Traveling the Great Loop

Join us as we travel North America's rivers, waterways, and canals; visit U.S. and Canadian cities, historical landmarks, national parks and river towns. We may even take you to the Bahamas.


Pelican Bay, Pine Island Sound; Cabbage Key, Florida

January 24, 2024; Captiva Island to Pelican Bay; Today’s run: 14 miles/

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Due to high winds, we stayed  at Captiva Island 4 days.

Leaving Captive, we motored passed Useppa Island.* In 1960, Useppa served as a CIA training base for Cuban exiles in preparation for the Bay of Pigs Invasion, (1961).

*Today, Useppa Island is an exclusive, luxury resort, requiring membership. The application to become a resident of the island requests current employer, position held, annual income, college the applicant attended, if the spouse is employed – where ? and income; and what other clubs the applicant belongs to.

We dropped anchor in a large bay 20 miles north of Captiva Island. Eight other boats were there, all of them sailboats; more sailboats than we had seen since leaving Cincinnati. From Pelican Bay, sailboats have quick access to Pine Island Sound and to the wide-open waters of the Gulf where boaters can hoist their sails and fly with the wind like sailors like to do.

In the evening, a flock of anhingas riding the fast moving current between islands, resembled miniature synchronized swimmers with necks erect and beaks pointing forward; dolphins fishing near shore loped languidly during a feeding frenzy while pelicans propelling out of the sky landed clumsily on the water. After nightfall, masthead lights twinkled like a sky full of fireflies.

A tidal, shell beach, attracts sunbathers from the mainland.
Fishermen pull up crab traps in the bay.

It was the first day, since leaving Cincinnati several months ago, warm enough to wear short sleeved T’s. We dinghied to Cabbage Key, a small resort island named after the island’s abundance of cabbage palms, (Florida’s state tree), to have lunch.

Greeting us, Ken Wells, one of two sons of the family-owned business, and overseer of the Cabbage Key Inn & Restaurant, pulled a set of stairs up to our dinghy to assist in disembarking with dry feet. Ken fell quickly into a short life history of how he had grown up on on the small island, and had gone to school on the mainland by Boston Whaler.

One of dozens of protected gopher tortoises that burrow underground on the island.
Sand-shell trails, extending no more than a mile long, wander among dense vegetation where Spanish moss hangs from limbs and wild orchids cling to tree trunks.(Spanish moss is not a moss nor is it Spanish; it is a bromeliad and air plant.

The appearance of the Inn has changed little since its build in 1936 when it was constructed as a home for the Rinehart family,* the second family to live on the island. The elevation of the building isn’t high but built on a Calusa Indian shell mound, it is situated on one of the highest points in all of Southwest Florida. Cabbage Key is listed on the National Park Service’s National Register of Historical Places.

*Allen Rinehart’s mother was Mary Roberts Rhinehart (1876-1958), “America’s bestselling mystery writer”. She often summered on the island of Useppa among Presidents and other successful businessmen. Allen, owner of Farr Publishing Company, and a producer at Paramount Pictures, hosted several celebrities including Kathrine Hepburn, his wife’s cousin. Although owners of the island changed, numerous well-known people of importance continued to visit: Ernest Hemmingway, Tony Bennet, John F. Kennedy, Julia Roberts and many others. Allen’s wife, Gratia Buell Houghton Rinehart, was heiress to the Corning Glass Works fortune.

Upon entering the tavern, heart pine floors squeak your arrival . Ceiling fans whiz above antique fishing gear and old photographs. Continue walking to the back and you come to the Dollar Bill Bar where the walls have been collecting dollar bills since 1969, a custom supposedly started by a tarpon fisherman who attached a bill to the wall so he would have money to pay for a drink upon his return.
Described as “looking like a parade float from a gloating Wall Street investment firm”, about $10,000 falls to the floor each year and is donated to Charity.

In addition to a collection of framed newspaper articles on the walls, a note reminds patrons that everything, including groceries, fuel, and mail, is delivered to the island by boat, ( accounting for the elevated restaurant prices.)

Before I Go:

In early days, in an attempt to warn islanders of approaching hurricanes, a yellow painted, oblong block of wood with yellow streamer attached, was dropped by Coast Guard aircraft over locations thought to be in danger. The block contained a rolled up statement with a warning like this one that was found several months after a hurricane had hit the island : The hurricane is now moving slowly northward with center 150 miles south of Havana, Cuba. Last reports gave winds 50-55 mph and increasing. Barometer falling…..Advise you to seek shelter. (Courtesy of The History of Cabbage Key).



2 responses to “Pelican Bay, Pine Island Sound; Cabbage Key, Florida”

  1. So fun to read these posts and re-live our own Loop a decade ago. Enjoying your pix and stories a lot! Thanks for taking the time to write and share!

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  2. Pattie Brennan avatar
    Pattie Brennan

    Donna,

    So interesting to hear the history of Cabbage Key! We were there years ago and ate at the Dollar Bill Bar when we had a boat in FL. I remember it being fun and a unique experience.

    I don’t know if you have checked Jill Kushner’s listings recently but we finally signed a contract on our condo last week! The whole thing came out of the blue but we are thrilled and the couple buying it are from Sorrento and they are in their 80’s! They wanted a larger, furnished unit and ours fit the bill. We close on June 17th. We were able to fly back to MN yesterday as planned and will fly back to FL on June 1st until the 22nd. We will close and move during the three weeks. We purchased a smaller condo 10 minutes east of The Colony and will live there. We may stay there but have the option of something else if it comes along. Needless to say we are excited and relieved and are the first to sell in Treviso since early fall of 2023. It has been very bad. Hopefully there will be more sales soon.

    it’s starting to look like a crazy summer ahead!

    Pattie

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