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View Entire Book - twin lights publishers
/30/09 10:56 AM Page 1 THE SEA ISLANDS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS of south Carolina, Georgia, and Florida rtlett eorgia, she spent 20 g Atlanta public relaphotojournalism as a her assignments have as of South Africa to he medieval cities of ize; atop the eerie casSade in the South of g alligator pit at the e was interrogated in ith a Zulu spear, and rmites in Venezuela’s PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS karen t. bartlett Antebellum plantations, shrimp boats, and sweetgrass baskets… lighthouses and driftwood-strewn beaches...wisteria, Spanish moss, and ancient oaks… charming seaports and funky beach towns… intimate inns and island-chic resorts… Lowcountry native Karen T. Bartlett reveals the secrets of the Sea Islands. the sea of sout Georgia A PHOTOG a photographic portrait ward-winning professe travel articles and y in magazines, travel oks throughout North Imagine the shrim plantations in North lum mansions in Tides. These scenes filmed on a strand along the coastline and Florida. On th and jasmine perfum shore birds and the Gullah language fall houses send out th 300 years. Walk with Lowco Bartlett beneath ca oaks. Explore golde port towns. See if fresh-picked peach. horses galloping thr of cannon fire… th Gilded Age… the w over windswept seas There’s magic in creeps as slowly as a enchanted. PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS twin lights publishers ng with former U.S. ned a reindeer driver mented the primitive te Pentecost Island in covered spa therapies Asia to the Dead Sea. he ASMP, American hers, and the SATW, l Writers. She is the e, the premier lifestyle west Gulf coast. or Twin Lights’ topPhotographic Portrait, er books in the Photoncluding Cape Cod, . featured in this book note cards and matted n, visit her website at THE SEA ISLANDS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS a photographic portrait Karen T. Bartlett Book design by: SYP Design & Produ www.sypdesign.com RTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS THE SEA ISLANDS of south Carolina, Georgia, and Florida RTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS RTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS a PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS photographic portrait RTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS RTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS P H O T O G R A P H Y A N D N A R R AT I V E B Y Karen T. Bartlett Copyright © 2009 by Twin Lights Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without written permission of the copyright owners. All images in this book have been reproduced with the knowledge and prior consent of the artists concerned and no responsibility is accepted by producer, publisher, or printer for any infringement of copyright or otherwise, arising from the contents of this publication. Every effort has been made to ensure that credits accurately comply with information supplied. PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS First published in the United States of America by: Twin Lights Publishers, Inc. 8 Hale Street Rockport, Massachusetts 01966 Telephone: (978) 546-7398 http://www.twinlightspub.com PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS ISBN:1-885435-84-3 ISBN: 978-1-885435-84-2 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Tybee Pier at Dawn (opposite) An icon since 1885 when the Savannah socialites traveled by train for big band concerts and a day at the beach, the Tybee Pier and Pavilion is among the Georgia island’s best fishing spots and most beloved landmarks. PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Gulls at Cumberland Island (frontispiece) R.J. Reynolds estate (jacket front) Shrimp boats at Folly Island, Mermaid Art in Beaufort, Sweetgrass baskets (jacket back) Special thanks to Jenny Stacy (Savannah), Patrick Saylor (Georgia’s Golden Isles), Liz Mitchell and Catherine Hipp (Beaufort), Katie Chapman (Charleston), Charlie Clark (Hilton Head), Dan Carter (Edisto), James Maund (Sapelo), Scottie Lingerfeld and Laurie Frost (Darien). Additional appreciation to the innkeepers and hosts at The Westin Resort, (Hilton Head), Edisto Island Vacation Rentals, Riverview Hotel (St.Mary’s), Tybee Vacation Rentals, and The Ballastone Inn, (Savannah). Photograph of Millbrook Plantation, Georgetown South Carolina (page 4) used with the permission of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Parrish. Book design by: SYP Design & Production, Inc. www.sypdesign.com Printed in China PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS S uspended in time somewhere between Gone with the Wind, Porgy and Bess, Forrest Gump, and The Prince of Tides lies a mass of islands so extraordinarily steeped in textures and flavors, soulful colors and magical light that they stir artists to greatness and move historians to tears. On these isles, the sultry salt air can feel as thick as molasses. Azaleas grow blossoms as large as teacups, and the intoxicating fragrances of wisteria and jasmine waft from trellises and hidden gardens. Here, ghosts and “haints” are as common as the timeworn shrimp boats and Spanish moss which, in fact, is neither Spanish nor moss. Time passes slowly. World class resorts have slipped in, adopting the laid back ambience of the islands, and great white herons with five-foot wingspans now soar over windswept oceanfront golf links. Yet, the descendants of slaves still weave their sweetgrass baskets and sell them from wooden shacks along the highway. White-columned plantation houses still languish beneath canopies of ancient live oak trees. And on one island, wild horses, abandoned by 16th-century Spanish explorers, still run free on the dunes. These seductive islands, hundreds of them, hug the Atlantic coastline from Amelia Island, Florida near Jacksonville; to Georgia’s legendary Golden Isles, and fringe the Lowcountry from Savannah, Georgia to Georgetown, South Carolina, just north of Charleston. Mapmakers of the 18th and 19th centuries called them, simply, The Sea Islands. PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 4 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS The West African slaves who toiled on the rice, indigo, and Sea Island cotton plantations helped shape the rich culture of the Lowcountry. The cadent Gullah accent, as it is called in South Carolina, or Geechee, as it is called in Georgia, still falls sweetly on the ears like a song. These images are offered as a Sea Islands appetizer, as savory as Gullah-inspired slow-cooked barbecue and sweet potato pie. While each island thrills the senses in a different way, they’re inextricably woven together by sea oats and magnolias, shell-strewn beaches, imposing lighthouses and spectacular sunrises. Many bear visible scars of wars and slavery, and all were influenced by the major seaports of Amelia, Brunswick, Savannah, and Charleston. This connectedness is what I hope you will feel as you travel these pages, regardless of the island on which I may have captured a particular photograph. PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 7 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS As a Lowcountry native, I’ve yearned to revisit these islands—to feast on boiled peanuts and blue crab, drink sweet tea, and listen to hand-clapping Gullah spirituals. I wanted to peek into gracious Victorian inns that once were family homes like my grandmother’s when I was growing up. I longed to watch the dawn mist rise over the marsh; to feel the textures of old brick, and touch crumbling tabby ruins dating back more than two centuries. I’m grateful to Twin Lights Publishers for sending me on this quest; to the family and friends who provided a place to sleep along the way, especially Ayla and Eric Hemeon, and my grandmother, Vollie Jeffords, who passed away before she got to see the finished book. Ron Wofford fed me fried oysters, showed me hidden plantations, and revived my Southern accent. Hilton Head bird photographer David Lynch shared his favorite rookery. Author/historian Roger Pinckney, who dug me out of a sand dune, knows more Daufuskie secrets than anybody, and quintessential Lowcountry hostesses Laura and Meredith Devendorf of Dunham Farms gave me the run of their camellia gardens. Their movie-set avenue of oaks is pictured on page six. PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 9 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS SOUTH CAROLINA LOWCOUNTRY PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS A Peaceful Paddle (top) Why So Serious? (bottom) Beach House Memories (opposite) There’s hardly a more peaceful paddle than through a maze of marsh tributaries and creeks, like this wildlife-rich, protected estuary on Folly Creek, along the shores of Long Island. Wherever there’s water, there’s sure to be an outfitter nearby. Ha! Ha! Hahahahaha! The laughing gull earns its name with its raucous call, usually in concert with other members of its large colony. Migrating laughing gulls spend their winters in the Sea Islands, particularly in marshes, creeks, rivers, and beaches. “See you at the beach house” echoes along the southern Atlantic coastline year-round as local families and visitors escape to weathered cottages and paintbox-fresh stilt houses, like this one on Folly Island, to make memories for a week or a weekend. 