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Want to help a loggerhead sea turtle? Here’s what you can do

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Plastic wrapping washed up on the Ocracoke beach. This kind of plastic in the ocean can be deadly for marine life thinking it’s food.

Text and photos by Peter Vankevich

Adult loggerhead sea turtles typically weigh between 170 and 350 pounds with a lifespan of around 50 years.  Part of their diet includes jellyfish and squid.

Loggerheads can mistake released balloons and clear plastics in the sea as food and ingest them.

This causes blockages in their digestive systems, leading to malnutrition, internal injuries and even death.

Additionally, the toxic chemicals found in plastics can further harm loggerhead sea turtles, compromising their immune systems and reproductive capacities.

When walking on the beach, bring a bag with you and if you come across released balloons and plastics like shrink wrap, pick them up and dispose of them where they cannot make their way back to the sea.

Picking up plastics on the beach can help mitigate the threat posed to loggerhead sea turtles and other marine life.

Every piece of plastic removed from the beach is one fewer piece of harmful debris that could end up in the bellies of marine animals. It also makes the beach nicer.

If you are on vacation here and have become familiar with the amazing success story of nesting sea turtles, when you return home spread the word for folks not to release helium balloons. Balloons from as far away as Indiana and Ohio can make their way to the island and out to sea where they can cause the death of sea turtles and other aquatic animals.

By raising awareness, we can help save the lives of loggerhead sea turtles. There are many alternatives for celebrations or commemorations than releasing balloons.

As of Aug. 29, there have been 100 sea turtle nests on Ocracoke with 26 already hatched.  The entire Cape Hatteras National Seashore has 299 sea turtle nests with 106 nests hatched. These nests are all loggerheads except for two leatherback, four green, and  one Kemp’s ridley.

Hyde County hires new EMS director, hires more staff, purchases Ocracoke Masonic Temple

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By Connie Leinbach

Hyde County has hired Brook Cox as the new director of Emergency Medical Services.

Cox, from Mebane, Alamance County, began work Aug. 27.

With over 20 years of experience in the EMS field, Cox brings a wealth of knowledge, expertise, and a deep commitment to the community’s well-being, said Hyde County Manager Kris Noble.

Brook Cox is Hyde County’s new EMS director.

Throughout her career, Cox has held various administrative roles within EMS, demonstrating exceptional leadership and a dedication to providing the highest standard of care.

Her extensive experience ranges from frontline emergency response to strategic planning and management, Noble said, making her a well-rounded leader with a comprehensive understanding of the EMS landscape.

“As the new EMS director, Cox is committed to fostering a culture of excellence, teamwork, and compassion within the department,” Noble said.  “We are confident that Hyde County EMS will continue to thrive and grow under her leadership.”

Cox, in an interview, said she is excited about her new position and home.

“It’s beautiful,” she said about the scenery of the mainland and Ocracoke. “What I love about Hyde County is even though it’s one agency, it’s two different cultures. The employees here have such big hearts.”

Also, Noble said Gabby Robinson and Nick Hiatt have joined Hyde County EMS as new shift supervisors.

Hiatt began his Fire/EMS career in 1996 and has served in various roles between Wilmington and Mount Airy.

Robinson started her career in 2015 and has held various roles in Eastern North Carolina.

These new supervisors are two of the four that will be hired as per the new budget, Noble said.

“Adding these positions will give Hyde County a more efficient leadership structure and better coverage,” Noble said.  

EMS Gets New Digs

The Masonic Temple beside the Ocracoke Health Center will become the new EMS headquarters. Photo: P. Vankevich

Hyde County has purchased the Ocracoke Masonic Lodge to become the new EMS headquarters.

Located on Back Road beside the Ocracoke Health Center, the purchase of $450,000 was funded by a North Carolina General Assembly Appropriation of $600,000, Noble said.

Of that grant amount, $100,000 was used towards the purchase of a new ambulance, and the remainder of the funding will be used to make improvements to the building. 

