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Help wanted: Commercial watermen needed to remove lost crab pots

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WANCHESE — The North Carolina Coastal Federation is accepting applications from commercial watermen to assist for pay in its annual on-the-water Lost Fishing Gear Recovery Project from coastal waters during the “no-potting” period, typically from Jan. 15 to Feb. 7.

The application period for these jobs is now open for any fisherman with a valid standard commercial fishing license (SCFL) in North Carolina.  

The 2018 project will take place in select areas within all three marine patrol districts statewide. During the 2017 project, 36 crews, in partnership with Marine Patrol officers, removed 4,304 crab pots in coastal fishing waters statewide. This was combined with three shoreline cleanups that removed more than 3.5 tons of various marine debris in a single day.

To qualify, watermen must have a SCFL license and guarantee availability for work during the period of Jan. 18 through Feb. 7. They must attend a mandatory training session to learn general project protocols and how to use project equipment (data collection tablets, and for a subset of watermen, side-scan sonars).

Compensation is $400 per boat, per day. Each boat is required to have two people onboard for safety reasons.

This project is funded by the North Carolina General Assembly with support from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Marine Debris Program. It improves fish habitat and water quality and supports the coastal economy.

Applications are available for download at www.nccoast.org/crab and will be accepted until Friday, Jan. 12. Open positions are filled on a first-come, first -basis.

Completed applications can be mailed to the North Carolina Coastal Federation, P.O. Box 276, Wanchese, NC 27981, faxed to 252-473-2402, or scanned and emailed to sarajh@nccoast.org.

For more information, contact Sara J. Hallas at 252-473-1607, or sarajh@nccoast.org.

Ocracoke School announces honor roll students for first nine weeks of school

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Ocracoke School’s honor students for first nine weeks of 2017-2018. Photo: Peter Vankevich
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Ocracoke School on Tuesday honored 62 students who achieved the honor roll in the first nine weeks of the 2017 to 2018 school year.
“I am very proud of all of our students,” said Principal Leslie Cole.  “Thank you to Ocracoke School students, staff and parents for a great start to the 2017-2018 school year.”

While in previous years, both those students with all As and those with all As and Bs were honored, this year begins a new system.

Principal Cole said that for the last few decades, Ocracoke followed a 7-point grading scale and honor roll recipients were always those students whose grades were from 85 to 100.

A few years ago, the state mandated all public schools go to a 10-point scale.

“We adjusted our honor roll to this new system, but we did feel this lowered our expectations,” Cole said. “We wanted to raise the bar of expectations for our students that we feel the state lowered.”

At the end of last year, the staff agreed to set it to 85 to 100 for one simple Ocracoke School honor roll, but can’t be called the A /B honor roll since not all Bs are included, Cole explained.  This change is only for Ocracoke School.

She added that at the annual Academic Banquet that honors all recipients who earned the honor roll all year, those students who earn all As all year will be rewarded with a special recognition for this accomplishment. 

This change was made in the parent handbook and also was announced at the Back to School night and to the student body at the start of the year. 

Third Grade:   Angel Garcia, Manol Guerrero Perez, Zoe Modlin, Mia Perez Leyva

Fourth Grade: Eliana Contreras, Sawyer Devan, Angela Flores, Juliette Jordan, Tatiana Martinez, Aidan Mason 

Fifth Grade:    Shayna Brooks, Gabriel Brown, Nicholas Cole, Jacob Daniels, Gavin Elicker, Landon Fuller, Auggie Giagu, Uriel Guerrero Perez, Sally Jordan, Finn Kattenburg, Carter O’Neal, Noah O’Neal, Melanie Perez, Caroline Stocks, Catherine Todd

Sixth Grade:    Alyssa Bryan, Ronald Contreras Garcia, Maren Donlon, Daymon Esham, Emilia Jordan, Christian Stevens, Mariah Temple

Seventh  Grade:  Maggie Evans, Katie Kinnion, Iris McClain

Eighth Grade: Julian Bennink,  Edwin Perez-Benitez, Jackson Strange, Jayden West

Ninth Grade:   Hannah Belch, Becky Boos, Dylan Esham, Mason Fuller, Cole Gilbert, Mackenzie Novak, Alexander O’Neal, Russell Stevens.