14 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 15 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS An Island Institution Sea Treasures (left) No Chewing Required (right) Locals know they can get all the supplies they need for catching, or—if they don’t feel like fishing—cooking and eating fresh fish, shrimp, and oysters at Crosby’s Fish & Shrimp Co, on James Island between Charleston and Folly Island. The dock at Folly Creek is a popular spot to drop a line or a crab net. Ancient whelks and other fossil shells, long buried in the thick, quicksand-like “pluff mud” of South Carolina’s tidal creeks, are often dislodged by fishermen, shrimpers, and summer storms. Brown pelicans are most often seen plungediving into the ocean for their fish dinners, but some have gotten lazy and stake out spots on piers and docks, waiting for handouts from fishermen. This one holds the fish in his pouch for a few seconds, to the amusement of observers, before swallowing it whole. 16 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 17 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Morris Island Light The original 1767 Morris Island Light, rising out of Charleston Harbor between Charleston and Folly Island, was destroyed by the Confederate army to prevent Yankee troops from using it as a lookout. This 158-foot beauty, rebuilt in 1876, was nearly swept away with 14 other buildings and the 18 Laid Back Folly Island (top and bottom) very island they occupied by Hurricane Hugo in 1989. Now, completely surrounded by water, it has been salvaged at a cost of $1.5 million by Save the Light, Inc. and sold back to the people of South Carolina for one dollar. PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS There’s nothing stuffy about fun, funky Folly, an eclectic sea island barely 10 miles from the polished, pedigreed city of Charleston. Just six and a half miles long and two miles wide, its white sandy beaches, casual restaurants, and souvenir shops evoke the laid back spirit of the mid 20th century. 19 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Oyster Roast (top, left) On the Half Shell (bottom, left) Bon Appetit! (right and opposite) An oyster roast is a quintessential Sea Islands experience, best enjoyed on the beach, on a creaky dock overlooking the salt marsh, or beneath a canopy of oak trees. The feast typically includes many Lowcountry delicacies, including hush puppies, pit barbecue, and peach cobbler. Even children can master the fine art of oyster shucking. Picturesque clusters of inter tidal oysters are exposed in the salt marshes on the receding tide. South Carolina oysters, available fresh year-round, are among the most succulent in North America. They’re delicious served with a squirt of lemon and perhaps a drop of hot sauce, although purists prefer to slurp them without adornment. At Kiawah Island Resort’s traditional weekly oyster roast, fresh oysters are placed on an open pit and covered with wet burlap. Flames lick briefly at the pile to steam them open, and then they are scooped up with a long-handled shovel and heaped before hungry guests at wooden tables. 20 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 21 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Cycling the Lowcountry (top) Seining and Crabbing (bottom) Beachwalker Park (opposite) The number of bicycle rentals throughout the Lowcountry attests to the joys of leisurely cruising down back roads, along the tide line of hard-packed sand beaches, over bridges and through saltwater and freshwater ecosystems, kissed by the sun and embraced by gentle salty breezes. Young guests of Kiawah Island Resort can sign up for naturalist-guided beach combing, crabbing, and seining for tiny sea life. The Georgia/South Carolina coast is among the few spots in the world to witness bottlenose dolphins as they herd schools of fish into the sand banks, sometimes beaching themselves, in a dramatic technique called strand feeding. Stephen “Dr. Beach” Leatherman, America’s most respected authority on world-class beaches, has called Kiawah Island’s Beachwalker Park one of the top ten beaches in the country. Its 11 miles of sandy beach with sea-oat covered dunes, reveals mysteries of the sea in shallow tidal pools left by the receding surf. 22 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS View from the Cart Path Ocean Course, Kiawah Island (above) America’s Toughest Course? (pages 26–27) A common sight on the lush, marsh-fringed Lowcountry golf courses is the gathering of great blue herons, white herons, snowy egrets, roseate spoonbills, and wood storks feeding on small crustaceans and fish in the mud flats at low tide. A particularly popular feeding spot lies between a stand of ancient oaks and the marsh near the third tee of Kiawah Island’s Ocean Course. Gently rolling fairways, lush greens, golden sea grasses, tropical palms, and windswept trees turn an island golf game into a spiritual experience. The backdrop is the sound of ocean waves beneath a Southern sky of ever-changing hues. This moment was captured just after sunrise on the back nine of Kiawah’s Ocean Course. The seaside Kiawah Island Ocean Course designed by Pete Dye, has the most oceanfront holes in the Western Hemisphere. The movie location for The Legend of Bagger Vance, and site of prestigious world and U.S. tournaments, its stunning layout and unpredictable breezes inspired Golf Digest to name it “#1 Golf Course in South Carolina” and “America’s Toughest Resort Course.” 24 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 25 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Sullivan’s Island Light (above) Hunting Island Light (opposite) One of the “youngest” lighthouses on the Eastern Seaboard, the 165-foot high Sullivan’s Island Light is barely more than half a century old. Instead of the traditional endless staircase, an elevator zips to the top in seconds. With one of the brightest lights in the Western Hemisphere, Sullivan’s Island Light is visible 26 miles out to sea. The beautiful Hunting Island Light, relocated more than a mile inland in 1889 due to erosion, is South Carolina’s only lighthouse open to the public. Though no longer active, those willing to climb 167 steps to the top are rewarded with spectacular vistas. A flock of resident cardinals swoop in to accept seeds from visitors’ hands. PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 28 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 29 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Shrimp (top) Wood Stork (bottom) Homecoming – St. Helena Island Forrest Gump’s friend, Bubba Blue, spoke with the heart of a shrimper when he said, “You can barbecue it, boil it, broil it, bake it, sauté it. Dey’s uh, shrimp-kabobs, shrimp Creole, shrimp gumbo. Pan fried, deep fried, stir-fried… There’s pineapple shrimp, lemon shrimp, coconut shrimp, pepper shrimp, shrimp soup, shrimp stew, shrimp salad, shrimp and potatoes, shrimp burger, shrimp sandwich…” The endangered wood stork is a wading bird with a preference for the semitropical lagoons and wetlands of Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina. It is the only stork that breeds in North America. Though its bald head keeps it out of most beauty contests, it has beautiful black-fringed plumage, and its five-foot wingspan is dramatic in flight. Hungry gulls provide noisy escort as a shrimp boat returns to the docks with a hold full of bounty. Its passage through the cuts in narrow tidal creeks creates an illusion of sailing on a sea of marsh grass. 