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Events on Ocracoke Nov. 28 to Dec. 4

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Islander Jasmin Flores will be among the performers at the Festival Latino de Ocracoke, Friday through Sunday, Dec. 2 to 4, at the Berkley Barn and the Ocracoke Community Center. See flyer below. Photo: C. Leinbach

Tuesday, Nov. 29
Medicare workshop: Learn more about various Medicare plans and benefits.  Beneficiaries will also have the opportunity to explore and sign up for 2023 Part D plans during open enrollment.  10 am to 1 pm. Lunch provided but register by calling Teresa Adams at 252-921-0053 or emailing tadams@hydecountync.gov. 

Ocracoke School kindness march at 12:15 at the School Road circle. We will March from the school to the lighthouse and back. Ride the kindness wave with us! Parents and community are welcome to join us.

PTA meeting, 5 pm in Claudia Lewis’s room.

Wednesday, Nov. 30
Red Cross Blood Drive, noon to 6 pm Community Center. Click here to make an appointment.

Thursday, Dec. 1
Red Cross Blood Drive, 8 am to noon, Community Center. Click here to make an appointment.

Disaster recovery efforts virtual hub information presented by Ann Savage and Dr. Whitney Knollenberg, 4:30 pm, Community Center.

Ocracoke Decoy Carver’s Guild meeting, 7 pm. Community Center

Friday, Dec. 2
First home game of the Dolphins basketball season. Girls game at 4 pm and boys at 5 pm. Ocracoke School gym.

Ocracoke Oyster Company: Ray Murray, 7 pm

Festival Latino de Ocracoke concert with Angeles Diaz & Ana Luisa Chavez, 7-9 pm. Community Center.

Saturday, Dec. 3
Festival Latino de Ocracoke, 11 am to 6 pm. Berkley Barn. Music performances, traditional food, games for kids, followed by evening concert, 6-8 pm

Latin dance with Rafaga Norteno ($25), 9 pm to 1 am. Community Center

Sunday, Dec. 4
Festival Latino de Ocracoke Basketball tournament, men & women invited. 9 am to 6 pm. Ocracoke School gym.

Four boats ring in the holiday season

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The Farris O’Neal family joined in the Holiday Boat Parade Nov. 26 in their decked out Cap’n B. Photo: C. Leinbach

By Connie Leinbach

A postponement of the Holiday Boat Parade from Friday to Saturday didn’t stop the four boats who said they’d participate from circling Silver Lake at sundown on Ocracoke Island.

This number was up from last year when Chris Farr and his family of Columbia, South Carolina, was the only boat for what is becoming a Thanksgiving weekend tradition.

This year and last, the parades were postponed from the night before.

So, Sundae Horn, who organized the event, was happy that the four boats that said they’d participate were able to do so.

The Farrs were joined by the Windfall II, helmed by Rob Temple, the Cap’n B charter boat, piloted by Farris O’Neal, and Seth Huppert in his skiff.

“Merry Christmas!” Huppert would yell to the spectators on the Community Square dock as he passed by. His boat also played some holiday tunes.

This was the third time that Chris and Brynley Farr and their three boys, ages 3, 6 and 8, spent Thanksgiving on Ocracoke and participated in the parade.

Seth Huppert’s boat is at right and the Windfall II is at left. Photo by Sally Greene

“We decided seven years ago that we wanted to do something for Thanksgiving that was just our family,” Chris said as he tied up his boat.

So, they bought a catboat, a small sailboat, and went to Charleston, South Carolina, for three years, and then went to Minnesott Beach.

“We kept getting further and further away from home,” he said. They discovered Ocracoke after reading a sailing blog, “The Log of Spartina,” by Steve Early.

So, they began coming to Ocracoke for Thanksgiving week.

While they rent a house on Howard Street, the boys and Chris like to sleep on the boat some nights.

Horn said Farr reprised his one-boat parade Friday night and encouraged spectators to return Saturday night.

“I love keeping the boat parade tradition going,” she said.

The event is not sponsored by a group. She and the late Teresa O’Neal worked together several years ago to revive it.

The Farr family boat. Photo: C. Leinbach

“I’ll keep doing it in her memory,” Horn said. “She was so good at community spirit.”

