Showing posts with label Lighthouse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lighthouse. Show all posts

Sunday, November 28, 2021

Take 2: Lighthouse Inlet Heritage Preserve - Charleston County Parks


What a difference a few days make! We returned to Lighthouse Inlet on Folly Island a few days after our first stop and found a clear, blue sky and nearly unlimited visibility. Compare these views of the Morris Island Lighthouse with the views on this post. We visited Charleston in February 2021.

Morris Island Lighthouse

A closer view

Sullivan's Island Lighthouse (Charleston Light 5.5 miles)

Arthur Ravenel Jr. Bridge (8.1 miles)

Folly Beach and Lighthouse Inlet

Erosion-control wall

Wind-driven sand

One more look back

Atlantic Ocean

An entry fee of $1 per person is collected on the honor system at the kiosk at the end of Ashley Avenue.

Saturday, March 6, 2021

Lighthouse Inlet Heritage Preserve - Charleston County Parks


We visited Charleston, South Carolina in mid-February 2021. Our first stop was the Lighthouse Inlet Heritage Preserve on Folly Island. The preserve is located at the end of Ashley Avenue on the northeastern end of Folly Island. From the gate at the northeast end of Ashley Avenue, a 0.40-mile trail leads to the beach and a view of the Morris Island Lighthouse. The first ¼ mile is a paved road covered in graffiti with most messages being positive and all that I saw being family-friendly. 

The Morris Island Lighthouse stands 161 feet high and was completed in 1876 at a cost of nearly $150,000. When built, the lighthouse was well inland on Morris Island. However, the island has eroded over the intervening years so that the lighthouse is now over 1700 feet offshore. Unfortunately, the clouds were so low that it almost looked like fog on the day we visited and our view of the lighthouse was not optimal.

Very few free parallel parking spaces are available along Ashley Avenue. However, off-street parking on Summer Place Lane and paid parallel parking on Ashley Avenue is available at a rate of $2 per hour up to $10, payable in advance with a debit or credit card.

Graffiti covered pedestrian road

End of the road and start of the trail

From the top of the dunes, the Morris Island Lighthouse disappears into the fog

A closer look reveals the base of the lighthouse

Descending to the beach

Deadly currents at this end of the island

Beach erosion-control boulders

A flock of geese fly over

Another view of the lighthouse

A closer view

Trees growing on the dunes

An entry fee of $1 per person is collected on the honor system at the kiosk at the end of Ashley Avenue.

Monday, January 25, 2016

Cape Hatteras Lighthouse - Cape Hatteras National Seashore


Diamond Shoals is a shifting complex of submerged sandbars located from shore up to ten miles off the coast of Hatteras Island. The shoals were formed and are constantly shifted by the interaction of the southerly flowing Labrador Current and the northern flowing Gulf Stream. It has been a hazard to mariners for centuries and has led to the area being called the "Graveyard of the Atlantic". In an attempt to warn sailors and protect shipping, the US Congress in 1791 appropriated funds for a lighthouse to be constructed on Hatteras Island. The lighthouse was completed in 1803 with 18 lights at an elevation of 112 feet. The lighting apparatus was destroyed in 1862 during the Civil War. Realizing the limited practicality of the original station, Congress appropriated funding in 1868 to build a new lighthouse further inland. The new lighthouse was first lit on December 16,1871 and was the tallest brick lighthouse in the world at the time at 187 feet with a light at 192 feet above sea level.

The Atlantic Ocean has been shifting Hatteras Island to the west for thousands of years. Although initially built 1500 feet from the beach, by the 1936 the US Coast Guard abandoned the lighthouse to the sea and built a steel tower in Buxton to house the light. When the Cape Hatteras National Seashore was established in 1937, the National Park Service assumed responsibility for the lighthouse. In 1950, the lighthouse was deemed safe again and the light was moved back to the iconic "barber pole" striped structure by the sea.

In 1999, the lighthouse and associated structures were moved 2900 feet to a location 1500 feet inland from the beach. While Hatteras Island continues to shift westward, the move should protect the lighthouse from the sea for another century or more.

The visitor center provides the typical amenities that include an information desk, bookstore and restrooms. A ticket booth for climbing the tower is located adjacent to the visitor center.

We visited in October 2015 during our trip to the Outer Banks. Due to severe storms along the east coast that flooded low lying areas, the road to Hatteras Island had been closed for several days. When it reopened, floodwaters still covered much of the parking lot and some of Lighthouse Road. Since the floodwaters also damaged the quarters for the seasonal rangers, they were sent home early and the tower climbing season ended prematurely. While we were disappointed that we couldn't climb the tower, we were also grateful for the amazing job the the staff had done to re-open the grounds for visitors to safely enjoy so quickly after access was restored.

One section of the parking lot

Lighthouse Road

Visitor Center

Visitor Center entrance

Information Desk

Bookstore

Hatteras Lighthouse

Small ponds covered the grounds

The double lightkeeper's quarters is now a museum that was also closed for the season

Seasonal rangers lived in this historic building

Lighthouse entrance

Amphitheater for ranger talks
Entrance to Cape Hatteras National Seashore is free. The lighthouse is normally open daily from the third Friday in April until Columbus Day, but may close due to adverse weather. A fee of $8 per adult is assessed to climb to the exterior observation deck of the lighthouse. Seniors aged 62 and older; children under age 12, but taller than 42 inches; and the disabled may climb for only $4.

The seashore website is http://www.nps.gov/caha/index.htm.

Friday, January 1, 2016

Bodie Island Lighthouse - Cape Hatteras National Seashore


Construction of the Bodie Island Light Station began in mid-1871 and was first lit on October 1, 1872. The Currituck Beach Lighthouse built the following year used essentially the same plans with the light located two feet higher than Bodie's 156 feet. Light focused by the first-order Fresnel lens can be seen for 18 nautical miles. To reach the lighthouse from the US 158 intersection with NC 12 in Nags Head, drive south on NC 12 for six miles before turning right on Bodie Island Lighthouse Road. The parking area is at the end of the road in about one mile. The lower level of the keeper's quarters is now a visitor center, ticket office and bookstore. We visited during our October 2015 trip to the Outer Banks.

Lighthouse and keeper's house

The lighthouse dominates the landscape

The keeper's house was actually a duplex

Bookstore

One of the staircases in the keeper's house

View from the back porch

The name of the island changed from "Body's" to "Bodie" over the years

End of the road and Pamlico Sound

Keeper's house

US Coast Guard radio tower and Herbert C. Bonner Bridge to the south

A closer view of the USCG station and Bonner Bridge

NC 12 and the Atlantic Ocean

The pond was created by hunters decades ago

View north toward Nags Head

Shadows

A choice of views: looking down...

...and looking up

Light room above the observation level

Entrance to Cape Hatteras National Seashore is free. The lighthouse is normally open daily from the third Friday in April until Columbus Day, but may close due to adverse weather. A fee of $8 per adult is assessed to climb to the exterior observation deck of the lighthouse. Seniors aged 62 and older; children under age 12, but taller than 42 inches; and the disabled may climb for only $4.

The seashore website is http://www.nps.gov/caha/index.htm.