SOUTHERN STATES | FLORIDA

Still waters run deep in Florida's Everglades

It takes patience, attention to appreciate park's subtle beauties

By Thomas Swick, South Florida Sun-Sentinel Travel Editor
01:06 PM PST, January 15, 2008

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.--It's the place that makes this place worth living in," my friend Mark said when I told him I was going to the Everglades.

"I've never been," said my friend David, a Miami native, when I told him I'd just come back.

One of the many things that distinguishes the Everglades from other national parks is this seeming divergence of attitude about it. For all the people who find it irresistible, there are just as many (if not more) who view it as eminently avoidable. There are also, distinguishing it even further from the Yosemites and the Yellowstones, vast numbers in whom admiration for it and distance from it happily co-exist.

"Today, everyone agrees that the Everglades is a national treasure," Michael Grunwald writes in "The Swamp: The Everglades, Florida and the Politics of Paradise." "It's the ecological equivalent of motherhood and apple pie."

But it never appears on the list of the 10 most-visited national parks, even though it is the only one that abuts an urban sprawl of several million people. The Everglades is like the difficult novel everyone recognizes as great but only the truly dedicated actually plow through. The "Ulysses" of federally protected wildernesses. Even Marjory Stoneman Douglas, whose love for the place infuses every word of her 1947 classic "The Everglades: River of Grass," rarely visited. When asked why, she reputedly said it was enough for her to know that it was there.

As it is for my friend David, who as a boy ran through Douglas' yard, and a great many other Floridians. We drive Alligator Alley and think that's it: that flat, featureless, long-winded plain. Many national parks burst with drama -- peaks, falls, geysers, grizzlies. The Everglades, by contrast, is unassuming and subtle, demanding patience and close attention. A large part of its appeal is in its absences: of noise, summer crowds, things blocking the horizon. Even its stars, the alligators, often appear less lifelike than audioanimatrons.

Of course, in most parks the fauna keeps its distance, frustrating visitors accustomed to zoos. In the Everglades, insects especially feel no such shyness and will eagerly approach you and get in your face.

"Mosquito level: High," the sign at the entrance station read. I thought of all the people I'd told about my Everglades trip. Some had recalled seeing tourists haloed by swarms. A few just said "July," and gave pitiless smiles.

I followed Larry Perez's car to Royal Palm. Perez, a science communications liaison for the park, was a handsome young man with two earrings under a ranger hat.

"A beautiful morning," he said, as we walked toward the sun. He seemed delighted to be out of the office, and impervious to stinging insects. "They call Montana 'Big Sky Country.' It doesn't hold a candle to what we have here."

We were walking on Anhinga Trail through Taylor Slough. "A slough," Perez said, "is any low-lying land that channels water through it." Our path was once the first road in the Everglades, built in 1915. Thirty-two years later the place was designated a national park; the first, as its literature claims, "created to protect a threatened ecological system."

Pay attention

"Every season has its charms," Perez noted. "To know the Everglades you have to see it in every season and at every hour. I can't tell you how great it is to walk these trails in the winter on a full-moon night. You don't need a flashlight."

We walked on. The sun burned down. The world opened up, as Larry pointed out things that had escaped my slacker eyes: a West Indian morning glory; a five-lined skink; snail eggs, clinging to a green stalk like white caviar; pond apples ("they taste like biting into a jar of turpentine"); a boat-tailed grackle; a swallow-tailed kite (another summertime visitor); a great blue heron; a mostly submerged gator, a green anole. (Actually, I spotted this bright lizard, too, but didn't know that it was indigenous, or that it changes color under stress.)

"What causes them stress?" I asked Perez.

"Capture."

Earlier, Perez had tried unsuccessfully to catch a snake that had stretched, unseen by me, 30 feet ahead of us. "There are 28 varieties of snake in the park, four of them venomous." There are also two non-native species, he said: the heavyweight Burmese python (a potentially serious threat to the ecosystem) and the earthwormlike Brahminy blind snake. Even newcomers, at least in this case, conform to the park's idea of diversity.

Two large black crows sat on a nearby limb. "They're the smartest birds in the park," Perez said. "I have literally seen these birds swoop down and take things off a grill when people's backs were turned."