O’Neal, 60, died in June after a long battle with cancer.

Horn would love to see more boats join in the merriment. In 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic,12 boats participated.

“If anyone has any suggestions for how to encourage more boat captains to join in, please let me know,” she said. “Everyone who does it says they enjoy it. I know the spectators are excited to see the boats and many others watch on Facebook. Thanks to all who participated this year.”

Next year, she hopes to revive having hot chocolate and treats at the dock.

Earlier in the day for Small Business Saturday, 17 local artisans and businesses showcased their wares inside the Berkley Barn for the Holiday Gift Market, sponsored by the Ocracoke Civic & Business Association.

The OCBA’s holiday lights competition, Island Celebration, will be Dec. 17. Those who want their houses to be judged should have their lights set by dark.

Despite a bit of rain in the morning, Native Seafood held its oyster tasting Friday afternoon (Nov. 25). Raw oysters were available from Ocracoke, Hatteras and Swan Quarter, said Stevie Wilson as he shucked his locally raised O’cock oysters, and steamed oysters came from Cedar Island.

Owner Susie Scott O’Neal was pleased with the turnout and hopes to do it again next year.

Port and starboard mast lights on the dredge ‘Lexington’ looks like Christmas decor. Photo by Brenda Kremser
The Holiday Gift Market in the Berkley Barn Nov. 26. Photo: C. Leinbach
Oyster tasting Nov. 25 at Native Seafood. Photo: C. Leinbach

Runners trot on turkey day on Ocracoke

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Alex Weber, 17, of Durham, wins the 2022 Turkey Trot on Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 24. Photo: C. Leinbach

By Connie Leinbach

Angie Todd was amazed that the 5K Turkey Trot crowd on Thanksgiving morning exceeded her expectations.

“When we started this eight years ago, it began as a whim and we had about 30 people,” she told the crowd of 143 runners and walkers at the starting point at 1718 Brewing Ocracoke. “This year, our eighth year, we sold out.”

That was 175 who registered, she said, the most ever, but 10 didn’t show up and 23 did the race virtually, leaving 143 who crossed the finish line, according to the website of Run The East, a firm that conducts the race.

Todd, who is a world-class marathon runner and race director for the Scallywag 5K/10K/half-marathon (scheduled for April 29 & 30), said she hopes to boost the total who can register next year.

Alex Weber, 17, of Durham, bested the pack with a time of 18:42.

A member of his high school’s cross country team, he noted that he came in second overall last year.

First-timer to Ocracoke Kris Fox, 44, of Cincinnati, Ohio, wasn’t far behind and came in second at 18:47, and Ocracoke Islander Gerardo Dominguez, 32, came in third at 19:12.

Dominguez was happy with his time since he beat his time last year of 19:30, and he noted a number of young people giving him competition. Such as, Carter O’Neal, 15, of Ocracoke, whose time was 21:51.

Rachel Nerenbaum, 28, no city listed, was the top female overall with a time of 22:43.

As the Catto family cooled down from their run, one member, Olya, noted that family gathers on the island from Washington, D.C., and Atlanta. This was the fourth time the group ran together in this race before the holiday meal at the home of Joellen Catto on Trent Road.

“It’s now part of our family tradition,” noted James Catto.

All participants received a medal and overall and in age categories winners received homemade pies.

Proceeds of the race will go to a fund to replace the floor in the Ocracoke School gym.

From massive flooding from Hurricane Dorian in September 2019, the school was destroyed and is in the process of being rebuilt.

While there’s an acceptable floor in place in the school gym, it is far from perfect, and the school wants to replace it, said Todd, who also is Hyde County Board of Education chair.

Angie Todd, in turkey hat, welcomes runners in the Thanksgiving Turkey Trot. Photo: C. Leinbach
Gerardo Dominguez of Ocracoke comes in third in the Thanksgiving Turkey Trot. Photo: C. Leinbach

N.C. State to present disaster recovery information hub findings Dec. 1

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This past spring, researchers from N.C. State’s Department of Parks, Recreation, and Tourism Management gathered insight from Ocracoke community members related to developing a virtual information hub for disaster recovery efforts.

This virtual information hub could help Ocracoke and other coastal communities better respond to future disasters and crises such as hurricanes and pandemics. 

