A couple of nights at Cayo Costa State Park
Cayo Costa is a coastal island,
hence the name, in the Gulf of Mexico that must be accessed by boat. If you
don’t have a boat, there is a concessionaire that takes people back and forth
daily from a marina in Bokeelia. Bokeelia is on the north end of Pine Island.
There’s another town along the way to Pine Island called Matlacha, (I want to
say Mat – latch- a) which when I heard how it was pronounced I realized I had
been mispronouncing it. They pronounce it Mat la shay. I could not find any
other reference to this name or its origin. We boat passengers were warned on
the way back to be wary as it can be a speed trap, pedestrian crossing trap and
all tickets seem to cost $300. The thing I did notice about the town, was the
plethora of no parking signs. This on a single road lined with businesses of
all sorts.
Besides reserving your site on the
island, either camping or for one of the 12 cabins, if you are taking the boat
you need to also reserve your spot coming and going on the boat. Plus the daily
parking charge for parking at the marina. The current boat looks and at times
sounds like the African Queen, quite amusing but no problems. A new boat is coming
on line early next year. They are very specific about what you can bring on the
boat in your reservation confirmation email. You are limited to 3 items (50
lbs. max. per person), one large and no longer than three ft. and two small,
maybe a small backpack, and beach chair. I was very careful to stay within the
limit. I used my Cascade Designs Seal Line XL dry bag which comes within the 3
ft. length limit, a soft cooler, and a beach chair. Rain and thunderstorms were in the forecast.
When people started arriving, it got crazy, not only did
they bring inordinate amounts of storage bins, bikes, coolers, roof packs, bags
of charcoal, and God knows what else, it seemed like the rules went out the
window. The crew didn’t question any of it, and all the gear went in the boat
first, with the bikes up on the roof of the boat. With all the gear loaded the
bow was riding high. Then we all got on board and the first mate called out
names and numbers in groups, checking people off. As I was towards the back and
the engine noise, I couldn’t hear what the mate was saying for the most part. I
had been talking to a very nice couple Lilian and Warnell who go out to Cayo
Costa as often as they can and rent a cabin. The rest were large family groups
who evidently go out each Thanksgiving and have been doing it for years. Lilian
later told me it was ten families who do this.
Friday's crew on the Tropic Star.
More madness as we arrive at the island dock, unloading
everyone’s stuff and hauling it off the dock and piling it. Lilian nearly lost
a trash bag with stuff in this process, I suggested she could put a piece of
duct tape on the bag with their name on it. No one else had a bag like my
waterproof duffel and the men eyed it warily and seemed scared to move it so it
only got to the dock. It weighed a little over twenty pounds and I have through
hiked Big Cypress with much heavier packs. It has shoulder straps so I picked
it up, put it on and walked over to load it on the tram with the rest of my
stuff.
The State Park runs a tram provided by the county to take
everyone across the island to the campsites and cabins. In the meantime one (1)
ranger has to sign in a whole boatload of people, something I had never seen at
any other park, and the ranger later confirmed this. The tram consists of a
full size pickup driven by the same ranger pulling two aluminum trailers with
seats and a third smaller trailer for gear. The people staying in cabins get to
put their stuff in the bed of the pickup and all the other people and gear get
piled wherever it will fit on the trailers. The next stop, a few hundred feet
away if that, is the store with ice and firewood. The same ranger had to do
this also, taking only cash on this day as the store closes at three p.m. I
didn’t check the time, I just got my firewood and stuffed it on the trailer. I
don’t usually carry much cash but I brought it for this trip for the captain’s
tips, tolls, parking fees, and buying anything in case they didn’t take credit
cards. The store does take credit cards but is only open until three p.m. each
day. All day employees and volunteers catch the State Parks boat at 7:30 a.m.
to come out to the island and their boat leaves at 3:30 p.m. to take them back
to the mainland. Other rangers live on the island. Volunteers usually run the
tram and it arrives each hour at the top of the hour at the campground to take
anyone over to the store/docks/ranger station area.
Live oak with Encyclia tampensis orchids over the road to the campground.
The campground is nice with some trees and timber fencing
between sites. I had been wondering about shade as it is an island, I was
expecting a lower tree canopy but there were native Ficus aurea, the Golden or Strangler fig, Coccoloba uvifera, Seagrape and of course Conocarpus erectus, Green buttonwood around the campsites. Each
site has a picnic table, a grill and a pole with cross bars to dry stuff on. Each
site is also fenced off from other sites with a timber fence. These help dissuade
campers from hanging things on trees or other vegetation to dry. With my dry
bag being a pack I could pretty much carry everything at once (soft cooler with
shoulder strap, beach chair) from the tram drop off site to the camp site, but
was loaded down with the additional heavy bag of firewood. Some campers brought
carts or hand trucks to haul stuff. Luckily the campsite was close. I will say
this park does offer four hammock permitted primitive camp sites which is nice,
but none were available on the dates I chose.
