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The 500-year anniversary of Verrazzano’s landfall on the Carolina coast

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Verrazzano’s route across the Atlantic. Graphic by Kevin Duffus

By Kevin P. Duffus

Five-hundred-year anniversaries don’t come around very often. An opportunity to observe the earliest documented exploration and survey of the North Carolina coast slipped by the attention of the state’s stewards of its history this past spring with nary a nod.

Five centuries ago on March 7, 1524, (or March 18 on our modern Gregorian calendar), La Dauphine, a 100-ton, three-masted caravel from Dieppe, France, made landfall on the North American coast, likely in the vicinity of Murrell’s Inlet, South Carolina.

“We are seeing a new land which has never been seen by any man, either ancient or modern,” declared the French expedition’s leader, Giovanni da Verrazzano, remembered by history as “the Florentine Explorer.”

On both a vellum portolano and companion routier—bound pages of compass routes—the date and latitude were noted routinely and without consideration of their historical significance by the ship’s navigator.

Fifty days since departing the archipelago of Madiera, La Dauphine and Verrazzano were about to write the first chapter of recorded history on the Carolina coast.

Verrazzano’s account of his voyage as his expedition made its way northward along the barrier islands of North Carolina was historically, topographically, and ethnologically significant.

“And not the least among the recorded observations of the author was his account of the native inhabitants of the new land, the earliest firsthand commentary upon the Indians of the United States north of the Gulf coast of Florida,” wrote the late Brown University research professor Lawrence C. Wroth.

Among the notable occurrences during the exploration was the first documented instance of lifesaving in America.

Students and enthusiasts of North Carolina’s early history may be familiar with the story of the La Dauphine crew member who was accidentally cast ashore and nearly drowned while attempting to deliver presents to the local inhabitants along the shore of Bogue Banks. The Frenchman was rescued by native Americans, revived, and warmed next to a beach fire before swimming back out to an awaiting boat. That remarkable but under-appreciated event 500 years ago, alone, ought to be commemorated annually.

It was not until 1909 that Verrazzano’s original draft of his narrative report, known as the Cèllere Codex, to the French king was discovered in a private library in Rome. According to Verrazzano scholar Wroth, what sets the Cèllere Codex apart from two other previously known but less-detailed manuscripts was “the presence in its margins and between its lines of 26 explicatory annotations.” 

The most historically noteworthy of the handwritten annotations describes what La Dauphine’s company observed after passing to the north of Cape Lookout and the southern islands of the Outer Banks on the day of the Feast of the Annunciation, March 25: “We called it Annunciata from the day of our arrival, and found there an isthmus one mile wide and about 200 miles long, in which we could see the eastern sea [Mare Orientale] from the ship, halfway between west and north.”

Across the thin strips of sand that we know as Portsmouth and Ocracoke islands, Verrazzano thought he was gazing upon the Pacific Ocean.

Instead, what he saw and documented for the first time in recorded history was the vast inland estuary of Pamlico Sound.

Verrazzano’s remarkable annotation revealing his misinterpretation of the sound was not known to modern historians until the Cèllere Codex was discovered in 1909.

But the same false “Oriental Sea” spotted by Verrazzano, eventually referred to as “Verrazzano’s Sea,” was depicted for the next 100 years on some of the most influential maps of the Great Age of Exploration. 

History abounds with pivotal moments when the future is altered by human miscalculations or ill-informed choices. Such was the case when Verrazzano mistook Pamlico Sound for the long-sought shortcut to the Orient. On that day the future of North Carolina’s history was fundamentally changed. 

The Florentine explorer’s mistake “stimulated the imagination” of Elizabethan explorers, including Sir Walter Raleigh. Verrazzano’s Sea “was one of the motivating factors behind the establishment of the Roanoke colony,” concluded esteemed North Carolina cartographic historian William P. Cumming. 

Not until July of 1585, when Sir Richard Grenville departed Ocracoke Island with four small vessels and 60 men to circumnavigate Pamlico Sound and seek its connection to the Orient, was it learned from their Algonquian hosts that tributaries of the great estuary ended at their sources in the uplands.

There was no shortcut to the fabled shores of China. 

But by then it was too late. The die was cast.

Verrazzano’s blunder was the irresistible but unattainable pot of geographic gold that partly influenced Raleigh and his adventurers to attempt to settle their ill-fated colony inside the Outer Banks at Roanoke Island.

Inexplicably, Verrazzano’s exploration of the Carolina coast is history not worth remembering by today’s historians.

