9
part 1 of 3 june hilton head I july bluffton I august the lowcountry the seven wonders of [hilton head]

Seven Wonders of Hilton Head

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Sure, there’s plenty of golf around here, and everyone knows to stop at the Harbour Town lighthouse when in town. But if you venture off the marked trails every now and again, you’ll nd that Hilton Head Island and the surrounding Lowcountry are lled with vast stores of hidden wonder, places and phenonema that don’t necessarily appear on all the tourist maps. Throughout the summer, Monthly will spotlight some of these slightly more hidden gems, without which the Lowcountry wouldn’t be the place we call home. And we’ll start right here on Hilton Head and Daufuskie.

Citation preview

part 1 of 3 june hilton head I july bluffton I august the lowcountry

the seven wonders of [hilton head]

52 hiltonheadmonthly.com

Sure, there’s plenty of golf around here, and everyone knows to stop at the Harbour Town

lighthouse when in town. But if you venture off the marked trails every now and again, you’ll � nd

that Hilton Head Island and the surrounding Lowcountry are � lled with vast stores of hidden

wonder, places and phenonema that don’t necessarily appear on all the tourist maps.

Throughout the summer, Monthly will spotlight some of these slightly more hidden gems,

without which the Lowcountry wouldn’t be the place we call home. And we’ll start right here

on Hilton Head and Daufuskie.

PHOTOGRAPHY BY BILL LITTELL, ROB KAUFMAN AND THE COASTAL DISCOVERY MUSEUM

part 1 of 3part 1 of 3 june hilton head june hilton head I I july bluffton july bluffton I I august the lowcountryaugust the lowcountry

the seventhe sevenwonderswonders

ofof[hilton head][hilton head]

777hhi

JUNE 11 7 Wonders.indd 52 5/23/2011 12:19:06 PM

June 2011 53

First of all, no collection of local wonders (hidden or otherwise) would be complete without the island’s mascot: the nationally threatened loggerhead sea turtle.

Loggerhead sea turtles nest on island beaches between May and August, the massive females coming ashore at night to fi nd a prime piece of oceanfront real estate. The females will dig a nest, deposit their eggs — an average of 120 — shield them from hungry predator-types with sand and quickly (well, relatively quickly) make their way back to the sea. Two months later, tiny two-inch turtle babies sneak out of the nest and point themselves instinctively toward the brightest light they see: their ocean home, where they’ll spend the next 25 or 30 years growing to massive adulthood.

Such a delicate process, as you might guess, is susceptible to dangers both natural and man-made, and local groups like the Hilton Head Island Sea Turtle Protection Project, managed by the Coastal Discovery Museum, keep a close eye on the reptiles’ nests from May through October. During that time, residents know to keep their beachfront lights off after 10 p.m. from May 1-Oct. 31, pick up their trash and, most of all, leave nest sites alone. Jeff Vrabel

Read more: www.coastaldiscovery.org/loggerhead.html

1111111turtle powerCOASTAL DISCOVERY MUSEUM

JUNE 11 7 Wonders.indd 53 5/23/2011 12:19:16 PM

54 hiltonheadmonthly.com

33

Dolphins: cute, playful, friendly and, when hungry, organized.

The animals are certainly plentiful in local waters — particularly Calibogue Sound, which is kind of like a dolphin social club. Much rarer is a coordinated hunting behavior called strand feeding, which is unique to a very few parts of the southeastern coast.

Here’s how it works: At low tide, small groups of bottlenose dolphins herd hundreds of fi sh toward a fl at or beach. Then, all at once, the dolphins will leap onto

the bank to create a huge wall of water and energy, feast on the fi sh buffet and, when done, shimmy back into the water.

This isn’t something you’ll see on your average twi-

light beach stroll; guides and locals can point you to the

largely wild backwaters where it’s visible. Also, we should

note that the phrase “leap” here indicates some sort of

graceful natural phenomenon, but when this happens,

it can be pretty startling. Dolphins, one tends to forget

with the cuteness, are big. Jeff Vrabel

22dolphinstrand feeding

braddock point cemetery >

Tucked away in Sea Pines Plantation is a small piece of history that tells a larger story about Hilton Head. Braddock Point Cemetery is a resting place for native African-Americans, some of whom are thought to be descended from slaves. The small graveyard is really off the beaten path, nestled

between condo high-rises on Spinnaker Court off Lighthouse Lane, and it gets its name from Capt. David Cutler Braddock, who commanded a ship named the “Beaufort” in the mid-1700s. Braddock sailed the Carolina coast keeping his eyes on Spanish activities and would hide out in a small cove

in what is now Sea Pines. There are about 40 gravestones in the Braddock cemetery; the headstone, which appears to be hand-chiseled, is that of Susan Williams, who was born in 1861 and died in 1921. The cemetery is still in use; Robert E. Williams was buried there in 2008.

BILL LITTELL / IWL PHOTOGRAPHY

777hhi

JUNE 11 7 Wonders.indd 54 5/23/2011 12:23:11 PM

June 2011 55

JUNE 11 7 Wonders.indd 55 5/23/2011 12:24:07 PM

56 hiltonheadmonthly.com

44‘the blank spot

on the map’

When Charles Fraser fi rst laid the foundation for what would become Sea Pines, he did so with the philosophy that the natural state of the island would always come fi rst. The homes and facilities of the resort, he believed, shouldn’t

encroach on the marshes and forests that blanketed the island, but co-exist with them.

