N.C.'s Ocracoke Island named top beach

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very cool.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070608/ap_on_re_us/best_beaches_7;_ylt=AoW9XTYET0nnw4EHiktH__4E1vAI


RALEIGH, N.C. - Move over, Florida and Hawaii. Your beaches are no longer the best. The nation's best place to get a tan and enjoy the ocean's waves in 2007 is North Carolina's Ocracoke Island, a place so remote that even people in the offices of "Dr. Beach" — Florida International University professor Stephen Leatherman — didn't know where to find it on the map.

"It's not the end of the world, but you can see it from here," Leatherman said from Ocracoke, the first beach not in Florida or Hawaii to earn the top spot in his annual ranking of the nation's top 10 spots on the shore.

Technically, it's Ocracoke Lifeguarded Beach that is the nation's best. But Leatherman said there's little that separates those 300 yards of postcard-perfect sand from the rest of the island, almost all of which is protected from development as part of the Cape Hatteras National Seashore.

"Here, you have 14 miles of unspoiled, undisturbed barrier beach," said Leatherman, director of Florida International's laboratory for coastal research. "Where do you find that in the world?"

Ocracoke is at the southern end of the Outer Banks, the fragile chain of barrier islands along North Carolina's coast known as the "graveyard of the Atlantic." Accessible only by boat or private plane, there are only about 800 full-time residents of the island where the pirate Blackbeard met his untimely death at the hands of the Royal Navy in 1718.

"People shouldn't come here to play golf, and don't come here for the Hilton spa or something like that," Leatherman said. "They're not going to find those things here. What you will find here — it's like going back in time with very quaint, small inns. It's my favorite getaway island beach. And it's definitely that."

Ocracoke has been a favorite of "Dr. Beach" for years — he ranked it No. 3 in 2006 and No. 2 in 2005. By winning this year, it will be retired from consideration, along with other past champions.

"Obviously, it's a great honor to be put up at the top of the heap," said Julia Howard, the administrator for the Ocracoke Island Museum and Preservation Society, who has lived on the island for 35 years.

Leatherman ranks beaches on 50 criteria, using a 1 to 5 scale. No beach has ever gotten all 250 points, and Ocracoke ranked somewhere in the 230s, he said. The sand, for example, isn't lily white, so it lost points there.

He considers only swimming beaches, which leaves out those along the Maine and Oregon coastlines, where the water is just too cold. Beaches with lifeguards get high points, as do those that balance the natural environment and the built environment.

"I'm just a stickler for detail," he said. "There's no perfect beach by the rating criteria, but there are so many great ones."

Earning the No. 1 ranking on the "Dr. Beach" list is usually a tourism booster. When the north beach at Florida's Fort De Soto was named the best in 2005, Leatherman said, the number of hits on a related Web site jumped in one day from 1,000 to 10,000.

But the remote nature of Ocracoke and its place as part of a national seashore should spare the island's 25-foot sand dunes, topped by sea oats, from an onslaught of beachcombers.

"When things are inundated with people, it isn't quite the same place any more," Howard said. "We hope people who do come here would honor our beauty and keep it looking the way it does for a long time."

___

On the Net:

Dr. Beach: http://www.drbeach.org/

Cape Hatteras National Seashore: http://www.nps.gov/caha
 
very cool.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070608/ap_on_re_us/best_beaches_7;_ylt=AoW9XTYET0nnw4EHiktH__4E1vAI


RALEIGH, N.C. - Move over, Florida and Hawaii. Your beaches are no longer the best. The nation's best place to get a tan and enjoy the ocean's waves in 2007 is North Carolina's Ocracoke Island, a place so remote that even people in the offices of "Dr. Beach" — Florida International University professor Stephen Leatherman — didn't know where to find it on the map.

"It's not the end of the world, but you can see it from here," Leatherman said from Ocracoke, the first beach not in Florida or Hawaii to earn the top spot in his annual ranking of the nation's top 10 spots on the shore.

