Friday, May 17, 2013

A Trip Down the Keys Highway


Below is a proposed chapter for the book "A Quest for Counties."   It deals with the Florida Keys (Monroe County) and recounts a real tale from the summer of 1984 in Marathon.  This is indicative of how I would like the other chapters in the book to read and to flow.  Let me know if this works for you as a reader:

                                                                                   11

“If They Shoot, Shoot Back”
Vaca Key, Monroe County, Florida

(Portions of this chapter appeared previously in Faanes, Craig, 2001.  Somewhere South of Miami.  America House Publishers, Baltimore)

About 100,000 people call themselves permanent residents of the Florida Keys.  Some times on weekends during winter when there are more visitors than residents of Florida in Florida it may seem like there are 100 million residents in the Keys.  It seems that a trip down the Keys highway is now a required pilgrimage for everyone; it’s no longer a requirement just of Jimmy Buffett fans.

The Keys hold a special place in the history and folklore and the current-day psyche of Florida.  From the days of pirates there has always been an outlaw meme to the Keys.  No matter who was in charge or from where they were in charge, side stepping the rules and doing things differently was the norm in the Keys.

Henry Flagler and his long-sought Overseas Railroad probably had the longest lasting impression on the makeup of the Keys.  Through the trials, tribulations and travails of tens of thousands of men, Flagler oversaw the building of his dream railroad down the spine of the islands.  Logistics of this endeavor remain an awe-inspiring feat especially when you consider the state of technology in the early 20th century with our contemporary ability to build structures like the Sunshine Skyway crossing the mouth of Tampa Bay and to accomplish that task in just a few months.

Flagler’s railroad opened the door for many to travel where few had gone before.  Originally designed to be a conduit for trade goods to be loaded to and unloaded from ships traveling between Key West and Panama or Colombia, the railroad soon eclipsed expectations with the sheer number of visitors that passed through the Keys.  Marketed early and often as “America’s Caribbean Islands” industrialists and other ultra-rich northerners flocked to the Keys to escape the Arctic conditions further north in winter.

Keys tourism continued to flourish through the 1920s but the Great Depression took its toll in the early 1930s.  Adding more insult to additional injury was the famous Labor Day hurricane of 1935 that completely changed the face and the structure of the Keys for years to come.  Roaring ashore on September 2 1935 and still pumping out energy on September 4 when it moved away, the Great Hurricane left the Keys and Flagler’s railroad in a complete shambles.  Internal pressures recorded with the storm remain among the lowest ever observed on earth.  Topping it off was a 18-foot high tidal wave that roared ashore cleansing everything in its path and leaving utter chaos behind it.

As is the nature of humans, Keys residents didn’t let the Great Hurricane hold them down for long and repairs were quickly made.  A major change from the days of Flagler was that this famous railroad was not replaced.  Instead, built over the bed of that rail line was what is now known as the end of U.S. Highway 1, the “Keys Highway” or the “Overseas Highway.”  Its presence today allows for hundreds of thousands of visitors to pass into the Keys and in most instances to bring along with them the toys of modernity that they sought to escape on the mainland.

Although the railroad is gone and it has been replaced by the highway, Monroe County and the Keys remain a safe haven for eccentrics who enjoy life at the end of the road.  Many Keys residents moved there to get away from the rules and regulations that govern life everywhere else.  Only on their arrival they discovered that despite their protestations, the rules and the regulations still apply.  Long-time residents of the Keys call themselves “Conch’s,” a reference to the Queen conch, a massive marine snail whose flesh is a delicacy.  Referring to someone in the Keys as a “Conch” is like a badge of honor, and referring to that person as “an old Conch” is akin to having been present when Moses found the tablets on the top of a mountain in the Middle East.

Given their escapist mentality, many Keys residents believe they should be their own governmental entity away from and in spite of the United States, the state of Florida, or Monroe County.  I’m sure they feel that way until there is a natural disaster like a hurricane and they need financial assistance but that is another story.  In the early 1980s at the height of one of a million controversies created by Ronald Reagan and his disreputable Administration (and quickly swept under the table by a protective media) was the decision by a group of Keys residents to break away from the United States in protest of Reagan and to create their own little country to be known as “The Conch Republic.”  To this day you can still purchase “Conch Republic” license plates and “Conch Republic” flags.  Someone in Miami still produces and sells “Conch Republic” passports so if you want to be a dual citizen without leaving the comforts of America, you can purchase a passport and travel the world as a Conch. 

On the day the Keys declared their independence from all government around them, then-Florida Governor Bob Graham was scheduled to land at the Marathon airport for some function.  When he arrived and was informed of that he was now in a sovereign nation (at least in the mind of those who created this sovereign nation) Governor Graham asked politely at the airport if he needed a passport to be there.  Nobody was sure if he did or not.

My first visit to Monroe County was in July 1984 when I was conducting research on an endangered species of bird that nests in Michigan and winters in the West Indies.  We wanted to put tiny radio transmitters on the backs of the birds and track their movements but before doing so we wanted to practice on a more widespread and more numerous common species and we wanted to do this in habitats and humidity similar to what we would occur a few months later in the West Indies. 

