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Florida Circumnavigational Saltwater Paddling Trail
Segment 16
Biscayne Bay
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Status: The Dade County campsite at Chapman Field Park is not
yet open. Campsites at Pennekamp State Park will not be opened until
composting toilets are purchased and installed.
Emergency Contact
Information:
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911
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Monroe County Sheriff's
Office: 305-289-2430
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Miami-Dade Police
Department: 305-4-POLICE
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Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission 24-hour wildlife emergency/boating under the influence
hotline: 1-888-404-3922
Begin: John
Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park
End: Oleta River
State Park
Distance: 67-68
miles
Special Considerations:
Heavy winds and storms may prove challenging in open water areas.
Weekend boat traffic can be heavy, especially in the more narrow
northern section of the bay. Day two will be a highly interesting though
challenging day in terms of mileage.
Introduction
Paddlers can follow in the wake of Tequesta Indians, Bahamian
tree-cutters, pirates, wreckers, smugglers, fortune hunters,
millionaires and several United States presidents who have utilized
Biscayne Bay for their livelihood or their playground. The numerous
islands and keys reveal a surprising wildness, especially due to their
close proximity to Miami, and paddlers can observe first-hand the
restoration efforts underway for several spoil islands that are being
turned into tropical oases. Much of the bay is shallow, so paddlers can
largely avoid boating lanes and hug the shorelines, being wary of large
wakes.
Since the heart of Biscayne Bay is a wide watery expanse, paddlers
should pay close attention to weather conditions. To quote from the
Biscayne National Park website: “Some days,
Biscayne Bay’s shallow waters are glassy smooth, a window on another
world. Other times, the wind whistles and whips, creating white waves
that bite like teeth at an angry sky.”
Several routes can be taken through this segment, depending upon desire
and prevalent winds. This draft will focus on one main route since
campsites are currently limited to just a few sites.
Three Florida state parks are included in this segment: John Pennekamp,
Bill Baggs Cape Florida, and Oleta River. More information can be found
on these three parks by logging onto
http://www.dep.state.fl.us/parks/. The route traverses the Biscayne
Bay Aquatic Preserve, an area that includes extensive mangrove forests,
seagrass meadows, estuarine and hard-bottom communities, and a diverse
array of marine life. At least 512 fish species occur in the bay and
more than 800 benthic organisms. Manatees, sea turtles and a wide
variety of birds can be seen. To learn more, log onto:
http://www.dep.state.fl.us/coastal/sites/biscayne/info.htm.
Paddlers will also enjoy Biscayne National Park, the largest marine park
in the national park system, with more than 180,000 acres of islands,
mangrove shorelines and undersea life. To learn more, log onto
http://www.nps.gov/bisc/.
Regarding primitive campsites outlined in this guide, users are required
to keep these sites clean and follow all regulations in order for them
to remain open for paddlers. All human waste must be packed out and
properly disposed. For more information about Leave No Trace principles,
log onto:
http://www.lnt.org/main.html.
A
GPS unit is a must to safely follow the route and find campsites. Bug
repellent is recommended, even in winter, although biting insects are
more prevalent in warm months.
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1: John Pennekamp Coral
Reef State Park to Ocean Forest Estates campsite, 7-8 miles
(Note: This campsite is not yet open)
In this section, you’ll begin paddling through one of the most pristine
areas in coastal South Florida. Green mangrove-lined shorelines greet
paddlers along with shallow patch reefs with their colorful fish. There
are numerous opportunities to land on shore and snorkel these
biologically rich areas.
From the Pennekamp kayak launch site (just over the wooden bridge on
your left along Largo Sound), paddle north through North Sound Creek and
skirt the inside of Rattlesnake Key. Hug the shore as you proceed
north until you reach an area of high spoil banks next to a dredged
inlet. Check in with park headquarters before embarking and
camping at Ocean Forest Estates
2: Ocean Forest Estates campsite to Elliot Key, 20 miles
Paddle along the shore a couple of miles, passing the Ocean Reef Club,
an exclusive member’s only community that does not allow random visitors
by sea or land.
