Peyton Piquard, David Tweedie and Desiree Christa Ricker relate through comedy skits what it’s like on Ocracoke in the “Dingbatters Guide to Ocracoke, Season Two,” playing Wednesday nights at 8 in Deepwater Theater. Photo by Eakin Howard
Monday, Aug. 5 Ocracoke Preservation Society: Porch talk, 1 pm. Rodney Kemp: Fish House Liar Hyde County Commissioners, 6 pm. Community Center A Tale of Blackbeard musical, School gym, 8 pm Ocracoke Bar & Grille: Melody Maxwell, 4 pm; Formula Duo, 7 pm Gaffer’s: 30 Second Rocks Trivia Game, 7 pm; The Blendrs, 9:30 pm
Islander Kelley Shinn, left, will join Marcy Brenner, right and Lou Castro for music Tuesday night in the Coyote Den, Community Square. Photo: C. Leinbach
Tuesday, Aug. 6 Ocracoke Preservation Society: Porch talk, 1 pm, with Karen Amspacher of the Core Sound Waterfowl Museum on Harker’s Island. Jolly Roger: Aaron & Jackie, 6 pm Ocracoke Bar & Grille: Kim France, 4 pm Ocracoke Oyster Co.: Bryan Mayer, 7 pm Coyote Music Den: Plus One with Kelley Shinn, 8 pm Gaffer’s: Texas Hold ‘Em Poker, 7 pm; Barefoot Wade, 9:30 pm
Wednesday, Aug. 7 Ocracoke Preservation Society: Kids craft, 1 pm Ocracoke Community Library: Movie Night, 7 to 9 pm Ocracoke Oyster Co.: Bryan Mayer, 7 pm Ocracoke Bar & Grille: Jon Lea, 7 pm Jolly Roger: Edgar Scrubbs, 6 pm Deepwater Theater: The Dingbatters Show, 8 pm DAJIO: Lounge Rays, 8 pm Gaffer’s: Team Trivia, 7 pm; Barryoke Karaoke, 9 pm
Thursday, Aug. 8 Ocracoke Preservation Society: museum tour, 1 pm Zillie’s Wine Tasting, 6 p.m. Reserve at http://www.zillies.com or call 252-928-9036. Jolly Roger: Van Who, 6 pm Ocracoke Oyster Co.: Mitch Barrett, 7 pm Ocracoke Bar & Grille: Melody Maxwell, 4pm; 30Three, 7pm Ocracoke Community Library program: Learn about services available from Hyde County Hotline, Inc. with Client Services Advocate Brenda Kremser, 7 pm. Gaffer’s: Willis Gupton, 7 pm; DJ Marshall B Dance Party, 10 pm Deepwater Theater: Molasses Creek, 8 pm DAJIO: Raygun Ruby, 8 pm
Friday, Aug. 9 Ocracoke Preservation Society: Porch talk, 1 pm. Crystal Canterbury talks about WWII on the OBX. Zillie’s Wine Tasting, 6 p.m. Reserve at http://www.zillies.com or call 252-928-9036. Jolly Roger: Willis Gupton, 6 pm Ocracoke Bar & Grille: Kate McNally, 4 pm, Ray Murray, 7 pm Ocracoke Oyster Co.: Kate McNally, 7 pm DAJIO: Jon Lea, 8 pm Coyote Music Den: Coyote in Concert w/ guest Kim France, 8 pm Gaffer’s: The Freeway Jubilee, 9 pm
Saturday, Aug. 10 Jolly Roger: Willis Gupton, 6 pm Ocracoke Oyster Co.: Martin Garrish & Coyote, 7 pm Ocracoke Bar & Grille: Kate McNally, 4 pm, Ray Murray, 7 pm DAJIO: Kate McNally, 8 pm Gaffer’s: The Freeway Jubilee, 9 pm
Sunday, Aug. 11 Ocracoke Oyster Co.: Jon Lea, 7 pm Ocracoke Bar & Grille: 30Three, 7pm DAJIO: Lounge Rays, 8 pm Gaffer’s: Petty Thief, 9 pm
Among the Ocracoke Health Center staff are Christine McNerny, R.N., and Merrian Midgette, receptionist. Photo: C. Leinbach
TheOcracoke Seafood Festival,to benefit the health center, will be held from 3 to 10 pm, Saturday, Aug. 31, in the Berkley Barn.
