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Florida's old Tamiami Trail


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Jackson74
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PostPosted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 7:50 am    Post subject: Florida's old Tamiami Trail Reply with quote

[i]Monroe Station
Junction of Tamiami Trail and Loop Road, Ochopee, Florida
a story by Jeff Klinkenberg, St. Petersburg Times



Monroe Station served as a way point for people using US 41 to cross the Big Cypress Swamp, Miami to Naples or the other way. Built in 1925, it was used as a way station until 1949. Motor cycle patrols would be sent out to look for wayward motorists. Later on, it was the only place you could get gas or something to eat when crossing Florida at the lower end of the state.

During the early 70's, it was the only place to get gas, a cup of coffee, a repair or use a telephone in that area of the Big Cypress Swamp. The property was used for many years, as a place to store Swamp Buggies. After the Government created the Big Cypress Perserve, Joe Lord, the owner, was forced to remove his gas tanks for reasons of pollution prevention, and this lead to Monroe Station not being profitable anymore.

The Big Cypress National Preserve took over ownership, and like other properties it has taken over, stopped doing any maintenance on it. For a while it rented out space for Swamp Buggy storage, but now it has stopped that and plans call for it to be used as a tow vehicle parking area in the future.



There were three structures like Monroe Station along old US 41. One of these three structures was chosen for restoration, but it blew down in a hurricane years ago. Monroe Station has been designated on the National Register of Historic Places back in 2000. That was done without the knowledge of the Superintendent, by NPS personel in Atlanta. The National Park Services was determining what portion of it can be saved because of its poor condition.

What does Monroe Station look like today?



What should the future bring to Monroe Station?



Monroe Station could be returned to a traditional use in transportation. The building is unsafe and would take a huge effort in dollars for it to be returned to use. It could be replaced on a smaller scale, but with a building that has a similar look to Monroe Station in its prime. This building could include the Florida Game Commission check in station, bathrooms for personel and visitors, trash collection containers and even a memorabilia showing the traditional uses that Big Cypress Swamp has had. Long term parking for off-road vehicles should be provided for. This would make for a safer highway through the Big Cypress National Preserve by eliminating the need to tow off-road vehicles every time they are used. The off-road registration process could be moved from the visitor center to the new Monroe Station. This would remove the mixing of off-roads and automobiles from the same parking lot which will eventually lead to someone getting hurt.........

Back on the Loop Road
A 26-mile, forlorn ribbion of dirt road off the Tamiami Trail
Midway between Miami and Naples
a place where Gators and Snakes outnumber Humans

A video on the Big Cypress National Preserve at:

BigCypressNationalPreserve


BIG CYPRESS NATIONAL PRESERVE.....



First I tap the brake. Then step hard. The 11-foot alligator, sprawled across Loop Road stays put. With no room to turn around and no desire to drive in reverse to the nearest paved road, I honk!

The gator ignores me, Insolent creature! Fighting road rage, I inch closer, almost nudging the beast with my front tires. Nothing. Though I have no intention of leaving my truck, I open the door to see what will happen. The ka-chunk must make the vehicle seem menacing. Hissing like a dragon, the great reptile lumbers into the swamp.

As the bubbles dissipate, the swamp once again becomes placid. For an instant I am tempted to visit the bank for a better look. Then I remember the late Clara McKay, the woman everybody called the "Beer-Worm Lady" because that's what she sold at her little store. She knew the Big Cypress, knew the way of the critters, but one day she let her guard down. To hear her tell it, she was dipping water for her beloved pet cats when a big alligator lunged up and tore off her right arm.



I remain securely behind the wheel, nudge the gas pedal and continue my journey down the old Loop Road and into my past.

When I was a teenager, the Loop Road was a real Mister Toad's Wild Ride. It was the most untamed place I knew, the most remote, smoke-'em-if-you-got-'em, people-unfriendly byway in Florida. It was 26 hellish miles of moon-crater potholes, gape-jawed alligators, choleric cottonmouths and swamp men who would just as soon spit on your tennies as say hello. The federal government owns it now, in the 700,000 acres of the Big Cypress National Preserve. The potholes are gone and laws are now occasionally enforced, but otherwise the Loop Road remains a marathon of crushed gravel, reptiles and watch-your-back roughnecks.



It begins at Monroe Station on the Tamiami Trail in Collier County, meanders south for a spell, then snakes back north toward the Tamiami Trail at the Miccosukee Indian Reservation in Miami-Dade County. Construction crews built the road in the 1920's but forgot to add civilization. The uncivilized nature of the Loop Road made it attractive to nature lovers, but also to plume hunters, gator poachers, orchid thieves, moonshiners, pot growers and nonconformists. Many settled along the Loop where it dips, briefly, into Monroe County. The nearest Monroe County sheriff's substation is about 80 miles away, by road, in the Florida Keys.