Kevin Duffus, named the 2014 North Carolina Historian of the Year by the North Carolina Society of Historians, is the author of “The Last Days of Black Beard The Pirate,” and five books and four award-winning documentary films, all on North Carolina maritime history. See more online at https://www.facebook.com/KevinPDuffus.

Graphic by Kevin Duffus

Presentations at Frisco Native American Museum

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Jeannie “Enahdah” Cranford and Mike “Thunder Dancer” Cranford of Tsalagi (Cherokee) will present talks at the Frisco Native American Museum.

The Frisco Native American Museum Thursday will hold an open house and Native American presentations in celebration of the renovation of the building in Frisco.

An open house from 2 to 3:30 p.m. will be held on Thursday, July 18, to showcase recent renovations to the Natural History Center, which is a place for workshops, lectures and meetings.

Long time supporters and volunteers Jeannie “Enahdah” Cranford and Mike “Thunder Dancer” Cranford of Tsalagi, the native name for Cherokee, will present “Pow Wow history, Music & Instruments, Dance Demonstrations” from 11 to 11:45 a.m. and again from 2 to 2:45p.m. on July 18.

Their talks are free with museum admission.

The Cranford’s next presentations will be Aug. 7 and 8, with

Primitive Weapons Show and demonstration from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Aug. 7, and Smudging, Herbs, Directions, and Animals in Native Traditions from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Aug. 8. 

For more information about the museum, visit online www.nativeamericanmuseum.org, and for events, see: www.facebook.com/FriscoNativeAmericanMuseum/

The expansive refit of the building was made possible by a grant from the Outer Banks Tourist Bureau. 

Ocracoke events July 15 to 20–updated

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Ocracoke Ice Cream Company opened July 4 in the former Slushy Stand. Open daily at 2 p.m., owner Joseph Ramunni said the only menu item for now is ice cream.’We’re keeping it simple.’ Photo: C. Leinbach

The base of the Ocracoke lighthouse is open daily for visitors to view inside, 10 am to 12:30 pm and 1:30 pm to 4 pm. Lighthouse Talks are offered every Monday through Thursday at 11 am.

Monday, July 15
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.

Ocracoke Preservation Society: Book Signing with Hannah Bunn West, “Save Our Sand Dunes,” 1 pm

Ocracoke Coffee/Minibar: Bead by the Sea jewelry making class, 6 pm

Tuesday, July 16
Morning Bird Walk, 8:30 am. Meet at the NPS Campground parking lot.

Ocracoke Preservation Society Porch Talk: Island Birds with Peter Vankevich, 1 pm

NPS Talk: Life on a Barrier Island: 2:30 pm. Outside the Discovery Center.

Ocracoke Civic & Business Association meeting, Community Center. 6 pm. See agenda below.

1718 Brewing Ocracoke: Barefoot Wade, 7 pm

Ocracoke Oyster Company: Bryan Mayer, 7 pm

Wednesday, July 17
Roanoke Island Animal Clinic at the Community Center. Appointments: 252-473-3117.

NPS program: Meet the Banker Ponies: 9:30 to 10 a.m. at the Pony Pasture

Ocracoke Community Library: Baby/Toddler/Preschool story time, 10 am

NPS program at the lighthouse, 11 am

Ocracoke Community Library: Program for kids grades K to 5, 1 pm

NPS Talk — Life on a Barrier Island: 2:30 pm. Outside the Discovery Center.

Ocracoke Oyster Company: Bryan Mayer, 7 pm

DAJIO: Barefoot Wade, 7:30 pm

Thursday, July 18
Ocracoke Community Library: Baby/Toddler/Preschool story time, 10 am

NPS Ranger program at lighthouse, 11 am

Ocracoke Preservation Society Porch Talk: Ocracats with Rita Thiel, 1 pm

NPS Talk: Life on a Barrier Island: 2:30 pm. Outside the Discovery Center.

Ocracoke Coffee/Minibar: Brooke & Nick, 6-8 pm

Friday, July 19
What’s Happening on Ocracoke interview with Hannah Bunn West and Ann-Cabell Baum, co-authors of “Save Our Dunes. On WOVV 90.1 FM, 11:30 am

Ocracoke Coffee/Minibar: Kate McNally, 6-8 pm

Ocracoke Oyster Company: Ray Murray, 7 pm

1718 Brewing Ocracoke: Brooke & Nick, 7 pm

The Breeze: Back To The 80s Costume Party with Ocracoke’s DJ Tommy, 9 pm

Saturday, July 20
Ocracoke Coffee/Minibar: Musical artist TBD

Ocracoke Oyster Company: Ocracoke Rockers, 7pm

DAJIO: Ray McAllister Band, 7:30 pm

Sunday, July 21
Religious Services
Life Saving Church, 459 Lighthouse Rd., worship, 11am

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

Book review: ‘Save Our Sand Dunes’

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By Peter Vankevich

Picture this movie-worthy scene.