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service maintains and manages four National Wildlife Refuges in the Florida Keys and we made arrangements to conduct our research on the Big Pine Key and No Name Key units of the National Key Deer Refuge.  Despite this being the latter half of the 20th century there were still all sorts of crooks and thieves and low-life’s in the keys and especially on weekends.  Given the extensive area of open ocean that surrounds the Keys they were (and remain) a prime location for drug runners to attempt to bring their products into the country.  The ever-vigilant U.S. Coast Guard maintained offices at both Marathon and Key West and one of their responsibilities in 1984 was drug interdiction.  To do so they needed to be out on the open ocean looking for bad guys.  I saw this as an opportunity to get out on the open ocean to look for birds I had not seen before that live on the edge of the Gulf Stream.  A quick stop at Station Marathon one day confirmed that I could go along with the Coast Guard on their Saturday foray out into the Gulf Stream from Marathon.  We never got that far.

When I arrived at Station Marathon I was given a quick briefing on how to keep from being thrown overboard if we encountered rough seas.  Afterward we took off to look for birds in the cobalt blue waters of the Gulf Stream. The Coast Guard was out there to aid stranded boaters and to check safety equipment and to look for drugs and contraband.  I was along simply for a Saturday morning of looking at birds.  Not long after leaving the Station, we received a call instructing us to be on the lookout for a stolen boat.  Hearing this, the boat’s captain knew exactly where to look and we changed course for the “Cuban Docks” on Vaca Key.  Apparently if you are going to rip someone off and try to hide afterward the most logical place to try to hide was the Cuban Docks.

We had a description of the boat but to me they all looked the same.  As we made our approach to the docks the Coast Guardsmen asked me to stand in the bow of their boat with my binoculars so I could read the registration numbers on those other boats we passed. This was exciting at first but soon it became boring.  That all changed when we came on to a thirty-foot shrimp boat because sitting in its wheel house was a simple, lone, unassuming marijuana plant that was growing in a bucket.  Not thinking much of it I casually mentioned to the Captain that there was a marijuana plant in that boat and was he interested in it?  He took my binoculars, looked at the potted pot plant, and exclaimed, “I’m going to seize that boat!” 

Our plans changed again when the pot plant was found.  First we docked the Coast Guard vessel next to the shrimp boat and kept it under surveillance.  Then we radioed the U.S. Customs Service and the Monroe County Sheriff’s Department to alert them to our find and both groups said they would send backup.  This was followed by the rather dramatic laying on of guns.  Two of the four Coast Guardsmen were designated the boarding party.  It was their responsibility in these situations to board boats and look for contraband.  The boarding party strapped on their .45 caliber revolvers and waited for Customs and the Sheriff to arrive.  In the mean time I stood with the other two Coast Guardsmen wondering what would happen next. 

Arrival of the reinforcements meant that the boarding party could jump into action and as they approached the shrimp boat, one of the two Coast Guardsmen still on the boat went below decks and came out carrying three 12 gauge shotguns.  He handed one shotgun to the boat captain and then loaded a shell in the chamber of the second gun and kept it for himself.  He then turned to me.

“You’re a Fed aren’t you,” he asked.

“Yes,” I said, “but I’m not in law enforcement.”

Thrusting the loaded shotgun in my hands he yelled “If they shoot, shoot back!”

The last thing I considered that morning when I got out of bed was that I would be in a shootout with drug runners on Vaca Key but that is what it was beginning to appear was going to happen.  I wanted this as much as I wanted a toothache but I wasn’t going to argue.

The boarding party, made up of two Coast Guardsmen, a Customs agent and a deputy sheriff approached the shrimp boat with their guns drawn.  As instructed I stood in the bow of the boat with the 12 gauge shotgun aimed at the wheel house of the boat.  It was my responsibility to shoot if anyone shot first.  Between them the four-person boarding party had enough armaments to support a small insurgency in Nicaragua yet as they made their way to the shrimp boat I maintained my aim at the unseen doper inside.

With guns drawn the boarding party walked up to the main door of the shrimp boat and yelled at the occupants to come out.  Nobody inside moved.  They yelled again and still nobody moved.  At the conclusion of the third yelling session, one of the Coast Guardsmen on the boat kicked in the door.  I flicked off the safety on my shotgun.  The entire scene reminded me of a script for some surreal movie but it was real life and real time.

No shots rang out as the four men entered the shrimp boat to confiscate the lone marijuana plant in the wheel house.  After what seemed like an hour inside they returned to the main door leading a rather disheveled individual who was shirtless and shoeless (this was the Florida Keys after all) man with scraggly hair.  His arms were securely behind his back and his wrists were held together by hand cuffs.  The Customs Agent yelled at us and told us they had found some cocaine on the table along with the supposedly malevolent marijuana plant.  He also informed us that we could take down our arms and prepare to tie off the boat.

With the boat shrimp boat secured to the Coast Guard cutter we slowly made our way back to Coast Guard Station Marathon where it was tied off and guarded by another Coast Guardsman who proceeded to do about face marches in front of the boat.  It was his responsibility to ensure that nobody came near that shrimp boat unless they were personally known to the Coast Guardsman.  Should some nefarious individual attempt to board the boat before the Customs Service could tear it apart, it was this Coast Guardsman’s responsibility to shoot that person.  Hearing this I made it triply certain that no matter where I walked for the rest of my time on the Coast Guard station I had someone with me who personally knew the man walking about faces in front of the shrimp boat.