Tenth Grade:   Abel Dalgleish, Alan Doshier, Reese Gaskins, Karen Jordan, Paul Jordan, Mila Ortiz, David Styron

Eleventh Grade:  Colby Austin, Alston Belch, Ingrid Contreras Garcia, Taylor Fuller, Teresa Hadley, Kalai Samick

Twelfth Grade:  Liam Caswell, Lupita Martinez

 

Festival Latino de Ocracoke this weekend /este fin de semana

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The Festival Latino de Ocracoke on Saturday (Nov. 11) will honor the vibrant Hispanic culture on the island and will take place on the grounds of Books to be Red on School Road, Ocracoke School and the Community Center.  

Traditional games and food from different regions of Mexico will be available, as well as Tamale, Churro, and Itacate cooking workshops. “Flor y Canto,” a folkloric group with roots from Guerrero, Mexico, will perform throughout the day.

A folkloric dance workshop will precede the festivities on Friday at 7 p.m. in the Ocracoke School gym.

Saturday evening, a program including music and traditional dances by Ballet Folklorico “Orgullo y Alma Latina” and community members will be held in the Ocracoke School Gym followed by a Latino dance at the Ocracoke Community Center, featuring Kalidad Musical.

In addition to Ocracoke Alive, the festival is made possible by Hyde County Occupancy Funds and from sponsor donations.  Those interested in being sponsors can do so online at http://ocracokealive.org, or by mailing a contribution to Ocracoke Alive, P.O. Box 604, Ocracoke, NC 27960.

The festival schedule is as follows:

Friday dance workshop with Fabian Vargas (Nov. 10)

Learn traditional ballet folklorico dancing with Fabian Vargas of Ballet Folkorico Orgullo y Alma Latina (Ocracoke School Gym, 7 p.m.)

Saturday Schedule (Nov. 11)

For more details and programs visit http://www.ocracokealive.org/

Books to Be Red Lawn ~ 11 a.m. – 4 p.m.  Music Concert by Group “Flor Y Canto” and Mariachi Flores! Food, including dishes from all parts of Mexico! Traditional Mexican games, including Raiguela, Loteria, Giant Tic Tac Toe, and this year’s new addition, “El Toro Loco,” pinatas and more!

Área de Books To Be Red ~ 11 a.m. – 4 p.m. ¡Gran Concierto Con Grupo Musical “Flor Y Canto” y “Mariachi Flores”! ¡Muestra Gastronómica Con Platillo de Todo México! ¡Juegos Tradicionales Mexicanos, Incluyendo Torneo De Raiguela, Lotería, y Gato Gigante!, ¡Además de nuestra nueva adición “El Toro Loco,” Piñatas y Mucho Mas!

School Gym ~ 7 – 9 p.m. Music concert and folkloric dances presented by “Orgullo y Alma Latina” and members of the community. A special representation of Day of the Dead celebration in Mexico.

Gimnasio De La Escuela ~ 7 – 9 p.m.  ¡Gran Concierto de Música y Bailes Folclóricos Presentados Por Grupo de Ballet “Orgullo y Alma Latina” y Miembros de la Comunidad! ¡Además de Una Representación Especial Del Dia de Muertos!

Dance at the Ocracoke Community Center ~ 9 p.m. – midnight. To close this great event, we invite you to a dance with the band Kalidad Musical and a DJ!

Gran Baile en el Centro Comunitario de Ocracoke ~ 9 p.m. – 12 a.m. !Cerrando con Broche de Oro, los Invitamos al Gran Baile Con el Grupo Kalidad Musical Acompañado de un DJ Sorpresa!

Traditional Mexican food will be a highlight of the festival on Saturday.
Games will be part of the fun.

Dave Frum recalls his Vietnam, Cambodia days

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Dave Frum with this collection of Veterans Day hats. Photo by Connie Leinbach

For Ocracoke news, click here

By Peter Vankevich

In honor of Veterans Day, Ocracoke School since 2010 has recognized islanders who have served in all branches of the military.

This stirring event, instituted by then-Principal Walt Padgett, a special forces vet himself, takes place at the flag pole outside  the school and includes singing of the National Anthem, raising the flag and a “thank-you for your service to your country,” composed by some of the students.