Technically, it's Ocracoke Lifeguarded Beach that is the nation's best. But Leatherman said there's little that separates those 300 yards of postcard-perfect sand from the rest of the island, almost all of which is protected from development as part of the Cape Hatteras National Seashore.

"Here, you have 14 miles of unspoiled, undisturbed barrier beach," said Leatherman, director of Florida International's laboratory for coastal research. "Where do you find that in the world?"

Ocracoke is at the southern end of the Outer Banks, the fragile chain of barrier islands along North Carolina's coast known as the "graveyard of the Atlantic." Accessible only by boat or private plane, there are only about 800 full-time residents of the island where the pirate Blackbeard met his untimely death at the hands of the Royal Navy in 1718.

"People shouldn't come here to play golf, and don't come here for the Hilton spa or something like that," Leatherman said. "They're not going to find those things here. What you will find here — it's like going back in time with very quaint, small inns. It's my favorite getaway island beach. And it's definitely that."

Ocracoke has been a favorite of "Dr. Beach" for years — he ranked it No. 3 in 2006 and No. 2 in 2005. By winning this year, it will be retired from consideration, along with other past champions.

"Obviously, it's a great honor to be put up at the top of the heap," said Julia Howard, the administrator for the Ocracoke Island Museum and Preservation Society, who has lived on the island for 35 years.

Leatherman ranks beaches on 50 criteria, using a 1 to 5 scale. No beach has ever gotten all 250 points, and Ocracoke ranked somewhere in the 230s, he said. The sand, for example, isn't lily white, so it lost points there.

He considers only swimming beaches, which leaves out those along the Maine and Oregon coastlines, where the water is just too cold. Beaches with lifeguards get high points, as do those that balance the natural environment and the built environment.

"I'm just a stickler for detail," he said. "There's no perfect beach by the rating criteria, but there are so many great ones."

Earning the No. 1 ranking on the "Dr. Beach" list is usually a tourism booster. When the north beach at Florida's Fort De Soto was named the best in 2005, Leatherman said, the number of hits on a related Web site jumped in one day from 1,000 to 10,000.

But the remote nature of Ocracoke and its place as part of a national seashore should spare the island's 25-foot sand dunes, topped by sea oats, from an onslaught of beachcombers.

"When things are inundated with people, it isn't quite the same place any more," Howard said. "We hope people who do come here would honor our beauty and keep it looking the way it does for a long time."

___

On the Net:

Dr. Beach: http://www.drbeach.org/

Cape Hatteras National Seashore: http://www.nps.gov/caha

Ugh. I guess it's nice to get some recognition but it makes me shudder to think about all of the crown vics, caddys and town cars with Florida / North East tags that are idling in driveways over in Cashiers, Highlands and Sapphire and are getting ready to block the left lane and cruise over to OBX after reading this morning's paper. They'll quickly find that the already obnoxious real estate prices on the island are "so incredibly cheap" compared to "home" and continue to irrationally steepen the cost of everything there so that the locals continue to struggle to maintain their current lifestyle.

Thanks Dr. Beach, I'd like to introduce you to Edward Teach. :grinpimp:

At least it will now be retired from consideration.
 
Ugh. I guess it's nice to get some recognition but it makes me shudder to think about all of the crown vics, caddys and town cars with Florida / North East tags that are idling in driveways over in Cashiers, Highlands and Sapphire and are getting ready to block the left lane and cruise over to OBX after reading this morning's paper. They'll quickly find that the already obnoxious real estate prices on the island are "so incredibly cheap" compared to "home" and continue to irrationally steepen the cost of everything there so that the locals continue to struggle to maintain their current lifestyle.

Thanks Dr. Beach, I'd like to introduce you to Edward Teach. :grinpimp:

At least it will now be retired from consideration.

Amen, recognition is great...but the swarms of undesirable inhabitants that are now inevitable is going to change things for the worse, IMO.
 
