Florida’s Big Dig
The story of the Intracoastal and other thoughts on water, waterways, land, and ecology
Month: May 2014
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In 1876, the Department of Treasury began constructing five Houses of Refuge for shipwrecked sailors every twenty-five miles along the Florida East Coast. The first House of Refuge in Fort Lauderdale was located along the beach about where Bonnet House and Gardens occupies a site as deep as the distance between the Intracoastal Waterway and…
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Sunset view from Harbortown across Calibogue Sound, part of the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway. Several stretches of the Waterway through South Carolina are so shallow many vessels run aground, unable to move until high tide.
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Yacht harbor surrounded by a townhouse community, iconic lighthouse, retail shopping, and yacht club.
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Harbortown Lighthouse, Sea Pines Plantation, Hilton Head, South Carolina. Harbor leads out into Calibogue Sound, a part of the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway.
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Harbor surrounded by townhouses, retail shops, and a yacht club along with slips for boats of every size in Sea Island Plantation, the largest plantation community on Hilton Head Island.