Each veteran is honored with a special cap.

Islander Dave Frum, who served in the Vietnam War, has attended every one of these ceremonies and is proud of his collection of hats.

His recounting of that time matches that of the recent Ken Burns/Lynn Novick television series “Vietnam,” which recently aired on public television. This 18-hour documentary chronicles in depth one of the most divisive times in American history.

The eldest of five children, Frum grew up in Morgantown, West Va.  After graduating high school in 1967, he enrolled in West Virginia University (WVU) to major in forestry. 

After three semesters, he wasn’t sure if he wanted to continue. So he took a break and took a job in a store.  Although he planned on reenrolling in the fall of 1969, he got his draft notice that summer.

Early that September, Frum boarded a bus, and 12 hours later, in the middle of the night, arrived in Fort Knox, Kentucky, where they began immediate processing.

Although that blitz is a bit of a blur, he remembers one of the sergeants yelling to the new recruits: “Remember this date, Sept. 7, 1971. That will be when you will get out.”

After several weeks of basic training, he went to Fort Sam Houston, a U.S. Army post in San Antonio, Texas for10-week training as a combat medic.

Then it was on to Southeast Asia.

Again arriving in the middle of the night and stepping off the long flight, Frum felt the heat and humidity accompanied by the odors of jet fuel and the topical jungle.

“When I got to the bunk, it was too hot for me to sleep,” he said.

He was assigned to the 9th Infantry Division’s battalion aid station south of Saigon.

“Even though I would be a medic attached to an infantry unit, I was handed a M16 that I was expected to use if needed and did not have any casualties to treat,” he said. Vietnam was the first U.S. war where medics carried weapons.

For three months, he went out on nightly forays–often on a boat up a river and getting out in the bush or in rice paddies in search of the enemy. 

“You never knew if you would be attacked or where they were,” he said. “I think most of the soldiers we encountered were Vietcong and not NVA (North Vietnamese Army) where we covered,” he said.  One night, he recognized one of the captured Vietnamese as someone he knew and who worked at the base during the day.

In the heat of battle, Frum dealt with life-or-death triage of wounds from bullets and shrapnel.

“Ten weeks is not a lot of time to become a medic,” he said, “but we were told by a surgeon to do the best we could to keep the wounded soldiers alive till we could medevac them by helicopter to a hospital.”  

The toughest night was when three of his friends were killed in action, one of them his best buddy. “I tried to treat him, but knew he wouldn’t make it,” he said.

The most serious combat was yet to come—in Cambodia.

“We took a long flight into the country landing near Parrot’s Beak and that’s where we battled the NVA on a daily basis,” he said. “Cambodia was beautiful and the people I met liked Americans and hated the NVA. This was real war. We dug fox holes in the middle of the jungle and I treated a lot of wounded soldiers”

During his tour of duty, he heard about the Kent State shooting of student protesters in 1970 and wondered what was happening to America.

“I was able to get out earlier than the two years, and when I returned on April 12, 1971, which was Easter Sunday, it was to a different America,” he said.

He picked up on the change when wearing his uniform on the return flight where he noticed people staring at him and few smiles or “welcome back” comments.

“It was an eye-opener to see the opposition to the war in 14 months,” he said. “Everyone had long hair and wore bell-bottom pants.”

Upon his return, he, too, grew out his hair and sported bell bottoms.  Though understanding the opposition to war, he never wavered in his belief that he was serving an important role. Frum and the other combat medics saved a lot of lives during that war and many were killed while assisting others.

The Ken Burns documentary noted that more than 2,000 Army combat medics and Navy corpsmen (medics assigned to Marine units) are listed on the Vietnam Memorial Wall.

“I received several citations, including a bronze star, but I’m most proud of my Combat Medical Badge,” he said. This badge is awarded to those who provide medical support during any period in which a unit was engaged in ground combat.

Unlike many who went to Vietnam and returned with drug problems or PTSD, Frum returned focused.

He re-enrolled in WVU and quickly got his degree. 

While still in college, he started working summers with the National Park Service and continued full-time after graduating.

He discovered Ocracoke in 1977 when he accepted a position with the NPS as a nature interpreter and later helping with maintenance in the winter. In 1979, he designed and helped make the Hammock Hills nature trail across from the campground.