Here come the gold chains from FL. I think Ocracoke will be ok because of the ferry access only!

uzj100
 
Already this past week I could tell things were way busier for so early in the summer, and the ferry lines to Ocracoke were terrible, normally a max of 1hr wait, this time 3 hour!
 
Already this past week I could tell things were way busier for so early in the summer, and the ferry lines to Ocracoke were terrible, normally a max of 1hr wait, this time 3 hour!

The lines in April were worse than in past years too so maybe we can't blame it all on "Dr. Beach".

Out of season is the only way to go in OBX IMO.
 
I'm planning a long road trip from July 3 to July 14.
Charleston-Wilmington-Winston Salem-Richmond-DC/Silver Spring/Annapolis-Richmond-Ocracoke:confused:-Charleston.
I've never been to Ocracoke, but I was planning on spending 1 night camping at 1 of the 3 campsites arriving July 13 and departing July 14.

Is it worth it at that time of the year? Or am I gonna hit: heavy lines at the ferry/crowded beaches/crowded town? My wife is not too thrilled about camping even if it is on Ocracoke.

What say you guys? Should I wait for the off-season for our first Ocracoke experience?

And if we do go, should I reserve a camp site or can we get a spot w/out a reservation?
 
Check and see if you can make a reservation on the ferry for a certain time. Thats what I did and it worked out great. No waiting.

The ferry between Hatteras and Ocracoke does not take reservations thus the waiting in line going either direction.

Reservations are only offered on the Cedar Island – Ocracoke and Swan Quarter – Ocracoke routes.
 
Just got back from dinner with one of my buds who works for one of NC's "outdoor" magazines. He said he had a buddy just write an article about kayaking where he stayed a night camping on Ocracoke(like I wanna do).

Said the mosquitos are F'in brutal.:doh:

What say you, fellas? My wife is not really lookin' forward to campin' anyway. She's not a camper. I don't wanna ruin hopeful future camping trips to Ocracoke with a bug attack. Am I shooting myself in the foot by taking her camping on Ocracoke this time of year?
 
Just got back from dinner with one of my buds who works for one of NC's "outdoor" magazines. He said he had a buddy just write an article about kayaking where he stayed a night camping on Ocracoke(like I wanna do).

Said the mosquitos are F'in brutal.:doh:

What say you, fellas? My wife is not really lookin' forward to campin' anyway. She's not a camper. I don't wanna ruin hopeful future camping trips to Ocracoke with a bug attack. Am I shooting myself in the foot by taking her camping on Ocracoke this time of year?

Yep, unless you like doing shots of pure Deet routinely, rent a house or room and save yourself the headache. Especially given she's not big on the whole camping thing anyway. ;)

The camping is ocean-side which helps a little bit due to the breeze but still summer nights can be brutal. Take her in March or April for a few nights and camp one or two and she'll be a convert.
 
The ferry's a bitc4

I spent summers of 01 & 02 lifeguarding for the park service in Ocracoke. The trick is to hit the ferry early in the morning. After that, the wait just increases throughout the daytime. Waiting time steadily decreases as it gets later into the evening.

Surf is really fickle, but when there's a south swell the lifeguard beach always had a good peak (1st parking lot outside of town). I'm heading to AVON near the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse. The family has a house on the beach for a week. Maybe I'll luck out and find some good waves waiting for me.

Also, try to book your camp site ahead of time if you can. The NPS campgrounds can fill up quick.
 
We need a beach we can drive on/camp on for an event...we haven't hit the ocean at all as a club...this is a problem.
 
Almost all the beaches on Hatteras and Ocracoke islands allow camping, but fires might be prohibited certain times of the year or if things are unusually dry.
 
I demand an ocean voyage! :)
 
Ocean Voyage?

The real deal would be to take the private car ferry over to Portsmoth from Ocracoke (it may actually depart from Davis Island), and at that point you would have the entire Cape Lookout National Seashore to yourself.:) I saw a cherokee that was nicely equiped doing this very thing in April. I was green with envy.
 

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