The shrimp boat incident in the Cuban Docks severely cut into our time on the ocean but the Coast Guard had made a promise to me that they would get me offshore to look for birds.  After maybe two hours of paperwork and interviews we again left the dock headed for the open ocean.  As we passed under Seven Mile Bridge we received a call from Marathon but instead of telling us to go back to the Cuban Docks to look for another boat, it was Coast Guard Station Marathon wishing us a successful trip to find birds.

We didn’t find many birds because by the time we arrived on the Gulf Stream the winds had kicked up and the waves were horrendous and there was little else for us to do but ride out the tempest.  I suggested several times that we return to shore but the Coast Guard had promised me time on the ocean and they were bound and determined to give it to me. After an hour in the rollicking angry ocean we had two Coast Guardsmen down with sea sickness and the other two were beginning to look green. Rather than subject them to more discomfort I begged them to take us back to shore.  I could always get offshore another time to look for birds.

Our return to the station was greeted with high fives and congratulations because on dismantling the inside of the boat, Customs and the Coast Guard found several large packages of cocaine tethered to the inside walls.  Today’s action turned out to be the best bust of the month for Coast Guard Station Marathon and it all started with an off-handed remark about a single marijuana plant growing in a bucket in the wheel house.  As I was preparing to leave Marathon and return to Big Pine Key I asked one of the Coast Guardsmen if they didn’t come off a little too extreme in dealing with the shrimp boat owner at first because on the surface it appeared he had just one pot plant.  The Coast Guardsman snickered a bit and said “When you deal with low life’s every day you have to treat everyone like they’re going to kill you.”

I have had nothing but the utmost respect for the Coast Guard since that day.

Friday, May 10, 2013

Black-bellied Whistling-Ducks Perched on a Powerline



Earlier this morning I made my daily jaunt to pick up my daily jolt of go-juice at Starbucks (my cardiologist now allows me one cup of high-octane coffee per day - I knew I liked my cardiologist).  As I was driving out of the parking lot I noticed two very large lumps perched on the power line that sits adjacent to University Parkway.  My initial thought, given their size and the time of year, was that they were Black Vultures.  However on closer  inspection I was surprised to see a pair of Black-bellied Whistling-Ducks swaying back and forth trying to stay upright on the power line.

I've seen Wood Ducks perched on power lines before but until today they were the only species of duck that I have witnessed doing so. Wood Ducks are considerably smaller than Black-bellied Whistling-Duck and accordingly have a much lower center of gravity making the act of balancing on a thin wire that much easier for them.   It must have been quite an accomplishment for a duck as big as a Black-bellied Whistling-Duck to curl its webbed feet around a wire and then try to remain upright for as long as these two did.

It seems that the longer I observe nature the more I find that I don't know about nature.

Saturday, April 6, 2013

Wisconsin Point - The Most Magical Place in the Cheesehead State


There are some places on the planet that are so special that they will never leave your mind.  For me, Doi Chaing Doh Thailand comes to mind immediately as does Ourzazate, Morocco. Closer to home are places like Lake Clark National Park and Preserve in Alaska and Cave Creek Canyon in southeast Arizona's Chiricahua Mountains or the indescribable Platte River in central Nebraska.  However for me no place is more magical than Wisconsin Point, an area known geologically as a baymouth bar just outside of Superior in Wisconsin's Douglas County.

My first time at "the Point" was during a wildly drunken smelt fishing trip there in high school.  Given the general nature of smelt fishing I guess its repetative to say "wildly drunken" and "smelt fishing" in the same sentence.  The two are one.  I went there with Steve Benavides and some other buddies and we consumed large quantities of beer and caught large numbers of smelt and then drove back to Rice Lake arriving in one piece early the next morning.  Two years later I traveled back to the Point with Lee Anderson and a couple of high school friends on another smelt fishing excursion. This time while in Lake Superior dragging a net to catch fish a large wave rolled over me, completely submerging me and filling my chest waders with frigid April water.  A large campfire helped remove some of the twinge of the cold but not much.
Recent satellite image of Wisconsin Point.  The dark brown water is Allouez Bay. Follow the Point to its end and you are at the ship entrance to Superior Harbor. The state to Wisconsin's west that begins with the letter M is on the other side of the entrance.

There were intermittent trips to the Point in subsequnt years but none are more memorable than May 22, 1975 when my then-wife and I traveled to the Point to watch spring migration. The morning dawned chilly and the sky was filled with fog. Everywhere you looked there was fog.  Migrating birds were not able to move in the fog and when we arrived on the Point we found songbirds everywhere. Every bush and every tree limb seemed to be overloaded with song birds.  Some, like a male Chestnut-sided Warbler, were so tame that they jumped on my arm and hopped around looking for insects.  As the fog slowly lifted we moved from the trees out to the beach and found it littered with migrating shorebirds that, likewaise, could not migrate in the heavy fog.  Eventually by early afternoon when the fog had completely lifted we looked out on Lake Superior and found it crawling with migrating ducks and cormorants and loons.  In seven hours that morning on the Point Ruth and I observed 135 species of birds. Every species of warbler, vireo and flycatcher that nests in northern Wisconsin or migrates through it was there as were all of the thrushes.   On the beach we found every species of shorebird that occurs regularly in Wisconsin as well as 12 species of duck, and both regulalry-occurring loons.  The Wisconsin state bird list at the time was about 400 species. Fully 34 percent of all the bird species ever recorded in the state - one third of the state list total - was found that morning on a stretch of land no more than 100 yards wide and 5 mile long that juts into Lake Superior.  We returned to Superior and the Point a month later and while driving by the dry-docks in Superior we saw a ship named the Edmund Fitzgerald.  History tells us that just a few months later the Fitz went down in a tremendous November gale on Lake Superior. She had sailed past the tip of Wisconsin Point on her way to sea after repairs.