After six years on the island, he and his wife, Karen Lovejoy, hit the road, traveling out west and working at several jobs. They returned to Ocracoke in the late 80s and have been here ever since.

For years, Frum worked two jobs. Since 1987, he took care of maintenance for Portsmouth Island village for the National Park Service, a part-time position from which he recently retired, and he has worked for Ocracoke’s water plant since 1992 and still does.

Times change, and the veterans of Vietnam now these days are recognized for their service and willingness to have sacrificed their lives.

He continues to read about the Vietnam conflict. When in Washington, D.C., he visits the Vietnam Wall Memorial to see the names of those he knew that are on the wall. He has yet to watch the Burns Vietnam series but plans to watch it.

He also looks forward to the Ocracoke School ceremony each year.

“The honoring of all those that served the country by the school is one of the most important days of the year for me,” he said.

Ocracoke Schoool Veterans Day tribute in 2015. The ceremony was moved inside due to weather. Photo by Peter Vankevich

 

 

Update on restaurants, who’s open and closed on Ocracoke

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Hatteras Inlet at dawn. Photo by Peter Vankevich

For Ocracoke news, click here 

Peak visitor season has wound down. Here is an breakdown of openings and closings for the next several months. Any Ocracoke businesses wishing to post their seasonal information, send a note to info@ocracokeobserver.com. 

Open year round:
Eduardo’s
(but will close for about 20 days in February)
Gaffer’s
Magic Bean Coffee Bazaar
Ocracoke Bar & Grille
Ocracoke Station
Ocracoke Oyster Co.
Zillie’s Island Pantry

The following two establishments are planning Thanksgiving buffets:

 Ocracoke Oyster Co.: Noon to 4 pm. Taking orders for pumpkin pecan pie until Nov 16.
Gaffer’s. Noon until 5 p.m.

Other Food & Drink activities:

Zillie’s Island Pantry, Monday to Thursday: 1 to 7:30 p.m.; Friday to Sunday: 1 to 8 p.m.
Wine Tastings, 6 p.m. on Nov. 22 and 24. Reservations required.
  Special event: Thanksgiving Wine Dinner at the Berkley Manor, Nov. 25.
Annual Open House: Nov. 26, noon to 6 pm. Complimentary spiced apple cider, hot mulled wine, holiday treats and secret surprise savings.  For details and reservations, visit zillies.com, or call 252-928-9036.

1718 Brewing Ocracoke: Grand Opening scheduled in November. Watch online for details. Oyster Roast with a special brewed oyster stout Nov 21. Expect some pop up entertainment and food events during the month. Open weekends for most of the winter.

The Ocracoke Working Watermen’s Association 12th Annual Oyster Roast, Shrimp Steam and Seafood Stew Fundraiser,  Saturday, Dec. 30

SEASONAL RESTAURANT CLOSING DATES
Jolly Roger:
closed for the season.
Fig Tree/Sweet Tooth: closed for the season.
Dajio: closed for the season.
Howard’s Pub: closed for the season
Flying Melon: Nov. 4 or 10, depending on weather.
The Back Porch Restaurant: Open Friday, Saturday and Sunday the first two weekends in November. Closed for season: Nov. 12.
The Pony Island Restaurant: closing late November.
Jason’s Restaurant: open through Thanksgiving weekend, 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and 5 to 8:30 p.m. Closed Thanksgiving Day.  Re-opens on Valentine’s Day
The Fudge & Ice Cream Shop:  Closing Nov. 10 or 11
The Slushy Stand: Nov. 26.
Ocracoke Coffee Co.: Noon, Nov. 26.
Thai Moon and School Road Deli: open Wednesday through Sunday, noon to 8 pm. Thanksgiving week: open Monday through Wednesday; closed Thanksgiving Day, then open for the rest of the weekend. TBD beyond Dec 3.
SmacNally’s: Open through Thanksgiving weekend.
Sorella’s: open until the end of December from Thursday through Sunday. Open daily during Thanksgiving and Christmas weeks.

