Several years ago we joined that over-60 club
that migrates to warmer climates every winter.
We’ve been hitting the road each January for the last six years,
seeking to avoid Midwest winters and find and explore new destinations. In true “snowbird” fashion, we’ve spent three
winters in Florida and one each in Tucson, Arizona and Orange Beach,
Alabama. But we had never spent the
winter along the Texas Gulf Coast, so this year we set out to become “Winter
Texans.” The three-day trip was
uneventful (travelling through Dallas on a Saturday afternoon helped) and after
a short ferry crossing from Aransas Pass, we arrived in Port Aransas late on a
beautiful, sunny Sunday afternoon.
Sunset on our first night in Port Aransas |
We learned a few things very quickly: Texans are very friendly folks; “Winter
Texans” (they aren’t “snowbirds” in Texas) tend to come back year after year
because they like the area and the welcoming atmosphere; and the entire area
around Corpus Christi is referred to as the “Coastal Bend”.
Port Aransas is located on Mustang Island, one of the longest in
the chain of barrier islands off of Corpus Christi. A 24-hour free ferry, operated by the Texas
Department of Transportation, connects the island to the mainland. The ferry crosses the Gulf Coast Inter-coastal
Waterway, which serves as the ship channel into the port of Corpus Christi. Even though the crossing is less than
one-third of a mile, the island has a totally different feel than the
mainland. (Sixteen miles south of the
ferry terminal, the John F. Kennedy Causeway connects North Padre Island to the
south side of Corpus Christi, so it is also possible to drive to and from Mustang
Island.)
The two small ferries that serve Mustang Island. There are five larger vessels. They transport everything from cars to the largest tractor-trailers. |
Dolphins playing in front of an in-bound empty tanker |
Dolphins are visible in the ship channel all the time, often in pairs of two |
A tugboat transiting the ship channel. The land mass that you see behind her is San Jose Island, another of the barrier islands. |
A loaded tanker leaving port. Notice how low she rides compared to the photo of the empty tanker. The rock wall is the south jetty marking the ship channel. |
Roberts Point Park, adjacent to the ferry terminal. You can see 4 of the larger ferries at the terminal on the opposite side of the ship channel. |
We love being around water, and are especially attracted to marinas. This is the Port Aransas Municipal Boat Harbor. |
We booked our stay at Port A RV Resort, a relatively
small (in numbers of sites) park that was completely rebuilt after Hurricane
Harvey devastated the island two-and-a-half years ago. Additional reasons that we chose this park
include the fact that it sits adjacent to a bird sanctuary, is convenient to
the beach, and is close to the majority of the restaurants and shops of Port
Aransas.
Our site at Port A RV Resort. We were in the newest section of the resort, added during the rebuilding following the 2017 hurricane. |
The fishing lake behind our trailer (that's us, with our bikes still under cover and still on our bike rack.) |
Looking across the fishing lake from our site. |
This crane visited the lake behind our trailer almost every day, and would walk up and down the bank. On only a few occasions did I see him (her?) catch a fish |
The pool in the new section of Port A RV Resort. To the left, not visible in this picture, is a building containing a recreation room/kitchen, gym, laundry facility and restrooms and showers |
The original pool and hot tub. I'm standing in front of another building housing a recreation room/kitchen, office, mail room, laundry, and showers and restrooms. |
Charlie's Pasture, the wetlands adjacent to Port A RV Resort, taken from the resort |
Port A Resort backs up to Charley’s Pasture, a 1,200 acre
wetland that is part of the Great Texas Coastal Birding Trail. Unfortunately, the expansive boardwalk
through the nature preserve is still under reconstruction after being destroyed
by the 2017 hurricane, but the area is still a lovely backdrop. It is only a short drive to the Leonabell
Turnbull Birding Center, where 700 feet of the boardwalk and one of the viewing
towers have been rebuilt. The Coastal Bend area
is the winter home of the endangered Whooping Crane. With approximately 504 left in the wild, it is
a rare treat to see these huge, majestic birds.
Each pair requires approximately 250 acres for their nesting territory. Another beautiful bird is the Roseate
Spoonbill, with its striking pink feathers. This bird was endangered in the 1800’s, when
ladies’ hats sporting feathers were in fashion.
