• Keith Eckersall
  • Jayne Eckersall
Apr – May 2022

Going to America

A 18-day adventure by Keith & Jayne Read more
  • Sunday Morning

    May 1, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 23 °C

    Sunday morning breakfast courtesy of Chef Greg, the off to the local downtown church ⛪️ for Sunday morning service with Greg and Patti. Lovely service and very welcoming 🙏.

    Back to the main street in Fernandina looking at the stalls searching for a souvenir to bring home.

    I found a lovely aluminium print from Bone Yard Island at sunset but we would've had trouble bringing it home.
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  • The Blessing

    May 1, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    13:00 is the time everyone was waiting for when the shrimp boats would sail up alongside the Dock and be blessed, by the priest; funnily enough from the church Patti and Greg had just taken us to.

    The Blessing of the Fleet is a tradition that began centuries ago in Mediterranean fishing communities. The practice began predominantly Catholic, but is now practiced by all Christians as a blessing from the local priest and pastors that is meant to ensure a safe and bountiful season.
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  • Sunday Lunch

    May 1, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

    So we found the perfect souvenir; a print of the red brested blue birds 🐦 that we see all the time flying around Greg and Patti's home.
    So mission completed we headed off for lunch at
    The Ritz-Carlton Hotel, Amelia Island; that boasts 5 stars of ultimate luxury and is also the home of Greg's other Golf Club. The hotel connects guests with the peaceful flow of natural waterways and native sand dunes. Experience a journey of culinary discovery highlighted by dinner in Salt, rated AAA Five-Diamond. Relax in the tides of wellness with unique services inspired by the sea. Reconnect with nature and all that is elemental along the beaches of Amelia Island. 
    That said the hotel also employs Gopher Tortoises 🐢 to cut the lawn.
    Walking past amazing pools , facilities and a parrot, we took a table for lunch.
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  • Down on the hotel's Private Beach

    May 1, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

    What awaits across the boardwalk.
    The Ritz-Carlton Condominiums (apartments/flats).
    Sign post so we shouldn't get lost 😂
    And then I nearly got knocked over by another Gopher Tortoise 🐢 as it bounded over to me looking for a titbitRead more

  • Hotel to the Golf Club

    May 1, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

    Stroll through the hotel in search of a little retail therapy.
    A bath 🛁 full of rubber ducks 🦤
    No Jayne sorry no time to sample the Spa. 😪
    A quick reference and check list to the birds of paradise and we have seen half of them....
    The front of the Ritz-Carlton before the short walk over to the Golf Club and its amazing views of the fairway.
    Oh and yes I did buy a little rubber duck .... a Pirate ☠️.
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  • Last day at Fernandina Beach

    May 2, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 24 °C

    Last day at Greg and Patti's home 🏡 before moving on to Sarasota and all my new friends came to say goodbye:
    The Little Blue Heron
    Alligator
    The American Robin.
    I then had to post my postcards from Fernandina Beach and make sure the little red flag was sticking up so that the postman would see and collect it from outside the house.
    Then came the last rock on the rocking chairs on the front veranda and the last drink at Greg's outside bar.
    Time for a farewell photo with Greg's lovely and funny parents Pauline and Jim who had arrived last night.
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  • We're on the road to nowhere

    May 2, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 30 °C

    Well to Sarasota actually.

    Patti and Jayne set off first in Patti's electric Volkswagon.
    Then Greg and I set off in his Nissan Infiniti.
    On the way we saw:
    - the common yellow American school bus.
    - one of the 500 a day logging wagons on Amelia Island just to provide wood pulp for the paper mill.
    - and the lesser spotted migratory birds Patti and Jayne.
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  • Feeding Time

    May 2, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C

    After a 4 hour drive with a stop we arrived on Longboat Key. As it was gone 8:00 in the evening we headed straight for Whitney's for a typical Diner meal in a converted auto maintenance garage.
    We weren't the only ones to be fed as the mosquitoes took great delight feeding on me!!
    After leaving we then headed straight for the apartment, unloaded the cars and unpacked just enough clothes before going to bed.
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  • First day in Sarasota

    May 3, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 27 °C

    Good morning from Long Boat Key in Sarasota.

