or dad in sight here.
Uh oh. This Great Blue didn’t make it. It was in the street. Wonder what happened?
The only shade on the entire 15-mile asphalted loop road.

I managed to talk Blaine into walking two other short trails on the way back.  I said we should do them now because we may not be back, but what I really wanted was a chance to take a break from working so hard.  😊

Solution to what? I’ve got some things that require solutions! Maybe this is the place!
This picture was on their information board. I was quite certain any picture I took wouldn’t look like that. : )
I was right. These are my pictures.
This is the only picture we took here. We didn’t even walk the entire trail.

A little over three hours later, we were back at the Visitor Center and ready for lunch.

Today’s lunch view. Pretty nice considering we’re in a parking lot! : )

Up next?  Kayaking the Turner River!  The launch was about ten miles from the Visitor Center, but about halfway, there’s another Visitor Center that has a great observation platform for looking down at dozens of gators.  Tired of those alligator pictures yet?

Question posed at the Oasis Visitor Center. What do you think?
Well isn’t that interesting??
Guess this gator wasn’t hungry. There were fish swimming all around him, and that one you see was right in front of his mouth before we took the picture!
You can’t tell from the photo because there’s no perspective, you’ll just have to take my word for it – – this one was a giant!

We chose this trail because it was touted as “The best canoe trail in the Everglades”.  It wasn’t.  The first half was really nice, but the second half?  Not so much. 

On the Turner River.
This turtle and an osprey were the only wildlife we saw.
An osprey in it’s nest!
Isn’t he cute??? : )
They had these signs up several places. Do you suppose the wildlife know to go here? Things that make you go, hmmmm . . . .
We used different muscles for kayaking today than we normally do! At this point, it was all ‘pull along’!
We kept thinking there’d be breaks, but there weren’t.
Pretty!
So I Googled – ‘pink eggs on trees’ – and discovered that these are actually Apple Snail eggs! And those giant shells I told you about earlier? Those were Apple Snails! Of course, we touched the eggs. They felt firm – I guess like eggs! : )
Thankfully, we’re headed back now.
Once we go under that bridge, we’re real close to being done. FYI – after we turned the corner, there was a boat just leaving that we had to wait on. It looked like when they pole pirouges in the Louisiana bayou! A guy in front with a camera and a girl standing in the back with her long paddle. She said it was her maiden voyage. They won’t go far if they have to stand to paddle . . .

And when I say half, I’m only talking about the part we actually paddled.  When spiders started dropping on me from the mangroves, I was sooo done!  In addition, as you can see, it was so tight in there, we barely fit and there were no breaks.  It just was no longer fun at all!  Even if there hadn’t been spiders.

Have you been wondering about the name of this place, because I sure did!  Shark Valley was so-named because early settlers saw the fins of bull sharks in the river that runs through this area.  Don’t worry.  We weren’t on the Shark River, we were on the Turner River.  😊

But that’s the information I found first.  Then I found these other two things from different websites:

If you’re wondering about the name Shark Valley…Well, although sharks are one form of wildlife that you will not see in the shallow waters of the Everglades within Shark Valley, they’re not terribly far away. Two of the estuaries supplied by The Everglades River are the Shark River and Little Shark River whose brackish waters provide wonderful feeding and nursing habitats for several species of sharks, including bull sharks, which are the top of the food chain, as well as blacktip sharks and lemon sharks.

You won’t see any mountains framing the Shark Valley, but we are technically in a valley because the coastal ridges of South Florida are higher than the interior of this part of the state.  The western coastal ridge is about 14-17 feet above sea level. The Atlantic ridge is 15-20 feet above sea level, and the Shark Valley Visitor Center area is about 7 feet above sea level, which puts us in the valley between the two ridges. And that’s why we’re called Shark Valley.

So just how did they acquire their name?  Which version do you prefer?

We ended our day driving home via the Loop Trail that runs within the Park.  We had read that it was scenic, but we thought, not so much.  It was just really, really dusty most of the way.  Especially if we got behind another car.  Our pretty, shiny, copper-colored Jeep is now a dull tan.  ☹

The long and dusty road.
There’s a Miccosukee Indian town called Pinecrest that you drive through to get out of the Park. The houses that we saw, were all elevated like this, we’re sure because of the swamp that surrounds them. Some of the home’s driveways . . . well, let’s just say, you better be extra careful backing up!

Thus ends our ten hour day in the Valley.

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