Park information here: https://www.floridastateparks.org/park/Cayo-Costa
Dunes between the campground and the beach.
There is no power in the campground. There actually is for
the water system but not for the campers otherwise, utilities are well hidden
underground. For the tent campers there are separate bathrooms with a regular
toilet stall and a handicapped toilet stall. The one shower is outside that is
more of a post swim shower than a get naked take a bath shower as there is
absolutely no privacy it being located next to the stairs. Cold water only here, but potable. So even if
you aren’t swimming because of the weather or otherwise, you should bring some
apparel to wear to shower in, or go in the dead of the night and shower by
moonlight.
Speaking of being
naked in the moonlight, there are bugs. They warn of raccoons and securing your
coolers and food supplies from them. I put my soft cooler into an Action Packer
bin which I could have secured with a cable from latch to latch. I neither saw
nor heard them, but then there was an awful lot of people and teenagers up at
all hours roaming around with lights and noise as it was a holiday weekend. There
was probably five campers at most campsites. Most were staying until Saturday
or Sunday. There were very few mosquitoes, but there were no-seeums. I wasn’t
being really bug aware when I was throwing my gear through the tent door and
they got into my tent. Evidently in large numbers going by what I saw the next
morning in the corner of my tent. Take a look at the photo, those black dots
are little blood sucking tormenting insects. I would highly recommend bringing
a Thermocell unit and putting it somewhere near the tent entrance.
In case my tent screening isn’t no-seeum
proof, (always check this when you buy a tent), when I returned home and dried
out my tent and then set it up in the yard, I treated the screening with Permethrin
spray which should help in the future. Always, always dry or air out your tent,
tarps, sleeping bags, etc. after camping, even if you have to drape it in the
shower. Mildew grows very quickly, within hours, and destroys your
waterproofing. Even if it wasn’t raining we have such high humidity the tents,
sleeping bags, etc. will get damp, especially if they have been stored in an
air conditioned area. I bring a trash bag with to stuff wet or damp stuff into
and they get taken care of first when I arrive home. There is nothing worse
than a tent or even a tarp that has that awful vomit smell of mildew.
It rained as promised, but a lot
more. As I said the forecast was for rain, the percentage went up and down as
the trip dates approached. I knew my tent was good, the cats and I had camped
it in when I had the house tented for termites and we sat out a thunderstorm in
it. The rains started Wednesday night and continued steadily throughout the
night and then in the morning the winds really picked up. I was very glad I had
trees and shrubs to shelter from the winds. By eight in the morning they
slacked off some. The campground is sand, though it is hard packed it drains
relatively fast. I had all my clothes, sleeping bag, etc. in waterproof bags by
this point as the driving rain was pushing a mist through the tent. I was
sitting on my folded up ZRest® pad. I was noticing the tent floor was starting
to float so I went out in the rain that had slacked off some and snatched my
ground cloth (cut open 55 gal. trash bag) out from under the tent as it was not
letting the water drain. An hour or so later the rain completely tapered off
but we had showers on and off all day. It was a very dark, overcast Thanksgiving
Day.
Other campers did not fare so well,
their picnic canopies failed or broke in the wind. Their tents leaked, I heard
of one tent that had four inches of water in it. What I saw was that people
setting up their tents put down blue tarps that were larger than their tent’s
footprint under the tent as a ground cloth. In my neighbors case the tarp was
out one foot on all sides of the tent. This caught all the water coming off the
tent and routed it under the tent. Even though they were on air mattresses all
of their sleeping bags, blankets, etc. were soaked. Plus they had to deal with a
broken dining canopy. I talked to them about the ground cloth and what happened
to mine which was totally under the tent, and I saw later they guyed the tarp
over the tent. These were Boy Scouts, I will say no more.
Nothing like a nice campfire.
My firewood had been out in the
rain, so I didn’t have much hope for a fire. I put the remaining logs up on the
grill to help them dry out. Once the weather improved some I pulled the fly off
the tent to help things dry out, and then later when I put it back, still damp I
added the silnylon tarp I recently made and guyed it crosswise across the tent.