By Rose Hoban
Cheryl Ballance sometimes has had to tell summer guests not to come to Ocracoke.
Ballance, the long-time chief executive officer of the Ocracoke Health Center, once got a call from a woman who was nine months into a high-risk pregnancy and wanted to know what the health resources were.
“Oh, you really need to look at the map,” she had said before going on to explain that if the woman went into labor, she’d be several hours from a facility that could safely deliver her.
Ballance, an R.N., has seen and heard it all—from the 1,000-plus year-round residents and several thousand visitors daily during the summer season.
That makes the health center, helmed by the island’s only doctor, Erin Baker, D.O., an important place on this island, providing many health services in a friendly office setting. Supplementing island health care is Gail Covington, a nurse practitioner, who provides services in home on Ocracoke and Hatteras islands, but who does not take insurance.
But the past few years have been challenging financially. Ballance said it’s difficult to keep providing high quality care on a shrinking health care dollar in one of the most remote and sparsely populated parts of the state.
About a third of her patients are uninsured, even as they work two to four gigs at a time during tourist season, and the center does not turn anyone away.
“The people who support this whole resort are people who are only employed, if they’re lucky, somewhat in April, May, June, July, August, and if we don’t have hurricanes September and October,” she said. “Then by November, everything is closed. They’re making a year’s worth of income during that five- to six-month period.”
Then, for many people on the island, funds begin to dwindle in the lean months of late winter, especially as unemployment checks peter out. It’s something familiar to Erin O’Neal, the clinic’s chief operating officer, who used to work in restaurants when she’d come home from school.
Ocracoke Health Center. Photo: P. Vankevich
The isolation tourists crave makes for challenges for the locals.
When Vince O’Neal (related to Erin O’Neal, who’s married to Vince’s cousin, Chad) was a kid on Ocracoke, his only medical encounters were with the school nurse or his grandmother, a midwife who delivered the island’s babies for decades. That was before the clinic started in 1981.
“We did not have any kind of medical services here until that clinic was built,” said the 59-year-old restaurant owner, and, by his reckoning, eighth generation Ocracoker.
Otherwise, it was off the island to the doctor, a trip that could take hours, or even a whole day. To visit specialists, islanders must take a day or more to do so.
Access to emergency care from Ocracoke has gotten better over the years. There are always emergency medical technicians on the island and helicopter service to Vidant Medical Center in Greenville, but there’s no pharmacy and no lab.
Getting off the island takes hours by ferry to mainland Hyde and then to the nearest hospital, or an hourlong ferry ride to Hatteras from the northern end of the island and then another 90 minutes to Nags Head.
So much depends on the ferries. If the weather turns stormy, or foggy, the ferries don’t run. Even when they do, getting to a specialist off island can mean getting up at 3:30 to get the 5 a.m. Hatteras run. Prescriptions? They come by courier from Beach Pharmacy in Hatteras every afternoon.
Many of the clinic’s child patients are covered by Medicaid, but Ballance said uncertainty looms about that payment stream as the program gets set to transform from a fee-for-service to managed-care payment regimen where clinics such as OHC get paid a set monthly fee in return for providing all of a patient’s needs.
The Ocracoke Health Center recently got a much-needed new floor thanks to grants but more money is needed for other building repairs. Photo: C. Leinbach
And Ballance wants to make sure she gets the same reimbursement percentages from all providers.
The OHC has achieved the benchmarks required to be a “quality provider” for Blue Cross Blue Shield, which comes with enhanced payment. But the extra work to become a quality provider has meant extra work.
“We’re almost at that breaking point. I mean, we’re really on the brink, that we have to hire another person,” to fulfill the quality tasks plus do paperwork, she said, noting that the cost of living and lack of low-cost housing on Ocracoke can make it challenging to recruit year-round workers. “We don’t earn resort income, but we pay resort prices to live here,” she said.
