Saturday, September 20, 2014

The New Everglades Wonder Gardens

 
 
 
The Everglades Wonder Gardens was established in 1936 in Bonita Springs, Florida. Two brothers, Bill and Les Piper, originally set up as a wildlife rehabilitation center, and it quickly developed into a popular original old Florida roadside attraction. Over the years, the gardens were home to panthers, bears, otters, alligators and “Big Joe” who at over 14ft long was, for a while, the largest American crocodile in existence. The attraction remained in the Piper family for many years until mid-2013 when the park closed briefly for the first time ever, leaving the fate of the Everglades Wonder Gardens in question. Instead of closing, however, local photographer John Brady took over management of the gardens and is determined not to let it become another extinct attraction.
 
I have been a resident of Bonita Springs for over 20 years, and have raised three children here. The gardens were at least a monthly trip. The old growth tropical banyan trees shaded us as we viewed Florida mammals and birds in a quiet setting. I was sad to see the gardens close and a little apprehensive to see someone else take over this longtime family attraction, but recently I visited the historic landmark to see the changes myself.
 
 
The first change I noticed as I stepped through the door was a major rebuilding of the lobby. Gone was the outdated shop selling plush animals and cheap baubles. In its place is a beautiful gallery featuring Brady’s Florida Everglades art photography. There are large, well lit pieces highlighting his award winning color and black and white work. Some of these photos easily rival Clyde Butcher’s work in scale and composition. Just down the hallway, and over the resident hound, is what remains of Les Piper’s natural history collection, various reptile and aquatic skeletons and native artifacts.
 
 
Entering the gardens I noticed that all of the old growth banyans, tropical plumbs, kapoks and scheffleras remain, providing a beautiful canopy over the entire 3 ½ acre area. As I walked around the grounds I noticed several familiar sites. The alligator pond is still there as are most of the old cage areas that once housed the black bears and Florida panthers.
 
 
The mammals have been replaced with local rescue birds and exotic species ranging from parakeets to large parrots. A flock of beautiful pink Florida flamingos still grace the gardens as do a variety of reptiles. Some of the square concrete ponds that once housed injured alligators are now empty. Presumably, and hopefully they will eventually hold fish and other aquatic life. A collection of tortoises round out the animal collection of the park.
 
 
After spending an hour or so roaming the gardens and snapping pictures, I left feeling very satisfied. The gardens looked fresher and newer than ever. New displays of bromeliads and orchids, some of them rare, are placed throughout the park. A new butterfly garden is full of colorful blooming milkweed and shrimp plants. Large staghorn ferns hang from the giant branches of the banyan and kapok trees.


 
I left feeling that this jewel of Bonita Springs was placed in good hands. John Brady’s vision is to restore one of the last vestiges of a bygone era of roadside attractions while updating it as well. More information about Everglades Wonder Gardens can be found at http://evergladeswondergardens.com and you can visit the park yourself, it’s located in the heart of historic downtown Bonita Springs on the Imperial River on Old U.S. 41.


 




Monday, September 1, 2014

Everglades Restoration and Our Responsibility


The headlines were ominous, “Advisory. High bacteria levels. Avoid contact with the water. Increased risk of illness at this time.” (Stuart, FL)Lizette Alvarez, NY TIMES. Only they weren’t referring to some accidental discharge or environmental catastrophe somewhere far away, they were talking about our beaches and estuaries, the very lifeblood of our South Florida home. I have lived here over 20 years and spend most of my time out on the water and have seen the devastation to the estuary year after year.


What is an estuary and why is it important to us? Where freshwater rivers meet oceanic waters, estuaries form. Estuaries require just the right mix of fresh water and salt water to support the sea grasses and aquatic life that thrives there. Estuaries are crucial to the ecosystem because they are a breeding ground for marine life. Our estuaries are important not only to us but to the people from all over the world that come to visit them. Visitors come to join us for bird watching, fishing, and for the beaches. Tourism is the backbone of economy and employs 1 out of every 5 people. We receive millions of visitors each year that generate billions of dollars in economic revenue.


The Everglades once covered almost 11,000 square miles of south Florida. Prior to 1905, water flowed down the Kissimmee River, into Lake Okeechobee, then south through the Everglades. The Everglades are as much as 60 miles in width, yet only six inches deep in some places. The area is home to a multitude of bird and fish species and is the only place in the world where alligators and crocodiles live in the same habitat.