 

Pirate Jamboree commemorates Blackbeard’s last stand

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Blackbeards Pirate Jamboree 2017 Ocracoke NC
Lt. Robert Maynard, portrayed by John Collamore, and Blackbeard, aka, Clay Raines, in the final throes of battle at the 2017 Blackbeard’s Pirate Jamboree on Ocracoke Oct. 28. Photo: Natasha Jackson

By Richard Taylor

Fair weather and large crowds went hand-in-hand contributing to a successful 2017 Blackbeard’s Pirate Jamboree during Halloween weekend, Oct 27 to 29.

A committee of islanders expanded the memorial into a full-blown festival in 2012. But it wasn’t until 2014 that the first one took place. The damaging effects of Hurricanes Irene and Sandy canceled the first two. Another hurricane (Matthew) last year resulted in another cancellation. So this was just the fourth festival. It is sponsored by the Ocracoke Civic and Business Association (OCBA).

“It was an incredible success this year,” said Chip Stevens, an OCBA board member who coordinates the pirate players. “Every hotel room was filled and almost every (rental) house was full; the restaurants were full; the campgrounds were full. We had folks sail in from the mainland.” 

The Ferry Division cooperated by running extra ferries on Saturday, which enabled a lot of day-trippers to attend.

Families in full pirate regalia were evident everywhere: strolling down Irvin Garrish Highway in the heart of the village, along Back Road and elsewhere.

A costumed family visits the jamboree. Photo: C. Leinbach

Stevens was surprised at how many people donned pirate costumes and eye patches, though stressed that the event’s focus is on pirate and colonial history.

This was showcased in the living-history pirate encampment on the Berkley Manor grounds where professional crews discussed or demonstrated navigation, canon-making, life in the notorious Port Royal, Jamaica and more.

 

“We were slammed all day,” said John Collamore, who portrays Lt. Robert Maynard with the Colonial Seaport Foundation crew. “There were a lot more people. We got good feedback.”

One of the first demonstrations visitors saw upon entering the encampment at Berkley Manor was a whole pig roasting on a spit over a wood fire. Bread was baking in a freshly made mud oven nearby.

Blackbeards Pirate Jamboree Ocracoke NC 2017
Dinner for the pirate re-enactors is a whole pig roasting in the encampment. Photo: C. Leinbach

Brittany Slaughter and Lindy Cartwright, both of Kill Devil Hills, attending with their families, were costumed as women pirates Mary Read and Anne Bonny.

“I like all of the actors walking around,” Cartwright said as she watched her young children attempting sword fighting in The Sword Conservancy area of the encampment. “Last year we saw an arrest and execution in the street.”

She was referring to the King’s Rangers, a group of youthful militia re-enactors, who periodically during Saturday’s event performed a pike drill, then arrested a brigand for piracy (one of their members) and marched him back to the encampment for a penalty.

Zain Koroly and Lori Lecki of Chester, Va., visited the event for the first time dressed in period costume (cottons and muslins) and adorned with accessories.

“It’s adult dress-up,” Lecki explained with a laugh. “Pirates wore all of their booty.”

For two members of the canon crew out of Beaufort, Jaron Stephens and Autumn Gillespie, this was their first enactment on Ocracoke and only their second or third pirate re-enactment.

“This is a lot of fun and we will definitely be back for the big one next year,” said Stephens.

The Community Center on Friday evening was packed as folks listened to pirate-themed songs performed by the Motley Tunes and a magic show by Capt. Jim. Afterwards, the audience was treated to a very clever take off on a popular 1960s television game show To Tell the Truth, which featured three swarthy, large-bearded gentlemen who each declared “My name is Blackbeard.”

The panel, posing as the show’s celebrity regulars, Tom Poston, Orson Bean, Polly Bergen and Kitty Carlisle with a series of off-beat questions, attempted to weed out the two imposters. Author-historian Kevin Duffus, moderated and wrote the skit.

Duffus, who also is a documentary filmmaker, has written extensively on Blackbeard and was N.C. Historian of the Year in 2014. He also shared his historical knowledge with his “What Was Blackbeard Doing at Ocracoke” talk Saturday in Community Square.

The main event on Saturday was the three-ship battle between Blackbeard (portrayed by Clay Raines) and Maynard in Silver Lake.

