Showing posts with label Stuart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stuart. Show all posts

Monday, January 27, 2020

Florida Oceanographic Coastal Center

The Florida Oceanographic Coastal Center in Stuart is a fun indoor/outdoor science center devoted to sea creatures. The indoor part is much smaller than the outdoor part.

Fish suncatcher at the front door

Inside is a display of locally-caught fish mounted on the wall. Their species is listed below so visitors can try to match names to bodies. The fish were caught in the Atlantic and Caribbean by Frances Langford, a famous singer and entertainer from the 1930s to the 1950s. She donated the fish and the land for the center!

Guess the fish

Frances Langford (1913-2005)

A couple of tanks show different parts of the sea floor that we'd otherwise never get to see.

Oyster bed, good camouflage for oysters

Sea horse in another tank

The star attraction of the center is ray feeding pool. A couple of times each day, a volunteer gives a talk about rays, describing their biology, habitat, and diet. Our guide showed us some of the stingers rays use to defend themselves.

Ray tank

Spine with stingers

Seeing the rays/petting the rays

Swooping around underwater

After about ten minutes of talking, the volunteers brought out some bits of fish for visitors to feed to the rays. The instructions were simple: hold the fish in your hand with your hand flat against the shelf just below the waterline. The ray will swim up and suck the fish out of your hand much like a vacuum cleaner. The trick is to stay still or the ray won't come near you. We enjoyed feeding even though it was a little scary.

Cousin feeding

Trying to lure the ray

My daughter's success

My son's success

A second turn

My youngest needed my help to hold his hand still under the water. At age five, the situation was intimidating but fun when it actually worked.

The center also had a fun cut out for posing.

Did the ray eat my daughter?

One of the guide's recommendations was to shuffle your feet when you walk along the surf. That avoids stepping on rays accidentally. A stepped-on ray is a stinging ray!

Do the ray shuffle!

Another outdoor tank had hermit crabs and snails. This one snail had a long shell and it would occasionally bury itself in the sand to find tiny critters to eat.

On top of the sand

Buried in sand

Feeling other crabs

At the center's lagoon, they had a shark-feeding demonstration. Visitors were not allowed to hand-feed the sharks, as you might imagine. They would definitely bite the hand that feeds them!

Tossing food out for the sharks

Not the most photo-friendly fellows

Another display let my youngest make bird tracks in the sand with special stamps.

Footprinting

We walked around to the far side of the lagoon for a demonstration on sea turtles. On the way we saw them growing sea grass for use in the lagoon and other spots.

Underwater greenhouse

The turtle demonstration was a little boring because it was all talking. The lagoon turtles eventually swam near but hardly ever surfaced.

The back end sticking out

The front end sticking out

Display of local turtle types

We did enjoy the visit and I picked up a copy of Jonathan Dickinson's journal. He was traveling from Jamaica to Philadelphia and was shipwrecked in the area in 1696. The journal is about his travels north from there to Saint Augustine where locals helped them continue their trip. Dickinson has a major park named after him.

Thursday, January 16, 2020

Other Florida Geocaches 2019

After snagging some Hobe Sound caches, we went further north and found some caches near Jensen Beach. We went to the Treasure Coast Children's Museum though it was closed because we were too early. Out back is a long dock with the What's up Doc? (or is it down?) cache.

Rightward view from the start of the dock

Leftward view from same dock

Running down the dock

 The dock was infested with pigeons. My youngest son is a bit skittish around animals in the outdoors so he was very unhappy. We told him they would run away from him but he still didn't have enough confidence to get past them. I carried him to the end.

At the end we found a fisherman plying his trade by two light posts. He was by the left light post, so we checked the right one for the cache. Nothing there. So I politely asked to sneak in and discovered only half the cache! The lid was attached to some fishing line but the bottom (along with the log and whatever else was inside) was missing.

The fisherman craftily edited out

View back to shore

Back by the parking lot, we found Pokie Man. With the dock and the museum and some other attractions, this particular park has a lot of Pokemon Go virtual amenities. Thus the cache is named in a non-copyright-violating way.

Pokie Man's position

We went over to Stuart where another cache is on a pier out over the water. We parked in the cute downtown area and walked over to the boardwalk. On the way we saw a big Christmas tree!

Stuart's Christmas spirit

The pier with the cache

The Dock Holiday cache was a "did not find" for us since the location at the end of the dock had only some suspicious fishing line that was cut. We logged our non-find and the cache's owner was good enough to email back about checking the location. The nearby small playground was a fun break for the kids.

The standard swing set

Boat-themed playground

We saw two extra-long golf carts stop by each other and have a chat. After talking to them ourselves, we found out they are electric trolleys (of a sort) for the city. They said there is a much better playground across town so we took a ride. The local Kiwanis club built a fantastic area that we couldn't take full advantage of since it started to rain. We did enjoy some of the equipment.

Leaving on a jet plane...

...now with passengers

Maybe the baggage belt?

Another fun area

The downtown area has a few more caches but the rain dampened our spirits.

The next day we visited Stuart Beach. We found Old Staircase, which is indeed an old staircase in the brush between the beach and the parking lot.

Doesn't look like the beach or the parking lot!

We look forward to more geocaching adventures in 2020!