30 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 31 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Night Heron (above) Coffin Point Plantation (opposite) The black-crowned night heron loves the marshes, rivers, and creeks of the Lowcountry. Despite its name, it often comes out to feed during the day when the boats come in, especially during breeding season. At the end of a picturesque half-mile long avenue of oaks, overlooking St. Helena Sound, sits the circa 1800 family home of Ebenezer Coffin. At 2,000 acres, it was the largest Sea Island© cotton-producing plantation in the Carolinas. The Coffins fled the island just ahead of the advancing Union army in 1861. PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 32 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Sunrise on Sullivan’s Island (opposite) Beaufort Inn (above) In that quarter-hour between the moment the night sky pales and the first shore birds awaken with thoughts of a seafood breakfast, the morning light changes from lilac to pink to pale yellow; each phase reflected in the ebb and flow of the tide. With their secret gardens and courtyards, historic cottages and jasmine-draped walls, Victorian gingerbread inns, dating back to the 1800s, represent the best of Southern hospitality throughout the South Carolina Lowcountry. The shell-pink Beaufort Inn, in the National Historic Landmark District, consistently ranks among the finest in the U.S. PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 35 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Sweetgrass Baskets (opposite and bottom, left) Rhett House Inn (top) Gullah Art (bottom, right) Three hundred years ago, slaves from the Rice Coast of West Africa brought their basket making skills to the rice plantations of the Lowcountry. From generation to generation, using filed-down silver spoons to weave the fragrant marsh grass with palmetto and longleaf pine, their descendants have kept this Gullah tradition alive. These baskets are the artistry of Mount Pleasant artist Jery Taylor. Beaufort, “Queen of the South Carolina Sea Islands,” represents the Antebellum South at its architectural and romantic best. The luxurious Rhett House Inn was not named for Gone With the Wind ’s Mr. Butler, but for the Charleston planter who built it as a summer residence in 1820. The Inn’s guest register is a “Who’s Who” of celebrities and Hollywood stars. Visitors who stumble upon Red Piano Too on St. Helena Island can’t fail to be enchanted by the extensive museum-quality collection of colorful Gullah folk art, fine art, quilts, books, and jewelry. More than 150 self-taught artists are represented. A chat with owner Mary Mack alone is worth the visit and yes, there really is a red piano. PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 37 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Mermaid Art (top) Mansions of Beaufort (bottom) Queen of the Sea Islands (opposite) The whole town got involved when the Arts Council of Beaufort County sponsored The Big Swim, a public art project honoring the elusive mermaid, so prominent in seafaring lore. Several artistic interpretations of the “siren of the seas” can still be seen around Beaufort, like this especially beautiful one at a residence near the waterfront. Wide verandahs, columns, and gracious lawns of some 400 antebellum homes and 18th to 19th-century mansions have made Beaufort a popular movie location. Visitors recognize scenes from The Big Chill, Prince of Tides, The Great Santini, and Forrest Gump. Local residents don’t mind respectful gawking. They’re likely to smile and wave as you stroll by. Beaufort occupies Port Royal Island, halfway between Savannah and Charleston. A languid, romantic air permeates the historic waterfront, tidal marsh, and narrow, live oak-shaded streets, replete with antebellum mansions, moss-covered walls, and ancient cemeteries. Horse-drawn buggies clip-clop along cobblestone streets as their drivers recount 300 years of history and lore. 38 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 39 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Hydrangeas (top) Passion Flower (opposite) Lush, showy banks of hydrangeas are the pride of Southern gardens, and the Sea Islands provide a particularly stunning springtime display. Mature hydrangeas can reach a height of 12 feet. Variations in the pH balance in the soil can transform blue flowers to pink or purple, often with many shades on the same plant. Exotic and sensuous though it is, Passiflora was named by Spanish missionaries who used it as a symbol of the passion (final days and crucifixion) of Christ. The fragrant royal purple Passiflora incense averages five inches wide, with a lacy corolla over the petals. Passion flower vines grace walls and fences, and meander through wetlands along the southeastern coast. 40 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Southern Cross of Honor Chapel of Ease, St. Helena Island In 1862, the Confederate States of America (CSA) created the Southern Cross of Honor medal featuring the Confederate battle flag, in tribute to the valor of its armed forces. Many graves throughout the South are distinguished by the Iron Cross of Honor marker, inscribed with the letters C.S.A. The pink-toned tabby ruins of the mid 18thcentury Chapel of Ease rests beneath a canopy of ancient oaks. Built by Beaufort’s prominent St. Helena Parish for members managing their island plantations, it was destroyed by fire in 1886. Though many people insist it is haunted, it remains a popular backdrop for wedding and family portraits. 42 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 43 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Daufuskie Island Tucked between the mouth of the Savannah River and Calibogue Sound, not far from Hilton Head, is an island so steeped in Gullah culture, that a world class resort might seem intrusive or out of place. The Daufuskie Island Resort and Breathe Spa is neither. Set graciously at the end of an imposing avenue of oaks, where the Melrose 44 Sunrise Over Melrose Mansion once stood, The Inn at Melrose Place exudes casual sophistication without a shred of pretense. Guests arrive by ferry or private yacht and get around the island on golf carts, by horse and carriage, on horseback, or by bicycle. PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS A romantic gazebo overlooks the stunning 7081-yard, 18-hole Jack Nicklaus signature golf course, and a sweeping crescent of white sand beach behind the Inn. Its scores of honors include Conde Nast Traveler’s pick as one of the top golf courses in the world. 45 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Hallow Groun’ Angel Watch (opposite) Daufuskie’s only white cemetery, established in 1790, is named for Mary Dunn, who granted the land to plantation families. Tucked behind a rusted iron gate deep in the island’s northwest corner, it marks the graves of indigo and Sea Island cotton planters and their families. Six black cemeteries dot the island. The pretty angel perched on the wall of a family plot seems to be waving a gentle goodbye. According to Gullah tradition, graves face east so the spirit can “fly away home.” Nearby is Mary Fields School, where Southern writer Pat Conroy once taught and later immortalized the two-room schoolhouse in his novel, The Water is Wide. 46 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 47 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Golf on Daufuskie Island Hardy Flower Daufuskie has two championship courses. The Tom Weiskopf and Jay Morrish-designed Bloody Point Course is home to a bald eagle’s nest (7th hole) and an osprey’s nest (15th hole). Bloody Point ran red with blood during the 1715 Yemassee Wars between the Royal Colonial Militia and the native Yemassee tribe. Pictured here is the 9th hole of the Melrose Course. The brilliant red bottlebrush flower, with its fragrant sticky filaments, is irresistible to bees and butterflies. The hardy, droughtresistant evergreen bush can grow to 8 feet and makes dramatic seaside hedges that bloom in spring and summer. 