On the morning of Aug. 15, 1973, Carolista Baum stood in front of a bulldozer at Jockey’s Ridge in Nags Head to keep the tallest sand dune in the East from being leveled to build a series of condominiums.

The heavy equipment operator suspended work for that day.

Hannah West. Photo: P. Vankevich

A timeout was called and after a flurry of activity by Baum, who mobilized the community and relentlessly lobbied local and state leaders, the developer abandoned the development project, leading to the creation in 1975 of Jockey’s Ridge State Park, the most visited state park in North Carolina.

This famous incident was the subject of a chapter in “Remarkable Women of the Outer Banks” by Hannah Bunn West (The History Press, 2022).

The story is now nicely portrayed in a children’s book “Save Our Sand Dunes” (UNC Press, 2024) by West and co-author Ann-Cabel Baum, Carolista’s oldest daughter, who with her sister Inglis and brother Gibbs were playing on the dune that day when they heard the strange rumble of a bulldozer and quickly ran off and told their mother.

Baum, who now lives in Raleigh, remains active and is vice chairperson of the Friends of Jockey’s Ridge State Park.

“Writing this book with Hannah brought back so many fond memories,” she said. “Our mother was amazing. When she took charge, things happened.  She gave us kids petitions and at ages 3, 5 and 6 we would ask visitors to sign them to help save Jockey Ridge.”

With lovely illustrations, this slim volume describes the history and natural environment of this dune, which is thought to be 3,000 to 4,000 years old.

The Baum children: In front: Gibbs and Inglis, , Ann-Cabell in back. Photo provided by Ann-Cabell Baum

In language easy for young folk to understand, the story goes on to tell how Carolista and her three children mobilized the effort to save the ridge and turn it into a state park.

West, who grew up in Kill Devil Hills, said she was contacted by Ansley Wegner and Sheilah Barrett Carroll at the NC Office of Archives and History, Historical Research and Publications. The Office has a goal of publishing more North Carolina history titles for young readers and were working with Baum on an idea for a book about her mother and Jockey’s Ridge.

“George Barnes suggested me as an author for the book, after reading ‘Remarkable Women’,” West said. Barnes was the first superintendent of Jockey’s Ridge State Park and her Parks and Rec softball coach when she was a kid

The book is wonderfully illustrated with paintings by Outer Banks artist Larry McCarter and illustrations by Anne Marshall Runyon.

Runyon is the author of “The Sheltering Cedar” (Portal Press, 2007) that tells the story of Ocracoke wildlife on Christmas Eve.

Book designer Sheilah Barrett Carroll masterfully wove the text and artwork on each page.

Carolista Baum died in 1991.

A North Carolina Highway Historical Marker for recognizing her efforts to save Jockey Ridge was installed in July 2023, in Nags Head.

Photo courtesy of NC DNCR

Ocracoke School back to regular start date

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The first day of school will be Aug. 26. Photo: C. Leinbach

By Connie Leinbach

Updated July 16, 2024

Hyde County Schools has abandoned an earlier start for Ocracoke school students and has gone back to its regular start and end dates, which will be Aug. 26 with school ending June 11.

“The Board of Education voted on July 9 to comply with the legal demand to change the Ocracoke calendar to comply with the start date to avoid potential legal and financial repercussions that could detract from our strategic plan to ensure student success,” said Dr. Melanie Shaver, superintendent of schools, in a July 10 press release and letter to parents.

The calendar is updated on the Hyde County Schools website. While the first day back to school for Ocracoke will be later, the first day of school for Mattamuskeet will be Aug. 12 with the last day May 30.

“We will move forward with the calendar as it is,” Julio Morales, administrative assistant to Shaver, said in an email. “More than 20 school systems in the state have adopted calendars that may not follow the entire set of expectations from the archaic calendar law.” Only one parent complained, he said.

Earlier this year, the district held meetings on Ocracoke about changing the school calendar and emailed students, teachers and parents three choices.