Even the well-paying patients haven’t been as profitable of late. Traditionally, the clinic has treated tourists, who do often have jobs – with insurance – that pay enough for them to come to the island for a vacation. But commercial reimbursements haven’t kept pace.
“We barely do a margin in our busy season, June, July and August,” Ballance said.
If it weren’t for the funds the center gets for being a “federally qualified” health center, the fundraising, and foundation grants, there’d be no way to keep health care going on the island.
That’s why the health center is mounting a Seafood Festival from 4 to 11 p.m. Aug. 31 to raise about $80,000 needed to make building repairs, among other needs.
“Health care is vitally important for the island, both to meet the needs of the local community and the tourist population,” said Helena Stevens, executive director of the Ocracoke Civic and Business Association.
She wouldn’t even speculate what losing the clinic would mean to the island.
Rose Hoban, an R.N., is the founder and editor of North Carolina Health News, an online news outlet at nchealthnews.org covering health issues statewide.
To hear Hoban’s interview Aug. 8 with WUNC’s Frank Stasio, click here.
To read about the Ocracoke Health Center, clickhere.
Volunteers and staff are hosting the first annual “Ocracoke Seafood Festival Health Center Benefit” on Saturday, Aug. 31, at the Berkley Barn, 58 Water Plant Rd.
All proceeds from this event will go to much needed repairs to the Health Center’s nearly 40-year-old building, program expansion, and operations.
The Ocracoke Health Center became a Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) in 2013, receiving federal grant funds each year.
“Those funds allow the health center to provide more patient services and provide a discount for patients unable to pay for medical care,” said CEO Cheryl Ballance. “Grant funding and patient payments do not cover all costs, especially the increasing need for discounted medical care and repairs to our aging and weather-beaten building.”
Tickets for fish, shrimp or oysters are $10 for one choice, $20 for two and $30 for all three.
Live music, a live and silent auction, and local seafood will be the highlights of the event. 3 to 5 p.m. – Silent Auction 4 p.m. – Food Served 4 to 6 p.m. – Live Music: Barefoot Wade 6 to 7 p.m. – Live Auction 7 p.m. – Live Music: Ocracoke Rockers 8:30 to 9:45 p.m. – Live Music: Raygun Ruby
The Ocracoke Health Center is a community owned and operated, private non-profit, 501(c)3 corporation established and operating since 1981 as a provider of family practice medical care.
Their mission is to provide quality, accessible, affordable, community-based medical care with respect and dignity to all individuals in a culturally sensitive manner.
No one is refused care if they are unable to pay for services. A discount plan is offered to all, and eligibility is based on income and family size.
Those wishing to make a donation can contact the health center at 252-928-1511, or send donations by mail to P.O. Box 543, Ocracoke, NC 27960.
The M/V Rodanthe, the N.C. Ferry Division’s newest vehicle ferry between Ocracoke and Hatteras, is idled at the Hatteras Ferry dock while its engine is being checked. Photo by Jed Dixon.
After only a few days running, the North Carolina Ferry Division’s newest car ferry, the M/V Rodanthe is offline.
Jed Dixon, Ferry Division deputy director, confirmed on Saturday that the Rodanthe is resting dockside while a Caterpiller representative checks out the engine.
The first day, Tuesday (July 30), it made a few runs, Dixon said.
“This came up the second day,” he said.
Some readings with the Caterpiller C-18 diesel engine came up that concerned them.
“In an overabundance of caution, we took it offline,” he said. “They’re working on it now.”
He said the Ferry Division has enough other boats to make scheduled runs.
There’s a chance the engine might have to be replaced and taken to the Ferry Division shipyard in Mann’s Harbor or another shipyard for that, he said, “but everything’s under warranty.”
Built by the Bollinger Shipyard in Amelia, Louisiana, the $9.7 million Rodanthe holds up to 40 vehicles and arrived at the NCDOT Shipyard in Mann’s Harbor in June.
