Tag Archives: butterfly

Cross Country Vacation Sept./Oct. 2025-Post 16

Bald Point State Park, Florida

Bald Point State Park is located on Alligator Point where the Ochlockonee Bay meets Apalachee Bay. The Hubster and I have never been to Florida, much less the gulf coast, and we were looking for a place to stretch our legs. What a treat this place turned out to be!

The coastal marshes, pine flat woods, and oak thickets support a diverse biological community that makes this park perfect for birding and viewing wildlife. View migrations of birds and butterflies in the fall into winter. This park offers sunbathing, fishing and hiking and facilities include a fishing dock and picnic pavilions.

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

*Clicking on a photo will give you a closer look!

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

Pavement and boardwalks make for easy access, including wheelchairs, to white sand beaches and a marsh overlook. Public restrooms are available.

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

As you can see, on this gorgeous late September day, the Hubster and I nearly had the place to ourselves.

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

We didn’t see sea turtles, but we were refreshed and rewarded with a peaceful panorama. The sea oats fluttering in the ocean breeze were lovely.

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

It was fun watching this fisherman casting his net.

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

We had never seen this sea creature before (unfortunately it had met its demise), and the fisherman explained that it was a horseshoe crab. Did you know that these creatures are related to scorpions and spiders rather than crabs?! They have 10 legs and 9 eyes! They don’t reach adulthood until they are about 10 years old, and they can live to be about 20 years old.

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

We learned that with the outbreak of World War II, soldiers from Camp Gordon Johnston near Carrabelle practiced beach training here. In 1942, amphibious warfare training centers were hurried into construction. The Amphibious Training Center (ATC) camp covered over 100,000 acres of remote training area and varied beachfronts and sand bluffs. The US Army 4th Infantry Division that trained at Camp Gordon Johnston led the landing at Normandy. 

In addition to the training function, German and Italian POWs were moved to this site in March 1944. Camp Gordon Johnston later became the second largest POW base camp in the state with branch camps at Telogia, Dale Mabry Field and Eglin Field. Prisoners housed at this site principally performed work in the military camp.

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

Did you know that a Gulf Fritillary butterfly has a chemical defense mechanism in which it releases odorous chemicals in response to predator sightings? Common predators learn to avoid this species. I wonder if this is anything like the skunks in my backyard!

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

I really wanted, but not wanted, to see an alligator on this trip.

Never happened.

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

We strolled on the boardwalk over the tidal marshes and creeks.

The ground ‘moving’ caught my eye and, upon closer inspection, the receding tide exposed hundreds of fiddler crabs! I think these are Leptuca pugilators, if I can believe Google, and are another creature that I don’t see back home.

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

Another critter I met was the American green tree frog. I have lots of his frog cousins back home and it was a pleasure to meet this little guy. If you want to know what he sounds like, then click here.

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

See the world around you!

More Travel Posts:

Old Kettle/Kettle Falls Natural Recreation Area

Kettle Falls Recreation Area

The rain is gone and Hubby and I headed over to one of our favorite places to enjoy nature.

Kettle Falls Recreation Area

It was a glorious day!

Kettle Falls Recreation Area

Kettle Falls Recreation Area

Kettle Falls Recreation Area

Kettle Falls Recreation Area

Kettle Falls Recreation Area

Kettle Falls Recreation Area

Kettle Falls Recreation Area

The locust trees are in full bloom!

Kettle Falls Recreation Area

We visit this park frequently, and a search of Old Kettle or Kettle Falls Natural Recreation Area on this blog will show just how often!

Kettle Falls Recreation Area

Back home…

a photo of the barbed wire fence just because.

Home

And the view from the back yard.

Home

See the world around you!

A Stroll in the Garden

Butterflies are nature’s angels.
They remind us what a gift it is to be alive.
-Robyn Nola

Phlox

*Clicking on a photo will give you a closer look!

Butterflies can’t see their wings.
They can’t see how truly beautiful they are,
but everyone else can.
People are like that as well.
-Unknown

Phlox

How does one become a butterfly?
You have to want to learn to fly so much that you
Are willing to give up being a caterpillar.
-Unknown

Phlox

Perhaps the butterfly is proof that you can go through a great deal of darkness and still become something beautiful.
-Unknown

Phlox

Beautiful and graceful, varied and enchanting, small but approachable, butterflies lead you to the sunny side of life. And everyone deserves a little sunshine.
-Jeffrey Glassberg

 

Hubby and I depend upon a gravity spring for our water.  This year the spring was not enough for the house and the gardens.  So we decided that it was time to put in a well.

We’ve waited.

And waited.

Finally, this week, this happened:

Home Sweet Home -Drilling

There is a stake showing where to drill.  Meanwhile, the excavation had to happen in order to bring in the drilling equipment (not so easy when one lives on the side of a mountain).

Looking down to our driveway (lost one pear, and one apple tree to the excavation):

Home Sweet Home -Drilling

Home Sweet Home -Drilling

Here is a photo from Sept. 15, 2011 :

Home Sweet Home...Looking Towards the Mouth of the Kettle River Emptying into the Columbia River

And April 18, 2015:

Home Sweet Home

And this week:

Home Sweet Home

Well, I must endure the presence of a few caterpillars if I wish to become acquainted with the butterflies.
-Antoine de Saint-Exupery, The Little Prince

Stay healthy!  Stay safe!