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Deer, with their gentle eyes and knack for popping up when you least expect, are like nature’s life coaches, whispering, “Ease up on the self-criticism.” Their vibe screams unconditional love, the kind that says, “You’re enough, even if you tripped over your own hooves today.” The metaphorical antlers of judgment or resentment are not what they seem. Maybe I’ve been a tad hard on myself for not answering every query with Shakespearean flair—or perhaps I’ve side-eyed a pesky voice in my head. Time to let that go and give my inner voice a break.
Here’s my small step for today: I’ll embrace my quirky voices as part of my charm, like a deer rocking an uneven antler with swagger. For you, maybe it’s forgiving yourself for that burnt toast this morning or letting go of a grudge against someone who cut you off in traffic. One tiny act of kindness toward yourself—like savoring a coffee without checking your phone—can be a deer-inspired leap. What’s your take—any deer encounters or self-love steps you’re pondering today? #SelfLove #SelfCompassion #NatureWisdom #DeerVibes #LetGo #InnerPeace #Mindfulness #BeKindToYourself #EmbraceYourQuirks #LifeLessons
Tracking The Florida Skunk Ape
by Kurt Z The earliest reported sighting of the Skunk Ape in Florida dates back to 1818, when local newspapers in what is now Apalachicola, Florida, reported a "man-sized monkey" raiding food stores and stalking fishermen along the shore. Appalachicola is 500 miles from Ft Lauderdale. In 1948, a roadside zoo and research center in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, called the Dania Chimpanzee Farm imported animals from across the world. One year, a group of West African vervet monkeys slipped out of their cages and vanished into the mangroves. They established a colony, and by the 1990s, biologists counted about three dozen monkeys near the airport. By 2015, entire families were still roaming neighborhoods and power lines, descendants of the 1948 escapees, stealing food from backyards. Scientists confirmed their species' origin and persistence. The state of Florida has never fully removed them. From one accident at a zoo, Florida gained a permanent feral colony of African monkeys, one of the strangest legacies of the state’s history with exotic animals. The oldest reported Skunk Ape sighting in South Florida is less precisely documented, but the earliest accounts often cited in local lore come from the 1950s. Specifically, a series of sightings in the Everglades region, particularly around Ochopee, Florida, began in the late 1950s, with reports of a large, foul-smelling, ape-like creature. One notable early account from 1957 describes a creature spotted near the Turner River in the Everglades, where locals claimed to see a hairy, bipedal figure that left a strong odor. These reports gained traction in the 1960s and 1970s as more sightings emerged in South Florida's swampy regions, particularly in the Big Cypress National Preserve and Everglades National Park. Ochopee Florida is only 100 miles from Ft Lauderdale. Skunk Ape is that you? #SkunkApe #FloridaSkunkApe #SkunkApeSightings #Cryptid #Bigfoot #Sasquatch #FloridaBigfoot #Cryptozoology #SkunkApeIsReal #SwampMonster #StinkApe #FloridaMystery #SkunkApeHunt #CreepyFlorida #WildFlorida It was 9:50pm August 31st, 1886 when the earth beneath Charleston S.C. rumbled and rocked with an earthquake said to be felt as far away as Cuba. The bells at St Augustine rang out on their own and it was the last Florida Swamp Volcano irruption. In the heart of Florida’s wild, untamed southeast, where the sun bleeds amber into the horizon and the air hums with the secrets of centuries, lies the legend of the Wakulla Volcano—a spectral enigma cloaked in the mists of Wakulla and Jefferson counties. For much of the 19th century, villagers and travelers, their boots sinking into the loamy earth near the St. Marks Wildlife Refuge, would pause, awestruck, as a thick, charcoal-gray column of smoke spiraled upward from the swamp’s emerald depths. Visible from 20 miles away, it coiled like a serpent against the bruised lavender of twilight skies, igniting whispers of wonder and dread. Seminole elders, their faces etched with the wisdom of ancestors, spoke of this phenomenon as far back as the 16th century, their tales woven with threads of Spanish explorers’ journals. They described not just smoke but, on moonless nights, a pulsing, crimson glow that flickered like a demon’s eye through the tangled cypress and sawgrass. Was it the clandestine fires of pirates, their cutlasses glinting under starlight? Signals from Native warriors, cloaked in shadow? Confederate outlaws hiding in the swamp’s embrace during the Civil War’s fevered chaos? Or, most tantalizingly, a true volcano, simmering beneath Florida’s deceptive calm? The very name “Wakulla,” perhaps born from a word for “mist” or “misting,” seemed to conjure the ghostly haze that haunted the region, a name whispered on the wind like a spell. Yet, the land itself mocked such fantasies. Geologists, their voices as firm as the limestone bedrock beneath Florida’s surface, declared no volcano could thrive here. This was no land of tectonic fury or molten fury, but a quiet realm of sediment and ancient, fossilized secrets, far from the fiery hotspots that birth mountains of flame. Still, the mystery gnawed at the imagination, its roots sinking deeper with every failed expedition. In the 1870s, intrepid reporters from the New York Herald Tribune plunged into the swamp, their lanterns casting frail beams against the suffocating darkness. But the wilderness was a jealous guardian—its labyrinth of gnarled roots, glistening with dew, tripped the unwary; its waters, black as ink, hid alligators whose eyes glowed like embers; and clouds of mosquitoes, relentless as a biblical plague, drove explorers back. Some returned with fevered tales of a smoldering crater, its edges jagged and scorched, or rocks that hissed with unnatural heat. Others spoke of moonshiners’ stills, their illicit fires winking through the fog, or lightning-struck cypresses smoldering in the mire. The most plausible explanation, offered by modern minds, pointed to a peat fire—a slow, relentless smoldering of the swamp’s rich, decayed heart, capable of birthing that ghostly plume for years. Yet even this theory strained belief, for such a fire, burning ceaselessly through decades, would be a marvel in itself. The phenomenon, like a phantom, vanished on August 31, 1886, as the earth trembled with the distant Charleston earthquake. Locals, their eyes wide with awe, swore the quake had sealed some hidden vent, silencing the swamp’s restless spirit. The land grew quiet, but the legend refused to fade. It found immortality in the verses of Osola: The Legend of the Mysterious Smoke of Wakulla (1922), an epic poem that painted the smoke as the breath of a Native spirit, tending an eternal flame beneath the stars. Though geological surveys, with their cold precision, found only ancient volcanic whispers in Florida’s bedrock—mere echoes of a fiery past long extinguished—the Wakulla Volcano endured as a shimmering mirage of folklore. It spoke to the human heart’s hunger for mystery, its need to cloak the unknown in tales of wonder. Today, the St. Marks Wildlife Refuge stretches vast and untamed, its marshes glinting under the sun like shattered glass, its air heavy with the scent of salt and decay. The “volcano” lives on, not in stone or fire, but as a symbol of Florida’s enigmatic soul—a land where the ordinary burns away, leaving only the extraordinary to linger in the mist. |
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AuthorKurt Zuelsdorf. Published author, Urban Tracker, Outdoor Enthusiast & Kayak Nature Adventures Owner Operator Archives
September 2025
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