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Scout Key

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Camp Sawyer on Scout Key in 1987

Scout Key is an island in the lower Florida Keys. It was previously known as West Summerland Key until 2010. U.S. 1 (the Overseas Highway) crosses the key at approximately mile markers 34—35, between Spanish Harbor Key and Big Pine Key.

Etymology

The Key was renamed to reflect the two adjoining scout camps on it, Boy Scout Camp Sawyer and Girl Scout Camp Wesumkee. Camp Wesumkee is the site of the Winter Star Party, an annual gathering of amateur astronomers. The name change also removed some confusion about its location – despite its name, the formerly-named West Summerland Key is actually about 10 miles east of Summerland Key.

Scout Key Milky Way in April, 2018

Geography

Originally, there were three keys at this location. They were connected by fills at the time the Overseas Railroad was built. The keys were West Summerland Key (westernmost), Middle Summerland Key (center), and no name is known for the easternmost key. West Summerland retained its name, but the other two are known simply as the Spanish Harbor Keys; named for the anchorage located between this key and Big Pine Key. Interesting features of this key include indian mounds, and storage buildings still standing from the Flagler railway construction era.

Environment

Its ecology has suffered recent hurricane damage. The swim platform at Camp Sawyer which was rebuilt after a 2004 storm became, in turn, scrap lumber in 2005. The storm surges came in from the east and eliminated many more trees on the Camp Wesumkee side of the Key than at Camp Sawyer, which still had many fifty-year-old buttonwood trees taken out.

Attractions

The eastern end of the key has a small parking area on the Atlantic that allows access to the Old Bahia Honda Rail Bridge, which is a popular photography spot among tourists and locals also known known as "The Broken Bridge"

Bahia Honda Old Rail Bridge as seen from Scout Key

References

  1. Petuch, E.J.; Myers, R.F. (2014). Molluscan Communities of the Florida Keys and Adjacent Areas: Their Ecology and Biodiversity. CRC Press. p. 43. ISBN 978-1-4822-4919-4. Retrieved September 7, 2017.

Further reading

Florida Keys
Biscayne National Park
Upper keys
Middle keys
Lower keys
Outlying islands
Areas
Other topics

24°38′59″N 81°18′39″W / 24.649855°N 81.310887°W / 24.649855; -81.310887


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