I remember Harry Reasoner giving this news report on the evening news like it was yesterday.  The song is one of the most eerily poignant songs I've ever heard.  I met Gordon Lightfoot once and he told me this was the most difficult, heart-wrenching song he ever attempted.

When Daryl Tessen did his first revision of the Wisconsin bird finding guide titled "Wisconsin's Favorite Bird Haunts" I had the privilege of writing the chapter on Wisconsin Point.  I also wrote about a nearby overlook that Ruth and I had discovered that we called "Gull Bluff" because of the huge concentrations of gulls that are observable from that overlook.

My first job with the US Fish and Wildlfie Service was as an ascertainment biologist in the Regional Office in Minneapolis.  There we worked on a program called "Unique Wildlife Ecosystems" that involved identifying unique non-waterfowl habitats that were to be considered for inclusion in the National Wildlife Refuge system.  We nominated four areas in Wisconsin and now 36 years later all four have been protected in one form or another.  Those areas included what is now the Fox River Sandhill Crane Marsh National Wildlfie Refuge in southern Wisconsin, the Mink River marshes in Door County, the area now known as the Kinnickinnic River State Park west of River Falls (where I just happened to have gone to both undergraduate and graduate school), and the incomparable Wisconsin Point.  The Point is protected and managed by either Douglas County or the city of Superior (or both?) and will hopefully never be defiled by condominium developments like so many other areas along beautiful stretches of water.  The Point will still be there long after I am gone and that is how it should be.

My friend-since-grade school Pam Huseth and I recently had a discussion about Wisconsin Point and she sent me an article she had that tells some of the history and more recent controversies about this magical place.  I have reprinted that story below, probably in violation of some copyright laws but what the hell.  This is another avenue for informing people about the Point.  I hope you enjoy learning about this very special place.


Canku Ota

(Many Paths)

An Online Newsletter Celebrating Native America


May 17, 2003 - Issue 87




Wisconsin Point War Nears End


by By Harry R. Zander of the Journal Staff - From The Milwaukee Journal - December 14, 1924


credits: submitted by Timm Severud (Ondamitag)


Battle of Three Generations for the Last of the Chippewa Domains Picturesque
Superior - The most desolate and at the same time the most expensive unimproved land in Wisconsin lies here, off the Superior Harbor, a throwback to the primitive days of the United States' conquest of the Indian lands, a bone of contention over which nearly $1,000,000 has been spent already, the center piece of an industrial project involving the future expenditure of between $15,000,000 and $20,000,000.
Two generations have been born, loved, fought, reared families and completed the human span in death since the conflict over Wisconsin Point had its inception. A third generation is springing up, grounded as firmly in the principles of aboriginal ownership of the Point as were those old Chippewas under Chief Osagie, who opposed the dickerings with the white man back in 1841.
There remains only four of the descendants of old Chief Osagie and his counselors who have been adamant against the blandishments and lures of the white invasion. Yet this quartet of swarthy half-breeds, turning up their noses at the loosened purse strings of America's wealthiest corporation, sneering at the oily tongued promises of lives of ease and wealth, ignoring the crushing advance of modern industry upon the wilderness, which has been their fathers' and their fathers' father' as far back as human memory goes, wage with the white men's own weapons their battle for their heritage.

Tribes Defy Steel Company
This heritage, as the average man would view it, is not much. It is 300 acres of desolation over which the snow-laden winds swirl from the long reaches of Lake Superior and the northland. A few jack pines dot its expanse. Wild grasses, brush and sand dunes cover it. It looks like a land that God forgot. Yet in the eerie winds that thresh the cones from the jack pines and whistle through the stubbles growth the red me of the white age hear the voices of a long line of ancestors about the council fires of the happy hunting grounds protesting against the passing of the last of the Chippewa domains. Legends of great warriors and tales of mighty huntsmen ride every breeze that caresses the peninsula and in every gale that lashes the point the red children of a great Indian nation see the wrath of the mighty Chippewas aroused.
It is a wasteland, indeed, yet the unsentimental winds which drive the great $2,000,000,000 United States Steel Corporation, America's biggest combine, envision upon these desolate shores and wretched acres enormous docks to handle its iron and steel shipments.
For more than a third of a century now sentiment prevailed over business and the untutored savages' offspring have withstood the encroachment of the corporation. Recent developments, however seem to indicate that the conflict is almost at an end.

Negotiations Started in 1840
The history of Wisconsin Point, as it touches the subject of this review, dates back to 1840 when the white fathers of the government began to deal with the Fond du Lac Band of Chippewa Indians, through Chief Osagie for possession of the land. In 1842 the overtures of the whites were successful and a treaty was drawn up whereby the federal government obtained the 300-acre peninsula with the understanding that the Indians might continue to live there until ordered off by the President of the United States, after which homes would be provided on the Fond du Lac reservation in Minnesota.
Instead of settling all differences over the land, however, the treaty merely marked the beginning of a prolonged era of litigation, armed warfare and general trouble. Hundreds of thousands of dollars have been spent on the land to make it ready for the big industrial project, working staring and in some case approaching completion in lulls of the conflict during which the Indians' claims were believed to have been finally settled.
Five years after the treaty with Chief Osagie was signed, sealed and delivered, Frank Lemieux or La Swiss as he was sometimes called came down from Madeline Island and married a daughter of Chief Osagie taking up his residence on the point and gradually assuming leadership of the Chippewas. Lemieux was a half Indian and half French, having migrated from the La Pointe settlement on Madeline Island to marry Osagie's daughter.