48 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 49 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS First Union African Baptist Church Slave Houses Preserved The historic white frame church on Old School Road was established in 1881 by former slaves on 12 acres of the former Mary Field Plantation. Behind the main sanctuary is an authentically recreated slave Praise House. African worshippers, forbidden to beat drums, made music by clapping their hands, stomping their feet, and beating sticks on the wooden floor. Mount Pleasant, just north of Charleston, is home to Boone Hall, one of South Carolina’s best-preserved antebellum plantations. While most slaves were housed in wooden shacks, John Boone housed his 40 slaves in brick cabins. Several of these cabins, which later became sharecroppers’ homes, still stand. 50 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 51 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Boone Hall Plantation (left) Gullah Lessons (right) Avenue of Oaks, Boone Hall (opposite) Boone Hall Plantation lures major filmmakers to its authentically preserved depiction of the Antebellum South. Movies shot on location here include John Jakes’ North and South; Queen; the sequel to Alex Hailey’s Roots; and Nicholas Sparks’ The Notebook. Programs include daily tours and re-enactments spanning two centuries of plantation life. Where once it grew cotton and pecans, Boone Hall now grows strawberries, peaches, and other produce, with seasonal u-pick fields. Living history programs include storytelling, music, and Gullah language lessons by descendants of slaves still living in Mount Pleasant and on nearby Johns Island. Frank Murray, with his wife Sharon, preserves the culture through their company, De Gullah Enny Pry. It took two hundred years for the two perfect rows of oak trees planted by John Boone in 1743 to meet overhead and create one of the finest avenues of oaks on the Southern coast. The 3⁄4 mile moss-draped canopy leads to the Classic Revival plantation house. 52 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Blue Crab (top and bottom) Brothers and Sisters Oyster Society Hall Besides shrimp, the best-loved crustacean of the Sea Islands is the blue crab. Tangled in shrimpers’ nets, lured onto string lines tied with decaying chicken necks, or captured in commercial crab pots; the sweet meat is best enjoyed steamed with bay leaf and spices or “deviled” in the shell like the famous “Fuskie Devil Crab” on Daufuskie Island. In the 1920s, some African American oyster shuckers moved this two-story house to a wooded site on the former Maryville Plantation and made it their social club. Like the social clubs of white high society, the Brothers and Sisters Oyster Society Hall held meetings, initiations, parties, and dances. Locals are working to preserve the historic 150-year-old icon of Daufuskie culture. 54 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 55 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Island Colors The Purple House Rainbows pale in comparison with the brilliant hues of beach cottages all along the Lowcountry coast, and especially on the Sea Islands. Picket fences, palmetto palms, and towering pines complete the scene. Visitors to Daufuskie Island are enchanted by the colorful row of private homes scattered behind the dunes along Calibogue Sound. Among the most artful is the Purple House accented with sherbet colors. 56 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 57 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Antiques and Kitsch Haint Blue (top, left) One Stop Shopping (bottom, left) A Mess o’Crabs (right) Though it’s just 45 miles south of Charleston, it’s not a straight shot to Edisto Island, which is perhaps why it has retained a charming laid-back island ambience. Visitors can’t resist exploring treasures in local shops like this one on Hwy 174, guarded by a pair of pink flamingoes. It’s widely known in Gullah culture that bad spirits (“haints,” hags, and witches) are afraid of the water and will not attempt to cross it. This is why so may windows and doors throughout the Lowcountry and the islands are painted “haint blue,” the color of water. To be entirely safe, many people paint their entire house or store blue. Hankering for some boiled peanuts? Fantasizing about that trophy fish? Want to see some dolphins, rent a kayak, go shelling on a deserted island or take a plantation river cruise? Edisto Watersports and Tackle is the place. The family-owned business is operated by a popular couple, Captain Dillard Young and his naturalist wife, Lindsay. Tre-vaun’s bushel basket teeming with live blue crabs offers a preview of what’s inside the haint blue walls of Flowers Seafood Company. Edisto natives Frankie and Vincent Flowers are the guys to see on Edisto for fresh-caught fish and shrimp, too. 58 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 59 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS George and Pink’s Southern Peaches (left) Official Dish of the Lowcountry (right) Pink Brown, her father George, and family surley must have the most picturesque produce market in the Lowcountry. Their legendary store, with its clean-swept dirt floor, rustic scale, crates and baskets crammed with homegrown fruits and vegetables, accompanied by the cackling of free-range chickens, delights customers with a surreal, out-of-time experience. Georgia and South Carolina just love to debate the issue of peaches. Georgia is officially “The Peach State,” but South Carolina – harvesting more than 200 million pounds annually, calls itself the “Tastier Peach State.” Either way, Deep South peaches are undoubtedly the sweetest and juiciest in the world. This bountiful basket is from King’s Farm Market, Edisto Island. Whether savored in a five-star gourmet restaurant or a weathered fishing shack, nothing says “Lowcountry” more than a creamy, savory dinner of shrimp and grits. Recipes vary, among the best is Chef Louis Osteen’s of The Fish Camp on Pawley’s Island, however there are two non-negotiables: You must use a real cast-iron skillet and never, ever use instant grits. 60 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 61 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Retirement on Edisto Island Glimpses of Plantations (top) Beach Houses (bottom) Beloved fishing boats that have served their owners well often get a prominent final resting place that provides a condominium for fiddler crabs and other marsh creatures. This one has a view of the beautiful Edisto River, the longest black water river in North America. A peaceful glide along a coastal South Carolina waterway often yields a nostalgic peek into the past, such as this picturesque remnant of the early 19th-century Middleton Plantation on the banks of the Edisto River. Many preserved Lowcountry mansions, particularly between Charleston and Georgetown, are best viewed from the water. Pale, beach-tone colors, gabled roofs, wide porches, and long steps over the dunes to the ocean characterize the beach houses strung side by side in the family-friendly community of Edisto Beach. House hunting on the coast? It’s good to know that “first row” homes have direct beach frontage, while “second row” homes run parallel to the beach one lot back. 62 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 63 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Stylish Hilton Head Golfing Paradise Among the most polished and sophisticated of the Sea Islands is Hilton Head, where grand and exquisitely appointed homes sprawl gracefully along lush golf courses, creeks, the ocean, and the Intracoastal Waterway. At 12 miles long by 5 miles wide, it’s the second largest barrier island on the East Coast, distinguished by five star resorts, world class dining, tennis, golf, and fishing. Golfers worldwide dream of playing the legendary golf courses of Hilton Head Island, always listed among the world’s top golf destinations. Meticulously maintained courses wind through stands of majestic oaks, along tidal creeks and mysterious lagoons, and offer astounding views of golden marshes and the Atlantic Ocean. 64 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS The final hole of the prestigious annual Heritage Classic tournament is played on the lawn of the famed Pete Dye Harbour Town Golf Links. 