A grant from the Golden Leaf Foundation will help fund renovations which will include a triage area where medics can assess and even treat walk-in patients in a dedicated space.

This area will also be available for use by the Hyde County Health Department when needed. 

Renovations have already begun with move-in possible in early fall, depending on renovation progress, she said.

The building currently has six bunk-style bedrooms and the county hopes to also use the space to house Hyde County Sheriff’s office deputies overnight. 

Hyde County is in the process of submitting additional grant applications towards making the station more resilient by elevating the existing structure, constructing a climate-controlled, elevated ambulance parking area and adding a generator system to power the building during power outages. 

Ocracoke events Aug. 26 to Sept. 2

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Late summer Silver Lake harbor. Photo: C. Leinbach

Monday, Aug. 26
NPS program: Meet the Banker Ponies: 9:30 to 10 a.m. at the Pony Pasture.
NPS Talk: Life on a Barrier Island: 2:30 pm. Outside the Discovery Center.
Mini Bar at Ocracoke Coffee: Bead by the Sea jewelry making class, 6-8 pm

Tuesday, Aug. 27
Morning Bird Walk, 8:30 am. Meet at the NPS Campground parking lot.
NPS Talk: Life on a Barrier Island: 2:30 pm. Outside the Discovery Center.
Ocracoke Waterways Commission, 6:30 pm. Community Center.
1718 Brewing Ocracoke: Brooke & Nick, 7 pm
Ocracoke Oyster Company: Ray Murray, 7 pm

Wednesday, Aug. 28
NPS program: Meet the Banker Ponies: 9:30 to 10 a.m. at the Pony Pasture.
Small business workshops with Beaufort County Community College, Ocracoke Community Center

Thursday, Aug. 29
NPS Ranger program at lighthouse, 11 am
NPS Talk: Life on a Barrier Island: 2:30 pm. Outside the Discovery Center.
Small business workshops with Beaufort County Community College, Ocracoke Community Center
Ocracoke Oyster Company: Martin & Friends, 7 pm

Friday, Aug. 30
What’s Happening on Ocracoke: Dr. Jeremy Sexton and Joe Rockenstein, CEO of the Ocracoke Health Center, 11:30 am. WOVV, 90.1 FM, wovv.org
Mini Bar at Ocracoke Coffee: Kate McNally, 6-8 pm
Ocracoke Oyster Company: Shane Thomas, 7:30 pm
1718 Brewing Ocracoke: Barefoot Wade, 7 pm
The Breeze: High Gain Haze, 9 pm

Saturday, Aug. 31
Ocracoke Seafood Festival, 2 to 10 pm, Berkley Barn. See flyer below.
Mini Bar at Ocracoke Coffee: artist TBD, 6-8 pm
Ocracoke Oyster Company: Barefoot Wade, 7:30 pm
The Breeze: High Gain Haze, 9 pm

Sunday, Sept. 1
Church services:
Life Saving Church, 459 Lighthouse Rd., worship, 11 am
Ocracoke United Methodist Church: 71 School Rd., worship, 11 am. Streaming via its Facebook page.
Stella Maris Catholic Chapel: 95 School Road, Mass, 3:30 pm
1718 Brewing Ocracoke: Rockstead, 7 pm
Ocracoke Oyster Company: Barefoot Wade, 7 pm

Monday, Sept. 2  Labor Day
Ocracoke Oyster Company: Ray Murray, 7 pm
1718 Brewing Ocracoke: Music TBD

Free disaster mental health training offered

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From our news services

UNC Greensboro’s Center for Youth, Family and Community Partnerships will offer free disaster mental health trainings from Aug. 28 through Dec. 4 with some sessions in Spanish.

Sponsored by the NC Division of Mental Health, Developmental Disabilities, and Substance Use Services, these virtual trainings are open to anyone who may respond to a natural or man-made disaster. These trainings include Psychological First Aid and Skills for Psychological Recovery. 