For an ideal rest stop, follow the channel markers into Palo Alto Key
and take the first tidal creek on the right. The rest stop is a short
ways up the creek on the right in a tiny cove. Use your GPS unit to
verify. Numerous trails will enable you to explore this hammock
environment, but be wary of touching poisonwood trees in the area,
distinguishable by black splotches of poisonous sap on the smooth
trunks. Sensitive people can develop skin rashes.
As you pass Old Rhodes Key, you’ll notice the bleached bones of
mangroves as this area received a direct hit from Hurricane Andrew in
1992.
Porgy Key is an interesting point of interest as this is the home site
of the Jones family. Of African descent, they settled the key in 1897
and raised pineapples and limes to sell in Key West. Eventually, only
one member of the family remained on the island, Sir Lancelot Jones. He
worked as a sponger and fishing guide, having the distinction of taking
four different United States presidents bone fishing. Known fondly as
“the philosopher of Porgy Key,” Sir Lancelot was moved from the island
at age 94 when Hurricane Andrew was bearing down. His home was destroyed
by the storm, and visitors today can view concrete foundations of his
house and that of his family, and picture the life they once lived.
Across from Porgy Key is a Biscayne National Park day-use area on Adams
Key where you can have a picnic and use the restrooms.
Overnight camping is on the bay side roughly halfway up Elliot Key. You
can tie up your kayaks on the low docks that are generally reserved for
dinghies. Regulations forbid kayakers to land on the swimming beach.
Elliot Key has restrooms, picnic tables, grills, cold showers and fresh
water. A group camping site is on the ocean side about half a mile
across the island. You can stretch your legs on numerous trails,
exploring this scenic island. One seven-mile trail cuts lengthwise
through the center of the island through a tropical hardwood hammock.
Originally, this trail was a 150-wide swath cut by a former landowner
just before the park service took control of the island. Known as Spite
Highway, the swatch has since grown back to become a pleasing canopied
trail. A nature trail on the ocean side will enable you to view sea
grape, black mangrove, bay cedar, buttonwood and other subtropical
plants.
Camping on both Elliot Key and Boca Chita keys is on a first-come, first
served basis for a modest fee.
3: Elliot Key to Boca
Chita Key, 5 miles
This is a short day, certainly optional, to a premier
campsite on Boca Chita Key, also managed by the National Park Service.
The landing site is on the north side of the 32-acre island. There are
picnic tables, grills and restrooms, but no fresh water. Take time to
explore “the little lighthouse that isn’t,” a lighthouse built illegally
from native coral rock by Mark Honeywell in the 1940s for his own
personal navigation landmark. He was forced to permanently extinguish
the beacon when it was deemed an uncharted hazard to navigation in the
area.
4: Boca Chita Key to
Chapman Field Park, 11-12 miles (Note: this park is not yet open for
camping)
Paddlers have several options to reach the future campground at Chapman
Field Park, which is on the mainland. In calm weather, you can head
straight north and explore tiny Soldier Key, Stiltsville, followed by
the lighthouse at Bill Baggs Cape Florida State Park, and then cut
across. This will add 5 to 6 miles to your day. The Cape Florida
lighthouse was first built in 1825, destroyed by Seminole Indians in
1836, and rebuilt in 1846. The 95-foot lighthouse is the oldest standing
structure in Miami-Dade County. Ponce de Leon was believed to have
landed in this area in 1513 during the first Spanish expedition in
Florida.
A
direct northwesterly route from Boca Chita will shave off one to two
miles. The safest route is by way of the channel along Featherbed Bank,
which is largely bordered by shoals. You can take a break at the Black
Point Park and marina, and look for sea cows in this high manatee use
area.
Heading north along the shore, you will pass a distinct Florida
landscape feature, Mount Trashmore, more than six stories tall. This is
where Dade County’s solid waste is disposed. Chapman Field Park is just
past the Cutler Power Plant.
5: Chapman Field Park
to Teacher’s Island, 14 miles
Take your time to explore some of Miami’s shoreline culture by stopping
for restaurant breaks near Matheson Hammock Park and the Dinner Key
area. The bay will gradually narrow toward the Rickenbaker Causeway. It
is recommended that you skirt around Virginia Key on the Atlantic
coastal (east) side and slide between Fisher Island and the Port of
Miami, avoiding the Intracoastal Waterway. Be wary of large ships as you
cross Government Cut. A large offshore zone on the northwest side of
Virginia Key is a restricted area.
