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Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Biking Around the Northern Loop of Jekyll Island






We start our ride near Great
Dunes Beach Deck adjacent
to the Jekyll Island
Convention Center.






Dave & Kathy are ready
to roll...





There are stores just off
the northern loop bike
trail.





A couple shops &
bikes.





All the stores are in
trailers that can be
moved inland.
Sitting alone on the beach.






Construction on Jekyll Island

I wonder if it's a hotel.






Some of the houses on
Jekyll Island.

 Stone has been brought in to protect the shore from erosion.







The lighthouse on






A forest of driftwood
crowds the beach.







Dave, Kathy, Eric and I left our bikes and took a walk on the beach.






Patterns in the sand from
water receding around
driftwood.






Eric & I stand in front of
double-decker driftwood.





The root system of a tree...

Modern art or a tangle
of snakes?





The whorled tree trunks
look like snakes slithering
along.





Back on the bike trail...

Live Oak Trees give way





A Great Egret stands on the
edge of a stream that meanders
through the salt marsh.






We are biking toward Clam






The view from our picnic
table as we eat our
bag lunches.

We bike over to the Jekyll Island Campground to check it out.







The Camp Store






 All the campers here are parked under trees.  
We won't have DirecTV reception here.






Horton House Historic Site
preserves the ruins of the
oldest house on Jekyll Island.







Major William Horton was General James Oglethorpe's second in command.  He built this house around 1740 and started clearing land for farming.  Unfortunately, the Horton's time in the home would be brief.  It was burned by the Spanish in 1742 while they were attempting to reclaim lands held by the British.






Eric stands in the window of
 Major Horton's tabby home.








Major Horton's house isn't tabby because it's peach colored.  Tabby is the concrete mix made with Oyster Shells, which are plentiful here, lime and sand.  Looking closely, visitors can see sizable pieces of Oyster Shells in the ruins' walls.







The rear of the house.

I love looking through
a front window from 
the back of the house.












The Spanish Moss wafting
from the Live Oak Trees
creates a ghostly feel.





This wall is one of the few ruins
left behind of the duBignon





Spanish Moss clings to the
grate that covers the
duBignon's brick-lined well.






We cross a stream...






... and see a female
Great Blue Heron.





The bike path goes behind the
meet up with a horse.









The Golf Course...

We are near the Jekyll
Island Convention Center 
& the end of today's ride.







Eric mapped out our ride, and we rode 11.5 miles today.

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