Psychological First Aid (PFA) is an evidence-based approach to supporting individuals of all ages in the immediate aftermath of the disaster with goals to reduce initial distress and build a foundation for longer term adaptive functioning and coping.

This training would be appropriate for anybody who mobilizes in immediate disaster response.

Skills for Psychological Recovery (SPR) is an evidence-informed intervention that assists individuals of all ages with building coping skills to reduce ongoing distress that may persist in the weeks and months following a disaster.

It is not mental health treatment, but rather a secondary prevention model. This training would be appropriate for people who would likely work with those impacted in the weeks and months following a disaster.

See the flyers below for details.

Sable Island: A special slice of the Atlantic

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Flying into Sable Island, Nova Scotia.

Text and photos by Caroline Branan

I have had the special privilege of visiting Ocracoke Island annually with my family and we still continue to do so. With ease, I grew to love the island, so different from where we live in Chapel Hill. Ocracoke inspires people in many ways, from getting married on the beach, to spending countless hours fishing in all kinds of weather or taking that perfect sunset photograph.

My Ocracoke inspiration led me to learn about nature and find ways to understand and improve the environment, specifically our vast oceans. This led me to North Carolina State University where I graduated in 2022 with a B.S in marine sciences and a B.S in biology with a minor in music performance. Currently, I am in a master’s program at Texas Tech University studying biology.

Soon after graduating from NC State, I had the opportunity to co-write an article with Peter Vankevich, Released balloons: the scourge of the beach and seas.

To illustrate that this is a global problem, Sable Island was included. Similar in many ways to Ocracoke, it is a crescent-shaped island, roughly 25 miles in length located 180 miles off the coast of Nova Scotia. One of the many deflated balloons that ended up there was marked with a school name from Ohio and the date March 31. It appeared on that island three days later.

At the time of co-writing that article, I had no idea that I would have the incredibly special opportunity to spend six weeks, from Dec. 30 to Feb. 9, on that island and will return to study grey seal pup development for my master’s thesis. I didn’t even connect the dots until I started the school year. It’s incredibly fascinating how Ocracoke connects you to important people and places that shape your future, which people refer to as “the Ocracoke effect.” The connections you make on this island can shape your life trajectory, leading to your growing appreciation of Ocracoke.

My master’s thesis focuses on investigating the effects of iron on grey seal pup development, and the animals we work with are the grey seals on Sable Island. The grey seal pups need lots of oxygen in their blood and muscle to dive in search of food to survive. Their levels drop during development and slowly rise after they wean off their mother’s milk. However, it takes time for their stores to rise up to mature levels and often pups are still lacking oxygen stores when they go off to forage, meaning weaker diving abilities. Iron is a key micronutrient needed to form the proteins that oxygen binds to, specifically hemoglobin and myoglobin. A pup’s early iron levels depend solely on intake from their mother’s milk. So, I’m investigating whether iron limitations stem from the mother’s milk or from pup internal physiology using iron supplementation techniques.

Caroline Branan with a sleepy seal pup after handling. Photo by Michelle Rivard

All our research procedures and interactions are approved by our National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) permit number 25794, and our utmost priority is to interact with the seals as little as needed. I hope my research will lead to more questions about seal physiology and conservation efforts across pinniped species.

Since very few people can actually visit Sable Island, here are some details written within the context of comparing and contrasting Sable with Ocracoke.

Sable Island has a romantic image as home to hundreds of free-roaming horses, has the world’s largest breeding colony of grey seals, and an amazing list of bird species, many blown far off-course. Its unique assortment of flora and fauna is a huge draw for both research and tourism.

Since 2011, Sable is a National Park Reserve, managed by Parks Canada — their version of our National Park Service. It has a small year-round Parks staff team and no permanent residents.

Due in part to limited housing, only a few researchers can be on the island at a given time.

An old lightkeeper house, renamed West Light Field Camp, and lighthouse structure at sunset.

Those tourists with the money can make day visits only, no camping. Requests to visit must be made in advance. To make it even more of a challenge, it is not uncommon to get all the way there and be denied access by boat or small aircraft due to bad weather, especially fog, high winds and dangerous waters.

