Portsmouth Island North Carolina Summer 2019
Follow along As I travel to Portsmouth Island in North Carolina. This is an Island with a village that us to be have a population of 600 in the 1800's but is a modern ghost town today. This island is one of the few places on the east coast where you can camp on the beach.
Coast Guard medevacs ailing man from sailboat near Ocracoke Island, NC
A Coast Guard HC-130 Hercules airplane crew from Air Station Elizabeth City, North Carolina, finds a distressed man aboard a sailboat waving his arms for help about five miles west of Portsmouth Island, North Carolina, Aug. 7, 2017. An MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter crew from the air station deployed a rescue swimmer, hoisted the man from the sailboat and brought him to The Outer Banks Hospital in Nags Head, North Carolina. (U.S. Coast Guard video by Air Station Elizabeth City)
VLOGO: The Battle For North Carolina Beach Trip, Outer Banks, ATV, Fishing n Eating at Local Spots
On today's video we drive around, eat, ride an ATV, fish at the beach, the pier and on a charter boat at the Outer Banks, North Carolina. Enjoy!
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Outer Banks, NC
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Cape Hatteras Lighthouse & North Carolina Outer Banks Ferry System
Cape Hatteras lighthouse is the tallest brick lighthouse in North America! The lighthouse located on Hatteras Island in the Outer Banks in the town of Buxton, North Carolina and is part of the Cape Hatteras National Seashore. Our day 5 excursion starts here. The lighthouse stands at 193' high and has 257 stairs to the top. Wish me luck! After visiting the famous lighthouse we took 2 ferries, the Swan Quarter Ferry and the Hatteras Ocracoke Ferry.
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The Cape Hatteras Lighthouse protects one of the most hazardous sections of the Atlantic Coast. Offshore of Cape Hatteras, the Gulf Stream collides with the Virginia Drift, a branch of the Labrador Current from Canada. This current forces southbound ships into a dangerous twelve-mile long sandbar called Diamond Shoals. Hundreds and possibly thousands of shipwrecks in this area have given it the reputation as the Graveyard of the Atlantic.
46379 Lighthouse Road
Buxton, North Carolina 27920
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35.251203, -75.528176
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The Outer Banks Ferry System
Decades ago, one of the only ways to access some of the most secluded areas of the Outer Banks was via a ferry, and this tradition carries on today for thousands if not millions of visitors who want to travel to some of coastal North Carolina's most famous and off-the-map locales.
A small handful of islands on the Outer Banks, specifically Knotts Island, Ocracoke Island and Portsmouth Island, are veritably cut off from the rest of the world. With no roads that cross over the Currituck or Pamlico Sound, these regions can only be accessed by boat, making them dependent on the NC Ferry system for transportation on and off the islands.
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The Disappearing American Dialect of North Carolina
Hoi Toider, aka Ocracoke Brogue, is a dialect of American English spoken only on remote islands in North Carolina's Outer Banks. The unique accent and vocabulary developed over hundreds of years as a result of the area's isolation. Visitors often mistake the accent as foreign, but with origins dating back to the 1600s, Ocracoke Brogue is about American as it gets.
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From Swann Quarter to Ocracoke Island
Title says it all. If you've never been to Ocracoke you owe it to yourself to visit. Unlike most of the Outer Banks there's a distinct sub-culture there, with the island having been home to generations of fishermen.
Portsmouth Island 2016
Mike and Andy sail camping on Portsmouth Island, NC October 2016. Camera, production and music by Andy Squint.
Easter Trip to Cape Lookout
Easter weekend of 2018, we made our way to the Core Islands of the Outer Banks of North Carolina. Cape Lookout is on the southern Island and is accessible by ferry only. If you have any questions about this location or suggestions on others, we'd love to hear them. Comment below! Please don't forget to subscribe!
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Ocracoke, The Outer Banks of N. Carolina
Cruising N. Carolina - Ocracoke in the Outer Banks, Nov 2004
Hurricane Dorian aerials over Ocracoke Island storm damage
Video from a helicopter over Ocracoke, North Carolina, shows some of the damage caused by Hurricane Dorian. (Credit: WCNC)
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Eastern Current Episode 4: Surf Fishing North Carolina with Ryan White -everything you need to Know
In this episode of Eastern Current, we have special guest Ryan White of Hatteras Jack located in the Outer Banks. We discuss best practices and techniques for surf fishing. In this episode, you'll learn the best tide conditions, casting techniques, how to read the beach, what types of rigs you should be using and much more!
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Kayaking Ocracoke, NC Easter 2013
Lauren, Mike and John from California paddling on Easter Sunday 2013 on Ocracoke Island NC.
Song By: Jovanotti..Penso Positivo
Surveying the damage in Cedar Island, NC after Hurricane Dorian
Here's what North Carolina Highway 12 on Cedar Island looks like following Hurricane Dorian on Sept. 6, 2019 — covered by marsh grass deposited by coastal flooding. NC DOT workers have been clearing the road to gain access to the community on the island.