Flora sounds threatening

The Gumbo Limbo Trail began near a stand of royal palms. It offered something people don't readily associate with the Everglades: shade. "This is the closest we come to a rain forest in South Florida," Perez said, as we walked the paved path under a thick canopy. He had prepared me for mosquitoes, but they were surprisingly quiet.

A tall tree with bright bark rose in front of us. "This is a gumbo limbo," Perez said. "often called 'the tourist tree' because it's red and peeling." He added that it can fall over and take root wherever it lands. We came upon a strangler fig and a poisonwood tree. In the Everglades, even the flora sounds menacing. No wonder people stay away.

A zebra longwing butterfly flitted past. "That's our state butterfly," Perez said. "We have the state reptile, the alligator; the state animal, the panther; the state marine mammal, the manatee; the state wildflower, the tickseed. The Everglades is quintessential Florida, man."

'Short slough slog'

Later, after we pulled off the road leading from Pa-hay-okee Overlook. Perez opened his trunk and extracted two large walking sticks -- more like wooden poles -- and handed one to me. He had promised me a "short slough slog" and, apparently, the time had come.

I had tried to sound nonchalant about this. I didn't ask about the possibility of encountering crocodiles. Perez had told me that they favor saltwater, and here the water was fresh. In fact, while South Florida is said to be the only place in the world where crocodiles and alligators co-habit, for the most part, they stay in their preferred liquids. Though there are places in the park where the sweetwater and saltwater, and hence the two reptiles, mix. I didn't ask about alligators either. It seemed too obvious. I did, however, question him about water moccasins. He said any animal that might do us harm would feel the vibrations of the water and move far away. He sounded pretty confident about this.

Just as we were about to head off, a tourist pulled up. "You're actually going in there?" he asked, incredulous.

"Yep," said Perez. "I've only lost one or two."

I stepped gingerly into the slough. The water was clear and refreshing. It was about the only thing that was. The sun was fierce. The footing was slippery. The pool was full of unidentifiable and suspicious forms. Added to the irrationality of plodding in sneakers through ankle-deep water was the insanity, in my mind, of doing it in the Everglades. One week before I would have seen such an excursion as a sure method of suicide.

"And people say there's no such thing as hiking in South Florida," Perez said cheerily, leading the way.

I tried to stay close, but inevitably fell behind. The water deepened in sections, causing more splashing, heightening my alarm. My pants became soaked up to my thighs. My shirt was dripping wet, though this was from perspiration. My sneakers sank in the muck. My arm tired from supporting myself with my stick, which was somewhat heartening as I realized it really was for walking (and not for beating off predators). My eyes stayed peeled on the watery path, which wiggled with what looked like large spider crabs.

Larry stopped to admire the scenery. The silence, now that we stood still, was startling. Lone trees -- dwarf (hatrack) cypress -- umbrellaed the landscape here and there, while a quarter-mile away loomed a cluster of taller cypress, our destination.

We slogged on, the water now up to our knees, and soon arrived at the cypress dome. It made me think of a Tarzan movie. A perfect round pool, dug by alligators over time, cooled in the shade of encircling cypress. The trees seemed to float, still and standing up, creating an eerie feeling of enclosure. We had entered an exquisite and unorthodox oasis, water in the midst of water, but deeper, darker, hidden away. We were still wet, but we were out of the sun.

"I'm going to poke around a little," Larry said. "I haven't been out here for a while."

I watched him wade off, and then disappear. I was on my own in the cypress dome. Surely, I thought, a gator will swim up. And I won't even be able to run. I did a little dance, to create vibrations. I held my stick tightly.

"We bring schoolkids out here," Perez said, when he returned a few minutes later. "And their sneakers often get sucked off. There must be hundreds of Nikes under that water."

'Hug a gumbo limbo'

Outside the marina store in Flamingo, I met Maureen McGee-Ballinger, a Flamingo district interpreter.

"This morning you enjoyed the heart of the park," McGee-Ballinger said. "In Shark Valley you're in the middle of the river of grass. Flamingo is the mixing bowl, where the freshwater comes down and meets the saltwater."

I said I was surprised by how few mosquitoes there were. "It's hot," McGee-Ballinger said. "And there's a breeze."