As if to drive the point home, inside the resort lies the Sea Pines Forest Preserve, 605 acres of space where Fraser’s philosophy reaches

BILL LITTELL / IWL PHOTOGRAPHY

56 hiltonheadmonthly.com

JUNE 11 7 Wonders.indd 56 5/23/2011 12:25:28 PM

June 2011 57

its zenith and nature remains just as unspoiled as it was when he laid the fi rst brick.

“It’s the blank spot of the map; you can see it in satellite photos. It stands out from thousands of feet above,” said David Henderson, wildlife biologist for Community Services Associates. “That’s what makes it special.”

But there’s plenty to explore in that blank spot. The Preserve offers bike rides through history along antebellum rice dikes that

harken back to Sea Pines’ days as a rice plantation. There’s fi shing in Lake Mary, a 30-acre marvel and the largest freshwater lake on the island. There’s bird watch-ing and picnicking. And perhaps most impressively, there are shell rings that date back to nomadic Indian tribes from 4,000 years ago. “There’s something for everyone,” added Henderson.

Charles Edwards

JUNE 11 7 Wonders.indd 57 5/23/2011 12:26:06 PM

58 hiltonheadmonthly.com

6666

55singingsands

If you listen carefully while walking the dunes of Hilton Head, you may discover that the sand sometimes “sings,” or produces audible sound vibrations that can be compared to the strains of a chorus, or the playing of violins.

The idea is not a new one. Thoreau encountered singing sands while walking on an Atlantic Ocean beach; he noted that the sound resembled that made by rubbing a fi nger over wet glass. Charles Darwin was the fi rst scientist to discuss the phenomenon; in his “A Naturalist’s Voyage Around the World,” he wrote: “Leaving Socego, we retraced our steps. Each time the horse put its foot on the sand, a chirping noise resulted.”

The “singing” may be the consequence of billions of minute crystals being rolled against each other by wind. Or, since the sounds are some-times more pronounced after sundown, it could be that the cooling of the sand at night creates shifts and settling in the dunes.

In any event, the next time you go for a walk, keep your ears tuned for a secret island song. Mary Syrett

ROB KAUFMAN

58 hiltonheadmonthly.com

JUNE 11 7 Wonders.indd 58 5/23/2011 12:27:14 PM

June 2011 59

If you head to Daufuskie Island’s Bloody Point in search of the famous lighthouse, don’t bother looking up. This is a different kind of lighthouse.

“I’ve worked hard around the world to tell the true meaning of one of South Carolina’s most misunder-stood lighthouses,” said Joe Yocius, better known as Lowcountry Joe, the current keeper of the Bloody Point Lighthouse.

Rather than a traditional tower, this lighthouse looks like a normal, two-story home. The difference is a dor-mer window that opens up to reveal a lens that used to align with a second positioning light to provide boat-ers safe passage into the Savannah River. That second light has been lost to the ages, and now the lighthouse serves a purpose more historic than navigational.

Having survived cyclones, the ravages of age and the process of erosion which required the lighthouse be moved a quarter of a mile inland (by oxen, no less), the lighthouse serves as silent testament to Daufuskie’s past. And few appreciate that like Joe.

“All we are keepers of the past,” he said.

Charles Edwards

themisun-derstoodlight-house

the66the6the66the6themisun-6misun-themisun-the6themisun-thederstood6derstoodmisun-derstoodmisun-6misun-derstoodmisun-light-6light-derstoodlight-derstood6derstoodlight-derstood666the6the6

BILL LITTELL / IWL PHOTOGRAPHY

strachanmansion77

Here’s something you don’t see every day: 25 years 7

Here’s something you don’t see every day: 25 years 7

ago, developers strapped a mansion to two barges and

7ago, developers strapped a mansion to two barges and

7fl oated it 100 miles down the Intracoastal Waterway.

“It was daunting,” Randall Page, general manager at Haig Point, said of the engineering feat that brought Strachan Mansion to Haig Point on Daufuskie Island. “But can’t you duplicate that with something new. It has good bones, and that feeling of warmth and tradition.”

The Strachan Mansion (pronounced “Strawn”) was built in 1910 by shipping magnate J.S. Strachan. It faced demolition in 1986 and was advertised as “for sale” to anyone who would move it. Glen McCaskey, account executive for Haig Point’s ad agency, convinced the developers of Haig Point to purchase Strachan for $1 and the move was on.

The relocation had to be carefully planned to navi-gate the tides, tricky currents and open bridge spans, sometimes with only a foot of clearance. When all was said and done, the house landed at Haig Point on April 29, 1986, with only a single window broken.

The move turned out to be a public relations boon for Haig Point. It proved to any worried potential home buyers that – despite being isolated on an island – the community was capable of providing anything. And despite the costs associated with moving a three-story, 7,500-square-foot, 300-ton house – in one piece – 100 miles, the purchase ended up being a bargain. “In many ways, it’s our front door,” Page said. “We have events there, a bar, our general store. And it’s right by our docks, so all of our members pass through. I think it will always maintain that feeling of the center of community.” Tim Hager

BILL LITTELL / IWL PHOTOGRAPHY

777hhi

JUNE 11 7 Wonders.indd 59 5/23/2011 12:27:59 PM