The first new ferry for the Hatteras-Ocracoke route in 13 years, it replaces the 22-year-old M/V Thomas A. Baum, and is part of an ongoing effort by the N.C. Ferry Division to phase out the smaller Hatteras-class ferries with larger river-class vessels to accommodate more vehicles.
The Rodanthe has a number of enhanced features–interior bathrooms and a first-level passenger lounge. The hull has also been designed to reduce over splash that can occur on the Hatteras Inlet route – especially on windy and stormy days.
Two others of the same size, the M/V Avon and the M/V Salvo, are being built for a combined total of $22.9 million and expected to be completed in 2020.
The Rodanthe was officially christenedon June 28 in a ceremony at the Hatteras dock.
Drew Batts and Clayton Jernigan are the new owners of the gas station and campground. Photo: P. Vankevich
To catch up on Ocracoke news and much more, click here
By Peter Vankevich
The Ocracoke Station & Beachcomber campground is under new ownership and plans are underway to reopen in early 2020.
Business partners Clayton Jernigan and Drew Batts of Stantonsburg, Wilson County, in July purchased the two and a half-acre property and building and have renamed it “Jerniman’s.”
It already has a website and is taking reservations for the campsite starting in February and even has a schedule of events for the year.
The island was abuzz in July when the pair signed the contract and installed a sign with the new name and contact information.
Jernigan said in an interview at the site that the pair has a two-year plan that will include extensive renovation of both the inside and outside of the building but getting the campground back open is the first on their agenda.
Campsite reservations will start online on Sept. 1 for the 2020 season that will open Feb. 1.
The site accommodates 30 RVs and has five sites for tent campers to which they hope to add four more tent sites.
In the meantime, the pair said the gas pumps will remain open 24/7 for credit card purchases only under the current contract with Beasley Enterprises, Windsor, for the next two years.
So how is it that a pair of businessmen whose enterprise, AutoRazzi, that photographs vehicle inventories for dealerships for their websites are purchasing the only gas station on Ocracoke?
Batt’s wife, Samara, wanted to see all the lighthouses in North Carolina.
So, they started up in Currituck and worked their way southward.
Missing the Cedar Island ferry, on their way back to the Hatteras ferry, Drew noticed the for-sale sign at the gas station. They were already thinking of adding a new venture and after much research, they now have an interest on Ocracoke.
The station closed in May 2018 after financial difficulties ensued for the operators, Sean and Laurie Death, following damage from Hurricane Matthew in October 2016.
The Ocracoke gas station is open for gasoline sales with credit cards only until the new owners get it all organized. Photo: C. Leinbach
The traveling exhibit on Blackbeard and his flagship Queen Anne’s Revenge is on display through August at the Graveyard of the Atlantic Museum in Hatteras.
HATTERAS— An infamous pirate has once again staked claim to land along the Outer Banks.
The North Carolina Maritime Museum in Beaufort has installed its traveling exhibit on Blackbeard and his flagship Queen Anne’s Revenge in its sister site in Hatteras, the Graveyard of the Atlantic Museum, 59200 Museum Dr., just beyond the Hatteras ferry terminal.
The display, which includes a collection of artifacts recovered from the QAR shipwreck site, will remain at the museum through at least the end of August. It is then scheduled to move to the N.C. Museum of History in Raleigh.
“The exhibit is a story that covers the discovery and archaeology of the wreck of the Queen Anne’s Revenge,” the museum system’s Exhibits Curator Mike Carraway explained. “It also covers the pirates themselves in relationship to QAR and Blackbeard.”
The approximately 40 artifacts in the exhibit have been recovered from the underwater home of the Queen Anne’s Revenge. Intersal, Inc., discovered the shipwreck in November 1996, using information provided to Operations Director Mike Daniel by the company president, Phil Masters.
This is the second iteration of the traveling exhibit, which has added more items.
“And we changed the way the artifact cases are set up,” Caraway said.