An hour east of the Loop Road is Florida's gritty urban center, Miami. An hour west is the conservative and wealthy Naples. On certain places on the Loop Road, it feels like the 19th century.



Today, wardens from the National Park Service patrol the Loop Road. But it still is the wrong place to lock your keys in the car, run out of gas or suffer a dead battery. Cell phones seldom pick up a signal on the Loop Road, but the mosquitoes and horseflies work overtime even on a mild February day. Never leave your vehicle without first checking for snakes.

Stopping my truck, I see no reptiles. As I step onto the road, the swamp grows immediately silent. The crickets, first to recover their wits, commence chirping. Then the red-winged blackbirds pepper me with sardonic screeches. The pig frogs add hearty grunts to the Loop Road music. I snap photos of the cypress trees, the ferns, the lily pads. I snap a photo of the lonely road. Years ago, everybody felt the need to be armed, but nowdays we tourists tote cameras in case we encounter a panther, bear or swamp nymphet. The Loop Road is Florida's Garden of Eden, before the serpent tempted Adam and Eve and God shamed them into wearing clothes. I would't be the first to see somebody sauntering down the Loop fashionably naked.



Next Stop.....

Monroe Station.....

When I was a kid, dad and I fished on the Tamiami Trail, mostly in the Everglades, though sometimes farther out in the Big Cypress. In 1965, my friends and I began visiting Loop Road on our own. We'd fish for bass at dawn and look for snakes after the sun got up. My friends and I were more confortable among coldblooded reptiles than warmblooded girls.



One of us would drive. The others would sit on the hood with pillowcases. Spotting a snake, we would leap from the hood, catch the snake with a bare hand and stuff it into the pillowcase. I wish I could say we were gathering snakes for the good of science, but we weren't. We were catching (and later releasing) them for the sheer thrill of messing with something that would bite if given a chance.

After a thrilling morning with the snakes, we'd stop at a place called Monroe Station on the intersection of Loop Road and the Tamiami Trail. Built in 1928, it was orignally a gas station and convenience store. By the time I discovered it, Monroe Station was the redneck capital of South Florida.



Big Joe Lord ran the place, helped by his wife, Sweet Sue. Big Joe was always angry, usually at the government, which was poised at the time to buy the Big Cypress Swamp and possibly put him out of business. He was also angry at the Vietnam War protesters, men with long hair, pot smokers, forced busing and maybe the direction of the wind. I kept my long hair and opinions under my hat, sat at the counter and ate Sweet Sue's ham steak with red-eye gravy.

Whenever I'm in the Big Cypress, I stop at Monroe Station for old time's sake. It closed in 1987 and is one good hurricane from falling down. Under the dust, among the cobwebs, one old business card still clings to the dining room wall. "T.K.Riggs," it says. "Unemployed." Call the number. Nobody there by that name. I can see rusty cans and whiskey bottles through yawning holes in the floorboards. Roach droppings, looking like coffee grounds, blanket Sweet Sue's old luncheon counter.

The park service plans to spend $500,000 to restore the old building. Rangers may use it as an office, a visitor center, or a museum. If Big Joe's ghost haunts Monroe Station, maybe he'll stop cussing the government, but probably not.

A Forbidden Place.....

When I was a kid, another place to eat on the Loop Road was the Gator Hook Lodge in the tiny community of Pinecrest. A sign outside the door warned, "No Guns or Knives Allowed Inside" and was often ignored. A guy named Jack Knight ran Gator Hook. I remember him being rough around the edges, but an okay guy. On Saturday night's, he always hired a band. The fiddler in the Gator Hook band was Ervin Rouse, who had written Orange Blossom Special back in the 1930's. I never heard him play, but he lived out there with his dogs, Butterball and Curly.





Even at lunchtime the Gator Hook Lodge was an uninviting place, which made it attractive to teenage boys hoping for adventure. When the screen door banged shut behind you, every head in the tavern turned to see who had entered. At mid-morning, many patrons already staggered around drunk.

Peter Matthiessen set his novel, Lost Man's River, in the Everglades. Perhaps the most menacing scene takes place in the Gator Hook, when a drunk, one-armed gator poacher explains his relationship with park rangers.