Some islanders noted on Facebook posts that the festival, starting on the same day as the Ocracoke School Halloween Carnival Friday afternoon, took away from attendance at the carnival, which is a big PTA fundraising event.

Zain Koroly and Lori Lecki of Chester, Va.

While the jamboree program listed the carnival and was attended by some of the professional pirates, festival organizers said next year’s event will again be the last weekend in October and can better promote the carnival.

“It was good for the economy,” said Bob Chestnut, owner of Ride the Wind Surf Shop, who echoed other business owners about the weekend, which also included Halloween parties and bands in local restaurants. “We had a good weekend.”

Carol Pahl, owner of Ocracoke Restoration, said it was one of her best Saturdays of the year for business. 

Sunday morning’s memorial service for pirate and British sailors killed at sea during the 1718 Battle of Ocracoke was relocated to the Community Center due to inclement weather. A wreath of remembrance was still tossed into the sea off Springer’s Point later in the rainy afternoon.

Although exact counts are hard to estimate, Stevens thinks 3,500 to 5,000 visitors attended.

Financing for the festival comes from an Ocracoke Occupancy Tax grant, beer and merchandise sales, program ads and fees from vendors at the Brigands Bazaar on the Wahab House next to the encampment.

In 2015 the last year the festival was held, the OCBA raised about $17,000 in earned revenue to produce the event. Figures from this year’s event are as yet unavailable. Stevens said he’s still counting, and has already had 15 to 20 inquiries at his Blackbeard’s Lodge for next year’s event.

Planning, fund-raising and publicity for the event takes months by a volunteer committee composed of various islanders.

“We have to plan the encampment, coordinate the battles, the Friday night and Sunday morning events and everything else,” Stevens said. “All participants had to be lodged and fed.”

Over the years, Stevens has cultivated relationships with pirate crews and performers from among the pirate community.

Mark Brown, right, and his mother, Patricia, enjoy turkey legs to support the Ocracoke School fifth-grade fundraiser. Photo: C. Leinbach

“They come from all over the country,” he said. “I’ve been to several festivals over the years. The crews are very excited to come here.”

This year, he said about 90 paid participant pirates attended.

“They are like Civil War re-enactors,” he said. “Ocracoke is a very special place to have this event because it has the most pirate history of any place in the state. It’s the culmination of the life of the most famous pirate in U.S. history. Blackbeard had five ships and over 400 men.”

Pirate crew re-enactors come from all works of life.

“We had a retired banker and even news caster from Florida,” he said. 

The OCBA is already working on next year’s “grand event” Jamboree — the 300th anniversary of Blackbeard’s demise.

“We’re looking to expand to Thursday next year due to the anniversary,” Stevens said. “We have to plan the encampment, coordinate the (Silver Lake ship) battles and plan the Friday night and Sunday morning events.”

He expects a lot of statewide exposure and publicity.

“It’s a year-round job to recruit the (pirate) crews, do the financing and make sure the bills are paid,” he added.

Peter Vankevich contributed to this story.

Blackbeards Pirate Jamboree 2017
Three Blackbeard contestants are ready for “Will the Real Blackbeard Stand Up” Friday night in the Community Center. Photo: Natasha Jackson
Blackbeards Pirate Jamboree Ocracoke NC 2017
Children try out their sword fighting skills with members of The Sword Conservancy. Photo: C. Leinbach
The Canon Crew, one of the pirate re-enactor groups, prepares colonial-style smoked fish for the other pirate crews. Photo: Natasha Jackson
Author-historian Kevin Duffus reveals Blackbeard’s secret plan. Photo: C. Leinbach
The Kings Rangers militia arrest a suspect for piracy. Photo: C. Leinbach
Pirate Jamboree 2017
The Motley Tones provide a soundtrack of sea chanteys and tavern songs throughout the jamboree. Photo: Natasha Jackson
A memorial Sunday in the Community Center commemorates the fallen among Blackbeard’s and Lt. Robert Maynard’s crews Nov. 22, 1718, off Springer’s Point. Photo: C. Leinbach
A few hardy pirate crew members brave the wind and rain on Sunday to visit Springer’s Point where they tossed a memorial wreath into the Pamlico Sound. Photo: John Collamore
Blackbeard's Pirate Jamboree Ocracoke NC 2017
A wreath made of island flowers commemorates those lost among Blackbeard’s and Lt. Robert Maynard’s crews off Springer’s Point Nov. 22, 1718. Photo: Michelle Murillo

 

 

Hatteras-Ocracoke ferries switch to winter schedules Nov. 7 

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Photo by Connie Leinbach

18 round-trip departures daily

HATTERAS – As the days get shorter and the temperatures drop, the time has come for the North Carolina Ferry Division’s popular Hatteras-Ocracoke ferry route to switch to its winter schedules.