This sandbar has been known as Sable Island, or Isle de Sable, since 1601, with “sable” meaning sand in French. So, when I say sandbar, I’m not minimizing Sable’s beauty and impact; I refer to the literal translation and topography.

Like offshore of the Outer Banks, Sable Island is also known as the “Graveyard of the Atlantic” due to the enormous number of shipwrecks that have occurred starting in the late 16th century. Over 350 documented shipwrecks have occurred around Sable Island, with the first being a sailing ship, the “HMS Delight,” in 1583. These shipwrecked vessels pale in comparison to today’s large ships and many were small fishing boats, but they still held crews who perished in these swirling waters.

Because of the seemingly constant winds and swirling overwash, it is not unusual that long-buried vessels will resurface due to shifting sands and then be buried again.

Many factors make it treacherous to navigate around the island, including storms, high winds, fog and strong currents.

There are three main currents that meet very close to Sable Island: the Labrador Current, the Gulf Stream and the Belle Isle Current. These currents also create dense fog over the island especially from late spring into summer, heavily obscuring it from the view of oncoming ships.

Midday view from the highest accessible point on Sable Island, overlooking the grass and melting snow.

Due to the proximity of the three currents, lots of marine debris washes up onto the island. Parks Canada and the Sable Island Institute are partnering on a Beach Monitoring program and analyzing it to help understand the level of ocean pollution. One study showed that 92 percent of this debris is plastic.

Hurricanes and tropical storms that impact the Outer Banks often creep their way up the Atlantic Ocean towards the island. Hurricane Dorian, which caused massive devastation to Ocracoke’s village, struck Sable as a Category 2 storm.

With so many shipwrecks and rumors of plunderers on the island, in 1801 the government of Nova Scotia established a series of lifesaving stations and a permanent staffed station that would benefit shipwrecked individuals and save many future lives.

Today, there are far fewer shipwrecks due to advanced navigation systems such as GPS, radar and sonar as well as better weather forecasts and communications.

Much like our own Ocracoke, Sable Island is a vital habitat for flora and fauna.

Sable Island horses and grey seals intermingle.

Although not native, both islands have had their own population of horses that had different origins. In the 1700s, horses and other livestock were introduced to Sable Island as a cheaper way to graze and start cultivating a civilization. Left to roam freely, they became feral and adapted to the island’s harsh conditions, surviving major storms by sheltering in the island’s hollows and between its high dunes.

Whereas the human population was never high, mostly fewer than 25 people, the horse population has thrived primarily because of the island’s abundant year-round marram grass as their primary food source, which also serves as a sand anchor. Despite the island’s narrow width–a little over a mile–these long-maned shaggy horses are aided by freshwater springs which are present throughout the middle of the island.

The current horse population is estimated to be about 475 individuals. An ongoing debate dating back more than 50 years between ecologists, government officials and animal lovers over what to do with the herd continues today: Should they manage their numbers, remove them or leave them entirely alone?

Contrasting with the Sable Island population, the famous Ocracoke horses, often referred to as ponies, were thought to have started from horses that had swam ashore from Spanish shipwrecks during the 16th and 17th centuries. But the National Park Service that commissioned an in-depth study which has recently dispelled much of the folklore about them. The horses today come from a mix of breeds.

Rather than grazing around the island freely, Ocracoke’s horses, about 11 in number, are well cared for and penned in to at the island’s center to avoid being struck by passing vehicles along NC 12.

Sable Island is a botanist’s paradise with nearly 200 plant species (not all native) that include six orchids and plentiful cranberries. However, there are no trees except for one small pine tree planted in the 1950s. Attempts to combat erosion by massive plantings were unsuccessful. Trees are not suitable for Sable’s extreme weather and poor soil conditions.

Both islands have a variety of migratory and native bird species. More than 350 species have been recorded on Sable Island and the checklist of Birds of the Outer Banks has approximately 400 species, although many on that list have been observed on Ocracoke.