"Now I ain't got nothin personal against the ranger," the poacher says. "Might could be a real likable young feller, just a-tryin to get by, same as what I'm doin. Might got him a sweet lovin wife and a couple real cute li'l fellers back home watin on him, or maybe just the sweetest baby girl - same as what I got! Ain't no difference between him and me at all!"

"But if'n that boy tries to take my gators, well, I got my duty to my people, ain't that right? Got my duty to take care of my little girl back home that's waitin on me to put bread on the table! Ain't that only natural? So all's I'm sayin, and it would be pathetical, and I am the first one to admit it..... all's I'm sayin, now, if any such feller, and I don't care who, tries to keep me from my hard-earned livin, I surely would be sorry. 'Cause I rekon I would have to leave him out there."

My dad one time asked how the fishing and snaking had gone. I gave him a report and casually mentioned the interesting eatery on Loop Road. He turned pale. "Not a place for you," he said.

The Gator Hook is gone now, torn down except for steps I have heard about but never can find. Jack Knight is dead. Whenever I drive the Loop Road I adjust my iPod to the play list I call "Country Blues." Sooner or later, Orange Blossom Special comes on.

Like it here? Yep.

Years ago, it took three hours to drive the Loop Road because of the potholes. Now it takes about an hour, depending on gator traffic. In some places, the road is straight as a rifle barrel; in other places it curves through the swamp like a Miccosukee's bow. The road is about 12 feet across, narrower at bridges, which by the way, lack railings.



The Florida panther is the rarest large animal in North America, but I know a guy who has seen three over the years on Loop Road. I know people who have encountered bears. Gators are as common as the lizards in your back yard. Gator in the road! It crashes like a falling piano into the black water. Bromeliad air plants on the high branches drip like icing from a cake. Pretty white ibises hop from log to log. The old-timers ate them. Now the white ibis is threatened and most of the old-timers are extinct.

As I approach Pinecrest, I notice evidence of human habitation. Old cars. Fences. Threatening signs. I pull up to a fence and wait. A woman ambles out, gives me the eye. I tell her I have an appointment with Sandy Dayhoff. I'm allowed in.

Sandy Dayhoff, a park ranger for 35 years, represents the only official law and order on the Loop Road. The year she turned 17, in 1962..... she dropped out of Miami High School and married "one of those swamp boys," Fred Dayhoff. They moved to Loop Road.

"We didn't have electricity, running water, phones or even a car for years. We didn't need it or want it," Sandy says. Twice a month her mother drove from Miami with staples. Otherwise the young couple was self-sufficient. Sandy grew vegetables and raised ducks and chickens. Fred was an accomplished hunter, killing deer, hogs and turkeys. On the Loop, he is called "the Invisible Man" because of his shy ways. Sandy is a private person too. I ask what she does to pass the time. "I stay busy." Read? "Yes." What do you read? "All kinds of things." Listen to music? "I love music." What kind? "All kinds."

She has curly brown hair and eyes like dark pools. She looks sturdy enough to skin a hog, drag a gator out of a hole and put a curious reporter in his place.



"I've never wanted to leave here," she says. "The nights are so beautiful. Years ago the stars were so bright you couldn't believe it. The stars are still pretty, but if you look east now you see this big dome of light coming from Miami. Miami seems to get closer every year."

During the rainy season, mosquitoes are fierce. Bobcats eat chickens. One time Sandy's foot encountered the fangs of a snake. "Pygmy rattler," she says. "I was wearing flip-flops. Somebody should have written D-U-M-B on my forehead."

Was the bite painful? "Yes."

Go to the hospital in Miami? "Naw."

An Afternoon in Eden.....

Back on the Loop Road, I stop my car next to a neat grave.

"RIP," the tombstone says. Somebody has placed fresh flowers. Across from the grave is what looks like a fort. A sign on the 8-foot wall says "Lucky Place." Lucky turns out to be the irrepressible Lucky Cole, age 63, a 250-pounder who wears a cowboy hat and a bandanna. His hair and beard are dyed black. The mat of hair on his muscular arms is so thick it takes a moment to identify a tattoo as a bald eagle.



Lucky grew up in Miami but spent boyhood weekends hunting along the Loop Road. After a career in construction, he retired here in 1990. He started out with a modest trailer, then built a house and decks and a greenhouse and bathrooms and even a pool. Lucky believes he has found heaven. He loves nothing more than sitting on his deck at sundown, talking to Wife No. 3, watching the birds and smoking a big cigar.



He is joyful when a thirsty tourist stops and asks for beer. Lucky doesn't run a store, but he'll provide beer, or a chaw of tobacco, or fuel for an airboat, in exchange for a donation to his retirement fund. He even has a price list.