White Settler Enters Claim
Seven years later, in 1853, during the period of when land speculation was at its height in the Northwest Territory, Joseph A. Bullen, a white man, cast appraising eyes upon the point. In February 1854, he made proof of his pre-emption entry, paid the required amount of cash and got a receiver's receipt for the land. A month later however, in March of the same year, the president ordered the land reserved for military purposes and in the following May the land department issued an order suspending the entry of Bullen. In 1855 the land was released from military reservation and the entry rights of Bullen were recognized by the government.
Subsequently Bullen sold the Point to the Agate Land Company, a subsidiary of the United Steel Corporation. But Frank Lemieux and Chief Osage's daughter did not relish the idea of heir domain being converted into a forest of machinery and devices, which they did not understand. The others of the already dwindling Fond du Lac Band supported them in their protest.
Years dragged by in weary succession with frequent attempts by Lemieux to contest the Bullen entry and to obtain from the government the title to the land, which he represented was his as Chief Osage's son-in-law. In 1891, however, the patent was finally issued to Bullen on his entry in 1854. Lemieux appealed from this action to the Secretary of the Interior, but the decision was affirmed by Hoke Smith, the Secretary at that time, and Bullen was once more confirmed in his possession.
Defend Land With Guns
Bitter fights ensued, the Indians holding possession of the land at the points of rifles for a considerable period. Quiet and order were restored again and diplomats attempted to pacify the Indians with settlements. Eventually the land was platted on one portion of the point and streets for a town laid out, a city park, called Independence Square, being included in the platting, so arranged to include Lemieux's home, presumable to prevent molesting him.
The old warrior was getting on in years; however, and in 1902 he died, leaving a tangled web of legal red tape to be unraveled by his widow and five children. The widow survived him by only five years, when she too passed away, leaving the children and their descendants to carry on the battle.
Several of the heirs of Lemieux moved to the City of Superior so that their children might have access to the schools but they always maintained some member of the family on Wisconsin Point to protect their title to the land through uninterrupted possession.
The year after the death of Lemieux's widow the steel company's officials and the officials of the interested subsidiaries believed their title clear and all difficulties cleared away. The erection of a connecting rail line from the Minnesota Steel Co.'s plant west of the St. Louis River in Minnesota was constructed, skirting the city of Superior, and the erection of the long bridge from the mainland across a wide marshy stretch to the point was completed. The opportunity to build the largest ore loading docks on any of the Great Lakes appeared to be at hand at last.

Another Settlement Made
But the troubles were not yet over. Certain of the old Indians, spurring on the Lemieux descendants, laid fresh claim to the land, disregarding the Treaty of 1842 and pointing to their uninterrupted habitation of the land since the days when white men were not known here.
The land company, having already spent $300,000 for its title and fully as much more on improvements, demurred and the course was taken to court. After hanging fire for years a financial settlement was made with all the descendants of the original settlers except three children and a grandson of Lemieux, the latter's son Frank Jr., having died leaving a son, Phillip.  A daughter of the original Lemieux, Mrs. Mary La Vierge making a settlement over the land concerned. The three other children contesting the case were Peter and John Lemieux and Mrs. Martineau.
Including in the settlement the steel concern made with the Indians was an agreement that the land company would remove the Indian dead from a cemetery, which stood in the way of its proposed docks, to the Nemadji River Cemetery in Superior's East End. This was done in 1918 and further plans for improvements started by the Steel Corporation's subsidiary.
For of the Lemieux descendants namely the two sons, Peter and John, the daughter, Maggie Martineau, and the nephew, Phillip Lemieux, however, still claim title to the land and in 1920 the brought suit against the Agate Land Company.
Family Retains Square.
Following a lengthy hearing Judge W. R. Foley on October 28, 1924, rendered a decision stating that the Agate Land Company had clear title to the land with the exception of the streets, belonging to the City of Superior, and the small strip in Independence Square, which Frank Lemieux and his descendants actually had occupied since 1846. That bit of land, no more than 150 by 80 feet, was awarded the Lemieux heirs.
Now, attorneys handling the case believe that after the struggle of half a century, the Lemieux descendants will come to an agreement with the steel concern whereby the final bit of Indians land will pass into the hands of the white men, making possible the completion of their plans for extensive improvements.
There still is a possibility however, that the Indians will refuse to accept the decision of Judge Foley and will appeal the case to a higher court. In that event, the battle of he ages will be renewed once more while the steel company's bridge and the network of its proposed docks rot away.

Indians of Wisconsin Point are still carrying their fight to preserve the last of the sacred lands, against America's wealthiest corporation. Pictured above is a group of a group of the descendants of Chief Osagie and Frank Lemieux in the act of removing the bodies of their ancestors from an Indian cemetery to the main land.






