The Manteo Project
PHOTOS BY EVAN SEMON
CITADEL • On a foggy, rainy day typical of the spring break trip to the Outer Banks, the Cape Hatteras lighthouse shows through the fog.
S
pring break is supposed to be a time to get away from the rigors of the classroom. But for 12 photojournalists on “vacation,” the Outer Banks of North Carolina became a c lassroom for a week.
2 Pottery • 3 Barber • 4 Hand Gliding • 5 N.C. Aquarium • 6 Fishing • 7 Features • 8-9 Fishing
10 Features • 11 Outer Banks • 12 Lighthouses • 13 Features • 14-15 Photographers • 16 Sponsor
A SPRING BREAK ENDEAVOR • MARCH 14-19, 2003 • MANTEO, N.C.
Burning & Turning
“I took a night pottery class about 21 years ago and have been hooked ever since.” • Bonnie Morrill
PHOTOS BY MATT STAMEY
SPIN • Bonnie Morrill spins a clay bowl on her potters wheel at her shop on the water front in Manteo, N.C. Morrill and her husband Bob, have been doing ottery for 21 years and have been in Manteo since 1991. The clay they use for their art is from Asheville and is used for dinner wear, meaning it can be used in the p microwave, oven and dishwasher.
DRY • Candle holders that have dried line the back of the Morrill’s truck to be taken to the kiln to be fired. Candle holders are Wanchese Potteries bestseller. “They’re cheap and easy to make,” Morrill said. “We sell a lot of them and they don’t take up much shelf space.”
SMILE • Bonnie Morrill, owner of Wanchese Pottery, laughs with a customer while making a pot in her studio. Morrill said she put her potter’s wheel in front of the window so the light on her work is better and the customers can get a better look at what she’s doing. Morrill never did any pottery in high school or college and was a third grade teacher. “I took a night pottery class about 21 years ago and have been hooked ever since.”
HERE KITTY • King-Potts, Wanchese Pottery’s pet cat, sits on the counter and watches as people enter and leave the store. Morrill said Potts is the king of the store. “He greats everybody that comes in here,” Morrill said.
PHONE • Evidence that you’re in a pottery store is all around visitors to the tiny shop, including on the phone, which is covered with dried clay. Pottery is called “Turning and Burning” in the South and is called “Throw and Fire” in the north. The kiln reaches temperatures as high as 2,300 degrees.
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Barber Shop Small-town barber provides just the right cut
PHOTOS BY JEANEL DRAKE
FLAT TOP • Nine-year-old Ryan Lewis gets his usual haircut from C.L. Reynolds at Reynolds Barber Shop in downtown Manteo, N.C. Reynolds has been barbering since 1958 and is celebrating 25 years at 303 Old Tom St. “Every time you’re doing a service where you benefit somebody you feel kind of good,” Reynolds said. TOP PHOTO
BARBER WHEELS • C.L. Reynolds has retired his bicycle, now riding a scooter to work when the weather is nice. His bicycle in the alley was always a sign that the shop was open, and when he bought the scooter his regulars didn’t know he was open. Now he keeps the bicycle in the shop and sets it outside during business hours.
CHEAP TREAT • A rare one-cent gum ball machine sits in Reynold’s Barber Shop. After Reynolds finished Lewis’ haircut he gave him a few pennies and told him to get a few pieces to take home to his sister. “That gum ball machine is probably the only thing you can spend a penny on anymore,” Reynolds said.
MORNING SHAVE • Man-
WAITING GAME • With an inconsistent schedule based on walk-ins, Reynolds spends a good portion of his day waiting on customers. He fills the time by reading his Bible. Reynolds is an interim Southern Baptist minister.
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teo resident David Parker gets a haircut and shave for $9 at Reynolds Barber Shop. When Reynolds started barbering, a haircut cost 75 cents. “People used to have more time to sit and talk, but now they’ve become too busy,” Reynolds said.