65 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Goldeneye (top) Waiting for Dinner (bottom) Harbour Town Lighthouse (opposite) Despite bad press, alligators are rarely aggressive with humans except when antagonized, surprised, or frightened. It is illegal to harass an alligator. Almost any body of fresh or brackish water can be a habitat for the prehistoric creatures, providing a thrill for spectators at a respectful distance. Springtime is nesting season all over the Sea Islands. Great blue herons, white herons, and more return annually to fresh water rookeries that are surrounded by water and often protected by alligators. These snowy egret and tricolor heron chicks await the return of their parents at feeding time. The pretty 90-foot “facsimile” lighthouse at Sea Pines Resort is synonymous with Hilton Head Island. It has a beacon, stunning 360degree views, a gift shop at the top, and museum quality photos and artifacts all the way up. Harbour Town, with its restaurants, galleries, shops, town green, and glamorous yachts at harbor, is a popular island gathering spot. 66 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Cruising the Sea Islands Charleston Harbor An authentic and romantic way to see the Antebellum South is by water, following the same marsh-fringed rivers traveled by the first settlers, planters, and traders. The American Spirit, captured here gliding on the South Brunswick River beneath the graceful Sidney Lanier Bridge, explores the Lowcountry and Golden Isles from Jacksonville to Charleston, including calls at Beaufort and Savannah. Charleston and sailing go together like mansions and mint juleps, Porgy and Bess, live oaks and Spanish moss. Sailors get seaworthy at a young age in Charleston Harbor, where junior members of the prestigious Charleston Yacht Club hone their skills year-round. Their colorful mainsails are a joyful sight from Historic Charleston’s Battery Park and the Ravenel Bridge. 68 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 69 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS GEORGIA’S GOLDEN ISLES PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS St. Simons Light (previous page) Wesley Memorial Garden (above) Epworth By the Sea (opposite) With commanding views of St. Simons Island, as well as the nearby Sea Island and Jekyll Island, the 104-foot lighthouse is one of only five surviving navigational lights in Georgia. The keeper’s house is a museum. It’s rumored that the ghost of a former lighthouse keeper, killed in an altercation with his assistant, haunts the tower stairs. An imposing Celtic cross, surrounded by ancient live oaks, wisteria and azaleas, presides over a two-acre garden near Christ Church, honoring Anglican missionaries Charles and John Wesley. They arrived with General James Oglethorpe in 1736 to establish Georgia’s first military outpost, Federica. The Wesleys returned to England where they founded the Methodist movement. Built in 1880, the Lovely Lane Chapel stands on the former site of the prosperous Hamilton Plantation. A lumber mill nearby supplied the oak that built the USS Constitution (“Old Ironsides”). Today the land is home to a United Methodist Church retreat center. Lovely Lane Chapel is among the most popular wedding chapels in Georgia’s Golden Isles. 72 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 73 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Village Inn & Pub (top) Quintessential Sea Islands (bottom) Slave House (opposite) The ivy-covered 1930s beach cottageturned-gracious-inn on St. Simons Island is dwarfed by massive, centuries-old oak trees. Guest rooms are named for important Georgia historical figures, including author Eugenia Price and Georgia’s founder, General James Oglethorpe. Set in the heart of The Village, its authentic English pub is a popular local gathering place. An old tabby wall provides a gracious backdrop for banks of azaleas in Wesley Memorial Garden. Tabby is a concrete-like mixture of lime, sand, crushed oyster shells, and water. Many intact tabby buildings, as well as the ruins of hundreds of plantation houses, forts, stores, and lighthouses dating back to the early 1700s remain throughout the Lowcountry. This former slave house built of whitewashed tabby is one of the only remaining structures from St. Simons Island’s prosperous Hamilton Plantation at Gascoigne Bluff. When the United Methodist Church acquired the historic land overlooking the Frederica River, they named it Epworth By The Sea, honoring the English birthplace of John and Charles Wesley. 74 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Rock Shrimp on Board (opposite) Blessing of the Fleet (top) Wild Shrimp (bottom, left and, right) A common sight along the peaceful creeks of the Brunswick River is the return of shrimp trawlers from a week or more at sea. Besides the familiar brown, pink, and white shrimp savored throughout the Lowcountry, local shrimpers are sometimes rewarded with a hold full of sweet, hard-shelled rock shrimp like these, headed for sale at Poteet’s Seafood Company. Each spring, the shrimping season begins with solemn prayers for safety and a bountiful catch. Elaborately decorated boats packed with families and friends receive individual blessings, then a memorial wreath is cast out to sea. Afterward, it’s all about shrimp eating, street parades, and partying on the river, Darien. Georgia’s event draws weekend crowds of 70,000 or more. “Wild Georgia Shrimp,” “Wild South Carolina Shrimp,” and “Wild Florida Shrimp” aren’t just ad slogans. Shrimpers throughout the Lowcountry take pride in the official certification by Charleston-based Wild American Shrimp, Inc. distinguishing their coastal catches from farmed imports. These succulent white shrimp are fresh off the boat at Wando Shrimp Co. in Mount Pleasant, SC. PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 77 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Darien River at Twilight Grilled Shrimp (top) Better Than a GPS (bottom) More than a dozen resident shrimp boats on the Darien River take on an ethereal glow as another perfect Golden Isles day comes to a close. Darien is eight miles southwest of Sapelo Island and about 12 miles north of Jekyll and St. Simons Islands. Those unfortunate enough to miss all the seafood festivals throughout the Lowcountry can still pick up some fresh shrimp, marinate it in garlic-infused lime juice, brush it with olive oil, sea salt and spices, and grill it up themselves. Or head for Mudcat Charlie’s, a marsh-side marina with character between Brunswick and Darien. Attention travelers: if you drive more than five miles in any direction without seeing a crab, shrimp or seafood sign, check your GPS: you may no longer be in those magical lands called the Sea Islands, the Lowcountry and the Golden Isles. 78 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 79 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Ships Passing in the Night Waving Girl Among the most impressive sights from a Georgia beach is the massive bulk of an international freighter on the horizon, bound for the deepwater ports of Savannah and Brunswick. Each year, these two ports alone handle close to 2 million tons of cargo annually. Only one lone seagull and a photographer are witnesses to this moonlit scene. Legend says that the lonely young sister of Cockspur Island’s lighthouse keeper waited, with her loyal collie, for the sailor she loved to return from the sea. For 44 years, Florence Martus waved her towel by day and her lantern by night to every passing ship, and each one sounded its foghorn in return. Florence really existed, though it is 80 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS unclear whether there ever was a lover. Ships still sound their foghorns in respect as they pass the beautiful bronze statues of Florence and her dog on Savannah’s River Street. 