Easter gators! There were six whole babies hunting bugs at the top of the water. 💚🐊💚
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Easter gators! There were six whole babies hunting bugs at the top of the water. 💚🐊💚

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"The poetry of the earth is never dead."
--John Keats
Photo: Sanibel Island, Florida
Sanibel Island
Osprey - what an awesome bird.Sanibel Island, Canon EOS 1N. (June 29, 2014)
"If you think I am flirting with you, I am just being friendly. If you think I am weird, and I make you uncomfortable, then I am probably flirting with you."
(An American white pelican at Ding Darling Wildlife Refuge on Sanibel Island, Florida)

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The seashell haul as it stands on our second to last day! We weeded out the damaged stuff this morning.
By extreme luck, I was able to visit the Bailey-Matthews National Shell Museum in Sanibel, Florida. A month or two before I planned to go to Florida to research my book about dead animals, I had asked the seashell museum if they’d want to recommend someone to be interviewed. I got no response and wondered if the question might have been rude since they had been dealing with a tragedy. I bought a plane ticket and packed my bags, and on February 1, just two days before I left, they announced that they were going to temporarily open in a limited capacity. Now, instead of a $25 ticket, it was a $10 suggested donation. I went on February 9, when they had a ribbon-cutting ceremony.
There was blue tape on a beam showing how high the water had reached during the storm, and the hall to the bathroom was plastered with photos of damage and resilience from the island. Pictures of rubble and graffiti saying “Sanibel Strong” and “Keep the Faith.” Some of the walls were incomplete, and the lettering on the side of the building was completely gone–but you could still read the name in the remaining adhesive. The live animal exhibits, showing the soft-bodied animals who make seashells, are gone, as all the animals died in the storm.