The overwhelming vote was for the earlier start date of Aug. 15, Rachael Chestnut, Ocracoke’s school board representative, said in an interview.

But when the district announced that school would begin on Aug. 15 it caught some Ocracoke parents by surprise. One business owner told the Observer that student employees were upset that they would lose more than a week of needed wages.

Under North Carolina law, traditional public schools are prohibited from starting the school year sooner than the Monday closest to Aug. 26 and from ending the year later than the Friday closest to June 11.

J. Mitchell Armbruster, a lawyer for three Carteret County businesses who sued their school system over its early start date, on behalf of several Ocracoke parents, sent Hyde County Schools a letter demanding return to the Aug. 26 start date for Ocracoke.

“I do know from talking to my clients that it is a concern in Ocracoke, where a lot of the kids do have summer jobs and other things, and it just wasn’t something that they realized was happening,” Armbruster said when contacted. “I know they could say everyone should have known, or whatever, but (parents) really were taken by surprise that this had happened.”

After discussing it, Chestnut said the board decided to revert Ocracoke School’s start date. Along with acceding to what the community wanted, “We wanted to be compliant with the law,” Chestnut said.

In North Carolina, the General Assembly has regulated school calendars for 20 years, largely due to the tourism industry’s concerns that starting earlier would hurt businesses, according to a report on www.ednc.org. The report also says that of the 115 school districts in the state, 29 are in defiance of the calendar law, which only applies to traditional public schools and exempts charter schools, year-round schools, and early colleges.

Shaver said in a clarification that Hyde Academy, which operates on both Mattamuskeet and Ocracoke campuses, allows students to enroll in college classes in ninth grade and begin working on an associate’s degree, a college transfer degree, or another workplace certification by the time they graduate. Mattamuskeet is a stand-alone school classified as a Cooperative Innovative High Schools and because of that it is exempt and has calendar flexibility.

Shaver made the following presentation to the school board. A report released in 2023, found here, shows the only school listed for Hyde County that was not exempt was Ocracoke School. 

“This (school calendar) legislation does not allow local communities the flexibility or right to choose their calendar and has long been challenged with bills being filed in the House and Senate,” Shaver said in her press release. “Hyde County Schools has been committed to finding solutions within the legislation but does not qualify for the exemptions due to our small size. This situation has prompted legal threats that we must address to preserve our limited state and county budgets.”

The legal school calendar makes it difficult for schools to end the semester in December, according to the ednc.org report.

Hyde’s proposed Aug. 15 start would have allowed for Friday afternoons off to allow for remedial work and testing, Chestnut said, rather than taking students out of regular classes during the week.

And that still will be the case because the board added 20 minutes to the Ocracoke school day.

Shaver said the student’s daily start time will be at 7:55 a.m. and the end time will be at 3:15 p.m. Monday to Thursday, but with an end time of 11:30 a.m. Fridays.

Hyde will do what it can to end the first semester in December, though it will consist only of 70 days, including testing, Shaver said.

Shaver said the presentations to the board reviewing the process, the polling results, and additional information were live streamed on March 5 on Facebook.  View the presentation with the data breakdown here.

Shaver made the following other points in her response to the Observer:
The calendar law in North Carolina, which mandates specific start and end dates for the school year, has been argued to be detrimental to student achievement for several reasons:

  • Misalignment with college schedules: The mandated school calendar does not align with the Beaufort County Community College schedule. This affects students taking dual enrollment courses or advanced classes that follow the college calendar, creating scheduling conflicts and disrupting learning. (We have 79 students in the district who are a part of Hyde Academy, which allows students to begin in ninth grade by taking dual enrollment courses). 53% of our Hyde County population have a high school diploma or less, according to the myFutureNC dashboard. By providing the opportunity and support for students to gain college credit in high school, we set a record of success and ensure that students who may not have the financial means to go to college receive the training and education that they need to be successful in the future to obtain a two-year transfer degree, decreasing the cost of their college experience (cost savings of approximately $30,000). Hyde Academy operates with a waiver because it is a Cooperative Innovative High School with calendar flexibility. Both Ocracoke and Mattamuskeet campuses have Hyde Academy.
  • Impact on Advanced Placement (AP) courses: AP exams are held nationwide on set May dates. A later school start date gives students less time to prepare for these exams than peers in other states, potentially impacting their performance and scores. This decreases the academic rigor rating that a school may receive if it does not offer or succeeds in the AP program. 
  • Summer Learning Loss and Interruption of Learning Continuity: A more extended summer break can lead to more significant learning loss, particularly among younger and disadvantaged students. Shorter breaks spread throughout the year can mitigate this loss and help maintain academic progress. According to myFutureNC, 62% of Hyde County students live in poverty, versus the state average of 17%. Our students need support to mitigate learning loss. Ocracoke became a Title I school in 2018, demonstrating a shift in the socio-economics and needs of our island students. 