    This is our new view every morning over looking the Gulf of Mexico.

    As we didn't get time to go food (grocery) shopping; I am fast becoming quite fluent in speaking American on this vacation 🇺🇲😁. Anyway I digress, we drove, or Greg did, down to what's known as The Circle on St Armands Island, for brunch at the Cilantro Grill. Food was fabulous when it arrived but the service was terrible!!

    After we had a short stroll around looking in various shops etc.
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  • Walking along the beach

    May 3, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 27 °C

    So after grocery shopping we headed back to the apartment and went for a shortish stroll along the beach.
    The local inhabitants seem to be all part of the sandpiper family:
    - Black Bellied Plover
    - Semi-palmated Plover

    Then just as we walked back it started to look as though we were going to be in for a storm....
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  • Sundown

    May 3, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 24 °C

    Fortunately the storm never really materialised we heard thunder but it didn't rain ........ and the sun came back.
    However, when the sun goes down it doesn't stop.
    But when it's gone other things appear, like:
    The wild rabbits 🐇
    The yellow crowned night heron
    And don't tell Jayne but snakes as well....this being a red rat snake ... I think!!
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  • Sun Rise

    May 4, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 21 °C

    Early start for Greg and I as we drove down to Sarasota Bay to watch the sun rise over Sarasota.
    After that we watched a couple of Great Blue Herons waiting patiently for any passing tasty morsels.
    Another Great Blue Heron took a shine to Greg and I and stood at the jetty entrance.
    From the end of the jetty looking around it looks a little like a mini everglades.
    Walking back to where we parked the car we stumbled across a flock of Ibis.
    We then headed over to the beach at Lido Key where hundreds of Black Skimmers were nesting and quite a few Royal Terns.
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  • Still in the Gardens.

    May 4, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

    More photos from wandering around the Botanical Gardens.