Video by Martha Quillin / The News & Observer
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North Carolina Surf Fishing
Start of 2018 NC fishing
A VIEW of the St. Johns River and the Mayport ferry PRESENTED BY ASAP PLUMBING 904-346-1266
This view is of the St. Johns River and the Mayport ferry.
The St. Johns River Ferry is a car and passenger ferry that connects the north and south ends of Florida State Road A1A in Duval County, linking Mayport Village and Fort George Island via a pleasant sail across the St. Johns River.
The 0.9 mile voyage crosses the St. Johns River 2.5 miles inland of the river's mouth and departs every half hour.
FROM MAYPORT VILLAGE TO FT. GEORGE ISLAND
Mon.-Fri. 6:00 am, 6:20 am, 7:00 am, and continuing on the hour and half hour, with the final departure at 7:00 pm. Sat. & Sun. 7:00 am, 7:20 am, 8:00 am and continuing on the hour and half hour, with the final departure at 8:30 pm.
FROM FT. GEORGE ISLAND TO MAYPORT VILLAGE
Mon.-Fri. 6:10 am, 6:40 am, 7:15 am, and continuing on the quarter after and quarter before the hour, with the final departure at 7:15 pm. Sat. and Sun. 7:10 am, 7:40 am, 8:15 am and continuing on the quarter after and the quarter before the hour, with the final departure at 8:45 pm.
**The ferry operates every day, including holidays**
****Please check schedule frequently for Holiday and Special events extended hours****
SCHEDULE MAY CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE
Only ferry service left in florida.
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ASAP DRYWALL SERVICES
ASAP ROOF INPECTIONS
WWW.ASAP-PLUMBING.COM
904-346-1266
Strange Items That Washed Ashore
Shells, crabs, fish...there’s a lot of cool things to see on beaches. Once in a while, you might just come across something out of place. Let’s look at some of the most interesting things that have ever washed up on shore!
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6. Spacecraft Debris
We know that weird stuff can end up on beaches. That includes weird stuff from space, too. Last year, debris from the Falcon 9 rocket (seen launching here) washed onto Cumberland Island, near the coast of the state of Georgia. Parts of the projectile also landed in the waters of the Bahamas. The Falcon 9 rocket belonged to SpaceX, the commercial aerospace and space travel company that Elon Musk founded. In the fall of 2018, a 10 foot or 3-meter long chunk of debris washed ashore on Ocracoke Island, North Carolina. The National Park Service contacted the U.S. Coast Guard and SpaceX to see if they knew where the debris came from.
5. Rubber Duckies
Rubber duckies belong in the water. What comes to mind is the bathtub, of course. However, what would you do if you saw 28,000 rubber ducks in the sea? A shipping container filled with thousands of rubber ducks was lost at sea in 1992. The ship was on its way from Hong Kong to the United States. Nearly 20 years later, the ducks were discovered still floating in the ocean. Some of the ducks even washed onto the shores of Scotland, South America, Hawaii, and Australia. These ducks have been nicknamed “Friendly Floatees.”
4. Green Bananas
A so-called “banana wave” arrived onto two Dutch Islands located in the North Sea in 2007. The islands of Terschelling and Ameland (amlanT) were met with thousands of unripe bananas one autumn morning. Island locals flocked to the beaches to collect their share of free, fresh bananas. The fruit came from 6 containers that fell off a ship transporting the bananas from Cuba. An hour after the containers fell off the ship and broke open, the bananas showed up on Terschelling, covering 0.6 miles or 1 kilometer of the beach.
3. Tires
Tires were strewn across South Florida beaches in 2017 in the wake of Hurricane Irma. Most people guess the tires came from the human-made reef known as Osborne Tire Reef and that the storm must have pushed the tires towards the coast. The Osborne Tire Reef was a result of a failed attempt at creating a reef. As a result, 700,000 tires were discarded into the ocean. A few years earlier in 2011, Hurricane Irene also carried a bunch of tires onto the beaches of North Carolina. Those tires were thought to have come from the Osborne Tire Reef, too.
2. E.T.
Margaret Wells was robbed of her E.T. replica in 2012. The homemade E.T., modeled after the famous movie character, was a gift handcrafted by her daughter, and Wells was distraught when it was stolen from her home. That year, the tide brought in the life-sized E.T. model near the coast of Old Portsmouth of Hampshire, England. E.T. was not unscathed. Upon his return, Wells discovered one of this fingers missing. At least E.T. finally came home!
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Kayaking in Ocracoke
Sunny and Stormy brave the calm waters of Silver Lake, the sound and salt marsh around Ocracoke, NC
North Carolina Fishing!
Fishing in North Carolina.
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