Archive for the ‘ March 2008 ’ Category

Celebrate Easter on Jekyll Island

Friday, February 29th, 2008

Jekyll Island offers the community an opportunity to celebrate Easter with their families and pet pooches. Jekyll Island’s Annual Easter Festival will be celebrated along Pier Road in the Landmark Historic District, March 22, from 10:00 am – 2:00 pm with activities for children, an Easter Egg hunt throughout the Historic District and the Third Annual Pooch Parade.
This year the Pooch Parade will be presented by Suzie’s Friends, a non-profit organization dedicated to providing a safe haven for homeless, abused and abandoned animals (www.suziesfriends.org). Registration will take place at the festival from 10:00 AM-11:30 AM. An entry fee of $5 applies with all proceeds going to Suzie’s Friends. All pooches must be on a leash and be people friendly. Plus, remember to dress your dog in his or her best Easter attire. Prizes will be awarded to the best dressed dog.
Arts and Craft activities include Easter Bag Decorating, Sand Art, Candle Art, Cookie Decorating and much more. While you are at the festival, be sure to stop at the Information Booth to get a map for the Easter Egg Hunt. Over 4000 eggs will be hidden throughout the Historic District including 4 Golden Eggs. Each Golden Egg winner will receive a special Easter gift. The map will give you clues on where to look. Food and Beverages will also be sold. Admission to the festival is free. For more information, please visit www.jekyllisland.com or call 1-877-4-JEKYLL.

Schedule

10 am Festival Opens
10:30 am – 11:15 am Magic Show
11:15 am – 11:30 am Georgia Sea Turtle Center on Stage
11:30 am – 12:00 noon Easter Games & Music Presented by Sunny 103
12:00 noon – 12:45 pm Pooch Parade
1:00 pm – 1:30 pm Pooch Parade Awards and Easter Games
*Schedule subject to change.

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Spotlight: The Jekyll Island Arts Association

Friday, February 29th, 2008

The works of Richard Fricks will fill the gallery at Goodyear Cottage as the Jekyll Island Arts Association opens its next exhibit on March 17. Richard will demonstrate a wide range of media in his show of recent works, which will be on display through April 21.
Although Richard has found acrylics to be his favorite medium, he will also show pen and ink work and block prints, which celebrate nature. He likes to paint on heavy bond paper and dab many shades of the same color, one on top of the other, building up an interesting surface. Most of his time is spent painting, but when he wants a break, he turns to block printing. “Instead of adding paint to create images, one cuts away the images, then rolls on a color.” Richard’s style and variety of work will make an exciting exhibit for Goodyear Cottage, in Jekyll’s Historic District.
A special opportunity to meet the artist and view the exhibit will be the opening reception on March 23 from 1 - 3pm. Everyone is welcome to attend. Regular shop and gallery hours are Mon - Fri noon - 4pm and weekends 10 - 4. Free admission, 635-3920.

The 2008 Jekyll Island Arts Festival is Friday - Sunday March 7-9. The hours are 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. on the grounds of Goodyear Cottage in the Historic District. Admission is free. Members present their entries to be judged on Friday morning. The categories are painting, photography, pottery, woodcarving, fiber arts, porcelain arts, handicrafts and ceramics. The festival shop will feature many items for sale by members, and the café, brunswick stew and other favorites will be served! Be sure to peruse the bake sale for dessert.  Marshgrass Bluegrass Band performs while you watch demonstrations by weavers, carvers, painters, and potters. Be sure to enter the raffle to win some of the donated art!

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Welcome Home, USS Georgia!