All of these items are well-researched and documented. The Leandro case has been back and forth in the courts since 1994. In this case, which was ruled upon and overturned in 2021 and reinstated in 2022, the N.C. Supreme Court issued a ruling upholding our state constitution and the rights of our children, families and communities, stating that “any and all other state actors and their officers, agents, servants, and employees are authorized to do what is necessary to fully effectuate years 2 and 3 of the comprehensive remedial plan.”

If you view the Leandro remedial plan found here, page 54 under iii. Action Steps to be Initiated in Fiscal Year 2022: item 3 states that the necessary policies to allow school calendar flexibility to ensure local schools align with community college and university schedules will be adopted. 

The responsible parties will be the North Carolina General Assembly, North Carolina Office of the Governor, North Carolina State Board of Education, and North Carolina Department of Public Instruction (DPI). Since these responsible parties have not followed the court orders from 2022, Hyde County Schools has been part of proposed legislation changes and has explored other options, such as Restart designation to allow for calendar flexibility. 

The DPI website describes a Restart model “in which the State Board of Education would authorize the local board of education to operate the school with the same exemptions from statutes and rules as a charter school authorized under Article 14A of this Chapter, or under the management of an educational management organization that has been selected through a rigorous review process.

The validity of the GS 115C-84.2 legislation (school calendar legislation) is an issue since the General Assembly is ignoring the Supreme Court rulings to enact the Leandro remedial plan. This is a complex issue that is far more nuanced than the clear-cut issue that people assume it to be.

However, for Hyde County Schools, the fiscal demands and drawn-out litigation period while our families need answers to know when to send their students to school far exceed our desire to be right in a court of law at this time, and we do not want to detract from our strategic plan goals to ensure student success. 

Correction: Dr. Melanie Shaver clarified Mattamuskeet School’s school calendar flexibility.

Ocracoke School calendar 2024-2025
Mattamuskeet School calendar 2024-2025

NPS seeks volunteer sea turtle nest-sitters

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A loggerhead sea turtle on Ocracoke Island, July 8, 2024. Photo courtesy of the NPS

From our news services

The Cape Hatteras National Seashore is looking for volunteers to be “turtle nest watchers” starting at the end of this month and into September when sea turtle nests on Ocracoke begin to hatch.

Nest sitters typically sit on the beach near a designated nest for several hours on their assigned evening(s) and watch that no vehicles breach the nest area, educate beach goers about these creatures and alert NPS staff if the nest starts to “boil,” or hatch.

The Seashore will hold a turtle nest watch volunteer training from 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday, July 23, in the Ocracoke Community Center.

This training is for volunteers who reside on Ocracoke or who will be available across multiple weeks as nest-sitters may be called upon from the last week of July through September.

During the two-hour training, volunteers will learn about sea turtles and will be required to fill out the necessary paperwork to become an official volunteer with the National Park Service.

No per-registration is necessary.

Let’s get Cape Hatteras National Seashore designated as an International Dark Sky Park

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This graphic from DarkSky International shows acceptable lighting to reduce sky glow.

In June, Virginians Kaye and Rick Kohler gave a presentation at the Ocracoke Community Library: “Dark Skies: How to Preserve and Protect One of the Island’s Natural Wonders.”  See: Restore the night: Ocracoke’s dark skies

Those who live on Ocracoke may take it for granted that we can head out to the beach and watch a space shuttle pass by, a rising moon, shooting stars, satellites and the Milky Way.

Most people don’t have this opportunity.

One statistic postulates that approximately 80 % of Americans have never seen the Milky Way.

This is because of “sky glow,” i.e., a form of light pollution that brightens the night sky in populated areas (large and small). It is caused by artificial light sources — commercial and residential lighting, floodlights and streetlights and blocks out stars, planets and astronomical activity.

DarkSky International (www.darksky.org) addresses this problem.

Founded in 1988, DarkSky seeks to raise awareness about the negative effects of artificial night light on human health and wildlife and provide information and resources to help restore the night. The organization has created several certification programs to recognize places that are committed to preserving dark skies.