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Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Searching for April Migrants

Golden-winged Warbler

Each spring for as long as I can remember I have been fascinated by the dynamics and the mystery of spring migration among birds.  It probably began with my maternal grandfather who actually took the time to teach me a little bit of what he knew about nature.  He and I would go out for walks when I was 5 or 6 years old and we would traipse through the woods at the southern end of his farm  There he would point out the spring flowers that he knew, and where to find mushrooms, and show me how to recognize a Woodchuck foot print and about the birds that showed up abundantly in his trees.  Like it was yesterday I still remember the first Rose-breasted Grosbeak I ever saw and my grandfather showed it to me in those woods.

With the passage of time and the acquisition of knowledge I began to develop an even stronger interest in migrating birds.  In graduate school I applied for and received a Federal bird banding permit that allowed me to capture birds to place numbered aluminum bands on their legs.
Bird Bands

I had a study area near Mikana Wisconsin where I banded birds over four years in the mid-1970s.  There I chose a recently clear-cut forest with its rapidly re-growing quaking aspen trees and set up 15 mist nets on weekends to capture and band birds.  I still remember capturing a male Baltimore Oriole on May 15, 1975 in that clear cut forest.  I placed a numbered band on its leg, recorded other information about it, and tossed the bird back into the wild.  Given the abysmal return and recovery rates on banded songbirds I assumed that I would never see the bird again. However on May 16, 1976 and again on May 15, 1977, I captured the same Baltimore Oriole in the same net and on essentially the same day of the month.  Range maps for Baltimore Oriole show that they spend the winter south into South America and nest in summer well north into Canada. Where had the bird been before I captured it each year? Had it been dining in a palm tree near Cartagena, Colombia a week earlier?  Was it headed to central Ontario to build its nest?  These were questions I could never answer but they served to intensify my interest in birds and in bird migration.

The peak of spring songbird migration in my natal Wisconsin is from about May 1 through May 25.  The further south you travel the earlier the migration timing.  For instance when I lived in Virginia I could count on the most migrating warblers being around during April 15 through May 5.  Even further south, here on the west coast of Florida, migration never really seems to end, but the peak of spring migration for most songbirds is from the last week of March through about April 20. In other words, right now is the peak of the movement from tropical wintering habitats north to temperate and even boreal nesting areas.

Being a native of northern Wisconsin who grew up in the great north woods of that state, I'm well aware of what wilderness is like.  And having lived six years in Jamestown, North Dakota and another six years in Grand Island, Nebraska, I'm well aware of what "wide-open spaces" are like.  Living in the overly-developed west coast of Florida there is hardly anything remaining that resembles the north woods, and the only wide spaces are the areas from the north end of a mall parking lot to the south end.  Still despite this astonishingly human-dominated landscape there are small patches of habitat that allow me to think (very briefly) that I'm in the wilderness of northern Sawyer County Wisconsin.  That is if I can block out the sound of nearby Interstate 75, and I dont look at the massive 345 kilovolt powerline crossings and the din of honking cars on University Parkway dont distract me and the sight and sound of Delta Airlines 757 aircraft on final approach to the Sarasota airport dont interrupt me.

One little patch of habitat that some how miraculously has not been developed into endless condos lies just to the east of my home.  There among the sounds of civilization is a small area of artificial wetland and scrubby upland trees and the occasional Carolina pine tree and some willows at the wetland's edge.  Its far from wilderness but its just a few minutes walk from my house and by spending a couple of hours there each morning I can not only feel like I'm still a biologist but at this time of year I can also witness spring migration of birds.

A patch of relative normalcy in an overly developed landscape.  My "route" follows the jagged edge of the artificial wetland in the middle of the satellite image.  That wide road to the east (right) is Interstate 75 and University Parkway makes up the southernmost edge of the image

This morning dawned foggy with a very low cloud ceiling.   These conditions at this time of year are excellent for finding migrant songbirds and sometimes getting incredible views.  I remember well the morning of May 22, 1976.  My former wife and I were at Wisconsin Point, a patch of ground that geologically is known as a "baymouth bar" in Lake Superior, at Superior Wisconsin.  When we arrived at sunrise a pea-soup like fog had enveloped everything and it trapped migrant birds.  They were everywhere that morning; some like a Chestnut-sided Warbler we found hopped onto my arm and stood there looking at me as I looked at it.  Ruth and I spent 7 hours on the Point that morning and early afternoon and by the time we left we had recorded an astonishing 135 species of birds!  Included among them was every species of Warbler and every Flycatcher that nests or migrates through northern Wisconsin.  All this on a spit of land 5 miles long and no more than 100 yards wide.  Everything had been grounded by the fog and we were in birder heaven.

This morning's fog

A patch of subtropical hardwood forest in the fog

My luck this morning was nowhere near as good as what Ruth and I experienced that long ago morning in the fog but still it was obvious that spring migration is well underway.  My first indication was a Golden-winged Warbler, only the seventh one I've ever seen in Florida.  It was first heard singing and then eventually found hopping around in the trees as it foraged.  This bird nests at the edge of old fields and in early successional stage forests.  Both are rapidly disappearing from the landscape as more and more humans fill less and less space. In 1977 I banded eleven Golden-winged Warblers in my banding study area near Mikana Wisconsin.  That was the largest number of Golden-winged Warbler anyone banded anywhere in North America that year.  