Friday, February 29th, 2008

By Kim Tripp, Contributing Editor

The great state of Georgia is proud to welcome its namesake, the USS GEORGIA (SSGN 729), back home. The USS Georgia has spent the last two years at the shipyard in Norfolk, Va. undergoing a conversion from a Ballistic Missile Submarine (SSBN) to a Guided Missile Submarine (SSGN) designation.
A formal return to service ceremony is planned for March 28, 2008 at Kings Bay Submarine Base. More than 3,000 attendees are expected for the special ceremony. Each of the 350 USS GEORGIA crew members will be presented a special “Welcome to Georgia” arrival bag filled with products and memorabilia from across the state of Georgia. A bag of Jekyll Island sand and shells has been included for each crew member.
The USS Georgia and other such SSGNs have the capability and targeting systems to launch up to 154 Tomahawk missiles – a significant increase in capacity as compared to other platforms.

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Happy Birthday, Jekyll Island!

Friday, February 29th, 2008

By Meghan Ross, Museum Staff

Sixty years ago, three hundred Georgians braved the elements to be among the first to visit Jekyll Island as a new state park. The weather was not ideal for opening day, which took place on March 6th, 1948. But cold and rain did not stop visitors from exploring the island that had long been the exclusive winter playground to America’s wealthiest families.
Several activities lured visitors in from each corner of the state. The Clubhouse pool was to be finished within the week and nine holes of golf ready within the month. There were also six scheduled boar hunts that took place that month to help control the boar population. Opening day events included bus rides to the state’s first public beach, a sumptuous opening day dinner in the Grand Dining Room as well as a dance for visitors to mix and mingle.
Beginning in 1954, the island’s history also became a main attraction. Tallu Fish, the island’s first curator, was instrumental in attracting visitors to Jekyll Island by opening up Indian Mound Cottage to the public as a museum.
She started the first guided tram tours through the historic district. She also helped to boost tourism by advertising the legend of the “Wishing Chair” to raise money for historic preservation. For just twenty-five cents, guests had the privilege of sitting in the infamous chair to make a wish in hopes that it would be granted. This “Wishing Chair” can still be seen on guided tours of the historic district inside Indian Mound Cottage today.
Jekyll Island’s amusement park, Peppermint Land, was open for business in the spring of 1956. This little amusement park, run by Harvey Smith, had its very own roller coaster, ferris wheel, carousel, and go-cart track. Unfortunately, due to financial issues, Smith had to close the doors to Peppermint Land in 1966.
In April of 1961, the Jekyll Island Authority opened the doors to its new Aquarama. This modern structure housed a meeting space large enough to accommodate two thousand people. It also included a 150-foot pool, dressing rooms, and an exhibition hall. The Aquarama was a big hit with tourism for Jekyll Island.
Nine holes of the original 1928 Great Dunes Golf Course were renovated and open for limited play in 1948. In 1955, the present Great Dunes golf course was completed and reopened to the public. In the early 1960s, Jekyll Island opened up its new 18-hole golf course named Oleander. In 1966, another 18-hole golf course named Pine Lakes opened, and in 1975 the 18 holes of the Indian Mound golf course were ready for play.
Over the sixty years that Jekyll Island has been a state park, we have seen many attractions come and go. Peppermint Land is no longer here, the Aquarama closed, and some activities have been shaped and molded over time.
To learn more about Jekyll Island’s earlier history, please visit the Jekyll Island Museum located on Stable Road. Exhibits are open to the public free of charge, and tours of the historic district depart daily. For more information, call (912) 635-4036.

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SPOTLIGHT: Upcoming Events

Friday, February 29th, 2008

March 1

Geocaching for Island Treasures
Join us for the 2nd Annual Geocaching for Island Treasures at 11 a.m. at the airport! Experienced geocachers please. For more information, please call 877-4JEKYLL.

March 1

G.E.O.R.G.I.A. Oyster Reef Restoration
UGA MArine Extension’s G.E.O.R.G.I.A. program needs volunteers to bag oyster shells for their reef restoration project. 912-264-7323

March 2

Friends of Historic Jekyll Island Auction
Over 300 great items for auction to benefit
the preservation efforts of the Jekyll Island
History Museum. Plenty of seating, refreshments
and fun! For more information, please call 1-877-4JEKYLL.