We walked over to a gumbo limbo tree. "You notice the mosquitoes now that we're in the shade?" she asked. Then: "Did Larry have you touch the trunk? It's cooler than other trees, because the life is close to the bark. So if you're ever stuck in the Everglades and really hot, hug a gumbo limbo."

A path led us along the shore of Florida Bay. The snouts of two manatees broke the surface. "I don't expect to see them this time of year," McGee-Ballinger said. The bay lies within the boundaries of the park, of much greater width than depth. "In theory, if you were 10 feet tall you could walk from here to Key West."

We came upon a mangrove. "They're a significant part of the Everglades," McGee-Ballinger said. "They're shelter, they're giant nurseries, they're food. For humans, they're protection." She said that after the Asian tsunami, scientists from India and Sri Lanka came to the park to study the mangroves, as most of theirs had been uprooted before the disaster.

They are also deciduous trees, she said, but they lose only one or two leaves at a time.

McGee-Ballinger mentioned that we might come upon a rattlesnake in the grass -- an Eastern diamondback or a dusky pygmy. Normally, I would have found this news disturbing, but my morning slog had changed my perspective. As long as I wasn't in water, I felt pretty good.

"Floridians are so lucky," McGee-Ballinger reflected. "They have the largest protected wilderness area east of the Mississippi. They have Biscayne National Park. They have the reef system at John Pennekamp Park.

"It's a gift to live this close. There are days when I drive home after work, change my clothes, and come back in the evening."

Our last stop was at Mahogany Hammock. "This is the best place to watch the stars," McGee-Ballinger said as we walked through the parking lot. "West Lake is the second best place. I see meteor showers, constellations."

And the way she said it, it was as if they were all a part of the majesty of the Everglades.

If you go:

Everglades National Park occupies Florida's southern tip. The park's principal access is from its east side near Miami, on the opposite side of the peninsula, and that is where visitors find most of the park's facilities. Everglades City is on the park's Gulf side, near Naples. It is still a rural community, an active commercial and sport fishing port lacking most of the usual tourist ticky-tack. Though it does not have full park facilities, it does have a National Park Service visitor center, and it is the jumping-off place for canoeists and kayakers leaving on long wilderness treks through the Ten Thousand Islands region of the Everglades.

Staying there:

Ivey House Bed & Breakfast, 107 Camellia St., Everglades City; 877-567-0679, iveyhouse.com. Full-service hotel rooms with private bath, $75- $140; rooms with shared baths, for adventurers on a budget, $50-$75. Rates include a breakfast buffet.

Guided kayak tours:

Offered by the Ivey House. Mangrove Tunnel Eco-Adventure, $95 for 4 1/2 hours, includes lunch. Sunset Spectacular Eco-Adventure, $80 for 2 1/2 hours. Full Moon Paddle, $80 for 3 1/2 hours. (Total Lunar Eclipse Paddle Tour scheduled for Feb. 21.) Kayak Fishing in the 10,000 Islands, $149 for 4 hours ($10 for fishing license).

Information:

Travel information for the Gulf Coast Everglades area, plus Naples and Marco Island, paradisecoast.com (free visitor guide, 800-688-3600).

Everglades National Park: nps.gov/ever/.

Big Cypress National Preserve: nps.gov/bicy/.

Paradise Coast Blueway: paradisecoastblueway.com. A new GPS-marked paddling trail system in Collier County. The Ten Thousand Islands section has been mapped with GPS coordinates for one long trail route from Everglades City to Goodland, along with six shorter day-trip paddling routes. Day-trip routes include Turner River in Big Cypress National Preserve.


Send us your comments and feedback

Where am I?

This hotel, which dates to 1921, has 39 rooms and commanding perch by a big river.


Air France's A380 debuts

A look inside the airline's first Airbus A380.

My Trips

Subscribe to the Daily Deal blog Daily Travel & DealBlog

SeaWorld Aquatica's 2010 expansion to include 4 new water slides
The recently opened SeaWorld Aquatica water park in Orlando, Fla. will add four first-of-a-...
Read more »

SIGN UP Newsletter_icons

Taking restless Southern California on vacation

Los Angeles Times e-mail newsletter, delivered every Thursday


Expedia
  • Departing from:
    Depart:
  • Going to:
    Return:

Subscribe to this section    

Subscribe to
Save and share