PHOTOS BY MATT STAMEY
OFF WE GO • Allison Ellis, a beginner, hang glides for the first time at Jockey’s Ridge while instructor Andy Torrington gives advice. The dunes at Jockey’s Ridge provide, according to Kitty Hawk Kites’ Hang Gliding Training Center, the perfect platform for learning to hang glide – enough height with a soft landing.
Over the edge
Hang gliders use largest East Coast sand dune to learn new craft
PHOTO BY JEANEL DRAKE
PHOTO BY JEANEL DRAKE
TAKE OFF • Before they can go off cliffs, hang gliders have to get certified beyond the basic level. Instructors in Manteo teach beginning and advanced classes.
TAKE OFF • Andy Torrington helps Allison Ellis take off. Kitty Hawk Kites’ Hang Gliding Trading Center advertises itself as the largest hang gliding school in the world, teaching students since 1974. PHOTO BY JEANEL DRAKE
FLY HIGH • Jennifer Purtee, an advanced beginner from Italy, learns more hang gliding skills. Conditions on the ridge allow gliders to travel more than 100 yards at 5 to 15 feet above the sand. PHOTO BY MATT STAMEY
PULL UP • Climbing back up the hill, backwards, with the glider, as Jennifer Purtee shows, can be tough.
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PHOTO BY MATT STAMEY
PHOTO BY KELLY GLASSCOCK
PHOTO BY NICOLE DONNERT
PHOTO BY MATT STAMEY
Under the sea
North Carolina Aquarium provides look at life beneath the waves PHOTO BY MATT STAMEY
BUBBLES? • As part of daily maintenance on the 285,000gallon aquarium, Beth Southern, special activities coordinator, cleans the glass wall while demonstrating diving techniques for visitors. PHOTO BY BRADLEY WILSON
CHECK UP • John Roesgen, an aquarist with the North Carolina aquarium, checks on the health of the terrapins.
PHOTO BY MATT ELLIOTT
WHAT A VIEW • Visitors to the aquarium admire a replica of the U.S. Monitor as well as sharks and other fish in the facility’s largest attraction. The North Carolina Aquarium on Roanoke Island also features interactive exhibits and research facilities.
PHOTO BY EVAN SEMON
IN SCHOOL • Pat Murphy, the aquarium’s dive safety officer, explores the indoor underwater environment. Aquarium staff regularly work with injured loggerhead sea turtles, dolphins and whales as well as fish.
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Out to Sea
Day charter gives visitors chance to experience deep sea
PHOTOS BY MATT ELLIOTT
REEL’EM IN • Leisa Lowrey, of Jasper, Ind., reels in her third fish of the evening. “This is great,” she said. “John’s (her husband) a pilot and had the weekend off, so we decided to take the kids fishing.”
ALL IN THE FAMILY • Johnathan Lowrey takes a photo of his son Bob as Bob reels in his first striper during their fishing trip on the Sea Hunter 2. The family members caught their limit of 16 fish. Thomas, 8 years old, caught the biggest fish – more than 19” long.
SLICE • Mate Jeff Floyd, of Nagshead, finishes cleaning the last of the 16 fish caught by the Lowrey family. “I’ve been doing this for a little over a year now, and I love it. Fishing is just something that gets in your blood,” Floyd said. CATCH • Striped Bass, Rockfish, are common along the Outer Banks. Catches up to more than 30 pounds are common.
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FEATURES PHOTO BY CARL HUDSON
FOR YOU • John Gonzalez video tapes the parade on his float at Kill Devil Hills, NC on St. Patrick’s Day while throwing out a lei to the crowd. Mike Kelly owner of Kelly’s Restaurant, started the parade in 1990. Now, some 10,000 people line Beach Road to see the parade. Afterwards, Kelly serves free hot dogs and soft drinks. “The parade has become one of the highlights of late winter and early spring,” said Nags Head Mayor Bob Mueller in a story in the Outer Banks Sentinel by Bill Freehling. PHOTO BY ROB BRADLEY
PATRIOTS • An American flag flies in downtown Manteo, an area full of small stores open largely for the tourists.