March 5

Spring Wine Event
Enjoy the delights of a selection of Lolonis wines paired to perfection with food that complements and enhances their tastes. Jekyll Island Club Hotel. 635-2600. 7:30 p.m. Reservations.

March 6-9

Sandy Paws - Greyt Fun in the Sun
The fifth annual Sandy Paws–Greyt Fun in the Sun Greythound Gathering will be held at the Jekyll Oceanfront Resort. Seminars, a Parade on the Beach, shopping, The Dancing Gilley Girls, and lots of other activities. www.sandypaws.org or sandy-paws@comcast.net.

March 7-9

JIAA Arts Festival
Art competition, show, exhibitions, raffle, bake sale, entertainment–day of fun! Goodyear cottage, historic district. 635-3920

March 8

Lions Club Benefit the Blind Golf Tournament
Join the Lions Club for a 4-person scramble golf tournament to benefit a great cause. Jekyll Island Golf Course. 635-2675. 8:15am

March 13

Hofwyl-Broadfield Plantation Lecture
Storyteller and author, Sudy Leavy, relates the story of Hofwyl-Broadfield Plantation based on her recently published book. Jekyll Island Club Hotel. 635-2600. 7:30 p.m. Reservations.

March 14 & 15

Peaches to the Beaches Yard Sale
Be part of this great Southern Yard taking place along 212 miles of Highway 341 from Perry to the Golden Isles of Georgia. Jekyll Island Convention Center. Call the Welcome Center 877-4JEKYLL for vendor info.

March 17

Something Irish: A Concert by Malarkey
Put on your best green and celebrate St. Patrick’s Day in true Irish fashion! Irish folk band Malarkey plays a concert of Irish airs. Jekyll Island Club Hotel. 635-2600. 7:30 p.m. Reservations.

March 19

Chef’s Demonstration
The Jekyll Island Club Hotel Chefs demonstrated two complete courses with a California Flair. Tasting and recipes are provided after the preparation. Jekyll Island Club Hotel. 635-2600. 7:30 p.m. Reservations.

March 22-24

Jekyll Island Collegiate Golf Invitational
The top nationally ranked men’s and women’s collegiate golf teams in NCAA Divisions II and III compete. 635-2675.

March 22

Easter Festival, Pier Road
At this family event, enjoy children’s activities, food and arts vendors, live music, arts and crafts, a pooch parade, and more! Call 1-877-4JEKYLL

March 13-15

High School Soccer Tournament of Champions
Varsity and Junior Varsity soccer teams enjoy a weekend of soccer at the Jekyll Island Soccer Complex. For more information please call 1-877-4JEKYLL

March 30

Sunday Dinner Dance
The Sunday Dinner Dance in the Grand Dining Room combines the delights of gourmet dining and ballroom dancing. Wayne Tate’s “Four and Easy” dance band features piano, bass, drums and horn. Jekyll Island Club Hotel. 635-2600. 6:00 p.m. Reservations required.

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Can You Create a Colorful, Fun, Beach Music Festival Logo?

Friday, February 29th, 2008

The Jekyll Island Authority needs a logo for the Beach Music Festival held annually in August. The Beach Music Festival is a large party on the beach with music, food and dancing. We need a logo that expresses summer, sand/beach, partying, music, dancing, etc. The ideal logo will be busy and colorful! We are looking for a logo that uses vivid colors like bright pink, green, blue, etc.
Our target audience includes everyone from families who want to spend a day listening to music on the beach to adult couples who just love Beach Music.
Beach Music includes bands with lots of saxophones, drum, guitars, horns, and keyboards. Their music can best be described as ‘Oldies-but-Goodies.’

