Tuesday, 1 July 2014

People fishing from the pier of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel



We stopped at the pier of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel yesterday and lots of people were fishing. Some had multiple poles set up.



These folks caught a shark and then released it.



These people caught two at once, a flounder which actually blends pretty nicely with the wood and a croaker. They expected to have to put them back because they were too small.



Sunday, 29 June 2014

Building the sand castle complex



Sand castle building at the beach on Assateague National Seashore across from Chincoteague.



A view of the tunnel entrance from the guard walls.



Through the tunnel to the courtyard.



Mortaring a wall.



Another entrance.



Assateague light house panoramas



Slightly offset.

Kite flying on the beach at Assateague



I actually thought it would be too windy to fly kites yesterday, but it worked out. At first we were working to keep them up, then we noticed that it was so windy nothing was going to stop them.



Lynn and Linus realized they needed a whole lot less effort.



Assateague Light House



No trip to the Atlantic coast, or anywhere with shore or lake line, is complete without light house visits. Assateague light house was recently reprinted and is still in use, though you can visit and climb to the top.



175 steps gets you away from the marauding mosquitos at the bottom. From the top are views of Assateague, Chicoteague and Wallops island.



We couldn't go up to the light because it is a working light. Two beams with electric lights point out and rotate. No fresnel lens or whale oil anymore.



Wildlife at Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge



Even at the visitor center there is wildlife at Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge. This black rat snake was in our path.



There was a frolicking family of Delmarva fox squirrels playing among the trees. Lynn noticed that these squirrels do look different from the common grey squirrel that we see all the time. Especially the faces and ears are different and also the coat color. She described them as alternate world versions of the squirrels we see everyday, subtly but noticeably different.



Delmarva fox squirrels are an endangered species that used to live all throughout the peninsula but slowly disappeared as the forests did, they are making a comeback and might be taken off of the endangered species list.



I had some good conversations with the park rangers about these sightings.