If there is one bird that connects the two islands, it is the Ipswich Sparrow which almost exclusively breeds on Sable Island and winters along the narrow Atlantic coastal dunes down to Georgia.

The Ipswich sparrow is a subspecies of the Savannah Sparrow with a larger build and lighter plumage. It faces conservation issues related to winter habitat depletion. The Ipswich Sparrow Demography Project operates in both the United States and Canada. It focuses on banding sparrows with unique transmitters to identify them and track their conservation status. Be on the lookout for them the next time you walk along the dunes in the wintertime. The Project loves to get photo documentation.

My favorite part about my time on Sable Island was watching the large numbers of grey seals that haul out onto land during the winter breeding season.

During the cold winter months, around half a million grey seals come out of the water and allot their energy to breeding and raising pups.

Pregnant females will haul out and give birth to their pups a couple of days after settling. Then they nurse their pup for about 15 to 18 days, pumping them full of milk and nutrients, causing the pups to triple in size.

Weaned grey seal pups.

After another couple of weeks on land, the pups make their way towards the water and start their adventure into the deep blue unknown.

While grey seals currently dominate the island, there is a small population of harbor seals that breed during the summertime. In years past, harp, hooded and ringed seals have all been spotted on this small island. These seals are more comfortable breeding on pack ice. So, their breeding grounds move further north each year.

The grey seal population has been monitored by Canada’s Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) since the 1960s when Sable Island and the Gulf of St. Lawrence hit an all-time low of 2,300 and 5,000 animals, respectively, due to excessive commercial harvesting. By implementing strict harvesting rules and monitoring, the total population has reached 424,000 animals across all Canadian breeding regions (as of 2017) and are officially deemed “not at risk.”

The grey seal team within Canada DFO goes to the island every year to monitor how often marked grey seals return to Sable Island for the breeding season. Some of these female seals have been returning to the island for over 30 years. Alongside this long-term population study, they put satellite tags on grey seal pups and track their horizontal movement across the Scotian Shelf and the rest of the Atlantic Ocean. Many pups die within their first year due to limited prey resources and predation from sharks. Watching their population on and off the island is crucial to understanding how they survive.

So, what was it like to spend six weeks on Sable during the winter season? Well, similarly to Ocracoke–there is almost always wind blowing. While most days were cloudy, the sun would peek out every so often, providing some extra warmth for us scientists working outside. Snow flurries would hit us at least once a week, however, snow didn’t stick around for too long on the cold but unfrozen sand. On those precious clear nights, we would brave the cold and take in the array of constellations. It was a beautiful sight to see amidst the howling winds.

My family and I have joked that Sable Island is just a “glorified sandbar” due to its topography and little human activity. In reality, this sandbar deserves all the glory and more.

The island offers an unfathomable measure of solitude amidst a vast ocean, providing you with an incredible amount of introspection. Being on the island reminds you how beautiful and pure nature can be.

There are not many parts of the world where much of the area is untouched. So, if you ever get the chance to visit this slice of the Atlantic, take it in and savor it.

Sable Island horses and grey seals

Researchers begin study to evaluate how erosion may impact transportation systems on Ocracoke

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Overwash after TS Debby in early August at the sandbag area of NC12 on Ocracoke. NCDOT photo

The public is invited to an overview of a study by the Cape Hatteras National Seashore to evaluate transportation adaptation strategies on Ocracoke from 1 to 2:30 p.m. Sept. 4, in the Ocracoke Community Center.

The Seashore has entered into a cooperative agreement with the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for a multi-year study on Ocracoke’s transportation challenges.

The evolution of Ocracoke’s dynamic barrier island in response to storm events and sea level rise presents challenges to the maintenance of the transportation corridor that spans the length of Ocracoke Island.

The chronic effect of storm events and coastal processes, including high-tide flooding, may worsen shoreline erosion in the future.

Additionally, climate change may amplify these challenges by increasing hurricane longevity, intensity and rainfall.

