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Boat tour shows off marine life without getting wet



By DELIA AREVALO
School of Communication
University of Miami

Posted October 13, 2006

HOMESTEAD, Fla.— I’ve lived in South Florida for 18 years and, like most locals, I don’t take part in many tourist-type activities.

But when I heard about a glass bottom boat tour of the coral reefs within Biscayne National Park, I thought, “I wonder what a glass bottom boat looks like?”

That’s when I knew I had to go see and find out.

I was making the trip from Fort Lauderdale, so I had to get up pretty early on a Saturday morning to get to the park on time. My family and I left at 8:30 a.m. and we arrived a little after 9:30.

Visitors must take the turnpike south toward Key West, get off at exit 6 and make a left. At first you might think that the directions were wrong because you are surrounded by fields of produce and ornamental plants.

When you hit Canal Street, you make a left.

But you have to be careful. There are no upcoming signs and you could easily miss it. If you arrive in the parking lot of the motor race track, which is what I did, you’ve gone a little too far south.

The best thing to do is call the Biscayne National Park Visitor’s Center for directions because, once I did, the entrance to the park appeared within minutes.  We parked and went upstairs to the second floor gift shop and asked for the boat ride.

We passed through the Visitor Center and went downstairs to the dock. We stepped aboard the Reef Rover IV, a small, rusty looking boat parked in green-colored water of the small marina. Inside there are white benches surrounding a giant square pit i n the center of the boat. Looking down into the pit we saw that there were rectangular glass windows numbered 1 to14. These one-inch thick windows were the only thing between us and the ocean.

A gar swims in shallow waters of Biscayne Bay (Photo by Cai Yan).

We got a short safety lesson from Capt. Jack Kelsey, including a warning that the
bathroom “accepts liquids only” so, for the visitor that is prone to going to the bathroom often,
it’s best to go at the Visitor Center. 

We started in a small opening covered by trees and it was slow at first because of the possibility of manatees. We were told to look out for them because this was the only place on the trip where there was a possibility of seeing them. However, we didn’t come upon any.

Sailing out we saw seagulls, pelicans and black, double crested cormorants sitting on groups of rocks that were in a trail, just above the water, near the shore. The boat sailed at a moderate speed so there was a nice breeze blowing.

It was a beautiful day with the sun bouncing off the blue ocean and light waves lapping against the side of the boat. If you want you can even sit on one of the benches in the back of the boat and sit facing the sea you’re leaving behind and watch the white wake. Or you can sit in front of the boat in a little area with a bench and feel the breeze right in your face as the boat cruises by.

Our tour guide was Paul Kuentzel, who told me that Biscayne National Park is one of the Top Ten most threatened national parks in the United States.

“When cruise ships get rid of trash, it flows into the Gulf Stream and creates algae, blocks nutrients and prevents growth for the reefs and fish,” Kuentzel said.

The park consists of 173,000 acres of bird sanctuary with over 190 species of birds, 512 species of fish and the third largest coral reef in the world. It is 200 miles of coral reef that starts in Biscayne National Park and ends in the Dry Tortugas west of Key West.

After about an hour and a half, we reached our first destination: a shipwreck. Like most people I’m sure, I was expecting something that looked like a ship had crashed there but I was surprised to find not much more than a pile of rocks at the bottom of the shore.

A fishing boat passes Turkey Point Nuclear Power Plant to the south of Biscayne National Park (Photo by Cai Yan).

However, when we looked down through the glass bottom we were able to see the fish, the coral, jellyfish and stingrays very clearly. There were small, yellow sergeant fish swimming through and over the blue and orange reefs. We were able to see that the reefs varied in size and had blue sea fans attached to them as the boat passed over at a safe distance so as not to disturb the marine habitat.

White Moon Jellyfish with long tentacles, that were so thin they looked like strands of hair, drifted by the brain and yellow coral while brown stingrays darted between the swaying sea fans.

The ocean bottom was easy to see because the water is not that deep. Coral grows best in shallow water and does not survive in deep water. It also does not survive in cold water, but the Gulf Stream flows in close enough to bring in water that keeps coral about 85 degrees.

Other than my family, the only other people on the boat were an older couple from Oregon. Tom Maddock, who was accompanying his wife on a business trip, said he found the trip, “very interesting. I’ve never seen coral living. I’ve usually only seen rocks.”

He loved the trip and the park and said he'd recommend it to friends.

“It’s unlike anything we get to see on the West Coast,” he said.

He noted that he found out about the park while he and his wife were nearby at the Big Cypress National Preserve.

Our trip to the reefs, unfortunately, was cut short by several funnel-shaped waterspouts spotted nearby. There was a possibility of tornadoes, but the captain was mostly worried about lightning since the boat was metal.

On the way back to port, our guide took dried starfish, sea fans and sponges out of a cooler and laid them out so we could get a closer look at them. It was interesting to see that they all have tiny holes throughout their bodies, all made by other ocean animals.

I found out later from the captain that the rusty looking Reef Rover IV is not only a surprisingly dependable boat, but she’s also an old survivor. Her hull was laid in 1975 and last year she was flipped in dock by Hurricane Wilma. Yet she was fixed and gives rides to the reef whenever enough people show up.

I enjoyed the trip and would definitely recommend it to anyone coming to visit. If you don’t like getting wet, but still want a chance to see marine animals and the sea, this is definitely an activity to put on the to do list.

A seagull rests on a piling in the waters of Biscayne Bay (Photo by Cai Yan).

If You Go:

General

Food and Lodging

Services

A park visitor studies a display near the Visitor Center that describes Biscayne Bay wildlife (Photo by Bruce Garrison).

 



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