Block Island "41:11.18N 71:34.71W"

VulcanSpirit
Richard & Alison Brunstrom
Wed 21 Sep 2011 12:43
And so to Block Island, population about 1000, an offshore part of the state of Rhode Island. And what a wonderful place it turned out to be. Named in 1624 by the Dutch explorer Adriaen Block after himself, it was settled by a small group of English from the Massachusetts Colony in 1661. At that time there were about 1500 native American Indians in residence with whom largely friendly relations were struck up, the two groups sharing the island. But, as usual, this did not last. The Indian population quickly crashed, here due largely to European diseases to which they had no immunity rather than to violence. The last Block Island Indian died in the 1880s; they had been on the island for at least five thousand years prior to the arrival of the Europeans and lasted just over two hundred years afterwards.
 
47% of Block Island is conserved as wild land, and it has a beach all the way round. The summer season had ended and the place was really quiet. We loved it - so much so that we stayed longer than planned in order to explore. Boats moor in a large salt lake reached by an artificial cut; the entrance is strangely reminiscent of Bermuda. 
 
Here we are walking down one of the beautifully maintained trails
 
 
And resting (yet again) in the sunshine on a glacial boulder - the whole island is another moraine.
 
 
And, on arrival at the beach, catching up on the news in the local rag
 
    
 
And here is my attempt at art, a technique borrowed from St Agnes island in the Scillies where it is all the rage. This tower contains only twelve stones; more time and patience allows in excess of twenty to the really skilled craftsman.
 
 
As might be expected, Block Island wildlife is interesting - there is an endemic vole and several rare species, but no squirrels, skunks, racoons, possums or coyotes. Here, just as a taster, is the rare Northern Blazing Star Liatris borealis which likes sandy barrens and heaths.