The Snowy Egret was also on the endangered list for the same reason. Blue Herons are fun to watch as they stalk
their prey in shallow water, while pelicans, diving into deep water from as
high as sixty feet to catch a meal, make a dramatic splash. Forty species of ducks and hundreds of
varieties of shore birds make this area, located on the Central
Flyway, their winter home.
This pair of Whooping Cranes spent the winter at Leonabell Turnbull Birding Center at Port Aransas. |
We saw this big alligator, maybe 12 to 14 feet long, sunning himself almost every time we went to the Birding Center. He never seemed to bother - or even notice - the birds. The last time we were there, he was swimming in the water. |
The Roseate Spoonbill, like the flamingo, derives its color from its diet, primarily shrimp. The colors can range from pale pink to bright magenta. |
The Leonabell Turnbull Birding Center is owned by the City of Port Aransas and is home to many species of birds. |
By the 1920's, the Roseate Spoonbill population had shrunk to only a few dozen nesting pairs, and they were put on the endangered species list in the 1940's. |
We THINK this is a Green-winged Teal. In any case, he is pretty. |
Common Moorhen |
Spoonbills are found on every continent except Antarctica. The genus name, Platelea, comes from Latin, and means "broad," referring to the distinctive shape of the bill. |
Heron. We love the reflection in the water. |
The south jetty, looking out onto the ship channel. A lot of people fish here, and the pelicans often hang around and wait for fish to be thrown to them. |
This pelican is banded for tracking. If you enter his band number into a database, you can track where he has been seen. |
Wading in the shallow waters just inside the south jetty, looking for food. |
A pelican takes off after a fish. |
Yep, that one's definitely a keeper. |
Horace Caldwell Fishing Pier. Signs warn of strong undertows beneath the pier, but local surfers still find it an exciting place to catch a wave. |
Feeding the gulls on the beach. The ships out on the horizon are anchored and waiting to get into the Port of Corpus Christi. |
Camping, both tent and RV, is allowed on the beach, except in areas posted with this sign. |
Diana Vondra, a crochet enthusiast and long-time Winter Texan from Iowa, made the first 30 caps for the bollards during the summer of 2016 |
Several of the caps are refreshed each year. They are put on the bollards each winter, and removed before the spring breakers and summer tourists arrive. |
Despite being a foggy day early in March, spring break families have set up camp on the beach. The front-loader belongs to the City; he is smoothing out the sand on the beach "road". |
Beach chairs from Cinnamon Shores Beach Vacation Rentals await guests at the water's edge. |
It is spring break, but still cool enough for a morning fire. He is wearing a coat, she is wearing a halter top, and their kid is keeping warm by sitting down in the hole dug for the fire. |
Loved this old Chevy pickup and vintage travel trailer. |
Flying our kite on the beach. |
Seagulls on a foggy morning. |
There are plenty of porta-potties and trashcans on the beach, and everything is surprisingly clean. |
Coffee Waves' Friday night folk music. |
All-you-can-eat shrimp dinner at Kody's every Wednesday evening. |
Port A RV Resort sponsored a number of entertainment events while we were
there, including painting classes hosted by a couple of professional artists
from Kansas City who travel and live in their motorhome; an evening performance
of comedy and magic by a man from the Rio Grande Valley who has entertained
professionally in Branson and other places; and a one-night concert by The Band Wanted, a husband and
wife duo named Joshua and Candy Carpenter, who travel the southwest in an old
bus, performing in a variety of locations from saloons to retirement centers to
nursing homes.
One of the things we like to do when we travel is attend
community and/or college theater productions.
Within a block of the resort is the Port Aransas Community Theater (PACT), where we enjoyed the comedy “Love, Sex and the I.R.S.” and the romantic
mystery-comedy “The 39 Steps”, a take-off of the original Alfred Hitchcock
thriller of the same name. In nearby
community theaters we attended “Church Basement Ladies” (the Rialto Theater,
Aransas Pass), the musical “Nunsense” (the Aurora Arts Theater, Corpus
Christi), and we thoroughly enjoyed the fantastic vocals of Janelle Shetters as
Patsy Cline, supported by the wonderful acting of Sandy Brandenstein as Louise Seger
in “Always, Patsy Cline” at the Rockport Little Theater in Rockport. The Warren Theater, on the campus of Texas A&M University - Corpus Christi, was the venue for the comedy “A Gentleman’s
Guide to Love and Murder” We appreciated
the talent, dedication and hard work of all of the actors, musicians and crews
at all of these productions.