  • Garden Wildlife

    May 4, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    Like most gardens, various types of wildlife are attracted to them. Here is what we saw at the Botanical Gardens:
    - Brown Anoles (Lizards) Not only will these lizards eat their own molted skin and detached tails, but they will also eat their own hatchlings and the hatchlings of the Green Anole. Since this invasive species arrived in Florida from Cuba, there’s been a decrease in the Green Anole population. Brown Anoles have wider heads and shorter noses than other Anoles. They have long toes that enable them to move quickly, and they can attach to any surface as they climb, even glass. Their bodies are light brown with black-and-white markings on their backs and light tan lines on their sides. Like the Green Anole, the Brown Anoles have dewlaps, which are reddish-orange. They’re active during the day and love humidity. These lizards can thrive in any environment but prefer ground vegetation and places that they can bask in the sun.
    - Little Blue Heron This small, grayish blue wading bird is wide spread throughout the entire Florida peninsula yet rarer in the panhandle. Its entire range extends outside of Florida northeast and west in North America and in many locations throughout Cuba, South and Central America. Little blue herons feed on a varied diet of fish, insects and amphibians and prefer to forage alone. Their nesting behavior is far more communal, however. Little blue herons often nest in colonies in the company of other wading bird species.
    - Osprey, also known as "fish hawks," are expert anglers that like to hover above the water, locate their prey and then swoop down for the capture with talons extended. In Florida, ospreys commonly capture saltwater catfish, mullet, spotted trout, shad, crappie, and sunfish from coastal habitats and freshwater lakes and rivers for their diet.
    - Wasps
    - Brown Pelican is a comically elegant bird with an oversized bill, sinuous neck, and big, dark body. Squadrons glide above the surf along southern and western coasts, rising and falling in a graceful echo of the waves. They feed by plunge-diving from high up, using the force of impact to stun small fish before scooping them up. They are fairly common today—an excellent example of a species’ recovery from pesticide pollution that once placed them at the brink of extinction.
    - Yellow Crowned Night Heron. Although it's name implies otherwise this bird is also quite active during daylight hours. The Yellow-Crowned Night-Heron has an average body length of 24 inches with a wingspan of 44 inches.
    Adults are slate grey, have a black head, white crown and cheek stripe, reddish eyes and yellow legs. Breeding adults have a yellow fore-crown with white plumes from nape and orange legs.
    Juveniles are grayish brown with amber eyes, white spotting and streaks above, gradually acquiring adult characteristics over a two year period.
    The Yellow Crowned Night-Heron hunts crustaceans, insects, & invertebrates in Mangroves, fresh and salt water swamps and marshes, mainly near the coast.
    - Great Blue Heron Largest of the North American herons with long legs, a sinuous neck, and thick, daggerlike bill. Head, chest, and wing plumes give a shaggy appearance. In flight, the Great Blue Heron curls its neck into a tight “S” shape; its wings are broad and rounded and its legs trail well beyond the tail. Great Blue Herons appear blue-gray from a distance, with a wide black stripe over the eye. In flight, the upper side of the wing is two-toned: pale on the forewing and darker on the flight feathers. Hunting Great Blue Herons wade slowly or stand statue-like, stalking fish and other prey in shallow water or open fields. Watch for the lightning-fast thrust of the neck and head as they stab with their strong bills. Their very slow wingbeats, tucked-in neck and trailing legs create an unmistakable image in flight.
    - Red Ants of the three types of red ants in Florida this is the Fire ant and gets its name from the extremely painful sting and bite. One fire ant can sting and bite its victim repeatedly. These ants build mounds, and when a fire ant mound is disrupted, workers make their way to the surface to attack the intruder. Attacks by fire ants are coordinated as hundreds of workers sting at the same time. Feeding on almost any plant or animal material, fire ants also feed on other insects.
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  • On the Beach

    May 4, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    Back on the beach ⛱️ and where better to get a selfie 🤳 with a Grear Blue Heron.
    One man and his dog ....... not here in Florida, a Great Blue Heron is (fisher)man's best friend, I can't think why though 😀
    Finally the Black Skimmers came flying down the waters edge, whilst a pelican kept watch from the jetty.
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  • Out Out

    May 4, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 28 °C

    Dinner at Element in downtown Sarasota.

    Cocktails 🍸 before dinner 🍽 a Pucker Up for the girls and a Smoked Manhattan for the boys.

    I, unsurprisingly, went for the burger and chips while jayne had the healthy salmon dish.Read more

  • Lazy Day

    May 5, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    Today's the day Greg and Patti leave Jayne and I home alone, as they go off to Melbourne near Orlando (3-4 hour drive away) for a family wedding.
    So some essential food shopping had to be done whilst we could get a lift to the supermarket. And that's where I saw my first Snowy Egret.
    Jayne and I then went for a walk along the beach whilst Greg and Patti had to work and pack for the wedding. We came across a Black Skimmer admiring the view and what looked like to be a discarded snake skin. This was; according to Google, a Whelk egg casing.
    Whelks lay their eggs in a long, spiral-shaped casing that can reach up to 33 inches in length. The strand contains up to 200 small pouches, and each pouch contains up to 99 eggs. The female protects the string of eggs by anchoring one end at the bottom of the ocean.
    Going for pizza and petrol with Greg I saw two Yellow Crowned Night Herons. The more defined adult and a brown coloured juvenile. On the golf course opposite the supermarket I finally saw a couple of Roseate Spoonbills. The most distinctive characteristic of the roseate spoonbill is its long spoon-shaped bill. It has a white head and chest and light pink wings with a darker pink fringe and very long pink legs. The roseate spoonbill is about two and a half feet in length with a wingspan of about four and a half feet.
    Then it was on to collect the pizza before rushing home and just missing the sun going down.
    Footnote - Gregg didn't get any petrol but I ticked off the Spoonbills 😅
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  • Going our own way

    May 6, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 27 °C

    First day of being left to our own devices........