Transportation strategies that have been used for decades to maintain N.C. Highway 12 and the South Dock Ferry Terminal can impact Seashore lands and may have inadvertently contributed to the low elevations and narrow island widths that currently make transportation susceptible to disruption from multiple sources including ocean overwash, soundside flooding and heavy precipitation events.

This multi-year study will seek to answer a series of questions relating to transportation adaptation and mitigation strategies to improve transportation reliability and management of natural barrier island processes.

Additionally, model scenarios will simulate the effects of using a status-quo management approach (e.g. continuing to maintain the existing location of the highway), conducting beach nourishment project(s) and exploring how the barrier island would migrate in response to other transportation alternatives.

The results from initial modeling and public feedback will be incorporated into the second year of research which will evaluate the effects of other transportation strategies before concluding with a second information session during the summer of 2025.

To learn more about the study, including additional opportunities to provide feedback, visit https://c-coast.org/ocracoke-adaptation-study.

Researchers from North Carolina State University, Duke University, East Carolina University and representatives from the North Carolina Department of Transportation, Hyde County and Tideland Electric Membership Corporation are also participating in the study.

New sandbags were installed in April at the breach area of NC12 at the north end of Ocracoke. Photo: C. Leinbach

Ocracoke events Aug. 19 to 25

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‘Downtown Ocracoke’ original art by Mike Rooney, who sometimes visits Ocracoke with other ‘plein air’ artists in October.

Monday, Aug. 19
NPS program: Meet the Banker Ponies: 9:30 to 10 a.m. at the Pony Pasture.
NPS Talk: Life on a Barrier Island: 2:30 pm. Outside the Discovery Center.
MiniBar at Ocracoke Coffee: Bead by the Sea jewelry making class
Ocracoke Oyster Company (7 pm): Barefoot Wade

Tuesday, Aug. 20
Morning Bird Walk, 8:30 am. Meet at the NPS Campground parking lot.
Ocracoke Preservation Society Special Porch Talk: “Fun with Writing!” with Ann Ehringhaus, writer, photographer, teacher, Reiki master. She will also have her new poetry book, “Poems of Brown and Gold” for purchase along with its companion “Poems of Blue and Green.” 1 pm
NPS Talk: Life on a Barrier Island: 2:30 pm. Outside the Discovery Center.
Ocracoke Oyster Company (7 pm): Bryan Mayer
1718 Brewing Ocracoke (7 pm): Barefoot Wade

Wednesday, Aug. 21
NPS program: Meet the Banker Ponies: 9:30 to 10 a.m. at the Pony Pasture.
MiniBar at Ocracoke Coffee: Island Trivia, 6-8 pm
Ocracoke Waterways Commission, 6:30 pm. Community Center. Rescheduled to Aug. 27 to accommodate a discussion with the ferry design engineer about the new sound class ferry design considerations.
Ocracoke Oyster Company (7 pm): Bryan Mayer
Deepwater Theater: Wednesdays: Ocrafolk Opry, 8 pm

Thursday, Aug. 22
NPS Ranger program at lighthouse, 11 am
NPS Talk: Life on a Barrier Island: 2:30 pm. Outside the Discovery Center.
MiniBar at Ocracoke Coffee: Brooke & Nick, 6-8 pm
Ocracoke Oyster Company (7 pm): Ray Murray
1718 Brewing Ocracoke (7 pm): Allegra & Paige

Friday, Aug. 23
Ocracoke Tourism Development Authority, 9 am. Community Center.
MiniBar at Ocracoke Coffee: Kate McNally, 6-8 pm
Ocracoke Oyster Company (7 pm): Ocracoke Rockers
DAJIO: Allegra, 7:30 pm
The Breeze:  Ray McAllister Band, 9 pm

Saturday, Aug. 24
MiniBar at Ocracoke Coffee: Artist TBD, 6 pm
The Breeze: Customer appreciation cookout with DJ Buckshot; 1 pm
DAJIO: Ray McAllister Band, 9 pm

Sunday, Aug. 25
DAJIO: Allegra, 7:30 pm

Education is the original level playing field

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A brand new Ocracoke School opened in August 2023. Photo: C. Leinbach

Young people are returning to school this month.