PHOTO BY KELLY GLASSCOCK
SHINY • Richard Andrews cleans the side of a boat in Wanchese during the off-season. Andrews is the first mate of the one-year-old charter boat.
PHOTO BY EVAN SEMON
OVERHAND • Evan Thomas, 6, casts his line over the docks of Pirate’s Cove on the east side of Manteo, a town that appeals to commercial and casual fishers.
PHOTO BY MATT STAMEY
HEADS UP • The Wright Brothers Memorial marks the spot where Wilbur and Orville Wright made the first powered airplane flight on Dec. 17, 1903.
PHOTO BY ROB BRADLEY
NO PARKING • A parking lot for a restaurant in Nags Head flooded due to recent rains.
PHOTO BY KELLY GLASSCOCK
PHOTO BY ROB BRADLEY
OCEAN VIEW • Shells and rocks along the beach near Jockey’s Ridge.
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CLEAN FEET • Matt Elliott stands on a pillar on the Atlantic Ocean beach.
The Perfect Catch
Fresh from your local ocean to the supermarket, day’s catch nets thousands
PHOTO BY KELLY GLASSCOCK
CLEAN UP • While out at sea, the crews nets were tangled in the ocean current forcing them to unwind the net by hand. The job will take three full days of work, witch means three days of no income for the crew.
PHOTO BY KELLY GLASSCOCK
IN LINE • Fish are taken off the conveyor belt and sorted by workers, then packed with ice to keep them fresh. The workers many times stay until 3 a.m. unloading boats that come in with their day’s catch. PHOTO BY KELLY GLASSCOCK
READY TO GO • Fish are thrown in a cardboard box labeled fresh fish and packed with ice. They are kept in a freezer until they are ready to be shipped.
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PHOTO BY KELLY GLASSCOCK
CATCH • After a boat came in to the dock, Marshal Sanderlin throws the day’s catch onto a conveyor belt for the fish to be packed in ice.
PHOTO BY KELLY GLASSCOCK
FRESH CATCH • Fish caught earlier in the day ride down a conveyor belt to be back in ice and shipped as fresh seafood. A boat this usually catches around 10,000 pounds but only caught 1,000 pounds today. PHOTO BY EVAN SEMON
MOONLIGHT • Marshal Sanderlin waits to upload a shipment of blue fish to be iced and shipped out for sale.
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FEATURES
PHOTO BY MATT STAMEY
HIGH JUMP • Conner sadler, 10, plays trampoline basketball in his backyard with Isaac Moore, 10. The two of them had played in basketball tournoment earlier in the day and finished the day playing on the trampoline. “It’s the only way they can dunk” Greg Sadler, dad, said.
BY EVAN SEMON
PLAY BALL • Timmy Colson, 8, stands below a basketball goal on the cracked concrete court in front of his house that doubles as a parking lot for the apartments behind the house.
PHOTO BY KELLY GLASSCOCK
TOP OF THE HILL • The Wright Brothers Memorial is large tourist attraction the monument represents the starting point of the first ever flight. Dec. 17, 2003 marks the 100th anniversary of man’s first flight. PHOTO BY MATT STAMEY
TANGLED WEB • Scott works on his Day Sailor on the Waterfront in Manteo. He works and lives on his girlfreind’s 31 Cal sailboat. His girlfriend is in the bahammas, and he watches over her boat. This is his third winter living on the boat.
PHOTO BY KELLY GLASSCOCK
GOOD DOGGIE • Steve Eakin plays with his daughter, Elizabeth, and nephew, Taylor Cowan, and dog, Kelly, at Valley Mount sand dunes during a short vacation.
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The Outer Banks A look at the environment of the islands off North Carolina’s coast PHOTOS BY BLAKE PEMBERTON
INTO THE WOODS • Nags Head Woods, a 1,400-acre preserve, is home to more than 200 species of plants and 50 species of birds. PHOTO BY AARON JENNINGS
SUNSHINE • Settlements back as far as the mid1500s took advantage of the mild climate yeararound. About 6 million people visit the Outer Banks each year.