The following schedule takes effect on Tuesday, Nov. 7:

  • From Hatteras: 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, and 11 a.m.noon, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9 and 11 p.m.midnight.
  • From Ocracoke: 4:306:307:308:309:3010:30, and 11:30 a.m.12:301:302:303:30,4:305:306:307:309:30 and 10:30 p.m.12:30 a.m.

For information on schedule interruptions due to weather or mechanical issues, follow the Ferry Division on Twitter @NCDOT_Ferry.

Meeting on Lake Mattamuskeet set for Tuesday

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For Ocracoke news, click here

Text and photos by  Peter Vankevich

Lake Mattamuskeet on the mainland is in terrible shape.

Bald cypress tree seeds at Lake Mattamuskeet.

Virtually all of its subaquatic vegetation has disappeared along with declining water quality and changing lake levels.   This lost vegetation that includes aquatic plants such as wild celery, pond weed, redhead grass and Eurasian milfoil, provides key food resources for migratory waterfowl and other birds as well as habitat for fish, crabs and many aquatic organisms.

Hyde County and other stakeholders have joined together to develop a voluntary watershed restoration plan. A second meeting will be at 7 p.m. Tuesday (Nov. 7) in the Hyde County Government Complex, Swan Quarter.

Lake Mattamuskeet is popular for crabbing. Ryan McCuaig of Ocracoke, caught only a few crabs on his trip across the sound in early August.

The goal of the watershed restoration plan is to provide a blueprint for how to best address water quality and flooding issues that harm the lake’s fish and wildlife and affect nearby landowners.

Community members will hear a draft of the watershed restoration plan goals that were discussed and approved by the plan’s stakeholder group. Group members discuss goals and potential solutions to the lake watershed’s water quality and flooding problems and help develop action items for the plan.

Stakeholders include members of Hyde County’s residential, farming and hospitality communities, as well as Hyde County employees and representatives from U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission. The North Carolina Coastal Federation is helping develop the plan. An overview of core stakeholders and their responsibilities can be found here.

Other topics include an overview of water quality trends and submerged aquatic vegetation in the lake from Michelle Moorman of U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission will present on waterfowl trends.

Randall Etheridge, assistant professor in engineering at East Carolina University, will present on the current mapping and survey efforts being conducted at the lake. This mapping effort has helped Etheridge develop a preliminary outline of identified problems and solutions.

Once completed, the plan will explain how the lake should and does function, its current status and health, and will identify management options to address water quality and flooding. Upon approval, it can be used to secure grant funds for implementation.

Any questions can be directed to: Erin Fleckenstein 252 473-1607 or erinf@nccoast.org.  Updated information about the plan development can be found at: www.nccoast.org/lakemattamuskeet. The next scheduled meeting will be Feb. 6, 2018.

Covering 40,000 acres and averaging only two to three feet in-depth, Lake Mattamuskeet is the largest natural lake in North Carolina. 

Map of Lake Mattamuskeet.

 

Ocracoke events Nov. 6 to 11

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For Ocracoke news, click here

Monday, Nov. 6
Hyde County Commissioners, Community Center, 6 pm

Ocracoke Bar & Grille: Aaron Caswell, 8 pm

The Ocracoke Preservation Society will hold its fall membership meeting at 6 p.m. Tuesday in the Ocracoke Community Center.

Tuesday, Nov. 7

Community Center: Ocracokee Preservation Society fall membership meeting and potluck, 6 p.m.
Gaffer’s: Texas Hold ‘Em Poker, 7 pm
Coyote Music Den: Open Jam: sing, play, listen. All ages, all levels welcome; 7:30 to 9 pm; youth at 6:30. Sign up at info@coyotemusic.net.  No charge; donations welcome.