On Ocracoke they will return to a wonderfully designed school that replaced the former one destroyed five years ago by Hurricane Dorian.

With a year under its belt, the school, designed by architect Ben Cahoon, a graduate of Mattamuskeet High School, has drawn praise from the students and the teachers.

There were some late teacher resignations, and the district is working hard on finding replacements.

This is difficult since finding affordable housing here for teachers has been an ongoing challenge.

This shortage will be alleviated somewhat when the building that was formerly the island’s childcare center and which had been closed for several years, will be converted to apartments with teachers and school staff getting first dibs when it opens next year.

Everyone, whether they have children in school or not, should take a strong interest in the educational system.

Schools are vital to society as they provide foundational education, equipping people with knowledge and skill for the workforce that drives economic growth.

It bonds young people by bringing diverse groups together.

Schools can help people understand the importance of protecting the environment, can lower crime and give individuals a chance to play organized sports.

Against this backdrop, it comes down to supporting public schools.

Not everyone has the means to pay the high costs of private schools which have thrived in our society over the centuries.

Yet, there are politicians and policymakers who see public education as a failure and want to cut the budget for public education and allocate what are called school vouchers that subsidize private schools.

This has become an issue in Arizona which provided these subsidies creating somewhere around a $1 billion deficit. This budget crisis has drawn the attention of other states who are implementing or considering a similar process.

Republican legislators in North Carolina have shown they are using more taxpayer money to fund private school vouchers. The House and Senate separate budgets include $463.5 million in new funding for private school vouchers.

These private schools are not accountable despite receiving millions in taxpayer funds and do not have to report test scores or fulfill certain state requirements.

State governments should support public education.

In North Carolina, teachers should be paid more. The state is ranked 42 in salaries. Then there is the issue of teachers not getting the thanks they deserve and, unfortunately, they have been caught in the crossfire of the culture wars that are tearing our society apart.

Then there is the school supply drive recently launched by Gov. Roy Cooper.

It encourages people across the state to donate school supplies in support of public schools, students and teachers.

North Carolina teachers spend on average up to $750 out of their own pockets for classroom supplies each year.

“It’s unfortunate that teachers still have to dip into their own pockets to buy some of the school supplies for their classrooms and this is a way all of us can help,” Cooper said.

It’s been said that our schools are not failing, but rather we are failing our schools by not providing economic and social support.

Schools do best when there is community involvement.

That involvement can include volunteering, attending events and supporting fundraisers.

Think of any issue you care about, and healthy public education is at the root of its success.

No matter what type of education makes sense for your family, thriving public schools lift us all.

Island native discovers true date of Ocracoke lighthouse’s birthday

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Ocracoke lighthouse. Photo: C. Leinbach

By Aida and John Havel

On May 18, 2023, the National Park Service hosted a celebration of the 200th anniversary of the building of the Ocracoke Lighthouse.

Ocracoke is the oldest operating lighthouse in North Carolina and among the top three oldest in our nation. An estimated 500 people gathered to join in the celebration.

Park Service administrators, local historian Philip Howard, Outer Banks Lighthouse Society president Bett Padgett, and Coast Guard representatives all participated in the joyous occasion.

Documents and research clearly indicated that the lighthouse was built in 1823, so there was no doubt that a celebration was called for. However, during planning meetings leading up to the celebration, discussions included the fact that no one had ever discovered when the lighthouse was actually completed and lit.

As someone remarked during the discussions, “it can’t be called a lighthouse until there’s a light!”

Park Service historians and other interpretive staff searched their files, books, and the internet for a definitive date of the lighting. The Ocracoke Preservation Society did not know. The island historian Philip Howard, who had discovered numerous amazing island facts, could not find the elusive date, and independent researchers such as the authors of this article—and others—also searched and came up empty handed.