As the tourist sips his beer and chews the fat, he might ask Lucky about the grave. If the tourist is from Michigan, Lucky might announce that he killed and buried an obnoxious tourist from Michigan. "Actually, nobody's in the grave," he confesses to me. "It's just a conversation piece. I like to have a laugh."



Lucky dislikes rude people. When he asks "Do you have some time?" be prepared to stay a spell. He shows me his antique barber chair, his Coke machine, his neon Budweiser sign, his other doodads and geegaws. "Come over here and check out my bathroom," he calls. I follow him to a door with a sign above that says "The Cat House."

Gulp! A long-dead house cat, stuffed by a hasty taxidermist, decorates the counter by the sink. I can't focus on the unfortunate cat because every inch of wall and ceiling is covered by photographs of women..... not the kind you'd expect to see on the Loop Road.



Turns out, Lucky is a commercial photographer as well as a swamp man. He shows off his work on a Web site, www.naturesexoticbeauty.com His photos of sunsets and swamps are graced by models who may or may not have remembered to wear a bikini top. "They pay me to make their pictures, that's right," he says. "I give them their pictures, they use them in portfolios or just keep them to remember what they once looked like."





At Lucky's urging, I study photos of women straddling motorcycles, women leaning provocatively against the mailbox out on the Loop Road, women wearing cowboy hats and six shooters and little else. I feel like I'm 15 again, sneaking a peak at the centerfold in Cavalier magazine at Park Shore Pharmacy in Miami. If Howard the druggist catches me, he'll tell my mother.

Beacons in the Road.....

Back on the Loop Road, I head toward the Tamiami Trail, toward civilization. Most people hate driving on the Loop at night, but I never minded, never had an emergency out there. A couple of times I shut down the engine and listen to the frogs. A couple of times I'd stop and call for owls. Alas, they snub me.



Near the bridge across Sweetwater Strand, red eyes glow in my headlights on the road ahead. I'm hoping for a panther, or a bear, or one of Lucky's swamp nymphets.

But it's just an opossum, dragging its tail on the dusty road, it vanishes into the trees.............



Thanks to Times Researchers:
Caryn Baird, Carolyn Edds and Mary Mellstrom contributed to this story.

Special thanks to:
Bob DeGross, Big Cypress National Preserve;
David Southall, Collier County Museums;
Steven DeLine, Everglades Conservation and Sportsman Club.

On The Web:
Steve's Big Cypress Swamp:

StevesBigCypressSwamp


JacksFloridaBromeliads

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ayme10is
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PostPosted: Mon Jan 21, 2008 5:12 pm    Post subject: Re: Florida's old Tamiami Trail Reply with quote

I am so thankful that I found this article. I was fortunate to have lived on the Loop with my granparents as a child (I am now 33). I spent every spring, winter and Easter break there until I was 17. My grandparents were forced out in 1995. My papa, who had earned his living as a frog gigger was devastated.

I don't recall the Gator Hook to be all that foreboding. It was owned by my aunt Monteen at one time. There are pictures of me in my "footy pyjamas" with a pool stick at the Hook. The pictures were probably taken well past my bedtime. I don't remember, but my mother says I used to sit on Erv's lap while he played. To me the Gator Hook always meant a heap of candy.

I am saddened by the state of Monroe Station. I used to wait for the school bus there. I attended Everglades City School during the first grade. I think my dad still keeps his swamp buggy at Monroe Station. He has some land back in the Big Cypress still.

Thank you for this wonderful article. I have contacted Lucky and it turns out he was friends with my granny and papa. I will be returning to the only place that has ever felt like home.
Again, many thanks.
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 03, 2008 7:14 pm    Post subject: Re: Florida's old Tamiami Trail Reply with quote

What a great article! I live in Bonita Springs (by the beach) and was just driving down Tamiami Trail today. I passed by Monroe Station... it is quite sad to look at it now knowing its previous state. Like previously said, one storm and the Station might not be standing anymore. It is too bad that it was left to rot like it was.

Well, I hope to get back out there soon so I can take a trip down Loop Road again.

(P.S. The Everglades Wonder Gardens is still here in Bonita... but Bonita has been and continues to grow right around it).
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 24, 2008 5:27 am    Post subject: Re: Florida's old Tamiami Trail Reply with quote

The America's Byways collection now stands at 125. The Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) removed the State designation for the Tamiami Trail in August, following a request by their Corridor Management Entity. Without the State designation required for national designation, FHWA has concurred with FDOT's request for removal of national designation as one of America's Byways.
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