    Booked an Uber to take us from our apartment at Seaplace on Longboat Key to St. Armands. and he dropped us off right outside Foxy Lady......and he has only just met Jayne.
    So we spent an hour or so strolling around the circle and its various shops stopping for an ice-cream and the occasional selfie 🤳 before joining the Lifeguards for a photo opportunity.
    We saw the Coca-Cola lorry delivery urgent supplies before taking the free trolley 🚎 bus to downtown Sarasota.
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  • Sarasota Bay Front

    May 6, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 29 °C

    The free trolley 🚎 bus took us from St. Armands over Bird Key and into Sarasota. We got off as the bus started to make its return journey and headed straight down to the Marina. Stopping (not shopping 🛍) for a nice cold can of coke and a packet of crisps or as they say here chips!
    In the Marina we saw several green parrots 🦜 (their correct name being Monk Parakeets) flying around and then decided to recreate the Kissing Statue.

    What Is The Kissing Statue?

    Unconditional Surrender, otherwise known as the “Kissing Statue,” is a greater-than-life size version of a famous photograph snapped at the end of World War II. The original photograph, entitled “V-J day in Times Square” by Alfred Eisenstaedt, captures the celebratory essence of sailors, nurses and other military returning home from Europe after WWII ended. Originally printed in Life Magazine in 1945, this image was the cause of some mystery for decades as no one, including the photographer, knew the names of the couple in the photograph. Eventually, it became known that George Medonza, caught up in the spirit of the celebration that day, had grabbed Greta Zimmer Friedman, a woman he didn’t know who was walking past him at the time and kissed her before moving on in the crowd. Medonza passed away in February of 2019 at the age of 95.
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  • What's in a name...

    May 6, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 29 °C

    Lovely afternoon walking around Sarasota Main Street and its luxurious (but expensive) shops. We then came across a bar called Mattisons City Grill, which was right by the trolley bus stop. So it would be a shame not to support the local economy 🍺🍺🍺 We were soon made welcome despite walking in through the wrong entrance and in fact quickly became regulars after l realised back in St. Armands that I'd left my bag on my barstool and had to go back on the return trolly bus with the same driver to get it.
    So we had a relaxing hour there chatting to other regulars and found I had something in common with KEITH the barman 🇺🇲 🍻
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  • Lido Key

    May 6, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    Arriving back in St. Armands again!! We walked down to the beach at Lido Key to show Jayne all the Black Skimmers that were nesting there.
    We then waited for an Uber (under the watchful eye 👁 of a female pirate) to take us back to our apartment on Longboat Key in time to see the sunset 🌇.Read more

  • Enforced Rest Day

    May 7, 2022 in the United States ⋅ 🌧 25 °C

    Woke up to Thunder and Lightning ⛈️ this morning and waves pounding the beach. Guess we won't be going there any time soon. During a break in the rain 🌧 we quickly high tailed it to the supermarket. Near the golf course opposite we saw our first Blue Jay. We arrived home 🏡 before it rained 🌧 again and fortunately I found a channel on TV 📺 that was showing the Liverpool versus Tottenham Hotspur game so out came the beer 🍺 and crisps and I settled down for the afternoon 😀Read more

  • Out at Last

    May 7, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 26 °C

    The weather finally changes for the better so Jayne and I can get out for a walk along the beach. Unbelievably the first thing we saw was a Red-bellied Woodpecker.
    Down on the pitch we noticed cordoned off areas where either Manatee or Sea Turtles had nested and left their eggs.
    On the way to watch the sunset we found a coconut that had been washed a shore during the storm.
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