Ocracoke Island’s Dale Mutro, who works at the Anchorage Inn front desk, conducted his own research And found original documents showing that the lighthouse was first lit on Aug. 15, 1824.

Not only did he find all the missing pieces, he also linked them together in a way that is absolute and indisputable. That is not easy when trying to piece together a 200-year-old mystery.

Mutro’s research was reviewed by Philip Howard in March 2023. Howard subsequently updated his May 20, 2018, online newsletter article on the history of the lighthouse on villagecraftsmen.com and credited Mutro for the new information in his footnotes at the end of the article. And the Park Service has accepted Mutro’s research and now includes the date of August 15, 1824, on their nps.gov website.

For details of the story, click here.

Aida and John Havel are on the board of directors of the Outer Banks Lighthouse Society.

Blackbeard’s Pirate Jamboree slated for Nov 1 & 2

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The Shadow Players will bring their comedy stage fighting show to Blackbeard’s Pirate Jamboree Nov. 1 & 2 at the Berkley Barn. Photo: C. Leinbach/Ocracoke Observer

Ocracoke Island will celebrate colonial life in the 1700s with a living history encampment and the Battle of Ocracoke during Blackbeard’s Pirate Jamboree Friday, Nov. 1, and Saturday, Nov. 2, on the Berkley Manor grounds.

The festival will focus on history, colonial life and family fun.

Events will kick off Friday evening at 7:30 in the Berkley Barn with a comedy, adult-oriented game show, “The Dating Game with Blackbeard,” in which comely ladies will vie for the chance to date Blackbeard.

Saturday (Nov. 2) will feature a colonial encampment on the grounds of the Berkley Manor highlighting daily life, navigation, cooking and medicine, games for kids and artisan vendor booths.

Back by popular demand, a pirate parade will kick off the Saturday events at 10 a.m. starting at Ride the Wind Surf Shop, walk through the downtown and end at the encampment.

Among the living history re-enactors are The Cannon Crew out of Beaufort. Led by Capt. Carl Cannon, the 17-member group will set up a colonial-era encampment with shipboard medicine, navigation, games, weaving and cooking.

A sea battle. Photo: C. Leinbach

Cannon’s period sloop, “The Adventure,” and Horatio Sinbad’s brigantine, “Meka II,” will circle the harbor with cannons ablaze at 11 a.m.

Also pitching their camps will be members of Leviathan Nautical Living History, a group dedicated to the accurate portrayal of a ship’s company in the age of sail, spanning the years 1680 to 1865.  They also will demonstrate colonial era firearms.

The Sword Circle, which hails from Raleigh, will demonstrate sword-fighting and will have a booth with candle making in which festival goers can try their skill. They also will have axe throwing and will set up an area for kids to learn sword fighting.

The Shadow Players comedy stage combat troop will return this year and the Motley Tones roving minstrels will sing sea chanteys and tavern songs throughout the day.

Historian Kevin Duffus and Sinbad will talk about “Blackbeard: Myths & Legends” Saturday afternoon.

Also showing in the afternoon will be a documentary “BoatBbuilding in Your Own Backyard,” about how Sinbad built his brigantine.

Duffus also will do an interview on WOVV 90.1 FM Friday at 11:30 a.m. and will sign his books, including “The Last Days of Black Beard the Pirate,” at Books to be Red at 1 p.m.

The living history crews will also reenact on shore along the NPS docks the sword fight in which Blackbeard met his demise at the hand of Royal Navy Lt. Robert Maynard.

The event will conclude with a memorial service honoring the fallen sailors for both Blackbeard and Lt. Robert Maynard.

A detailed schedule will be released later and will be included in the October issue of the Observer.

Stay tuned on Blackbeard’s Pirate Jamboree Facebook page, the OCBA website http://www.ocracokeisland.net and Facebook page.

Part of the colonial encampment at the 2023 Pirate Jamboree. Photo: C. Leinbach