One is the International Dark Sky Park, bestowed on a land possessing an exceptional or distinguished quality of starry nights and a nocturnal environment and which is specifically protected for its scientific, natural, educational, and/or cultural heritage resources, and/or for public enjoyment.

In 2021, neighboring Cape Lookout National Seashore became one of 122 national parks designated as an International Dark Sky Park and the first along the Atlantic Coast.

This honor was accomplished primarily in close partnership with the Crystal Coast Stargazers Astronomy Club and the support of the Core Sound Waterfowl Museum and Heritage Center and the Carteret County Chamber of Commerce.

About 10 years ago, there was momentum in getting the Cape Hatteras National Seashore designated as an International Dark Sky Park.

The Seashore has completed some steps in the process, but an official application has not been submitted, said Mike Barber, the public affairs specialist.

We think it is time to have the Seashore complete this process, provided they can meet the strict criteria.

To be certified as an International Dark Sky Park by DarkSky, a national park must:

–Demonstrate Exceptional Night Sky Quality, i.e., exceptionally clear night skies that are free from light pollution;

–Develop and implement a light management plan so that its outdoor lighting minimizes sky glow by addressing the type, brightness, and placement of outdoor lighting fixtures;

–Get the support of the local community and stakeholders for its dark sky conservation efforts. This can be demonstrated through public meetings, support letters, and collaborative projects;

–Sponsor educational outreach activities to raise public awareness about the importance of dark skies with programs about astronomy and the impacts of light pollution.

Once certified, the park must commit to ongoing monitoring of the night sky quality and report regularly to the IDA. This ensures that the park maintains the standards required for the IDSP designation.

Much of this may already have been done due to the need to minimize artificial lighting for nesting sea turtles.

A few years ago, the Seashore rebuilt the shower/restrooms using a contractor at Lifeguard Beach. An islander alerted the Observer that the bright lights on the outside of the new building and an accompanying streetlight could be seen from his house in the village.

After the Observer alerted the NPS about these lights, to their credit, they quickly changed the lighting to yellow downward lights. (See photos below.)

The Seashore cannot achieve an International Dark Sky Park designation on its own. It will need partnerships with local communities, schools, governments and community organizations.

One cooperating partner could be Tideland Electric EMC, which is the primary electric source on Ocracoke. This co-op is converting its streetlights to dark sky-friendly LEDs, according to Heidi Jernigan Smith, manager of Energy Services & Corporate Communications.

The Seashore does a decent job of holding meetings and seeking community involvement and input of their plans and should hold one for this effort.

By teaming up with the already certified Cape Lookout National Seashore it would mean a combined 126 miles of North Carolina coastal Dark Sky.

There are economic benefits that come with this designation by promoting Astro tourism, e.g., visiting college classes, astronomy clubs and amateur astronomers.

Although we may have some of the best dark skies in the eastern United States, the Kohlers, who have been visiting Ocracoke for years, noted that village has some sky glow, especially in the denser part of the village, which has grown increasingly brighter at night in recent years.

This glow could be diminished by retrofitting with down-shielded LED lights so that they do not shine upwards.

Something all of us can do is turn off outside lights at night when not needed. Neighbors will appreciate that.

This will save on your electric bill, but more importantly, it will provide the wildlife in your yard with a more natural environment.

To show your support for becoming an International Dark Sky Park, here is the contact information:
Cape Hatteras National Seashore
1401 National Park Drive
Manteo, NC 27954
Email: https://www.nps.gov/caha/contacts.htm
Phone: 252-473-2111
Fax: 252-473-2595

The bright lights at the NPS comfort station at the Lifeguard Beach in April 2021. Photo: C. Leinbach
The NPS comfort station refitted with less bright lighting. Photo: C. Leinbach

Ocracoke events July 8 to 14

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The evening gathering for the sunset show. Photo: C. Leinbach

The base of the Ocracoke lighthouse is open daily for visitors to view inside, 10 am to 12:30 pm and 1:30 pm to 4 pm. Lighthouse Talks are offered every Monday through Thursday at 11 am.

Monday, July 8
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: Mondays and/or Tuesdays: Bead by the Sea jewelry making class, 6-8 pm

Hyde County Board of Commissioners, 6 pm. Community Center and on Facebook at Hyde County Public Information. See agenda below.

Tuesday, July 9
Morning Bird Walk, 8:30 am. Meet at the NPS Campground parking lot.