PHOTO BY BLAKE PEMBERTON
FLYWAY • Nags Head Woods is on the fall flyway for a variety of birds including these geese flying near the Bodie Island Lighthouse. Each spring and summer, pelicans, herons, egrets, ibises, terns, skimmers and gulls gather on small islands and barrier beaches along North Carolina’s coast to nest and raise their young.
PHOTO BY BLAKE PEMBERTON
PHOTO BY BLAKE PEMBERTON
SUNRISE, SUNSET • In 1584, Sir Walter Raleigh traveled to Roanoke Island and took possession of the land for England. They met native Algonquians and eventually returned to England, undoubtedly reporting on the potential for settlements.
PHOTO BY BLAKE PEMBERTON
GRANDIOSE • Nurtured in isolated patches of preserve and housing subdivisions, some tall trees do grow on the island. Nags Head Woods is sheltered from the ocean by a ridge of ancient dunes, protecting trees from the damaging winds that come off the ocean.
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GRASS • The sandy soils throughout the estuarine waters and marshes support little vegetation naturally. However, tall grasses are common along the sandy dunes that line the beach.
Sentinels of the Coast Four lighthouses stand guard over the state’s coast PHOTO BY CARL HUDSON
IN THE RAIN • Cape Hatteras was the site of the first lighthouse along North Carolina’s treacherous coast, built in 1802. The current lighthouse on Cape Hatteras was built in 1870.
PHOTO BY KELLY GLASSCOCK
SMILE • Matt Elliott photographs the Bodie
Island lighthouse.
PHOTO BY BLAKE PEMBERTON
LOOK OUT • At 208 feet, Cape Hatteras is the tallest lighthouse in the nation. It was moved 2,900 feet inland in 1999 as part of a $12 million project to preserve the lighthouse.
PHOTO BY BLAKE PEMBERTON
PHOTO BY MATT ELLIOTT
LOOK UP • Each lighthouse is painted differently to make them recognizable in daylight. Their lights rotate at a different rate so ships would know where they were if they couldn’t see land.
FIERCE CLOUDS • The Bodie Island
lighthouse was built in 1872 to shine over the Oregon Inlet which has, over time, migrated nearly two miles away.
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FEATURES
PHOTO BY KELLY GLASSCOCK
WASH UP • After working in the gardens, Zachary and his mother wash the mud off their hands with the garden hose.
PHOTO BY MATT STAMEY
BIKE RACK • During the off season, empty spots for boats can be seen at the water front of Manteo. Two bikes lean against a post used to tie boats to the doc.
PHOTO BY BLAKE PEMBERTON
HEADS UP • Visiting the Outer Banks, this bird watcher from Ohio stopped near the Bodie Island lighthouse after attending a wedding in Virginia. PHOTO BY AARON JENNINGS
TARGET • Old family grave sites are common in Nags Head Woods. Usually nobody cares about them except for that family. Virgal Stapp died in 1942, possibly during battle in World War II. He was 21. Someone defaced this grave, using this man’s picture on the headstone for target practice.
PHOTO BY ROB BRADLEY
SMILES • The St. Patrick’s Day parade, island officials claim, is the larget parade in North Carolina. Almost anyone with a car or motorized vehicle joins in with crazy hats, candy and lots of green.
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SELF PORTRAIT BY ROB BRADLEY
MORE RAIN • Rob Bradley looks outside the van on 45minute journey to the Cape Hatteras lighthouse. Fellow N.C. State photographer Carl Hudson said, “My favorite moments on this trip was when all gathered together at the end of the night and would grab a couple of beers and just sit around and watch what everyone had to show. “
PHOTO BY BRADLEY WILSON
ATTACK • Evan Semon poses inside a shark at the aquarium.
PHOTO BY JEANEL DRAKE
HAIRY TOES • On one of the rare almost sunny moments, Kelly Glasscock photographs Matt Elliott’s feet oceanside.