Ann Savage and Dr. Whitney Knollenberg will host a public presentation of the findings from this work at 4:30 p.m. Thursday Dec. 1, in the Ocracoke Community Center.

The one-hour presentation will be held at the Ocracoke Community Center and light refreshments will be served. If you would like to attend, please RSVP to Knollenberg, whitney_knollenberg@ncsu.edu, by Tuesday, Nov. 29. 

Shoaling near Ocracoke alters Pamlico Sound ferry schedules 

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A Pamlico Sound ferry on approach to Ocracoke Island. Photo: C. Leinbach

From our news services

As of today (Nov. 21) the N.C. Department of Transportation’s Ferry Division will run an alternate schedule on Pamlico Sound between Cedar Island, Swan Quarter and Ocracoke due to critical shoaling issues in the ferry channel just outside of Ocracoke’s Silver Lake Harbor.

The schedule, effective immediately, is as follows:

  • Ocracoke to Cedar Island:  7:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
  • Cedar Island to Ocracoke: 10:30 a.m., 4:30 p.m.
  • Ocracoke to Swan Quarter: 7 a.m., 1:30 p.m.
  • Swan Quarter to Ocracoke: 10 a.m., 4:30 p.m.

Shoaling occurs when sand and sediment fill into a ferry channel, making water depths too shallow for safe operation of the ferry system’s largest vessels. 

The Army Corps of Engineers’ contractor Cottrell Dredging is using the Dredge Lexington in the Bigfoot Slough channel to clear the shoaling. The dredging operation is expected to take about 50 days, depending on weather and sea conditions.

Once water depths in the ferry channel return to acceptable levels, the Ferry Division will resume its regular schedule on both routes.

For Ocracoke ferry schedules, click here.

For up-to-the-minute information on schedule changes on the Cedar Island and Swan Quarter routes, please follow @NCFerryPamSound​ on Twitter. 

Ocracoke events week of Nov. 21 to 27

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See story about Thanksgiving week events here.

Even dogs like the Turkey Trot on Thanksgiving Day.

Wednesday, Nov. 23
Thanksgiving Bake Sale, 1 pm. Ocracoke Volunteer Fire Department. Proceeds will benefit the Ocracoke United Methodist Church piano fund. Those who wish to bake a cake, pie or dessert, please feel free to drop them off at the fire department between 11 am and noon.

Thursday, Nov. 24
Ocracoke Island’s Thanksgiving Eighth Annual 5K Turkey Trot will begin at 8 a.m., at 1718 Brewing Ocracoke. Registration will end at 11:59 pm Tuesday, Nov. 22. All proceeds will be donated to a fund to replace the Ocracoke School gym floor.

Friday, Nov. 25
Native Seafood will hold an oyster tasting event from noon to 4 p.m. in the parking lot of their store along Irving Garrish Highway.

Holiday Gift Market 2021.

Celebration of Life for Jim Wynn, 2 pm, Berkley Barn.

The Holiday Boat Parade will be at 5:30 p.m.on Silver Lake. This isn’t sponsored by any organization, and it doesn’t spend any money. There are no prizes. It’s just for fun.

Saturday, Nov. 26
The Ocracoke Civic & Business Association hosts a Holiday Gift Market from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Berkley Barn.

Ocracoke Oyster Company: Martin & Friends, 7 pm.

A mighty mariner: The Great Shearwater

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Great Shearwater. Photo by Kate Sutherland

By Peter Vankevich

When you talk about amazing animals, consider adding the Great Shearwater to the mix. They can fly between waves of 40 feet or higher in hurricane-like weather.

Large seabirds — 20 inches in length with a 3.5- to 4-foot wingspan – they get their name from their ability to navigate between swells, seemingly cutting, or “shearing,” the water.

The Great Shearwater feeds primarily on fish such as mackerel, sand lance, and capelin, also squid and crustaceans that swim near surface of the water. They forage by catching prey from the surface and by plunge-diving, sometimes as deep as 55 feet.
Possessing an extraordinary sense of smell, they will follow trawlers, sometimes in considerable numbers, awaiting cast off fish offal.
They have a piercing “eeyah” cry usually given when resting in groups on the water.

In the early 19th Century, John James Audubon portrayed this species as the Wandering Shearwater, another apt name.