81 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Kitesurfing Over Tybee (above) Tybee Light (opposite) One regular beachfront ritual at the south end of Tybee Island involves bright, crescent-shaped kites soaring overhead. But it’s not the kites the gathering crowd is watching: it’s the extreme acrobatics show being performed by aerial athletes 10 to 15 feet above the rolling surf. Tybee has one of the most active kitesurfing groups along the Georgia coast. Tonight, as she has for nearly 280 years, the stately 154-foot tall black and white Tybee Island Light will guide mariners safely into the Savannah River. Restored at the turn of the 21st century, she wasn’t always this pretty. She and her previous three incarnations had survived severe erosion, wind damage, an earthquake, fire, and decades of decay. PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 82 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Fort Pulaski (left) Tybee Light Stairs (right) Fort Screven (opposite) Heavy wood and iron gates helped guard the fort that saw only 30 hours of military action before surrendering in 1862. It succumed to newly invented rifled cannons that shattered its masonry walls from a mile away. Fort Pulaski, ranked among America’s bestpreserved “third system” coastal forts, offers stunning vistas, as well as exciting interpretive programs including cannon firings. The Confederate army burned the staircase to the top of the Tybee Island Light to thwart encroaching Yankees during the War Between the States. The now-restored 178 steps lead to panoramic views of the island and the Atlantic. The lighthouse and its five outbuildings at Fort Screven are closed on major holidays, including Savannah’s favorite: St. Patrick’s Day. Built in 1897, Fort Screven operated through the Spanish American War, World War I, and World War II. In 1947 it was acquired by the town of Tybee and now houses military and artillery artifacts under the auspices of the Tybee Island Historical Society Museum. 84 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 85 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Lowcounry Colors Loggerheads in Art and Life (top) Hemingway House (bottom) Maybe it’s the brilliant flowers, the colors of a sunset sky, or the lightheartedness that comes with sunshine and warm weather. Whatever the inspiration, color permeates life in the Lowcountry and on the Sea Islands, from homes to art, and storefronts like this in the historic town of St. Marys, Georgia. St. Marys is the point of departure for the ferry to Cumberland Island. Ma Cootah (Mother Turtle in Gullah), along with her 22 other larger-than-life loggerhead sculpture friends were auctioned as a fundraiser for Tybee Arts Association. Pictured at the Tybee Island Marine Science Center near the pier, Ma Cootah reflects the science center’s involvement in stranded mammal rescues, turtle monitoring, and interactive marine exhibits. Tybee’s modest beach bungalows of the 1930s and 1940s fell out of favor in the mid 20th century. Newly rediscovered in the 21st, they’re getting infused with brilliant colors and celebrated as vacation cottages and year-round homes. Savannah “cottage rescuer” Jane Coslick is credited with the rebirth of many such cottages, representing the fun, unpretentious spirit of Tybee Island. 86 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 87 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Heart Cockle on Nanny Goat Beach Sapelo Island Lighthouse Lacy sea foam catches the light of a Sapelo Island sunrise and frames a golden heart cockle shell that rolled up with the tide. Sea foam is a natural phenomenon caused by decaying marine matter. Shell seekers on the Sea Islands are also rewarded with moon snails, razor clams, starfish, tiny coquina shells, and sun-bleached sand dollars. Views from the salt marsh-fringed, sandy shell road are as rewarding as the view of the Sapelo Light itself. Located on the island’s southern tip, the 80-foot, circa-1820 tower, inactive for nearly a century, once again guides vessels around the treacherous hidden shoals of Dolby Sound. The lighthouse is part of the Sapelo Island National Estuarine Research Reserve. 88 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 89 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Sapelo Settlements (top) Four-hundred enslaved Africans once toiled on Sapelo Island’s cotton plantation. After emancipation, the freed slaves established small settlements throughout the island, with names like Behavior, Hanging Bull, Raccoon Bluff, Chocolate, Hog Hammock and Drink Water. In the 1930s, to consolidate his island holdings, tobacco heir R.J. 90 Reynolds relocated most residents of these settlements into Hog Hammock. The restored First African Baptist Church at Raccoon Bluff, listed on the National Register of Historic Places, radiates joy inside, with a blue ceiling (to banish evil spirits), lemon-yellow pews, and antique red and yellow stained glass windows. Cherokee Rose (bottom) Reynolds Mansion The velvety petals and very prickly vine of this climbing rose represent both the gentility and the strength of the Georgia people. The state flower since 1916, the Cherokee rose grows in profusion throughout the Sea Islands, draping itself like garlands over fences, bushes, and man-made supports. During the 1930s, tobacco magnate R.J. Reynolds bought much of Sapelo Island, including the magnificent 13-bedroom, 11-bath Spalding Plantation manor house and estate. Guided tours are offered daily. Lodging is available to groups of 16 to 29 people. The estate is managed by the Georgia Department of Natural Resources. PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 91 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Camellia Mystical Morning on Sapelo Azaleas and wisteria rule the springtime, while magnolias are the most pedigreed ladies of summer. But thanks to mild temperatures and filtered sunlight, the gracious camellia owns the Southern coastal garden all winter long. The showy camellia japonica comes in more than 3,000 varieties, cultivars, and hybrids. Dense oak canopies, graceful drapings of ancient vines and Spanish moss filter the rays of early morning sun, creating an ethereal, out-of-time effect on the R.J. Reynolds estate. 92 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 93 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Pretty in Pink (left, top and bottom) Sapelo Honey (right) Keepers of the Culture (opposite) The camellia (top) is believed to have been brought to the Lowcountry during the 1700s. Most camellias grow in shrub or tree form, from six to twelve feet tall. The beloved George L. Tabor azalea (bottom), with its extra-large blooms and deep pink dotted throat, transforms ordinary homes into showplaces and dominates prestigious home and garden tours throughout the area. Sweet, locally produced Sapelo honey helps raise money for the Sapelo Island Cultural and Restoration Society (SICARS) to preserve the island’s Gullah culture. One of the most exciting SICARS fundraisers is a joyful, musical, colorful cultural festival each October. With about 75 residents, Hog Hammock is the last intact, island-based Gullah-Geechee community in Georgia’s Sea Islands. Hog Hammock is home to native Gullah storyteller, and keeper of the culture, Cornelia Walker Bailey. Those who meet her will want to own her book: God, Dr. Buzzard and the Bolito Man. At Cornelia and Julius Bailey’s one-room store (when it is open), visitors can buy sweetgrass baskets, scuppernong jelly, or an artful Gullah doll made by daughter Terry. 94 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 95 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Sea Whip (top) Wild Horses (bottom) Wisteria and Azaleas (opposite) Bright-colored encrusting organisms in tones of pink and yellow transform ordinary sea grasses into beachcombers’ treasures on Georgia’s Golden Isles. Sea grasses, seaweed, starfish, and other marine life that has died and washed ashore have a pungent smell until baked dry under the island sun. Introduced by 16th-century Spanish explorers, then abandoned to return to the wild, a herd of once-domesticated horses has roamed Cumberland Island for 500 years. Though thin and scruffy, approximately 150 remaining feral horses still make a charming picture grazing on the dunes, among the castle ruins, and beneath the gnarled oaks of 19th-century mansions. Hardy, fragrant wisteria vines wrap their tenacious arms around massive oak trees, climb stone walls, and wend their way through fence pickets and posts. Here, they frame a six-foot high wall of azaleas along an island road for a particularly stunning springtime show. 96 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Castle Dungeness (top) Almost as glamorous in ruins as it was in its prime, the 44-room turreted Castle Dungeness was built in 1884 and burned in a raging fire in 1959. Now it is inhabited only by the wild horses that graze on its lands, and perhaps the ghost of Henry “Light Horse Harry” Lee, father of Robert E. Lee, commanding general of the Confederate Army. 98 Greyfield Inn The Dungeness Trail traverses maritime forests and crosses some of the most beautiful dune fields in North America to a wide, shell-strewn, sugary sand beach. Cumberland Island is managed by the National Park Service, which operates the Cumberland Queen ferry from St. Marys, Georgia. PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Greyfield was built on Cumberland Island in 1900 by steel magnate Andrew Carnegie’s brother Thomas and his wife Lucy. Their granddaughter, Lucy Ferguson, converted it to an inn 62 years later and it still is personally managed by the family. The sensuous live oak-canopied mansion, consistently ranked as one of the most gracious and PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS romantic inns in America, hosted the 1996 wedding reception of John F. Kennedy Jr. and Carolyn Bessette. 