Searching further a Worm-eating Warbler popped into view and off in the distance I heard a male Black-throated Blue Warbler, probably freshly arrived from the mountains of Jamaica, singing from the edge of the woods.  A male Northern Parula was busy doing its upward buzzy trill as a male Common Yellowthroat sang its distinctive "witchity-witchity-witchity" song from the willows at the edge of the wetland.  Palm Warblers and Yellow-rumped Warblers winter abundantly in this part of Florida and I was surprised to still find a couple of them sprinkled in with other birds freshly arrived from the tropics.  


Another star of the spring migration scene was Wood Thrush.  This bird with its fantasticly melodious voice is rapidly disappearing from the landscape as more and more people build more and more houses in fewer and fewer small patches of forest that remain in the eastern United States.  Seeing it freshly arrived, probably from Costa Rica, was another bit of evidence that spring migration is kicking into high gear.

I found 57 species of birds during my 2 1/2 hour walk through 2 1/2 miles of habitat.  Well 57 species of birds and one 8-foot alligator who decided that the dike surrounding the wetland was where he wanted to chill out in the fog and there was no way I was going to convince him to move.  He sat still and I sat still and eventually he moved. I didn't until he did!

Many of the 57 species this morning were resident birds like Sandhill Crane and Snowy Egret and Anhinga however 16 species were most definitely migrants and 10 of those were warblers.  Numbers of species and numbers of individuals will probably grow each day for the next 10 days or so. I will know that spring migration is winding down when species like Yellow-billed Cuckoo and Canada Warblers arrive. Until then however I'll be out on my 2 1/2 mile route each morning, binoculars in hand, looking for migrant birds just like I have done for 55 years since my grandfather first showed me that long ago Rose-breasted Grosbeak in his forest.

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Review of "The Panther" by Nelson De Mille


Nelson De Mille is one of the best suspense/espionage writers on the planet.  Bar none.  His work has focused on issues in the Viet Nam war (in which he served) and issues related to terrorism in the Middle East. and in the former Soviet Union.  I became addicted to him and his work with "Charm School".  Later he produced "The Lions Game" a greater than 600 page story about a terrorist who arrives in New York and goes around killing politicians.  I began reading "The Lion's Game" on a Sunday afternoon at 1:00 p.m.   As the day wore on I could not put it down. because I had to know what was on the next page.  I stayed up all night reading, called in sick at work at 7:00 a.m. Monday morning and finally finished the book at 3:00 p.m. that afternoon.  I read the entire book in one 26 hour sitting.  That's how good it was.

I anticipated a similar experience with the release of his new book "The Panther" about efforts to capture / kill an American-born Islamic-terrorist.  I didn't finish the book and in fact made it only through 480 of its 600 some pages.  Mr. De Mille asked at the start of the book for comments about factual errors.  I emailed him two that I found plus a comment about the book.  That is contained in the following email sent to Mr De Mille.

Bottom line is that this would have been a great read had the principal character, Detective John Corey, not made ridiculous endless wise assed comments about everything all the time.  It became very old and very childish at the same time.   I hope De Mille's next book isn't as annoying as "The Panther."

February 20, 2013


Dear Nelson De Mille,

At the beginning of The Panther you requested that people contact you with errors in the text.  I found two factual errors in the 480 pages of the book that I survived reading. I want to point them out to you.   I also have one comment.

First early in the book you refer to military people returning to "Dover Air Force Base in Maryland."  Dover AFB is in Dover Delaware.

Secondly, while Chet and the others are tooling around in Aden harbor with Chet driving the boat he pulls out his gun and shoots at a bird that is described as "black and white" and which Chet refers to as a "masked booby gull."

As a retired US Fish and Wildlife Service ornithologist I can assure you that Masked Booby's are not gulls.  Taxonomically gulls are in the family Laridae.  Ornithologically they are closely related to shorebirds (sandpipers etc), Jaegers (skuas) and terns.   Taxonomically Masked Booby is a member of the family Sulidae, the gannets and boobies.  Ornithologically they are most closely related to Frigatebirds, Cormorants and Pelicans.   These latter birds are much more primitive (ornithologically and genetically) than are gulls.

The only thing that any species of booby has in common with any species of gull is that 1) they both have feathers and 2) they both like to hang out around water.  After that all similarities end.  You can learn about Masked Booby at this link:

Finally the comment.  I really came to enjoy your work with Charm School.  That book had me hooked and I read "The Lions Game" in one single 26 hour nonstop setting.  Given how much I enjoyed your earlier works (every one of them) I want you to know that I was less than impressed with The Panther.  You have taken the wise-cracking persona of John Corey to an extreme. No human being is going to make smart assed comments about every thing on earth every sentence and every breath.  However that is what John Corey became in this book.  Of the 600 plus pages of the book my guess is you could have knocked down the volume of the book by 150 pages had you taken out half of Corey's unnecessary comments.  It rapidly became very old and very boring and to be honest I quit reading the book and placed it in the garbage after 480 pages.  Accordingly I do not know how the book ends and quite frankly I don't care.  I'll just pick up one of Bill Bryson's books and read it.  He makes wise cracks but at least only on occasion and when he does they are entertaining.

I sincerely hope that if John Corey survived the time in Yemen and you decide to use him in an subsequent books you produce that you cool down his smart assed view of everything.  It quit being entertaining about on page 50 of The Panther.

Craig Faanes
Sarasota Florida

Saturday, February 16, 2013

The Benefits of the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare)


Every three months I pick up a 90-day supply (270 pills) of Propafanone. It is the drug I take 3 times a day every day for the rest of my life to ensure that my heart never ever again goes into atrial fibrilation. If you've ever had a bout of a. fib you know why you never want it again. 