Many aspects of the biology of these seagoing birds remain a mystery. The average longevity is not very well known, with some estimates are at seven years. But one individual was believed to be more than 50 years old —gaining the status of an ancient mariner.

In the early 19th Century, John James Audubon portrayed this species (Ardenna gravis) as the Wandering Shearwater, another apt name.

Worldwide there are 32 shearwater species with five species that can be seen in the Gulf Stream waters off North Carolina The state’s other regularly occurring species are Audubon’s Shearwater, Cory’s Shearwater, Manx Shearwater and Sooty Shearwater. Two others, the Wedge-tailed Shearwater, and Cape Verde Shearwater, are extremely rare with just one documented record each.

Numbers and frequency of sightings of sea birds off North Carolina primarily rely on data gathered by Brian Patteson who has been running pelagic birding field trips since 1986. His business, Seabirding, runs these trips out of Hatteras to the Gulf Stream. Great Shearwaters may be seen from June to early November with the highest numbers from late July through August.

Based on time of the year, strong easterly wind conditions and available prey, it is possible to see these shearwaters from the shores of the Outer Banks, with three hot spots: Jeanette’s Pier in Nags Head, Oregon Inlet and Cape Point on Hatteras Island.

Unlike the other shearwater species in our waters, Great Shearwaters are subject to mass mortalities as what occurred in late June into early July this year. The Cape Hatteras and Cape Lookout National Seashores confirmed seeing many dead or dying individuals on the beach. The Wilmington Star News reported a remarkably high number of shearwaters picked up from the beaches of Brunswick County and brought to the Sea Biscuit Wildlife Shelter, a wild bird rehabilitation center located on Oak Island.

Great Shearwater stranded on Ocracoke, Oct. 1, 2022. Photo by Peter Vankevich

Staff of the NC Wildlife Resource Commission gathered about 100 dead birds and sent them to Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study (SCWDS). A final report has not been released,.

These high mortalities occurred around the time of some sustained bad weather with tumultuous seas.

Die-offs like this may be from an avian disease or consuming toxins, but often the cause is starvation due to food shortages or an inability to forage, according to a study by North Carolina biologist David S. Lee in 2014.

The National Park Service did not perform any necropsies to determine the cause of death but did confirm that many of them appeared to be younger birds, looking thin and were lethargic.

“While we don’t know the exact cause of the shearwaters washing ashore in June, we do know that natural variables, such as weather and food shortages, play a large role in their survival,” an official wrote.

Kate Sutherland, Patteson’s lead guide and record keeper, has been working with Seabirding since 2001. Not only is she an expert on Atlantic seabirds, she is also a superb photographer.

She agrees with the starvation theory. “We are one of the first places they can feed during migration, and they are on the brink of starvation,” noting how hungry they appear on their arrival.

“Mortality in the first year is high as with most species. But some years the weather brings them to our beaches instead of keeping them at sea,” she wrote. “I imagine there are other factors that could be exacerbating their death rate as seas warm and weather changes, plus plastic…there is so much more every year and that has to impact them if they are ingesting it on their journey.”

Sutherland noted the vivacity of these birds.

“They are one of the most charismatic followers on our trips because they come right to the boat to eat the chum, diving and calling and fighting!”

As sad as this is to see, such kill-offs do not impact the overall world population. According to Cornell University’s Birds of the World, it is estimated that there may be as many as 15 million individuals.

Great Shearwater. Photo by Kate Sutherland

Tristan da Cunha archipelago

After roaming throughout much of the northeastern Atlantic Ocean as far north to Newfoundland, they head to the southwestern coasts of Great Britain and Ireland. In September, they begin their southern migration to their nesting grounds, one of the remotest places in the world.

Aside from a small nesting colony on Kidney Island in the Falklands, the other known breeding locations are on the volcanic Tristan da Cunha archipelago smack in the middle of the South Atlantic Ocean and 6,500 miles from North Carolina. It is a British Overseas Territory that also has nesting Northern Rockhopper Penguins, Atlantic Yellow-nosed Albatrosses, Sooty Albatrosses, Atlantic Petrels, Great-winged Petrels, Soft-plumaged Petrels, Broad-billed Prions, Grey Petrels, Sooty Shearwaters, Tristan skuas, Antarctic Terns and Brown Noddies.

 Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons,

The Great Shearwater numbers are staggering, with 5 million breeding pairs on the largest island, Tristan da Cunha, followed by Nightingale Island with 2 to 3 million pairs, two million on Inaccessible Island and the distant Gough Island has estimates of up to 3 million pairs.

Shearwaters nest in crevices between rocks or a three-foot deep burrow, excavated by both parents, that may be used for several years and lay just one egg. Incubation takes approximately two months and both parents participate in feeding, returning only in the dark to avoid one of their diurnal predators, South Polar Skuas. Fledging takes nearly four months.

How remote are these islands? There are no airstrips, so the only way of travelling to them is by boat. The fastest is a six-day trip from South Africa. Only 250 people live on the biggest island, Tristan da Cunha. The rest are uninhabited.

Notes

If you thumb through an older bird field guide, you will not find the Great Shearwater. In 2010, the American Ornithologists’ Union changed the common name of Greater Shearwater to Great Shearwater, matching the common name used in Europe, and making more “sense”, as there is no “Lesser Shearwater,” though there is a Little Shearwater.

Not surprisingly, aside from the mass mortalities described above, necropsies performed on these shearwaters and other pelagic birds are finding high levels of plastic ingestion.

The Stellwagen Bank, located off the Massachusetts coast between Cape Cod and Cape Ann, is a National Marine Sanctuary managed by NOAA and where Great Shearwaters congregate in large numbers in late Summer.

Since 2013, researchers there have been using satellite technology to study their movements, life cycle, and feeding and foraging habits.

In 2021, state-of-the-art transmitters, small, lightweight, and equipped with mini solar panels were attached to 15 birds to track the birds’ migratory paths into the South Atlantic. You can follow their movements here:  https://twitter.com/trackseabirds or by the Twitter handle @trackseabirds.

Great Shearwaters were chosen for this tracking project because they are considered to be excellent indicators of ecosystem health and may provide insights into impacts of climate change.

Great Shearwaters can congregate in great numbers well offshore of North Carolina. Photo by Kate Sutherland

What’s open for the 2023 season on Ocracoke

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Late afternoon on the beach. Photo: C. Leinbach

The list below of upcoming seasonal closings as of May 15, 2023, and will be updated as we receive information. Business hours may change due to weather, doctor’s appointments or other spur-of-the-moment needs. Most businesses are open by Easter. Businesses: please send your seasonal closing info to: info@ocracokeobserver.com or send us a message on Facebook.

Food:
Variety Store: Open daily, 7 am to 8 pm.
1718 Brewing Ocracoke: Open, Noon to 9 pm. Closed Mon/Tues. Open 7 days a week starting in April.
ABC Store: Open
The Back Porch: Open
The Breeze: Open
DAJIO: Open
Eduardo’s of Ocracoke: Open
Flying Melon:
Open
The Fudge & Ice Cream Shop:
Open
Hang Ten Smoothies:
Open
Hart’s Hot Dog Hut (inside Jerniman’s):
Open Tues – Wed 6am-2pm, Thurs-Sat 6am-2pm & 5pm-9pm, Sun 6am – 11am. New menu, new look.
Helios Hideaway: Open 7 am to 10:30 for breakfast; 11 am to 2 pm for lunch. Monday to Friday; Saturday breakfast only.
Howard’s Pub: Open,
11-30-8:30; Open daily 11:30 – 9.
Jason’s Restaurant: Open 11-2; 5-8, Monday to Saturday.
Kayla’s Country Kitchen: Closed permanently
Lazy Sundae’s: ice cream treats opening around Easter. Text 252-921-0283 for delivery.
Magic Bean Coffee Bazaar: Closed permanently
Native Seafood: Open Thurs-Sat 11am-5pm; Sun 10am-1pm.
Ocracoke Coffee Company: Open 7am-noon. After Memorial Day: 7am-5pm, Sun 7am-noon.
Ocracoke Oyster Company: Open, 11am-11pm
Ocracoke Seafood Company (the Fish House): Open
Old Salt Sandwiches & Such: Open.
Plum Pointe Kitchen: Open, noon-9pm, closed Mon/Tues. Open 7 days a week starting in April.
Pony Island Restaurant: Open, 7am
-11:30am, closed Tues.
SMacNally’s:
Open
Sorellas Pizza & Pasta: Open Thurs-Sun, 5pm-9pm
Stockroom Street Food: Open
Slushy Stand: Open daily at 11 am.
Sweet Tooth and Fig Tree Bakery & Deli: Open
Taqueria 504Suazo’s: Open at 21 West End Rd., across from the Variety Store. Monday to Saturday, 9-4.
Thai Moon: Open
Zillie’s Island Pantry: Open daily Noon-8pm

