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Ocracoke cleans up

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Cleanup day student coordinator Becky Boos is standing fifth from right, holding the purple folder. Michael Shoemaker, teacher coordinator, is far left, back row, green vest. Photo by Peter Vankevich

By Rita Thiel

The Ocracoke School Beta Club held its first community litter pick-up of the year on Saturday.  

Clean-Up Committee chairperson, Becky Boos, organized the event, which collected 23 bags of trash from village streets.  

“Students wanted more community service activities,” said Michael Shoemaker, high school social studies teacher and teacher coordinator for Beta Club. “They want to be more involved with helping the community come together.”  

The clean-up began with Beta Club students gathering at the school for their supplies (garbage bags, gloves and vests) and, upon checking Boos’ map of the village, deciding in which area they would pick up trash.

Several community members who volunteered received supplies from Boos, who then assigned them areas.

Ocracoke Beta Club students Becky Boos (left) and Iris McClean inspect trash bag on Back Road,. Photo by Richard Taylor

Almost the entire Beta Club participated in the event, along with several island residents. The safety vests were donated by Howard Bennink and Keith Gaskins and the group used other supplies leftover from previous pickups.

Boos, who is in her first year of Beta Club, related the difficulties of organizing the event.

“The most difficult thing was trying to get everyone on the same page so it could run smoothly and all the areas get done,” she said.

Some of the more interesting items that were collected were a wheelchair, a hypodermic insulin needle and a full dolphin skeleton, head attached.

She would gladly do another litter pick-up.  

“Maybe we can have one on the beach next time,” said Boos.  Ideas for next time are already forming. Shoemaker would like to include recyclable materials, collecting them separately so they don’t end up with the trash.

Boos would like to get more of the community on board and participating.  

“Nobody wants to live in filth,” she said. “People get to do something good for the environment and ourselves.”

Trash Bag awaits pickup on NC 12 near Ocracoke Preservation Society. Photo by Richard Taylor

N.C. Highway 12 in Frisco to be closed March 24 for pipe replacements

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The N.C. Department of Transportation will close a section of N.C. Highway 12 in Frisco from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Sunday, March 24, to replace two cross pipes under the road.

Detour route for 4×4 traffic only

FRISCO – The N.C. Department of Transportation will close a section of N.C. Highway 12 in Frisco from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. March 24 to replace two cross pipes under the road.

The closure will take place between Delmer Willis Road and Sunset Strip in Frisco.

A marked detour route along the beach will be available for four-wheel drive traffic only between National Park Service ramps 48 and 49.

Motorists using the detour are advised to follow the marked route and obey posted speed limits. There is no detour route available for vehicles without four-wheel drive.

The work will be performed as scheduled unless a major weather event occurs.

For real-time travel information, visit DriveNC.gov or follow NCDOT on social media.

Shells from around the world to be auctioned at Shell Club meeting on Ocracoke

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Scotch bonnets, the state shell, are favored prizes members of the N.C. Shell Club seek when they visit Ocracoke each year. Photo: C. Leinbach

To  read more on the shell club’s adventures when visiting, click here and here 

A special live auction of shells from around the world will highlight the North Carolina Shell Club meeting in the evenings of March 29 and 30 in the Ocracoke Community Center.

Members and nonmembers are invited to attend each night.

Several shell collections were donated to the club this year, said Dora Zimmerman, president, and 50 shells from one of those collections will be for sale to all those who attend the meeting Friday night at 7 p.m. and wish to bid.

This collection, gathered by Rear Admiral Jerrold M. Michael, was willed to the North Carolina Shell Club by his wife.

The donors wished for the shells to be sold to collectors, especially members of North Carolina Shell Club, said John Timmerman, a club member who will be the auctioneer.

Timmerman said there are shells in the collection for all budgets.

The club usually holds a live auction at its November meeting in Ocean Isle but decided to have it on Ocracoke.

“We wanted our friends in Ocracoke to have an opportunity to see and buy shells from around the world,” said Everett Long, immediate past president.

Before the auction, Islander Philip Howard will talk about the Ocracoke lifesaving stations, active on both the north and south ends of the island from 1883 to 1917.

Club members will visit Portsmouth Island on Saturday for shell collecting and in the evening will gather at the Community Center for dinner, a speaker and a silent auction.

The cover of the N.C. Shell Club auction catalog for Ocracoke March 29

Beta Club seeks volunteers for village cleanup on Saturday

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Volunteers helping with a village litter sweep a few years ago. Photo: Peter Vankevich

To catch up on Ocracoke news and much more, click here 

The Ocracoke School Beta Club has scheduled an Ocracoke Village cleanup for 10 a.m. Saturday (March 16).