Prize: $150
Date of the Beach Music Festival: August 15-16
Please submit logo entries to Beth Burnsed,
bburnsed@jekyllisland.com

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Shell-e-Brate Earth Day with the Sea Turtles

Friday, February 29th, 2008

Shell-e-brate Earth Day with the Sea TurtlesSaturday April 19, 12 - 4 pm

Cost: Free w/ General Admission
$6 Adults
$4 children (4 - 12)

RRecycled crafts

RTurtle games

REarth friendly Vendors

RExhibits

RRaffle

RGiveaways

RReuseable bags

REvent shirts

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Georgia Sea Turtle Center “Turtle Update”

Friday, February 29th, 2008

Adopt a Turtle

With your donation of $50 or more, now you can “adopt” one of our sea turtle patients. Current patients and already released patients with satellite transmitters are eligible for adoption.
When adopting a turtle, you will receive an official certificate of adoption, a letter from your sea turtle, a 5 x 7 photo of your sea turtle, bi-weekly updates from the Georgia Sea Turtle Center, and you name will appear as an adoptive parent on the Georgia Sea Turtle Center website. If you chose to adopt a current patient, you also have the opportunity to be a VIP at the release of you adopted turtle!

Volunteering

New volunteers are required to attend an Interest Meeting and 1 General Orientation Meeting before beginning their volunteer experience at the GSTC, to allow for the best possible introduction to the Center and volunteer responsibilities.
Focus Classes will be offered monthly and typically held on 4th Tuesday of every month at 7pm, with a few exceptions, in the classroom. ALL volunteers are welcome! March’s Focus Class will be on Monday, March, 24 at 7pm in the Classroom and will be conducted by Dr. Bill Irwin, Director of the Georgia Sea Turtle Center. He will be discussing the migration and navigation of sea turtles.

Join us for Turtle Tales

Turtle Tales, Saturdays at 10:30am, is FREE with general admission! There are so many books about sea turtles, it’s hard to choose! Our Turtle Tales program will introduce you to the many children’s books about sea turtles. This program involves a turtle-inspired book reading and craft for children of all ages. There will be a different book and craft each month. And yes, you can purchase the books in our Gift Shop! Join us in March as we read Seymour Sea Turtle Snaps Up Lunch by Matt Mitter and use Seymour’s favorite food, sponges, to paint your very own sea turtle!

Educating at the Georgia Sea Turtle Center

School group attendance was great, with approximately 200 students visiting the Georgia Sea Turtle Center in February! We took our ‘show on the road’ to Oglethorpe Elementary for an Outreach program for 200 1st and 2nd graders as a part of Georgia History Day! In February, the Georgia Sea Turtle Center Education Team attended numerous educational conferences throughout the state of Georgia, including the Georgia Science Teachers Association and the Georgia Middle School Convention, with more to come in March though July.

Behind the Scenes

Go to the other side of the Treatment Window, get a closer look at the patients, off of the pavilion walkway! Take a behind-the-scenes tour! You will visit food preparation areas, animal holding areas, and the treatment, X-ray and Surgery Rooms. Saturdays and Sundays at 2 P.M. on a first come first served basis,-Reservations are required. Call early or sign up in the Gift Shop-Group size is limited to 10 guests. (912-635-4444) Cost: $25/Adults - $15/Children (Must be at least 10 years of age). Price includes admission.

An Update on our New Patients!

Our newest patient is a green sea turtle named Charlotte, who weighed 12 pounds upon arrival. Charlotte was found on January 17, 2008 washed up on the beach at Cumberland Island. She was quickly delivered to the Georgia Sea Turtle Center by our Georgia DNR colleagues. Charlotte was the first sea turtle stranding of 2008 for the state of Georgia. The top of her shell was covered in barnacles and algae that were carefully removed. This revealed several old boat propeller wounds. We placed her in a shallow tank of water to test her swimming abilities and found out she was a floater; Charlotte could not dive or swim underwater. Her hind end actually floats higher than her front! Although not readily apparent after an x-ray, we suspect there might be damage to her spine. We are planning on doing a CT scan on her in the near future to give us a better idea of the extent of her injuries and long-term prognosis. Thankfully, Charlotte has been eating very well. She absolutely loves bell peppers and cucumbers.
The Georgia Sea Turtle Center has been very busy with turtle patients and we now have a full house. In fact, we divided several of the tanks up so we could fit 2 turtles in some of them. Griffin, a male loggerhead sea turtle, is finally showing interest in eating on his own. This is a huge step in his recovery. We are offering him seafood (fish, squid, crabs) throughout the day and are continuing to tube feed him an Ensure/Fish shake once a day.
Recently we performed health checkups on Griffin, Vida, and Spitfire, all loggerhead sea turtles at the center. Their examinations consisted of weighing and lab work. Griffin weighed in at 193.6 pounds while Vida weighed 91 pounds and Spitfire weighed 118.8 pounds. Vida and Spitfire are on the road to recovery and should be released sometime this spring.