NPS program: Meet the Banker Ponies: 9:30 to 10 a.m. at the Pony Pasture.
Ocracoke Preservation Society Porch Talk:  Island garden with Debbie Wells, 1 pm

NPS Talk: Life on a Barrier Island: 2:30 pm. Outside the Discovery Center.

Mini Bar at Ocracoke Coffee: Mondays and/or Tuesdays: Bead by the Sea jewelry making class, 6-8 pm

1718 Brewing Ocracoke: Magenta Sunrise/Kendra Warren

Wednesday, July 10
NPS program: Meet the Banker Ponies: 9:30 to 10 a.m. at the Pony Pasture

Ocracoke Community Library: Baby/Toddler/Preschool story time, 10 am

NPS program at the lighthouse, 11 am

Ocracoke Community Library: Program for kids grades K to 5, 1 pm

NPS Talk — Life on a Barrier Island: 2:30 pm. Outside the Discovery Center.

Mini Bar/Ocracoke Coffee: Island Trivia, 6 pm

Deepwater Theater: Ocrafolk Opry, 8 pm

Thursday, July 11
NPS program: Meet the Banker Ponies: 9:30 to 10 a.m. at the Pony Pasture

Ocracoke Community Library: Baby/Toddler/Preschool story time, 10 am

NPS Ranger program at lighthouse, 11 am

NPS Talk: Life on a Barrier Island: 2:30 pm. Outside the Discovery Center.

Ocracoke Oyster Company: Martin & Friends, 7 pm

DAJIO: Caldwell Gray, 7:30 pm

Mini Bar/Ocracoke Coffee: Brooke & Nick, 6-8 pm

Friday, July 12
What’s Happening on Ocracoke interview on WOVV 90.1 FM, 11:30 am

Ocracoke Community Library: Movie night, 6-8 pm

Mini Bar/Ocracoke Coffee: Kate McNally, 6-8 pm

1718 Brewing Ocracoke: Magenta Sunrise/Kendra Warren, 7 pm

Ocracoke Oyster Company: Ray Murray, 7:30 pm

The Breeze: Eli Craig Band, 9 pm

Saturday, July 13
Mini Bar/Ocracoke Coffee: artist TBD, 6-8 pm

The Breeze: Eli Craig Band, 9 pm

Sunday, July 14
Religious Services
Life Saving Church, 459 Lighthouse Rd., worship, 11am

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

Restore the night: Ocracoke’s dark skies

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Island visitor Aaron Stiles frequently photographs the night sky on Ocracoke.

By Peter Vankevich

One can feel helpless at times as to what one can do in the face of large-scale environmental catastrophes such as the unfathomable amount of plastic in the ocean. But individuals can take some actions that can make a positive difference and keeping the night as dark as possible is one of them.

Kaye and Rick Kohler are long-time vacation visitors to Ocracoke, during their visit in June they discussed their efforts in a talk in the Ocracoke Community Library: “Dark Skies: How to Preserve and Protect One of the Island’s Natural Wonders.”  Rick also was a guest on WOVV’s “What’s Happening on Ocracoke.” 

The Kohlers live in Rappahannock County by the Blue Ridge Mountains and Shenandoah National Park in Virginia.

As long-time members of the Rappahannock League for Environmental Protection, they have been concerned with the harmful effects of artificial lighting on the health of people and wildlife.

In 2019, the League, working with others, was successful in getting the Rappahannock community park certified as a Silver-Tier Dark Skies Park by the DarkSky International (IDA).

The IDA’s mission is to raise awareness about the negative effects of artificial light at night on human health, wildlife, and to provide the public with information and resources to help restore the night.

They have their work cut out as every year light pollution is increasing by about 10 percent around the USA, Rick said in his talk.

Rick & Kaye Kohler. Photo: P. Vankevich

Rick and Kaye’s talk focused on what the IDA says, there is overwhelming evidence that light pollution can have harmful impacts on both people and wildlife and they provided examples.

Like many animals, humans have biological clocks called circadian rhythms regulated by the natural light-dark cycle.

 Artificial lighting can disrupt these rhythms, which can cause insomnia, eye strain, headaches and lead to stress, anxiety and depression.

Artificial light can harm animals and even plants.

Nocturnal frogs and toads rely on darkness to make their mating calls. Excessive lighting can adversely impact their reproduction rates.

During nocturnal migration, birds become disoriented by bright lights causing millions of deaths every year by fatal collisions with tall lit buildings, some with reflective glass walls.

Last October, more than 1,000 birds were killed striking just one lit building in Chicago which lies along a major migratory route.