Any and all are welcome to join in.

Volunteers are asked to meet in front of the school at 10 am. Vests, gloves, and trash bags will be provided, as will group assignments and community maps.

This clean-up is not linked to the DOT litter sweep in April. 

Photo: C. Leinbach

Calling all Ocracoke performers

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To catch up on Ocracoke news and much more, click here 

This year, the Ocracoke School PTA hopes all those on Ocracoke with any kind of talent join in the Ocracoke Variety Show at 7 p.m. March 22 in the Community Center.

Laura McClain, PTA president, said the group wants this year’s talent show to be a true community variety show.

“We want more than school kids to perform,” she said. So far, eight acts have signed up, McClain said.

Registration forms are available in the school office and the Variety Store and are due back at the school by March 19.

Proceeds from admission and concession sales will go to the PTA which will give all funds raised to the teachers.  

“At Christmas time we gave each teacher $125 to use on academic needs for their classrooms,” McClain said.  “We hope to give more this spring.”

Passenger ferry won’t be ready in May

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To catch up on Ocracoke news and much more, click here 

By Connie Leinbach

A worker at US Workboats guides the 48,000-pound hull of the M/V Ocracoke Express during Monday’s hull flip in Hubert. Photo courtesy of N.C. Ferry Division

As rumors flew around Ocracoke on Friday that the passenger ferry being built by U.S. Workboats in Hubert flunked a Coast Guard inspection, the N.C. Ferry Division said today that the vessel will not be available in May.

The island rumor mill over the weekend cited inadequate welds on the hull, but the Ferry Division has not confirmed that detail.

Calls to N.C. Ferry Division Spokesman Tim Hass and Ferry Division Deputy Director Jed Dixon Friday afternoon were not returned. A call again to Hass on Monday yielded an email statement from him late Monday afternoon.

Hass’s email was as follows:

“The N.C. Ferry Division has been made aware of construction challenges with the passenger ferry.

“In an effort to fully understand the issues that are keeping the builder from completing the vessel, the Ferry Division has been on site multiple times in the past two weeks and has embedded a contractor on site to monitor and provide quality control and assurance. 

“While it will take some time before we know if this increased oversight is having the desired result, the Ferry Division at this time does not believe the vessel will be in commission by May 1.  Once a full mitigation plan has been received and approved by the U.S. Coast Guard, the Ferry Division should be able to tell the local stakeholders of the anticipated delivery date.” 

The $9.1 million aluminum catamaran-style ferry, named “Ocracoke Express,” was scheduled to debut on Tuesday, May 14, with delivery to the Ferry Division in February. The vessel will carry up to 98 passengers on a 70-minute trip from Hatteras directly into Ocracoke Village.

Last May, the Ferry Division announced that the new boat being built by US Workboats near Swansboro wouldn’t be ready for the busy tourist season. They suggested it might be ready in the fall, but the fall came and went and the next debut date was to be in May.

The idea of adding a passenger-only boat to the busy Hatteras-Ocracoke run came about in 2015 when a longer route across the Hatteras Inlet was officially sanctioned after the short ferry route between Hatteras and Ocracoke became unnavigable due to shoaling in 2013.

This one-hour ferry ride has resulted in fewer runs between islands, longer wait lines at the Hatteras terminal and fewer day-trippers journeying to the island.

Islanders’ concerns with this prompted the Ferry Division to explore the purchase of a passenger ferry to help relieve the traffic lines at Hatteras.

Artist rendering of NCDOT’s passenger ferry that was scheduled to begin service between Hatteras and Ocracoke Village in May.

 

Former islander Joyce O’Neal: 1955 to 2019

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Joyce Salem O’Neal

Joyce Salem O’Neal, 63, of Beaufort and formerly of Ocracoke Island, died on Saturday (March 9) in Carolina East Medical Center of New Bern.

Born Sept. 7, 1955, she was a daughter of the late Harry M. Salem Jr. and Betty Lou Slocum Salem of Prince George County, Virginia. After high school, she moved to Ocracoke.

A hard worker, she was known to have multiple jobs at one time to help provide for her family. She retired after 30 years from Ocracoke Schools where she started as a custodian and later becoming a teacher’s assistant.

While a teacher’s assistant, she also assumed roles such as bus driver, high school girls’ basketball coach and data manager.

After retiring, she moved to Beaufort, to be with her daughter and grandson. There, Joyce started working full time at the Beaufort Library. She retired from the library at the end of 2018 due to illness.

Joyce enjoyed reading and had a love for fishing and fished numerous years in the Ocracoke Invitational Surf Fishing Tournament.