I made this tarp for my hammock whose roof fly is shy, I can lay in the hammock
and see stars, nice, wake up with frost on my face, not nice. The silnylon is
super light and waterproof, this one is 5 ft. wide by 9 foot long with reinforced
loops on corners and middles to give the most options for tying it. Evening
came and the weather held though it was still overcast. I got the fire going
and ended up using the rest of my firewood.
Last Christmas for whatever reason
I had a hard time getting my fire going. Partially because of un-split and
maybe not so seasoned logs. I normally use lighter pine that I can get at my
job, but it just wasn’t doing the job. Whatever the reason, I made some fire
starters and they work wonders and don’t take up much space. I used the paper
egg cartons, added pine wood shavings (animal bedding) and melted candles in a
can on the stove to pour into the individual cups on the egg carton. They tell
you can use dryer lint too, but who knows what is in dryer lint now. It could
be flame retardant or other carcinogens when burned or just in general. You
could use real cotton balls, not the polyester ones, but I think you can
probably get the wood shavings at a pet store and the pine helps starting the
fire. I would not recommend using scented candles for this, you can also buy paraffin
at the grocery store, usually Gulf Wax brand is available and used to seal
jelly jars when you make jelly or jam. Once these are cooled I tore them into
individual starters and threw them into a zipper plastic bag with my camping
supplies. With no smaller wood I started with one of these and when it slowed
down I tucked another under the wood in the fire and even with soaked ground
and wet wood had a good fire. Oh, I have to add, I wrapped up my frozen
burritos (dinner) in newspapers over the foil to insulate them and then used
that newspaper in the fire. This may turn into another blog page, watch for it.
The Gulf remained stormy with the
wall of steel gray clouds just off shore. The water was rough with white caps,
but what impressed me was the sound of the crashing waves. It was constant all
through Thursday and Friday, not a regular roar but varying with the long and
short waves. When I arrived I could not hear the surf from my campsite, but
with the storms off shore I could hear it wherever I was on the island. I love
the sounds of nature, even a thunderstorm while in a tent, and those waves
crashing while sounding somewhat like the roar of traffic were much better because
it was a natural noise to experience.
Wednesday evening
with calm waters.
I really enjoy photographing
wherever I am but with the constant rains, drizzle, sprinkles it was no weather
to bring an unprotected camera. I have, it seems several dry bags. My newest I
got to put in my backpack. It is a 35 L. Sea to Summit bag, we used to use a
garbage bag in case our packs got wet if we fell. I had my clothes in this and
it works really well as a pillow. Plus I didn’t have to worry about my clothes
getting wet with all the dampness from the rain. Then I have the extra-large
dry bag for canoe camping, it was probably purchased back in the 1980s, and a
very similar one is now made by Seal Line. It has patched holes from a raccoon
attack on the Peace River many years ago. My most used dry bag is by Voyageur’s
also from the 1980’s and that is what I carry my camera and wallet, keys in
while canoeing, it’s small, the usable space is about a square foot. It has a
thin foam-like liner. While canoeing my Mohawk on Crooked Creek in Yellville,
Arkansas, for the first time I flipped the canoe, the bag with my SLR camera
with a zoom lens popped up like a cork. It was tied into the canoe by a short
cord which also acts as a shoulder strap. If you canoe you learn to tie things
in. Better than having to rescue yourself, right your canoe and try to gather
floaters from escaping all at once. I can slip the camera in and out of this
bag pretty quick and it’s safe.
Back to the beach, never having
been here, I just wasn’t able to explore the whole place or even a good portion
of it. I actually only found out about the trails when I was leaving, as a
volunteer was telling visitors arriving by boat about the island. They do rent
bikes, also kayaks and I don’t know what else. By Friday the weather had
cleared and it was a beautiful day. It really is a wild looking landscape and
seeing the shoreline showing all the dead Seagrape shrubs that were killed in
Irma from the onslaught of waves and wind was impressive. I saw areas where the
waves had pushed in a layer of the shell hash which the beach consists of, a
couple of hundred feet inland burying the cactus and other plants at least a
foot deep. One could easily walk these beaches for days exploring the landscape
and history of this island. I will definitely be back to explore this island further.
Looking north up the island. The tip Boca Grande is visible.
Upland beach
vegetation.
Shells on this beach of shells.
This is actually a photo of how far the beach shell hash was
driven inland by Irma, recently buried plants.
I am sure this sign is “up” on a post, but with Irma it is
at pet level, telling them to stay off the beach. Several families brought
their dogs with them. One Labrador who was on the boat with us was noticeably much
happier once arriving on the island. They must be kept on a 6 ft. leash at all
times but can be in the campground and all the trails (!) in this park.
View from the dock on Friday, looking across Pelican bay at
Punta Blanca Island.
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