Fireflies are facing a world-wide decreasing population. Their flash of light is their mating signal and without darkness, they cannot find mates.

Some plants rely on specific lengths of daylight to trigger flowering and artificial lighting can cause them to grow more rapidly, flower out of season or not at all. Light pollution can disrupt the behavior of nocturnal pollinators like moths. One study showed that moths flew towards the streetlamps and away from flowering plants. This resulted in a reduction of plant pollination.  

Artificial lighting can cause sea turtle hatchlings to become disoriented and wander inland, where they often die of dehydration or predation by ghost crabs, raccoons, opossums and coyotes, according to the Sea Turtle Conservancy.

Their website notes scientists believe the hatchlings have an innate instinct that leads them to the brightest horizon, which, historically meant over the ocean.

The Cape Hatteras National Seashore provides information on how artificial light is harmful to hatchlings and what steps can be taken to reduce lighting.

Coastal communities around the world have passed ordinances that require residents to turn off beachfront lights during turtle nesting season, but not everyone complies.

In the upper Outer Banks, when sea turtles are getting ready to hatch, physical barriers, like screens or shades, are put up to block light from reaching the beach.

Ocracoke village is surrounded by dark skies, which makes stargazing and astronomy an attraction.

But Ocracoke village has grown brighter in the last several years, creating what is known as a sky glow that reduces the ability to see the stars at night.

The Kohlers say a lot of this diffused light can be remedied by using down-shielded light fixtures that direct the light downward where it is needed and does not allow the light to go upward.

Other steps include using warm-colored LED bulbs with a color temperature of 3000K or lower. These bulbs emit less blue light, which is more likely to scatter in the atmosphere.

Smart lighting systems, motion sensors and timers ensure that lights are only on when necessary, thereby reducing overall light output.

In 2021, Cape Lookout National Seashore became  an International Dark Sky Park designated by the IDA. It joined 121 other National Parks and is the first to receive this certification on the Atlantic Coast. This was achieved by community support from the Crystal Coast Stargazers Club, the Core Sound Waterfowl Museum and Heritage Center and the Carteret County Chamber of Commerce.

Cape Hatteras National Seashore has completed some steps in the process, but an official application has not been submitted, according to Mike Barber, the public affairs specialist.

Unlike the challenge of combatting human-caused climate change, reducing light pollution is as easy as simply leaving lights off at night whenever possible and by directing outside lighting downward.

So, comparatively, drastically reducing one of our many forms of pollution is as easy as, well, the flick of a light switch.

Crossing Hatteras Inlet with a full moon. Photo: P. Vankevich

Scenes from Ocracoke Independence Day 2024 events

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Fireworks up close, July 2, 2024. Photo by Erin Oleski
Fireworks from across the harbor. Photo by Robin Metcalf
Doing the Ocracoke square dance, July 3, 2024, in the Berkley Barn. Photo: C. Leinbach
‘Everyone promenade,’ says Philip Howard at the Ocracoke square dance. Photo: C. Leinbach
Best in Show sand sculpture 2024 is “Poor Unfortunate Shoals” by Blair Barber group of Richmond, Va. Photo: C. Leinbach
A puffer fish by the Hurd family wins for the 13 and over group. Photo: C. Leinbach
Roger Garrish is the 2024 parade Grand Marshal, driven by Lynn Ingram and Annabelle. Photo by Greg Honeycutt
The July 4 parade. The “Maynard Pursues Blackbeard and his Booty” entry, by the Cavenaughs of Winston-Salem, wins Best Theme. Photo: C. Leinbach
‘Old Salts,’ by the Godfrey family of Winston-Salem, with their depiction of Ocracoke history, captures Best in Show. Photo: C. Leinbach
Brant Godfrey of the ‘Old Salts’ float hands out ‘mail’ from Sam Jones–manila envelopes with a history of Ocracoke. Photo: C. Leinbach
The Griffen family captures an honorable mention in the Wheels category. Photo by Beverly Meeker
The Ocracoke United Methodist Church float wins best float. Photo by Ben Knight
‘Tow Mater’ by Drussie Dones wins Best Wheels. Photo by Cindie Schroeder
Vietnam veteran Ed Barbour of Chesterfield, Va., is best in the Walk ‘n Roll category. Photo by Ben Knight
The beach fire at the lifeguard beach caps the July 4 events on Ocracoke. Photo by Lynn Ingram
Marci Mason picks up candy and other trash July 5 along the parade route. Photo: C. Leinbach