Wednesday, Nov. 8
Gaffer’s: DJ Bingo, called WINGO with Rob King, 7 pm
Coyote Music Den: Word Play 7 to 8:30 pm

Thursday, Nov. 9

Veterans honored by the students at Ocracoke School, 8:15 am.
Ocracoke Bar and Grille: Kate McNally, 8 pm

Friday, Nov. 10
Coyote Music Den: Playing your Ocracoke Memories, Martin Garrish, 7:30 to 9:30 pm; doors at 7.
Gaffer’s: Barefoot Wade, 9 pm

Saturday, Nov. 11
Festival Latino de Ocracoke, Grounds of Books to be Red, Ocracoke School, Ocracoke Community Center. 11 am to midnight.
Ocracoke Oyster Co.: Martin Garrish and Lou Castro, 6 pm
Gaffer’s: The Flow Vendors, 8 pm

 

 

 

Birds of Ocracoke: A rare Yellow-headed Blackbird

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Yellow-headed Blackbird with Brown-headed Cowbirds and a Common Grackle

To see more profiles of the Birds of Ocracoke, click here

Text and photos by Peter Vankevich

Fall migration is a time when unusual birds appear in unexpected locations. Such was the case on Ocracoke when a Yellow-headed Blackbird (Xanthocephalus xanthocephalus) showed up on Ocracoke on Oct. 17.

That afternoon, a large, noisy, mixed-flock of Common and Boat-tailed Grackles, Brown-headed Cowbirds and Mourning and Eurasian Collared Doves arrived in this reporter’s yard in Widgeon Woods, near the lighthouse, to feed on bird seed on the ground. Their appearance was not unusual, but then a different species appeared in a wax myrtle tree.

After perching for several minutes surveying the scene, the mystery bird swooped down and joined the others and began ravenously eating the seed. Unlike some birds whose plumage in the fall can make them a challenge to identify, this one was easy–a Yellow-headed Blackbird. This bird is well-named, and no other bird in North America looks similar.

The adult male in breeding plumage has a bright yellow head and breast, a black eye line and body and upper white wing patches that are noticeable in flight. Females and first-year males are less colorful as was this one, probably a first-year male.

Like the smaller Red winged Blackbird, these are water birds. They nest in fresh water marshes, prairie pot holes and mountain meadows of central and western North America. Their eastern most breeding range is Minnesota, Wisconsin, northwestern Indiana and northern Illinois.

They winter primarily in the southwest and Mexico.

In the spring, when the male arrives onto its breeding grounds, it will stake out a territory, driving off Red-wing Blackbirds, and attempt to attract several females which arrive a week or two  later. The males are polygynous and will include between one and six females within a harem.

The females build nests on cattails, bulrushes and reeds over deeper water than red-wings and are primarily responsible for feeding the young.

During breeding season, they feed on and provide aquatic insects to their nestlings and they forage on cultivated grains and weed seeds during the post-breeding season.

The Yellow-headed Blackbird is strongly aggressive toward Marsh Wrens, probably because of the egg-destroying habits of these much smaller birds.

The male’s song is a short series of musical notes followed by a buzzy screech.

The term “rare bird” can be used two ways. It can mean a bird whose population is very small and perhaps in danger of extinction. It can also be used for species whose numbers are plentiful, but for an individual which strays beyond its distribution range into an area where they are not normally seen.

Recently, a Yellow-breasted Bunting showed up at a bird feeder on the southeast coast of Labrador. This is a Eurasian species, typically found in Russia and thousands of miles outside its range. It is also an endangered species.

In North Carolina, major storms can be responsible for providing rare birds. At other times, young birds which do not have the migration routes down, may head off in another direction ending up in areas such as the Outer Banks as this bird did.

So, Yellow-headed Blackbirds are considered rare in North Carolina and a delightful find when they show up. The one that appeared on Ocracoke was observed for only two days.

Best Time to see: Few sightings on Outer Banks late summer and fall

Where: Only one known sighting on Ocracoke, in village near lighthouse

Listen:    

(audio provided courtesy of OhioLINK Digital Resource Commons)

Click here for the Birds of the Outer Banks Checklist

Yellow-headed Blackbird, note small white line in wing indicating a probable first year male