In addition to her daughter, Carmen O’Neal, Joyce is survived by a grandson, Ayden Daniels both of Beaufort; a brother, Harry M. Salem III of Oakboro, N.C.; her fur baby, Leo; and unofficial granddaughter, Olivia Rimmer of Beaufort.

A Celebration of Life will be announced at a later date.

In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to a scholarship in Joyce’s name for graduating seniors at Ocracoke School, P.O. Box 189, Ocracoke, NC 27960.

The family would like to thank family and friends for their love and support during Joyce’s illness and passing.

Arrangements are by Noe Funeral Service Inc. of Beaufort and condolences and life tributes may be sent to the family at noefs.org.

Ocracoke events week of March 11 to 17

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A Tale of Blackbeard always needs several village girls. Auditions are Sunday, March 17.

To catch up on Ocracoke news and much more, click here 

Monday, March 11
ABC Board meeting. 6:30 p.m., Ocracoke Community Center

Tuesday, March 12
Coyote Music Den Jam Night, 6:30 pm. All ages & levels players, singers, listeners. Bring instrument; no charge; donations welcome.

Gaffer’s: Texas Hold ‘Em Poker, 7 pm

Wednesday, March 13
Meeting for those wishing to provide Commercial services on NPS property. 1 p.m. Ocracoke Community Center

OCBA Civic affairs meeting. 6 p.m. Ocracoke Community Center. Updates from:

  • Ferry Division Update – Postponed*
  • Kris Noble (Hyde County)
  • Ed Fuller (National Park Service)
  • Mandi Cochran (Child Care Center)
  • Scott Bradley (Community Square)
  • Joseph Ramunni (Ocracoke tram) – Postponed*

Coyote Music Den Word Play, 7 pm. If you like words, bring some to share. No charge; donations appreciated.

Gaffer’s: Team Trivia, 7 pm

Friday, March 15
Gaffer’s: Live music TBA, 8:30 pm

Saturday, March 16

Open auditions for “A Tale of Blackbeard,” Deepwater Theater, 2 to 4 p.m., and Sunday, March 17, by appointment only. 

Ocracoke Oyster Co.: Martin Garrish and Coyote, 6 pmGaffer’s: St. Patty’s Day Party, Raygun Ruby, 8 pm

Sunday, March 17
Ocracoke Bar & Grille St. Patrick’s Day parade starts at 1 p.m. at 1718 Brewery (pre-gaming begins at noon) and ends at O’Bar, featuring leprechauns, music and prizes throughout the day. See story here.

 

St. Patrick’s Day fun scheduled for Ocracoke

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The Lucky Charmers of Morehead City were the winners of last year’s St. Patrick’s Day parade, sponsored by the Ocracoke Bar & Grille. Will they repeat their victory this year? Photo by Richard Taylor

To catch up on Ocracoke news and much more, click here 

Luis DeJesus of New York City will be the grand marshal and head of tomfoolery for this year’s fourth Annual Ocracoke St. Patrick’s Day Parade.

Parade “pre-gaming” begins at noon at 1718 Brewing Ocracoke and the parade will begin after DeJesus finishes a meet-and-greet.  The parade will go down Irvin Garrish Hwy. and end at the Ocracoke Bar & Grille, sponsor and host of the parade and prizes. No registration is necessary.

Top prize is $550, awarded by DeJesus for best parade entry: Leprechaun’s choice for best float, group or individual.

DeJesus, a member of the Kiss tribute band called “Mini Kiss,” was grand marshal for the second year of the parade.

Sean Death, who with his wife, Laurie, own the O’Bar and began the event three years ago, wants the parade to be held on the actual St. Patrick’s Day to promote the start of the island season.

All businesses are encouraged to enter as many floats or groups as they want, freely distribute swag, such as cups, T-shirts, coupons, etc., along the parade route.

A lucky lab in last year’s St. Patrick’s Day parade. Photo by Richard Taylor

NPS superintendent to discuss 2018 Season

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Cape Hatteras National Seashore Ocracoke campground.

To catch up on Ocracoke news and much more, click here 

National Parks of Eastern North Carolina Superintendent David E. Hallac will present an overview of visitation to the national parks on the Outer Banks in a meeting from 2 to 3 p.m. Tuesday, March 26, in the Ocracoke Community Center.

Hallac will begin the meeting with an overview of the visitation patterns and park activities during 2018 at Cape Hatteras National Seashore, Fort Raleigh National Historic Site, and Wright Brothers National Memorial. A discussion and question-and-answer session will follow.

A second meeting will be held from 6 to 7 p.m. on Wednesday, March 27, in the Fessenden Center Annex Building, 47017 Buxton Back Rd, Buxton.

 

David Hallac, superintendent of the Cape Hatteras National Seashore and the Outer Banks Group. Photo by P. Vankevich