The Graveyard of the Atlantic Museum is just a short ways beyond the Hatteras ferry terminal. Photo: C. Leinbach
That way, he explained, they can tell the story through artifacts that reflect the panels on such topics as the legend of Blackbeard, piracy at that time, common weaponry, treasure and the discovery of QAR. Artifacts include lead shot and cannonballs, a pipe bowl, ceramics, fragments of gold and more. A touch screen provides information on Blackbeard’s crew; a model of QAR that Carraway describes as more historically accurate than even the one in the permanent exhibit on display at the museum in Beaufort; and a map of QAR’s underwater home are also included.
It was hard for Carraway to single out a favorite artifact or element of the display.
“It’s all really cool,” Carraway said, “or we wouldn’t do it.”
The Graveyard of the Atlantic Museum is operating on its summer schedule: open Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission is free.
For more information, call 252-986-0720 or visit graveyardoftheatlantic.com.
Part of the traveling exhibit on Blackbeard and his flagship Queen Anne’s Revenge at the Graveyard of the Atlantic Museum..
The M/V Rodanthe makes her maiden voyage. Photo by North Carolina Ferry System
To catch up on Ocracoke news and much more, click here
From our news services
The newest addition to the Hatteras-Ocracoke vehicular ferry route, the M/V Rodanthe, embarked on her maiden voyage on Tuesday morning (July 30) with a full load of passengers headed to Ocracoke, the North Carolina Ferry Division said.
The Rodanthe arrived at the NCDOT Shipyard in Manns Harbor in June and is the first new ferry for the Hatteras-Ocracoke route in 13 years.
The new ferry replaced the 22-year-old M/V Thomas A. Baum, and is part of an ongoing effort by the N.C. Ferry Division to phase out the smaller Hatteras-class ferries with larger river-class vessels, which can accommodate more vehicles.
The Rodanthe has a number of enhanced features in addition to the increase in physical space, which includes interior bathrooms, as well as a first-level passenger lounge which will be easier to access.
The hull has also been designed to reduce over splash that can occur on the Hatteras Inlet route – especially on windy and stormy days.
The vessel was officially christened at a ceremony on June 28 at the Hatteras ferry docks,
The Rodanthe is the first new ferry for the Hatteras-Ocracoke route since 2006, (when the M/V Hatteras was christened), and is the first new ferry for all of the state’s seven routes since the M/V Sea Level was put into service in May 2012.
Two additional new river-class ferries, (tentatively named the M/V Avon and the M/V Salvo), are also in the works, and will replace the smaller Hatteras-class ferries M/V Kinnakeet and the M/V Chicamacomico.
These additional new ferries are scheduled to be delivered in 2020.
Zillie’s is hoppin’ on summer afternoons. Photo: C. Leinbach
To catch up on Ocracoke news and much more, click here
National Park Service activities below
Monday, July 29 A Tale of Blackbeard musical, School Gym, 8 pm Jolly Roger: Barefoot Wade, 6 pm Ocracoke Bar & Grille: Melody Maxwell, 4 pm; Formula Duo, 7 pm Gaffer’s: 30 Second Rocks Trivia Game, 7 pm; Sopoz, 9 pm
Tuesday, July 30 Ocracoke Bar & Grille: Kim France, 4 pm Jolly Roger: Aaron & Jackie, 6 pm Ocracoke Oyster Co: Bryan Mayer, 7 pm Coyote Music Den: Coyote Plus One with Jon Lea, 8 pm Gaffer’s: Texas Hold ‘Em Poker, 7 pm; Barefoot Wade, 9:30 pm
Thursday, Aug. 1 Ocracoke Preservation Society: Porch talk, 1 pm Zillie’s Wine Tasting, 6 p.m. Reserve at zillies.com or call 252-928-9036. Ocracoke Bar & Grille: Melody Maxwell, 4pm; 30Three, 7pm Jolly Roger: Van Who, 6 pm Decoy Carvers Guild, 7 pm. Community Center DAJIO: Raygun Ruby, 8 pm Gaffer’s: Willis Gupton, 7 pm; DJ Marshall B Dance Party, 10 pm Deepwater Theater: Molasses Creek, 8 pm