Lodging:
Blackbeard’s Lodge: Open all year
Bluff Shoal Motel: Open all year.
Silverlake Motel: Open all year.
Sand Dollar Motel: Open all year except January
Captain’s Landing:
Open
The Castle B&B and Courtyard Villas:
Open
Edwards of Ocracoke Cottages: Open
Harborside Motel: Open
Oscar’s House B&B: Open
Ocracoke Harbor Inn: Open
Ocracoke Island Realty: Open all year
Blue Heron Realty: Open all year
Thurston House B&B:
Open
Anchorage Inn: Open all year
Pony Island Inn: Open all year
NPS Campground: Open all year.  http://www.recreation.gov
Teeter’s Campground: Closed

Jerniman’s Campground: Open all year
Pam’s Pelican B&B: Open
Crew’s Inn: Open

Services/Shops:
Angie’s Gym: Open
Books to Be Red: Open 10-4:30
Captain’s Cargo:
Open
Ride the Wind Surf Shop: Open daily, 10-5
Island Artworks: Open
Island Yoga: Open
Island Ragpicker:
Open
Kitty Hawk Kites: Open
Down Creek Gallery:
Open
Ocracoke Discovery Center (NPS): Open Wednesday, Thursday & Friday 10 am to noon through April
Ocracoke Preservation Society museum: Opening April 4.
Over the Moon: Open 11 am to 5 pm; closed Sundays
Little Rituals: Ope
n
Mermaid’s Folly (main shop):
Closed
Moonraker Tea Shop: Open
Mona’s Mobile Hair Care: Open all year. 252-921-0510
The Sunglass Shop on Ocracoke: Opening in May
Village Thrift (in the Community Store): Open, Thursday to Saturday 1 to 4 pm.
Village Craftsmen:
Open
Wheelie Fun: Open
Bella Fiore: Open
Pirates Chest: Open
all year
Portsmouth Island Adventures: Open
Ocracoke Island Golf Carts: Open

Ocracoke Garden Center: Open
Ocracoke Cigars: Open 1pm – 7pm Tues-Sat. By appointment until then.
Sandy Paws Bed & Biscuit Inn: Opening May 13.
Schooner Windfall: Open, 10am-sunset daily
Sea Break: Open

Sunflower Studio: Open
Kitty Mitchell Studio: Open 11am-5pm Tues- Sat.
Tradewinds Tackle: Open
Health services:
Ocracoke Health Center: Open. 252-928-1511
Island Mobile Medical Care: Open. Gail Covington, FNP. 252-996-0511
Ocracoke Mobile Veterinarian:
Open. 252-923-3787




Public comment period opens on draft offshore wind areas

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The eight draft offshore wind energy areas cover about 1.7 million acres off North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland and Delaware. Map: BOEM

Posted by Coastal Review Online Nov. 16, 2022. Reposted by permission

The federal Bureau of Ocean Energy Management on Wednesday announced that a 30-day public comment period has begun on eight draft offshore wind energy areas, including off the North Carolina coast. 

BOEM said it will hold virtual public meetings to engage the fishing community and environmental organizations to gather more information on the proposed areas and discuss next steps.

The proposed areas cover about 1.7 million acres off North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland and Delaware. The distances to their closest points range from about 19 to 77 nautical miles offshore.

“As BOEM moves forward to identify wind energy areas in the central Atlantic, we continue to prioritize a robust and transparent process, including early engagement with Tribal governments, state and federal agencies and ocean users,” said BOEM Director Amanda Lefton in a statement. “We want to gather as much information and traditional knowledge as possible to help us identify Wind Energy Areas — the offshore areas that are most suitable for commercial wind energy activities while having the fewest apparent environmental and user conflicts.”