A
great rest stop and point of interest is the 82.5-acre Virginia Key
Beach Park, located on the east side of the key along the recommended
route. Kayakers need to land on the northeast corner of the park beach
(see map). At the park, you can access restrooms, fresh water, picnic
pavilions and an interpretive trail. In 1945, Virginia Key Beach was
established as Dade County’s only public beach and recreation facility
for “the exclusive use of Negroes.” It is now on the National Register
of Historic Places and used by people of all races and cultures. The key
also features several native plant communities that are scarce in Dade
County, and it harbors the state endangered Biscayne prickly ash. To
learn more, log onto
http://ci.miami.fl.us/Parks/old_site/VirginaKey/index.asp.
Another point of interest is the Flagler Monument Island just offshore
from Miami Beach on the bay side. This is a tiny island that harbors a
60-foot obelisk dedicated to Henry Morrison Flagler, builder of the
Florida East Coast Railroad. Carl Fisher, the major developer of Miami
Beach, built the monument in 1919. Allegorical statues representing
pioneering, education, industry and prosperity are located on each side
of the monument’s base.
Teacher’s Island, just past the Venetian Causeway near the mainland, is
the first of several spoil islands that Dade County is restoring into
tropical paradises with native vegetation. Most are nearly
surrounded by riprap (large rocks) to stem erosion, but small beaches or
docks on each island offer handy landing spots. With the exception of
Bird Key, which is a bird rookery and off limits, each island has a
picnic area, and some have nature trails and shelters. No long-term
camping is permitted, but the islands make great stopovers for
circumnavigation paddlers as long as No Trace Principles are utilized.
Nearby parks on the mainland, such as Morningside Park near Morningside
Island, offer public restrooms.
In exploring the islands, try to identify native species that have been
planted on these once barren isles of sand. Species may include bay
cedar, sabal and coconut palm, sea lavender, sea grape, sea oats, gumbo
limbo, Jamaica dogwood and mahogany.
6: Teacher’s Island to Oleta River State Park, 10 miles
The bay gradually narrows as you head north until
you’ll see the huge area of mature mangrove forests, framed by large
buildings. This is Oleta State Park, resembling a coastal Central Park
in an urban setting. Exceeding a thousand acres, this is the largest
urban park in the state. The upland areas were built from spoil material
from dredging and are now best known for premier mountain biking. Wet
areas mostly consist of mangroves, though it is interesting to note that
sawgrass once dominated these sites. A 1926 hurricane opened a channel
across from the park, allowing more salinity into the northern bay,
enabling salt-tolerant mangroves to take hold. Dredging now keeps the
Baker’s Haulover Inlet open.
Paddlers can enjoy the park by landing at a designated spot along a
tidal creek near the beach. It is against park regulations to land a
craft on the beach as it may pose hazardous for bathers swimming
underwater. Visitors need to pay a day-use fee in the iron ranger near
the landing spot, or they can hike to the entrance station.
You can enjoy the luxuries of one of the park’s cabins for a fee.
Advanced reservations are recommended, especially on weekends, by
calling toll free 1-800-326-3521 or 1-866-I CAMP FL, or you can go
online to www.ReserveAmerica.com.
A
primitive campsite for paddlers is a short ways up the Oleta River, on
the north side. You’ll see an old concrete dock where you can land. This
was a marina several decades ago. This area is slated to be restored in
the near future, so the campsite may be temporarily relocated during
that time. You’ll need to utilize Leave No Trace principles and hike a
short distance to the entrance station to pay a small camping fee.
Across the road from the park headquarters are restaurants and a movie
theater. A supermarket is one block east. Along the river just north of
the campsite, at the bridge, is the park’s visitor services provider—The
Blue Moon Outdoor Center and Blue Marlin Fish House and interpretive
center http://www.bluemoonmiami.com/. Kayak rentals are available.
As you enjoy Oleta State Park, it is difficult to imagine that millions
of people live within a 20-mile radius. Like many parts of this segment,
Oleta is a natural oasis in an urban setting.
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