99 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Jekyll Causeway Towers Crane Cottage The six-mile causeway linking Jekyll Island to the mainland at Brunswick, Georgia traverses the legendary “Marshes of Glynn,” immortalized in verse by poet Sidney Lanier. After the state of Georgia acquired Jekyll Island in 1947, it built the landmark Spanish style towers that originally supported the banner, “ Jekyll Island – Year-Round Beach Resort.” Plumbing industrialist Richard Teller Crane and his wife admired a grand palazzo they saw in Italy, so they built their Jekyll Island “summer cottage” in its image. With 20 rooms and 17 baths, the Italian Renaissance palace was the most opulent of the Millionaire’s Row mansions. Crane Cottage is now part of the glamorous Jekyll Island Club Hotel. 100 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 101 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Jekyll Island Club Hotel Victorian Grandeur At the turn of the 20th century, America’s royalty—Rockefellers, Morgans, Astors, Vanderbilts and others—who built their extravagant summer cottages on Jekyll Island, formed what was described as “the richest, most exclusive, most inaccessible club in the world.” Now on the National Historic Register, the Jekyll Island Club Hotel is ranked among the world’s top resort hotels. If only the walls could talk in this fabled Victorian clubhouse with the stately tower. Between 1886 and World War II, social lives were made and shattered here, and powerful deals were brokered within its grand halls and manicured gardens. It is said secret meetings held here by the nation’s top bankers launched the concept for the Federal Reserve. 102 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 103 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Deserted Sands (top) Cannonball Jellyfish (bottom) Driftwood Beach Beach walkers who seek peace and solitude love Jekyll Island at sunset. A popular daytrip destination, Driftwood Beach and others around the island belong to locals and resort guests as the day’s shadows grow long. Every night brings a new color palette. Tonight’s peach and yellow sunset may give way to red and purple tomorrow. If it’s true, as some believe, that the collagen in cannonball jellyfish can control arthritis, Driftwood Beach is a medical treasure trove. In springtime, millions of this pretty, nonstinging variety of jellyfish populate the waters throughout the Golden Isles and the Lowcountry. An ethereal play of light showcases the artfully shaped oak and pine driftwood sculptures that were created by shifting sands. Some have been polished by surf and sun for hundreds of years. Driftwood Beach is at the north end of Jekyll Island. 104 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 105 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS View From The Cottages (top) A Fine Day’s Work (bottom) Jekyll Island Pier Once the private view of the privileged few, the breathtaking sunsets from Millionaire’s Row are now available to all. A path beneath the palms leads to the historic Jekyll Wharf, where the cream of American society once disembarked for a winter season of hunting, fishing, yachting, lawn parties, and other leisurely pursuits. Fishermen chug slowly into Jekyll Creek to dock at the historic Jekyll Wharf. Prime near-shore fishing targets are speckled trout, redfish, and flounder. Offshore, it’s kingfish, cobia, grouper, snapper, black sea bass, and sheepshead. Jekyll Creek, part of the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway, was critical in the transport of cotton and indigo from Jekyll Island’s plantations. The 520-foot long free access fishing pier at the north end of Jekyll Island affords stunning vistas of Driftwood Beach and the Sidney Lanier Bridge. Anglers can grill and feast on their catch in the adjacent Clam Creek Park. 106 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 107 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Little St. Simons Island Sea Island Magic Little St. Simons Island is the northernmost and most secluded of Georgia’s Golden Isles. Once part of a rice plantation, the privately owned island is accessible only by boat. The Lodge on Little St. Simons Island can accommodate up to 30 overnight guests to experience the 10,000 acres of pristine woodlands and seven miles of isolated beaches. Georgia’s Golden Isles receive some of the most spectacular sunrise and sunset shows on earth. On Little St. Simons Island, the abundant population of resident and migratory shore birds, wading birds, and songbirds provide the music. 108 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 109 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 110 The Lodge at Little St. Simons (opposite) The Helen House (top) A Step Back in Time (bottom) At the heart of life on Little St. Simons is the Hunting Lodge, where Lowcountry meals are served family style, island naturalists plan guided adventures, and guests gather for cocktails at sunset. The circa 1928, authentically preserved three-bedroom guest cottage, with its tabby walls, screened porch and open-beamed living room, overlooks the salt marshes and the Hunting Lodge at Little St. Simons Island. The movie-set 1930s ambience of the lodge comes from rough-hewn pine furniture, generations of family photos, island artifacts, and memorabilia from the visits of distinguished visitors. PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 111 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Adorable Armadillo Palmetto Forest Though it can stand on its hind legs and has kangaroo-like forepaws, the armadillo (Spanish for “little armored one”) is not related to marsupials. Its closest relatives are sloths and anteaters. Its shell is made of bone and it dines on insects that live in the decaying wood of palmetto and hardwood forests. Live oaks have spent many centuries growing their long, gnarled branches deep within the palmetto forest. Soft carpets of oak leaves and pine needles enhance the tranquility of the forests, which shelter deer, wild turkeys, wild boars, bobcats and other wildlife. As a stop on the Atlantic Migratory Flyway, the Sea Islands host hundreds of varieties of birds. 112 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 113 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS ALLURING AMELIA PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Golden Beaches (top) Miss Amelia (bottom) View from The Ritz (opposite) Sophisticated and chic, yet relaxed and comfortable define Amelia Island, the unofficial southern boundary of the Sea Islands. Here, old island traditions are held dear, yet world-class resorts fit in like the genteel Southern ladies they are. In moments between golfing, spa-ing, and active island pursuits, an umbrella-shaded lounge chair is never far away. She’s bright and sassy, and just as alluring as the resort she represents. The beautiful young parrot, mascot of The Ritz-Carlton, Amelia Island, loves the attention she gets on her beachfront perch, especially from the children. The Ritz-Carlton, renowned for its elegance, offers championship golf, a luxurious spa, five star dining, romantic getaway packages, and destination weddings. White frothy waves and sugary white dunes; royal blue umbrellas, green dune grasses, and a blue-green sea: these are the colors of luxury on Amelia Island as seen from a balcony of the AAA Five-Diamond Ritz-Carlton, Amelia Island. Amelia Island is about 30 miles north of the Jacksonville Airport. 