Environmental and energy advocates praised the announcement.

“Today’s announcement lays the groundwork for additional offshore wind development in the Atlantic, which will help lower energy costs, create jobs, and fight climate change. Unlike dirty and dangerous offshore drilling that pollutes our waters, worsens the climate crisis, and harms frontline communities, offshore wind can support a just and equitable transition away from the fossil fuels that are driving the climate crisis,” said Oceana Campaign Director Diane Hoskins in a statement.

“With growing offshore wind opportunities, the states along the Central Atlantic coast have a chance to become part of the next wave of offshore wind hubs. While these states will clearly benefit tremendously from jobs and investment associated with offshore wind development, the benefits will stretch across our nation,” said National Ocean Industries Association President Erik Milito in a statement.

Federal officials said the process to identify the potential offshore locations considered areas that appear most suitable for renewable energy development.

BOEM said it collaborated with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science to use an ocean planning model that seeks to minimize conflicts.

The eight areas were carved out of the original 3.9 million acres that the Department of the Interior announced for public comment in April. Officials said the final areas may be further changed based on feedback from government partners, ocean users and stakeholders.

BOEM seeks comment on potential conflicts, including with a potential U.S. Coast Guard “fairway” for transiting vessels, commercial fishing, a NASA danger zone, and marine habitat areas.

BOEM said it intends to further explore the areas with the Department of Defense, Coast Guard, NASA and other ocean users, such as the fishing industry, to collect additional information that should be considered before finalizing the wind energy areas.

Meetings have been set for the following dates:

To comment on the draft wind energy areas, visit regulations.gov and search for docket number BOEM-2022-0072. BOEM will accept comments through 11:59 p.m. Dec. 16.

For more information visit https://www.boem.gov/renewable-energy/state-activities/central-atlantic.

First aid for fishing injuries

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August 2010
By Ken DeBarth

We all expect every­thing to work out well. We expect to catch fish, have a good time, and return home safely. But sometimes things just don’t work out that way and some­thing bad happens.

Fishing is a pretty safe sport. Statistics tell us that the most dangerous thing we do on any fishing trip is driving the car to where we are going to fish. Once we are on the beach or in the boat, however, there are a number of things that can go wrong. Fortunately most of these are not life threatening, but even a little emergency can ruin a good day if you are not prepared or do not know what to do.

Common sense will prevent many fishing injuries. But bad things can and do still happen. Here are some ideas for ways to prevent and treat minor injuries you may encounter on your fishing trip.

Cuts: All sorts of things can cut you. Most common is your bait knife, but anything with a sharp edge can do the job in­cluding shells and foreign ob­jects in the water or the sand.

First aid for cuts includes cleaning the wound and con­trolling bleeding. Bleeding will wash some foreign material from the wound, but washing with hand soap and clean wa­ter is best. Most minor bleed­ing can be controlled by direct pressure. Put a clean cloth or a paper towel (or gauze if you have it) over the wound and push on it firmly. Hold pres­sure for several minutes. If you remove the dressing and pres­sure, a partly formed clot can be washed away and the bleed­ing will not be controlled.

Any cut that gaps open so that you can look down into it or spurts blood should be evaluated by trained medi­cal personnel. Stitches may be required for proper heal­ing. Wounds that need stitches should be sewed within eight to 12 hours. After that, the chance of infection and poor healing in­creases significantly.

Puncture wounds are a spe­cial type of cut—with a small amount of surface injury and a penetrating wound edge. Fish­hooks, fish fins and stab-type wounds all have the possibil­ity of carrying dirt and germs deep into tissue. Encourage puncture wounds to bleed. The blood will help wash for­eign material out of the wound. Soap and water washing is vi­tal, and soaking the wound in warm water will also help to clean it.

Stings and bites
Marine animals can cause painful inju­ries. The two most common in our area are sting rays and jelly fish. Sting rays have a barb at the base of their tail with a power­ful venom. Sting ray injuries are usually on an extremity and are due to stepping on or han­dling the sting ray. The pain of a sting ray envenomization is severe, and I have seen tough guys cry like a baby.