Playbills from all of the productions we saw this winter in the Coastal Bend area |
The art of building wooden boats by hand is alive and well at Farley Boatworks, thanks to a group of volunteers, some of whom are full-time island residents and some of whom are Winter Texans. |
The Tarpon Inn, located at 200 E. Cotter Avenue in Port
Aransas, was originally built with surplus lumber from Union Army barracks, and was used as a
dormitory for men building the south jetty for the ship channel. After the jetty was completed, the building
was sold and re-opened as an inn in 1886.
During the heyday of tarpon fishing, the inn became a haven for
fishermen, and one wall of the main lobby is adorned with over 7000 tarpon scales, each
signed by the angler who landed the fish, noting the date and the weight and
length of the catch. The most famous scale is the one signed by Franklin D. Roosevelt, who caught several tarpon during his 1937 fishing trip, even
though he did not actually stay at the inn.
Standing in front of a wall of tarpon scales at the Tarpon Inn |
The Sears "kit house"was also known as the Mercer House, having been built and occupied by the Mercer Family. It has been moved at least three times in its 110 year history. |
Copies of more than 12,000 photos and documents pertaining to the history of the City of Port Aransas have been archived in the museum. |
Twice each month, the history
museum offers guided tours, limited to 10 guests, to the petite (250 square
feet) Chapel on the Dunes, the oldest consecrated church on the island. The chapel was built in 1937-38 by Mrs. Aline
Carter, known locally as the “White Angel” for her flowing white organdy
dresses and for her service to the community.
Mrs. Carter later was named poet-laureate of Texas from 1947 to 1949.
Mrs. Carter commissioned her friend and noted San Antonio artist, Ethel Wilson Harris, to design and build the chapel. |
In 1972, with the permission of one of Aline Carter's sons, artist John Patrick Cobb painted the Biblical murals. Local residents were outraged. |
Since 1851, 64 hurricanes have
struck the Texas Gulf Coast, and Port Aransas has certainly had its share of
them. The most recent was Hurricane
Harvey, which roared ashore on August 25, 2017 as a Category 4 hurricane and
made landfall between Port Aransas and neighboring Rockport. One of the victims of Harvey was the iconic
1950’s hotel officially named the Aransas Inn, but known locally as the Pink
Hotel. This winter, some two-and-a-half
years after the hurricane, it was determined that the hotel could not be
salvaged and brought up to current standards, and the decision was made to raze
the building. When we left in mid-March,
demolition had not yet started. Other
vestiges of the devastation can still be seen in homes and condos that have not
yet been repaired, but are undergoing renovation. New construction is flourishing. The residents (along with some long-time Winter
Texans) have worked hard to restore and rebuild their community.
While a lot of renovation and rebuilding has been done, there is still a lot more to be done. This condo complex is right in the middle of town, near the beach. |
Further outside town, this complex remains un-repaired. Locals told us the number of spring-breakers was nowhere near past years because of the lack of places to rent. |
The Aransas Inn, a.k.a. the Pink Hotel, on Eleventh Street has been condemned and will be razed. |
Meanwhile, houses like this one at Pamilla Beach Resort and Golf Community are going up as fast as builders can work. There is no shortage of work for building trades-people on the island. |
But Port Aransas is, above all else, a vacation community, and this street scene, on Avenue G, reflects that. |
Mardi Gras Parade 2020 in Port Aransas. |
From its founding as Ropesville in
1888, to its name change to Tarpon (to celebrate the local sport fishing
industry) 8 years later, to the eventual renaming of the town as Port Aransas
(when the U.S. Postal Service opened a new post office there in 1910), the
little community at the north end of Mustang Island has had a storied
history. When Hurricane Harvey hit, it
is estimated that 100% of the businesses and 85% of the residences were damaged
or destroyed, yet the resilient town and its residents have rebuilt and moved forward,
lending credence to their slogan “Port A Strong”. We were thrilled to have spent our winter going
“coastal” in Texas, and proud to include Port Aransas as one of our “Road
Stories”.
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