After 1905, plans were made to drain the Everglades to make the land suitable for agriculture and development. Large tracts of swamp were transformed into farmland and people settled along the coast. As the population grew, so did the need to provide flood control to the new residents of South Florida. The result was an extensive network of man-made canals, levees and water control structures that channel 1.7 billion gallons of water daily from the Everglades, changing the natural characteristics of the marsh.


In 1910, a dike was constructed around the south side of Lake Okeechobee as part of the drainage project. Over the next several years flooding caused by breaches in the dike killed thousands of residents. These deaths resulted in the construction and expansion of the Herbert Hoover Dike, almost completely surrounding the lake. Canals were dug to connect Lake Okeechobee to the Caloosahatchee River to the West and the St Lucie River to the East. Redirection of the natural flow of water from the south to the east and west was made with complete disregard to the environmental consequences.


This redirected water flow has negatively impacted the mixture of fresh water and salt water putting the grasses and aquatic life at risk. The “quick fix” has been to make fresh water releases from the lake. Additionally, to protect the aging dike itself, the South Florida Water Management District and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers have been forced to release even more water from the lake. During the summer months when heavy rains cause the lake water to rise, billions of gallons of fresh water polluted by agricultural runoff are released into the Caloosahatchee and St. Lucie river systems. The current solution of making water releases to alleviate the negative consequences caused by the redirected water flow has made problems worse.

Excessive releases of polluted water from Lake Okeechobee are made during the rainy season because water levels are too high. Smaller water releases are also made during the dry season in an attempt to keep the fresh and salt water mix at optimum levels. These constant water releases cause toxic algae blooms and the sediment from them smothers grass beds where sea life spawns. Not only are the estuaries now dependent on scheduled water releases, but these releases are now necessary to prevent flooding and to supply irrigation during the dry season to farming communities. The dike itself has been long ranked among the most vulnerable in the country and a 2006 report on the lake found it posed a “grave and imminent danger”.


The situation we find ourselves in is a result of poor planning. There is no quick or inexpensive solution. Allowing more water to move south like it’s supposed to, treating more water as it’s released into the Caloosahatchee and St. Lucie Rivers, or fixing the Herbert Hoover Dike to allow for more overall water capacity have all been discussed. Finger pointing and politics has stopped progress. The South Florida Water Management claims they have no money because Governor Rick Scott cut their budget. Governor Scott claims they can’t fix the dike because the Federal Government is not providing the necessary funds. We can’t release water south because of the Everglades Agricultural Area which is comprised mainly of sugar cane fields. The Sugar Corporations are often blamed for stymieing efforts for a solution to further their agendas even though they are responsible for much of the agricultural runoff pollution. “Big Sugar” has also been accused of having government officials in their pocket and indeed has donated a great deal of money to super PACs to influence elections. The finger pointing must stop and collaboration must begin immediately if we are to save our beaches and the vast diversity of our estuaries.


One idea is Plan 6 which is a program that promises to create a vitally needed flow-path to let water move south from Lake Okeechobee to the Everglades instead of to the coastal estuaries. This plan requires the acquisition of about 50,000 acres of the 700,000 acres in the Everglades Agricultural Area (roughly 7%). The new acreage would be tied into existing public lands to form the overall Plan 6 flow-way. This would result in restoring the original flow of water into the Everglade south of Lake Okeechobee and eliminate the need for any more water releases. Plan 6 would replace other more costly plans that do not adequately restore the original Everglades flow nor keep polluted water from being released in the rivers. Additionally, Plan 6 would not require any change in infrastructure to Interstate 75 or the Tamiami Trail to the south. Existing culverts and flow-ways for those highways can handle the increased water flow.


Whatever the solution, one thing is sure, without intervention from citizens and government, we will lose valuable tourism, but most importantly, we will lose the vast diversity of our local estuaries. Getting involved is the only way we will save our estuaries, our local tourism and our livelihood. Contact your local legislators and demand a solution now. Without prompt action from our government and our community we stand to lose the most important things to our community. We now know what our estuaries are and what they mean to us, what caused the issues they are experiencing and how we can fix the state they are in. There are only two choices. Seek a solution that protects our beaches and estuaries or do nothing and destroy them both. The choice is ours. It’s up to us.