PHOTO BY FUNNY LADY
GROUP SHOT • Kelly Glasscock, Blake Pemberton, Rob Bradley, Bradley Wilson, Nicole Donnert, Matt Stamey, Jeanel Drake, Evan Semon, Matt Elliott, Carl Hudson, Brad Smith; not pictured Aaron Jennings
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Having a little fun From a first trip to the beach to eating sushi, spring break is all about having fun
PHOTO BY MATT STAMEY
Who we are
SPLISH SPLASH • Matt Elliott tries to avoid getting his digital camera wet while taking pictures of the ocean. PHOTO BY KELLY GLASSCOCK
ROB BRADLEY • a freshman at N.C. State University and assistant photo editor of the Technician NICOLE DONNERT • a sophomore at Kansas State University and photo editor of the Collegian; colerene@ksu.edu JEANEL DRAKE • a junior at Kansas State University; jeanel@ksu.edu MATT ELLIOTT • A junior at Kansas State University. elliott@ksu.edu KELLY GLASSCOCK • A senior at Kansas State University and digital photo editor of the Royal Purple yearbook. klg3544@ksu.edu CARL HUDSON • a junior at N.C. State University and photo editor for the 2004 Agromeck yearbook; cnhudson@unity.ncsu. edu AARON JENNINGS • A freshman at N.C. State University and graduate of Manteo High School. abjennin@ncsu.edu BLAKE PEMBERTON • A senior at Enloe High School in Raleigh. auxiliary16@hotmail.com EVAN SEMON • A junior at Kansas State University. eps9895@ksu.edu BRAD SMITH • a free-lance photographer in Washington, D.C. and graduate of the University of North Carolina/Chapel Hill; hunter8808@aol.com MATT STAMEY • a graduating senior at Kansas State University and photo editor of the Royal Purple yearbook; stamey@ksu.edu BRADLEY WILSON • coordinator of student media at N.C. State University and organizer of this little adventure; bradley_wilson@ncsu. edu
DESERT POWER • Matt Stamey has a little fun looking for water at Jockey’s Ridge.
PHOTO BY MJATT STAMEY
ALL SMILES • The crew from Kansas at the beach. Despite the rain and chilly weather, the folks from Kansas visited the ocean every day.
THANKS TO SUZANNE GODLEY of Roanoke Island Festival Park for helping us find a great place to stay DARYL LAW of the North Carolina Aquarium on Roanoke Island for showing us around the aquarium ROBIN SAWYER of Manteo High School for letting us use the computers and scanners at the high school – at any hour NABIL SHAHEEN of Kansas State University for copy editing
TECHNICAL INFORMATION Most of the pictures contained in The Manteo Project were shot on high-end digital cameras such as the Nikon D1. Some were shot on film and scanned using Nikon film scanners. The publication was designed in Adobe InDesign 2.02. Photos were edited using Adobe Photoshop 7.0. The publication, designed by Bradley Wilson and the photographers on the expedition, was printed by J&S Printing using an 85-line screen. Fonts used include Shinn Light, Shinn Medium, Shinn Extrabold, and California. Accent fonts include Texas Hero, Onyx, Americana, Oregon Wet, Goudy Handtooled, Harting and Birch.
PHOTO BY KELLY GLASSCOCK
KICKER • Brad Smith, a free-lance photographer, came to the coast to help critique photos.
PHOTO BY KELLY GLASSCOCK
KICKER • Jeanel Drake helps wrap Nicole Donnert for a visit to the beach at Cape Hatteras. This was Nicole’s first visit to the ocean.
PHOTO BY BRADLEY WILSON
UGH • Nicole Donnert pets the Horseshoe Crabs at the aquarium.
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FEATURES PHOTO BY MATT ELLIOTT
INTO THE MIST • Stairways down to the beach lead from the dozens of homes behind the sand dunes. PHOTO BY KELLY GLASSCOCK
THROUGH THE AIR • Jennifer Purpee flies through the air on a hang glider of the largest sand dune in North Carolina.
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