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Unplug and Unwind on Jekyll Island

Friday, February 29th, 2008

Would you rather surf the ocean or the World Wide Web? Watch a movie or a campfire? Which do you think your children would choose? A Nature Conservancy-funded study showed that many of us would likely choose the movie or the Web. We’re more removed from nature than we have ever been in history. As a nation, we’re becoming more “indoorsy”, and that’s not a good thing.
The study reports that visits to U.S. national parks have been declining since 1987, after having risen for the previous 50 years. Researchers said that video games, home movie rentals, going out to movies, Internet use, and rising fuel prices explained almost 98 percent of the decline. The drop in attendance comes as our use of electronic media has risen - something that researchers call “evidence of a fundamental shift away from people’s appreciation of nature.”
“When children choose TVs over trees, they lose touch with the physical world outside and the fundamental connection of those places to our daily lives,” said Steve McCormick, President and CEO of The nature Conservancy.
Jekyll Island is an ideal place for you and your family to reconnect with nature. It has been and always will be a place of natural beauty and conservation because 65% of the island will always be in its natural state. Everything you need to reawaken your inner Thoreau is here-nestled safely and conveniently on Jekyll Island.
“We demonstrate our values in the way we allocate our time,” said Patricia Zaradic, an ecologist with the Stroud Water Research Center who worked on the study. “Research indicates that children who experience nature with a mentor develop an appreciation of nature as adults.”
Children who are led by their parents to experience nature firsthand also learn habits that support a healthy lifestyle. Spending time engaged in the natural world is far preferable to spending time parked in front of a television screen.
So leave your laptops for another day. You need not give up your video games for good. But you can unplug from this 21st century world, and give your attention to the beautiful, great outdoors and the diverse creatures living within it. Jekyll Island promises something special for every member of your family, regardless of age or interests. How many video games can say that?
Come and see what’s outside on Jekyll Island!
With 10 miles of unspoiled beaches, beach lovers have plenty of space to sunbathe, swim, walk or search for shells. You’re sure to see many live creatures as well, including hermit crabs and sand dollars. Preserve the Island’s shoreline environment by leaving these interesting beach dwellers just as you find them and take only a few of your favorite shells.
As a barrier island, Jekyll Island’s beaches are unique and ever-changing.

