Flipping for Spring Break!
Inside the Moon...
11 year old boy rescued A4
Spring Break 2014 A9,A11
Fish Stories A5
The
Island Moon Weekly
FREE
March 13, 2014
The only Island in Texas with four-wheel-drive taxicabs
Around The Island
By Dale Rankin editor@islandmoon.com
Spring Breakers just haven’t been able to catch a break this year. The first weekend of Spring Break was more like Spring Broke as the rain swept the beaches clean of revelers over the weekend and through Monday; The beaches began to fill Tuesday afternoon until a cool, damp fog bank sent people scurrying for their cars and headed to local watering holes. The fog was so thick in Port Aransas that only one ferry could cross at a time for fear of collision. Then on Wednesday morning the north wind blew only a few hardy souls beachward. By Spring Break Standards our BPM (Bikinis Per Mile) quotient has been on the low side. You know it’s slow when there is but one Lobster Tan on the NoPac Beach. But as of this writing on Wednesday afternoon it looks like things will pick up weather wise, Lobster Tanwise, and BPMwise. So fellow Islanders, get set for a lively weekend hereabouts. The easiest guage of how many people are on The Island is how much cell phone service slows down and how much reception drops. If your cell phone only has one bar take the Aquarius Extension; if you can’t get service stay home.
Schlitterbahn Update Paul Schexnailder told the Island Strategic Action Committee last week that there were then eighty-seven days left before the Schlitterbahn park’s scheduled opening and it would take only about thirty of those to finish pouring the concrete. Crews this week were busy putting yet another story on the old Padre Isles Clubhouse and the view from the top is without a doubt the best on The Island stretching from downtown on the north to the King Ranch on the south. Then on Monday the park’s owner/designer Jeff Henry told a radio audience that the scheduled opening date is still June 1. Henry also said there is a new addition to the park of a “ship” which will be used to house live music, a workout room, a restaurant, and other attractions to be named later.
GLO land sale The sale of 3860 acres of land owned by the Texas General Land Office to a local trust looks to be a done deal. Sources say terms of the deal were worked out a few weeks ago and the Nueces County Coastal Parks Board at its last meeting discussed a plan for management of the land, which is located in Kleberg County but will be managed by Nueces County. The final agreement between the two counties was delayed until after the recent election to avoid it becoming a political football in Kleberg County. The sale happened quickly, by government standards, after local officials discovered late last year, by reading the Island Moon, that the National Park Service was negotiating to buy the land and bollard off six miles of beach in Kleberg County. It was feared that move would push more people onto the already crowded beaches in Nueces County and state and county officials stepped in. County officials say the land will be kept as a natural area with the beach open to the public. It is unknown at this point if a Beach Parking Permit will be required there.
Hang in there So fold out the roll-away bed and pump up the air mattresses because this is the weekend we Islanders find out we have friends we never knew; and even if we get slammed for a few days that’s okay. Resist the urge to make fun of visitors sporting a lobster tan because, hey, that’s what keeps the Island economy jumping. Just remember that April and its Chamber of Commerce Weather is just around the corner. We’ll see you on the other side. In the meantime, say hello if you see us Around The Island.
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Capt. Sail Offcourse Caught by a Cuda
Free
Photo by Matthew A. Perez
Next Publication Date: 3/20/2014
New Fines, Possible Community Center, $7.4 Million in Cash Highlight Annual POA Meeting
Schlitterbahn A16
Facebook: The Island Moon Newspaper
Year 17, Issue 517
By Dale Rankin The Padre Island Property Owners Association, the largest property owners association in Texas, held its annual meeting on Saturday, March 8 with about one hundred people in attendance. Here are some of the highlights: 2006 Covenant Change: In 2006 23 of the 26 subdivisions in the POA Passed an increase in dues on property bought after January 1, 2007. Properties bought prior to that date retained the old dues of two cents per square foot for waterfront homes, one cent per square foot for dry lots. POA continued on A7
Where Be the Treasure, Matey? All sorts of pirate swag is supposedly hidden in the Coastal Bend area just waiting to be discovered By Dale Rankin This month marks the birthday of our dear friend and Moon founder Moon Mike Ellis. We celebrate his time with us by digging through a treasure he left us: his collection of Island history books one of which is a 1972 book, "A Guide to Treasures in Texas," by author Thomas Penfield who unearthed hundreds of buriedtreasure stories, legends dealing with sunken treasures, stolen payrolls and life savings buried and never recovered by their owners. Some of them might even be true. As Jimmy Stewart said in The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance when the legend becomes fact, print the legend. We think our friend Mike would like this story. Treasure continued on A3
Island Foundation Schools ‘Whoop It Up’ Fundraiser is March 30th Largest fundraiser of the year By Brent Rourk Get your stompin’ and dancin’ boots and best western duds ready so that you can support and attend the Island Foundation School’s large annual fundraiser, ‘Whoop It Up’, on Sunday, March 30th at Whiskey River in Corpus Christi. Doors open at 6:00 PM and exhausted and happy dancers and auction winners will be leaving at 10:00 PM. As in past years, a dedicated fundraiser committee promises to provide a memorable evening of dancing, mouth-watering BBQ, and both live and silent auctions. There will be several valuable and fun auction items for the live auction and many fun silent auction items that will elicit lots of interest. Lisa Scheerer, Island Board President, stated, “This is a super fun party and we hope that everybody can join us. We really need this to be a big fundraiser for construction goals that are designed to improve our foundation.” Whoop it Up continued on A8
Spring break invasion! Photo by Ronnie Narmour. More on A9 & A11
Training Underway for Upcoming Sea Turtle Nesting Season By: Donna J. Shaver, Ph.D. Division of Sea Turtle Science and Recovery National Park Service, Padre Island National Seashore E-mail: Donna_Shaver@nps.gov This has been a relatively cold winter and for the last few months we have been very busy with the second largest cold stunning event recorded in Texas since the Sea Turtle Stranding and Salvage Network was established in 1980. Despite this, the Kemp’s ridley nesting season is rapidly approaching, and with no time to spare we have turned our attention from dealing with cold stunned turtles to preparing for this upcoming sea turtle nesting season.
Nesting and egg protection Kemp’s ridleys nest in Texas from April through mid-July. Females nest one to four times during the nesting season, at intervals of 14 to 28 days, laying an average of 100 eggs in each nest. Females provide no maternal care for their eggs, which face many human related and natural threats if left unprotected on the beach.
A little Island history
It is thought that under natural conditions, only about one in 400 eggs will produce an individual that survives to adulthood. Many people are working in the U.S. and Mexico to try to increase those odds. Kemp’s ridley is the most endangered sea turtle species in the world and bi-national recovery efforts have been underway since 1978 to help Turtles continued on A7
How Peace Came to the Karankawas
By Dale Rankin The Karankawa Indians carried out one of the earliest treaties between Native Americans and settlers in Texas, and also one of the few which both sides kept too. In 1824 a settler named John White, not the same John White who lives on The Island today, and two others had settled in the Austin Colony near the Colorado River. A group of settlers traveled by yawl to the mouth of the river with the intention of purchasing some corn and on the trip they were captured by Karankawa Indians. To save his life White told the Indians he would go up river and purchase some corn there, then return to trade with the Karankawas and rescue his companions. The Indians consented and White set out in his yawl. The agreement was that when White returned back downstream he would set the prairie grass ablaze ten miles inland so they would know it was him returning. White returned to the settlement and told the others what had happened and a Captain Jesse Burnham raised a company of thirty militiamen who History continued on A7