Treatment is simple. Soak the wound in hot water. Sting ray venom is de-activated by heat. Water temperature should be in the range of a hot bath. You can get a hot enough temperature from any hot wa­ter faucet. It is easy to find the right temperature—the pain will STOP! As the water cools, the pain will begin to return. You can add more hot water or use a two bucket technique by rotating a new bucket of hot water as the first bucket cools. It maybe necessary to continue the hot water soaks for 2 to 3 hours until all the venom is gone. At this point, the water will cool and the pain will not return.

Occasionally the barb will stay in the wound and this may require medical attention for removal. A medical professional can advise you on the need for antibiotics and teta­nus immunization.

Jelly fish have venom-con­taining tentacles that rupture on contact and can be very pain­ful. The venom is contained in small “cysts” and these must be removed. Jelly fish stings can occur on any part of the body.

Treatment involves remov­ing the tentacles and venom by scrubbing the affected area with sand and salt water. Fresh water will worsen the pain as it causes more cysts to rupture. Do not use fresh water! You can scrape the area with a credit card or similar thin hard-edged object to help remove the re­maining cysts and tentacles.

Jelly fish venom is destroyed by acidic solutions like vinegar and protein digesting sub­stances like meat tenderizer. If you have both available (and you may want to include some of each in your first aid kit), make a paste of meat tender­izer and white vinegar and rub it onto the painful area. Usu­ally one or two applications of this paste is enough to stop all the pain.

Tetanus immunization and antibiotics are not required for jelly fish stings.

Flying things like bees, green head flies and mosquitoes can bite or sting fisherman. Insect repellent and full coverage clothing will help prevent these troublesome injuries. The pain and swelling from bee stings can be limited by ap­plication of an ice cube to the sting area. This will limit the spread of the venom. Swelling and itch can be treated with over-the-counter Benadryl by mouth and local surface ap­plication of over-the-counter hydrocortisone cream.

Yellow jacket stings some­time require an update of tet­anus immunization but rarely require antibiotics. Any difficulty with breath­ing, light-headedness, or ex­tensive swelling after a bee sting should be evaluated by a medical professional as soon as possible.

Green head flies and mos­quito bites will cause swelling and itching. This can be miser­able but is rarely dangerous. Treatment is oral Benadryl and topical hydrocortisone. FOREIGN OBJECTS can be­come embedded in the body in a number of ways. The barb from a sting ray, a fishhook, a fish fin/spine can require at­tention.

Usually any foreign body that is embedded should be evaluated by a medical profes­sional. There are a number of first aid strategies for fishhook re­moval, but I have never had a lot of success with any of these. I remove fishhooks often in my work in the emergency room and urgent care centers. It isn’t hard if you have an injection of a local anesthetic. On the beach or in the boat it is harder. First aid is to remove the lure from the hook and stabilize the hook. Any movement of the hook will cause pain.

Foreign bodies in the eye sometimes occur. The most important first aid for “some­thing in the eye” is to NOT rub the eye. This is vital and very hard to do. The tendency is to rub the eye, but this often will cause more damage. Blinking and tearing will help wash the foreign object out of the eye. Wash the eye by irrigating with lots of water.
Always remove contact lens­es from an eye with a foreign object injury. Seek medical at­tention if the pain and irritation continues.

First-aid kit
There are any number of pre-assembled first aid kits on the market. You can buy one of these or you can put together your own. If you choose to make your own first aid kit con­sider including the following:

A supply of gauze pads—sterile 4x4s are available at most drug stores
Small hand towels—for dressings and cleaning wounds
Several sizes of Band Aids—emphasize the larger sizes
One or two Ace Wraps—these are useful in holding dressings and bandages in place
Benadryl capsules or tab­lets—available in 25-mg strength over the counter
Small bottle of white vinegar; small jar of Adolph’s Meat Tenderizer
Sling or triangular ban­dage—available at most drug stores
Bottle of hydrogen perox­ide—for washing wounds
Small bar of hand soap

Fishing is a safe sport, but, like in any other activity, ac­cidents can happen. Knowl­edge is always the best weap­on when dealing with the unexpected. I hope you will never need to remember any of the above information, but if an accident should happen, I hope some of this advice will help you to deal with the problem.

Ken DeBarth is a fisherman and a retired physician assistant. He has treated all of the above in his work and experienced most of the above while fishing.