116 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Amelia Island Plantation (top) Exhilarating Golf (bottom) Romantic Inns (opposite) The AAA-Four Diamond family destination resort at the southern end of Amelia Island has it all: golf, tennis, spa, beach, and island adventures. The 1,350-acre resort has a hotel in case you want to visit—or marshfront, oceanfront, and golf course homes in case you decide to stay forever. Amelia Island Plantation is world renowned for its spectacular 72 holes of championship golf, and none is more stunning than the 15th green of the Pete Dye/Bobby Weed Ocean Links course. The challenging, windswept links wind along a dune ridge that features five dramatic oceanfront holes. Another ten holes have gorgeous lagoon, marsh, and wetland views. Victorian gingerbread detailing, wide verandas, fireplaces and period antiques, a tranquil courtyard with a three-tier fountain, and gracious service draw visitors to The Addison on Amelia Island. Tucked among crepe myrtles and live oaks on Ash Street, this circa1876 bed and breakfast inn is one of several lovely romantic B&Bs that have made Fernandina Beach a top rated inn destination. 118 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Oldest Drinking Establishment Coke Nostalgia Back in the 1800s, when shipping brought great wealth to Fernandina Beach, saloons prospered along Centre Street. At the impressive Palace Saloon, complimentary towels once provided to wipe the foam from patrons’ mustaches are gone, but the 40-foot bar, tin ceilings, mosaic floors, gas lamps and elaborate murals in Florida’s oldest continuously operating drinking establishment remain. Coca Cola Company forged new advertising ground in the late 1800s by painting its logo on the sides of brick buildings, particularly drug stores. The usual perk for the store was a fresh coat of paint and their name above the Coke logo. This one was probably first painted in 1905, coincidentally the year the Palace Saloon began serving Coke. 120 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 121 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Boardwalk over the Marsh (top) Fernandian Harbor (bottom) Roseate Spoonbills This boardwalk over a wildlife-rich salt marsh still wearing its golden mantle of winter is among the best-kept secrets of the Sea Islands. Tucked into a residential community, within Amelia Island Plantation, is Drummond Point Park, where heartstopping spectacles of sunrises and sunsets are free to resort guests. Fishing charters, pleasure craft, shrimp boats, and sightseeing vessels make harmonious neighbors at the Historic Fernandina Harborfront. The picturesque 50-block cobble stoned historic district is popular for strolling, shopping, antiquing, and dining. The Chamber of Commerce occupies the quaint red Florida Railroad train depot at the corner of Front and Centre Streets. Among the loveliest wading birds of Florida and Georgia’s Sea Islands, roseate spoonbills make a dramatic sight, both in flight and reflected in the water as they scoop up their breakfast in the mud flats at low tide. Their spoon-shaped bills swing from side to side to capture frogs, minnows, and tiny wetlands creatures. 122 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 123 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS First Light on Amelia Magical Last Light (top) Mystical Landscape (pages 126–127) While most of the Sea Islands still slumber, early risers take advantage of dawn’s first gifts. In this case, it may be a tasty coquina or a silver minnow. While the Atlantic can toss up some awe-inspiring waves, some break over a sea as smooth as glass. The fishing is great in the Sea Islands yearround, especially at sunrise and sunset. With or without fish, when Mother Nature bestows a gentle evening glow of cotton candy pink over sea and sky like this one over Amelia, it’s hard to pack up and go home. A mystical quality permeates this summer afternoon at the Savannah National Wildlife Refuge, as the air temperature drops, wildlife take shelter, and thirsty grasses stand perfectly still in anticipation of a quenching rain. 124 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 125 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS RTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS Karen T. Bartlett is an award-winning professional photojournalist whose travel articles and photography appear regularly in magazines, travel guides, newspapers, and books throughout North America and the Caribbean. A native of Savannah, Georgia, she spent 20 years at the helm of a leading Atlanta public relations firm before pursuing photojournalism as a second career. Since then, her assignments have taken her from the savannas of South Africa to the temples of Bali; from the medieval cities of Tuscany to the jungles of Belize; atop the eerie castle ruins of the Marquis de Sade in the South of France and inside a teeming alligator pit at the edge of the Everglades. She was interrogated in South Africa for traveling with a Zulu spear, and she once dined on live termites in Venezuela’s Orinoco Delta. Karen went deep-sea fishing with former U.S. president Jimmy Carter, earned a reindeer driver license in Finland, and documented the primitive land-diving rituals on remote Pentecost Island in the South Pacific. She has covered spa therapies from the marble palaces of Asia to the Dead Sea. Karen is a member of the ASMP, American Society of Media Photographers, and the SATW, Society of American Travel Writers. She is the travel editor of Gulfshore Life, the premier lifestyle magazine of Florida’s southwest Gulf coast. She is the photographer for Twin Lights’ topselling Naples, Florida: A Photographic Portrait, and the author of several other books in the Photographic Portraits series, including Cape Cod, Tampa Bay and Long Island. Many of the photographs featured in this book are available as hand-signed note cards and matted prints. For more information, visit her website at www.karentbartlett.com. RTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS RTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS RTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS RTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS 128 PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS /30/09 10:56 AM Page 1 THE SEA ISLANDS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS rtlett eorgia, she spent 20 g Atlanta public relaphotojournalism as a her assignments have as of South Africa to he medieval cities of ize; atop the eerie casSade in the South of g alligator pit at the e was interrogated in ith a Zulu spear, and rmites in Venezuela’s PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS the sea of sout Georgia A PHOTOG Imagine the shrim plantations in North lum mansions in Tides. These scenes filmed on a strand along the coastline and Florida. On th and jasmine perfum shore birds and the Gullah language fall houses send out th 300 years. Walk with Lowco Bartlett beneath ca oaks. Explore golde port towns. See if fresh-picked peach. horses galloping thr of cannon fire… th Gilded Age… the w over windswept seas There’s magic in creeps as slowly as a enchanted. PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS karen t. bartlett Antebellum plantations, shrimp boats, and sweetgrass baskets… lighthouses and driftwood-strewn beaches...wisteria, Spanish moss, and ancient oaks… charming seaports and funky beach towns… intimate inns and island-chic resorts… Lowcountry native Karen T. Bartlett reveals the secrets of the Sea Islands. PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS twin lights publishers ng with former U.S. ned a reindeer driver mented the primitive te Pentecost Island in covered spa therapies Asia to the Dead Sea. he ASMP, American hers, and the SATW, l Writers. She is the e, the premier lifestyle west Gulf coast. or Twin Lights’ topPhotographic Portrait, er books in the Photoncluding Cape Cod, . featured in this book note cards and matted n, visit her website at of south Carolina, Georgia, and Florida a photographic portrait ward-winning professe travel articles and y in magazines, travel oks throughout North THE SEA ISLANDS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS a photographic portrait Karen T. Bartlett Book design by: SYP Design & Produ www.sypdesign.com