In 2010 when the Affordable Care Act (also known as Obamacare) was enacted, my co-pay for 270 pills was $120 every three months. In 2011, the first full year after enactment my co-pay went down to $70 every three months. Last year the co-pay was $56 every three months. 

Last night I picked up my first 90-day supply of the drug in calendar year 2013. Guess what my co-pay was?? Its now down to $35 every three months! 

Thanks Barack for signing the bill. Its certainly providing the "affordable" care promised by the title. And its also knocking down prescription prices as promised. Mission Accomplished :)

Oh, and Congresswoman Michelle (Batshit Crazy Shelley) Bachmann (R-MN) you can shove your death squad scare tactics directly up pampered Federal-subsidy-loving ass. 

Sunday, February 10, 2013

The Jimmy Buffett Birthplace National Historic Site

Jimmy Buffett's Birthplace at the Corner of Garfield and Roosevelt Streets, Pascagoula, Mississippi

Jimmy Buffett, the greatest singer, songwriter, and calypso poet ever to swim in the Caribbean (not to mention being the permanent mayor of Margaritaville) was born in a humble home in Pascagoula, Mississippi on December 25, 1946.  A few years later, while still in his infancy, this future mega star and environmental advocate moved with his family to near Mobile, Alabama where he was raised.  He never grew up so it can only be said that he was raised.

Now 66 years old his career has spanned all or parts of six decades and his impact on music and on people's outlooks has been almost impossible to quantify.  Despite having recorded more than 300 songs only three of them (Come Monday, Margaritaville, It's Five O'Clock Somewhere) have ever made the Top 10 and the only one to win an award was Five O'Clock and that was a joint award with Alan Jackson. Still despite the greatness of his music making it to the Top 10 only three times he has a following of Parrotheads that has to be the envy of every other singer and band out there.  

Who else but Jimmy Buffett could get people to dress up in coconut shell bras and feel secure in themselves at a concert?

Jimmy has said several times that with fans like Parrotheads who needs awards still the lack of recognition afforded him and his accomplishments borders on criminal.  Johnny Cash, who wouldn't know rock and roll music if it bought him another quaalude has been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.  Jimmy Buffett has not.  The Everly Brothers, who wouldn't know rock and roll if it bit them on the ass have been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame but not Jimmy Buffett.  Even Bobby Darin has made it to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame but Jimmy Buffett hasn't even been considered.

I think this is a national travesty and a national tragedy and I am determined to fix it and I an going to fix it by proposing that Congress establish the Jimmy Buffett Birthplace National Historic Site in Pascagoula, Mississippi and that they do it soon!  Right now if you stop by the Chamber of Commerce office in Pascagoula and ask for a map of the city bicycle path, the seventh place highlighted on the map is to stop by Jimmy Buffett's birthplace!  Eighth on the list is the former home of William Faulkner - Jimmy is surrounded by greatness in that city.  The city of Pascagoula recognizes his awesomness.  Its time Congress did as well.

Currently there are 79 sites across the United States that have been designated by Congress as a National Historic Site:  Among many others, these sites include Abraham Lincoln's Birthplace, in Kentucky Andrew Johnson's Birthplace in Tennessee, Carl Sandburg's Home in the mountains of North Carolina, and the home of twisted author Edgar Alan Poe in Philadelphia where he concocted the story "The Pit and the Pendulum."  

While I was in Mississippi this week I stopped by the Mary C O'Keefe Cultural Center of Arts and Education in Ocean Springs where I saw the "Senator Trent Lott Auditorium" on display.  Not far outside of Pascagoula I stopped at the "Trent Lott International Airport" that receives no commercial air traffic whatsoever let alone any from international locations.  It seems that every bridge and every stretch of US highway along the coast of Mississippi is named after some dead soldier or a state trooper killed in action.  Given all of that why can't this humble home in Pascagoula be established by Congress as a National Historic Site to the greatest singer to ever come out of the Mississippi Gulf Coast?  The entrance sign to Mississippi contains the slogan "Birthplace of America's Music"  Its high time Congress took action to codify that statement.


The last Congress that ended in 2012 passed something like 100 bills in two years and the bulk of them were for re-naming Post Office buildings.  Why can't the same thing be done in the current Congress and why can't they start with Jimmy Buffett?

I'm going to begin my letter writing campaign this week and I encourage you to do the same.  Start by contacting these two US Senators from Mississippi:

Senator Roger Wicker (R-MS)
555 Dirksen Senate Office Building
Washington, DC 20510
Main: (202) 224-6253
Fax: (202) 228-0378

Senator Thad Cochran (R-MS)
United States Senate
113 Dirksen Senate Office Building
Washington, D.C. 20510-2402
202-224-5054

And the person most likely to benefit from the designation is the Congressman from Mississippi's Fourth Congressional District

Congressman Steve Palazzo (R-MS)
331 Cannon HOB
Washington, DC 20515
Phone: (202) 225-5772
Fax: (202) 225-7074




Do it for people like this guy who got in touch with his inner child at a Buffett concert in Tampa and drove around on a bicycle that looks like a shark while carrying a shark fin on his back.  Not many people other than Jimmy Buffett has this affect on Americans and that alone qualifies for his humble beginnings to be forever immortalized in a National Historic Site designation.

Fins Up!