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Mangrove Roots Seek the Water--Mine too.

In the quiet shallows of Florida’s Indian and Banana River coastal lagoons, the red mangrove stands as both survivor and storyteller. Its roots don't begin in the soil—they reach outward and downward, searching, stretching, eventually anchoring themselves in the water. These tangled prop roots, shaped by tides and time, create stability in an ever-changing environment. For those who spend their lives on the water, the red mangrove offers more than ecological importance—it becomes a reflection of purpose, resilience, and a reflection of a person’s roots.


Red mangrove roots are uniquely adapted to thrive where land and water meet. They filter salt, stabilize shorelines, and provide essential habitat for fish, birds, and marine life. Yet their most remarkable trait is their persistence. They grow toward the water, embracing it, relying on it, becoming stronger because of it. In many ways, that journey mirrors my path, as I feel called back to the water after time away.


For years, I followed a different current—spending three decades in the classroom as an educator. Teaching, like these roots, shaped me, grounded me, and allowed me to guide others as they found their own direction. But also like the mangrove roots seeking their natural environment, I have felt the steady pull of the water. Long before I was a teacher, I was a charter captain, and before that I spent countless hours with my Aunt Shirley and Uncle Charles and my dad, navigating the waterways of Florida and the Bahamas, reading tides, and sharing the natural beauty of places like the Banana River Lagoon and Indian River Lagoon.


Returning to the water is not a departure from who I had become—it is a reconnection with who I have

always been. Just as mangrove roots do not forget their purpose, neither do we. The water teaches patience, awareness, and respect for the natural world. It reminds us that growth often comes from returning to what grounds us.


Today, as a charter captain once again, I find that my roots—like those of the red mangrove—are strongest where land and water meet. Guiding others through these ecosystems is more than a profession; it’s a continuation of a lifelong connection. The mangroves stand as a reminder that sometimes, the journey forward begins by finding your way back.

 
 
 

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