Friday, Aug. 2 Ocracoke Preservation Society: Museum tour, 1 pm Zillie’s Wine Tasting, 6 p.m. Reserve at zillies.com or call 252-928-9036. Jolly Roger: Willis Gupton, 6 pm Ocracoke Bar & Grille: Kate McNally, 4 pm; Barefoot Wade, 7 pm Ocracoke Oyster Co.: Kate McNally, 7 pm Coyote Music Den: Coyote in Concert w/ guests Kim France & Martin Garrish, 8 pm DAJIO: John Lea, 8 pm Gaffer’s: The Gabe Stillman Band, 9 pm
Saturday, Aug. 3 Jolly Roger: Willis Gupton, 6 pm Ocracoke Oyster Co.: The Rockers, 8 pm Ocracoke Bar & Grille: Kate McNally, 4 pm; Van Who, 7 pm DAJIO: Kate McNally, 8 pm Gaffer’s: The Gabe Stillman Band, 9 pm
Sunday, Aug. 4 Ocracoke Oyster Co.: Jon Lea, 7 pm Ocracoke Bar & Grille: 30Three, 7pm
NPS summer programs through Sept. 2 on Ocracoke The National Park Service provides talks on the Ocracoke Island environment and history. All programs are at the benches by the Visitor Center unless otherwise indicated. Bug spray suggested for all outdoor activities.
The NPS meeting area at the Visitors Center is where the spring programs will be held. Photo: C. Leinbach
Monday: 1 pm Pirates! Learn about Blackbeard and others. (30 min.) 3 pm Barrier Island Nature. Join a ranger for a talk about the wild side of Ocracoke. (30 min.) 8:45 pm Ocracoke after Dark. Explore the night sky with a ranger. Meet at the Ocracoke Day Use Area. (1 hour)
Tuesday: 10:30 am All About Turtles. Discover the mysterious creatures with talk and activities for all ages. (30 min.) 2:30 pm Ocracoke History. Learn about the island’s rich past. (30 min.)
Wednesday: 9 am Banker Ponies. Meet the ponies unique to Ocracoke. At the Pony Pen. (20 min.) 10:30 am All About Turtles. Discover the mysterious creatures with talk and activities for all ages. (30 min.) 2:30 pm Pirates! Learn about Blackbeard and others. (30 min.)
Thursday: 9 am Banker Ponies. Meet the ponies unique to Ocracoke. At the Pony Pen. (20 min.) 10:30 pm Ocracoke History. Learn about the island’s rich past. (30 min.) 2:30 pm Barrier Island Nature. Join a ranger for a talk about the wild side of Ocracoke. (30 min.)
Friday: 8:30 am Birds & Beaches of Ocracoke. An island exploration for all ages. Meet at the parking lot adjacent to the NPS campground. (90 min.) 2:30 pm All About Turtles. Discover the mysterious creatures with talk and activities for all ages. (30 min.)
The Ocracoke Civic & Business Association is seeking an administrative assistant and an events coordinator.
Below are the job descriptions. Interested applicants should send their resume and cover letter by Aug. 12, to: Ocracoke Civic & Business Association to info@visitocracokenc.comor by mail: P.O. Box 456, Ocracoke, NC, 27960.
This story was picked up by several national news sources, including the Daily Review (Hayward, California) in which it was published July 18, 1930.Aycock Brownwas a legend on the Outer Banks and in the early 1940s ran a newspaper called the Ocracoke Island Beacon. He has been described as one-man promoter of the North Carolina coast. Captain Garrish was a long-time resident of Ocracoke.
Ocracoke, N.C. – A coupe does not make a good submarine, and there is a lot to be learned about driving along the beach.
Aycock Brown drove along the sound side of the island at low tide. His car stuck in the mud while tide was flowing. In less than three hours what had been a dry beach was 100 feet or more from land and only the hood of the coupe was visible.
Capt. James Henry Garrish, using the regulation life-saving tackle, rescued the car and its driver. Islanders and coat guardsmen assisted in the rescue.