For your convenience, public showers and restrooms are located at several sites and picnic areas.
Here is a bird lover’s paradise. A vast variety of birds make the island home. In addition to those, the island serves as a resting place in the spring and fall for migrating species on the Atlantic Flyway. The island has been designated an “Important Birding Area (IBA)” by the Georgia Audubon Societies. It is one of 18 sites along the Colonial Coast Birding Trail and boasts several significant birding sites: near the Welcome Center on the Jekyll Island Causeway; at Clam Creek on the northern side of the island; and at the “Glory” beach near the Jekyll Island Soccer Complex. New birding platforms are scheduled for construction at Driftwood Beach and the St. Andrews picnic area.
With 206 campsites available on 18 wooded acres, Jekyll Island has something for everybody– from tent sites to full hook-up to pull-through RV sites. The campground offers a long list of amenities, including restrooms, showers, pay phones, laundry and a full-service store with food, ice, bait, propane, supplies and bike rentals. Daily rates are available year round. For guests wishing to stay a bit longer, the campground offers a week-long special: stay six days and the seventh is free. Monthly stay rates are available November through March. Other times, a 14-day camping limit may apply.
The Georgia 4-H Tidelands Nature Center offers hands-on exhibits for the kids as well as guided nature walks and kayak or canoe tours. Guided activities include nature walks, Historic District Landscape Tours, and Turtle Walks (from the Georgia Sea Turtle Center), offered from May through August).
On a guided nature walk, you will spend a couple of hours to walking the beach, maritime forest or marsh with an experienced naturalist.
Explore the area by kayak or canoe on a three-hour guided tour of the local salt marshes and estuarial waters. Learn about wading birds, fiddler crabs, marsh grass and dolphins. There’s no better way to observe birds, fish and other coastal creatures in their native habitat.
Both canoe rentals and kayak tours are available March through October. Sea Kayaks, a more maneuverable and stable relative of the traditional kayak, also are available for saltwater excursions. Rentals, instruction and guided tours are available by calling (912) 635-5032.
Jekyll Island is perfectly suited for travel by bicycle. With more than 20 miles of paved trails, you can explore a broad range of scenery, from beaches to forests to Jekyll Island’s own Historic Landmark District and campgrounds. Free trail maps are available at the Jekyll Island Welcome Center.
Jekyll Wharf and Jekyll Harbor Marina are two points of access to the many water activities along coastal Georgia. Spend a day sightseeing, dolphin spotting or on a sailing tour.
For the fishermen, the island’s knowledgeable fishing captains know all of the best spots to catch a variety of fish, including Tarpon, Whiting, Red Drum, Sea Trout, Triple Tail, Spotted Sea Trout, Striped Mullet, Sheepshead, and Black Drum, just to name a few. Loggerhead sea turtles have found safe haven on Jekyll Island. Their nests, tucked among the dunes of Jekyll Island’s beaches, have made the island a major site for conservation and education. Sea turtle nests are marked and monitored by the Georgia Sea Turtle Center. From May through August, female loggerhead turtles swim ashore, dig their nests and lay their eggs.
The Georgia Sea Turtle Center, a $3 million center, includes a learning center, rehabilitation center and veterinary clinic, is the first of its kind in Georgia. The Center officially opened June 16, 2007. For more information about the Georgia Sea Turtle Center and related programs, visit www.georgiaseaturtlecenter.org
Jekyll Island has been a golf destination since 1898, when Jekyll Island Club members added the first course on the island near the present-day airport. Today, Jekyll Island boasts 63 holes of golf on three 18-hole courses and one 9-hole course, earning Jekyll Island the bragging rights as Georgia’s largest public golf resort. During course design of Pine Lakes Course, Clyde Johnston incorporated “Family Friendly” tee boxes, making this the only course in America that allows players of all ages to compete evenly.
Boasting 13 clay courts (seven of which are lighted), the Jekyll Island Tennis Center earned a spot among Tennis Magazine’s “25 Best Municipal Tennis Facilities” in the country. The Jekyll Island Tennis Center hosts six USTA-Sanctioned tournaments annually, as well as junior camps throughout the summer. Ongoing adult programs include clinics and round-robin tournaments, which are offered between October and March. The Center’s staff can arrange pick-up games for single players, as well as offer private and group lessons. Also available are rental racquets and ball machines, as well as equipment repair. Weekly, monthly and annual single-person and family memberships can be purchased as well.
For a totally different perspective, saddle up and experience Jekyll Island on horseback. Guided tours originate from the Clam Creek picnic area on the island’s north end, make their way though maritime forests and along the salt marshes, then return along beautiful Driftwood Beach. Reservations are required and can be made Monday through Saturday (weather permitting) at Victoria’s Carriages and Trail Rides at the Island History Center on Stable Road.
There are plenty of ways to unplug and unwind on Jekyll Island. If you need some ideas, just check out www.jekyllisland.com or our Welcome Center on the Jekyll Island causeway!

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