Showing posts with label nick herron. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nick herron. Show all posts

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Casey Key “Buy a Piece of the Past and Create Your Own Future”


According to records, the first published mention of Casey Key was in a colorful report of a meeting in 1849 of Captain John Charles Casey with the Indians at Casey’s Pass, the site of the present Jetties.

The famous and courageous Captain Casey, although born in England, was appointed to West Point, where he graduated in the same class with General Robert E. Lee in 1829, eventually becoming connected with the Bureau of Indian Affairs. This duty took him to most parts of Florida, especially the West Coast, during the efforts of the Government to drive out the Indians. In retrospect not an admirable action, but at the time, considered justified and a matter of duty.
In 1856 a costal map from Tampa south was formulated mostly from Captain Casey’s detailed notes and sketches, which proved to be amazingly accurate and perhaps responsible for the Key having been named after him.

Casey Key remained a garden spot with wild game and fish in abundance. It was the latter that lured the first settlers from Osprey, across the bay to the Key. Like most of the first fine families who had land grants up and down the mainland coast across from the Key, they were excellent fishermen. Casey Key is grateful for its few remaining old homes.

From then on the Key’s growth was gradual and healthy: friends of friends coming to share the lush, tropical green foliage and the white sand of the unspoiled beaches. About 1917, a resident of the Key attempted to promote a real estate development by changing the name Casey Key to Treasure Island. As an enterprise it failed, but resulted in quite q bit of good-natured feudin’ and figtin’—“Casey Key” versus “Treasure Island”—in later years, as the nom de plume lingered on.

In September, 1921, a terrific hurricane arbitrarily gave approximately two-and-one-half-miles of north Casey Key to Siesta Key by moving the then existing pass just south of Point of Rocks to its present location where it is said, Nature, at midnight, with its frightening force, finally finished. This geographic change started a series of still unsettled litigations between the two Keys as to whose land was where and who owned what.

At the south end of the Key the story was different. Because of the shifting sands of Casey’s Pass, there was more portage than navigation, so some energetic citizens in that part of Venice known as Higelville, along with interested people from Laurel and Nokomis, successfully dug a channel to the Gulf with manpower alone. It was not until the Thirties that the Army Corps of Engineers built the first Jetties.

The Herron Group, Nick Herron and Kathleen Herron have four properties that were built back in the 1940’s. All are on very different locations on the Key. Three are Gulf front properties and one is Gulf to Bay.

Our newest listing is 615 Casey Key Road a Gulf Front home that was built for the Grandmother( who has passed away) as a wedding gift and has been in the family for over sixty years.
The Herron Group, Nick Herron and Kathleen Herron would love to show you some of the Casey Key history. As we say, “Buy a Piece of the Past and Create Your Own Future”.

Beach, Bay or Back Nine…Live the Dream

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Explore the Secret of the Seas at Mote Aquarium


For anyone visiting the Sarasota area, Mote Aquarium is a must-see. A local favorite, the Aquarium is on City Island located between the barrier island of Longboat Key on the North and Lido Key’s St. Armands Circle on the South.

This unique attraction is first and foremost, a research facility. Eugenia Clark founded the facility in 1955 primarily for shark research. It is now a world-renowned marine laboratory in the areas of aquaculture, coastal ecology, and marine mammal rehabilitation – to name a few.
Mote opened its aquarium in 1980, displaying Florida’s marine life for all to see. Mote allows you to explore the secrets of the sea with touch pools, shark, dolphin, manatee and sea turtle exhibits and over 100 other species of marine life.

Mote visitors can learn about the ocean’s top predators and shark research at the Shark Habitat, a 135,000-gallon tank with nurse sharks, bull sharks, blacktips, and sandbar sharks – among others. At Shark Tracker, visitors take on the role of Mote scientists and learn how sharks are tracked in the wild or find out what it’s like to be a shark in the exciting 12-minute movie at Shark Attack Theater.
A favorite for children, the Aquarium has two touch pools: at Contact Cove, get close to horseshoe crabs, sea stars, and sea urchins and at the Ray Touch Pool you can touch sting rays with no worries – their barbed tails have been removed.

Now the main attraction: The Ann and Alfred Goldstein Marine Mammal Research and Rehabilitation Center where visitors can see resident manatees Hugh and Buffett, loggerhead and green sea turtles, and resident dolphins, Harley and Moonshine.

When your visit to Mote Aquarium has ended, take a ride over to St. Armand’s Circle for some fine shopping and dining.


According to My Florida Regional Multiple Listing Service here are the figures for Longboat & Lido Keys:

Longboat Key Single Family Homes for Sale there are 164 Active Listings priced from $179,900 to $9,995,000. There are 15 Sale Pending and there have been 35 Single Family Homes Sold this year.

Longboat Key Condos for Sale there are 414 Active Listings priced from $48,995 to $5,000,000. There are 55 Sale Pending and there have been 101 Condos Sold this year.

Lido Key Single Family Homes for Sale there are 47 Active Listings priced from $475,000 to $9,800,000. There are 5 Sale Pending and there have been 16 Single Family Homes Sold this year.

Lido Key Condos for sale there are 102 Active Listings priced from $159,900 to $3,999,000. There are 4 Sale Pending and there have been 22 Condos Sold this year.

Nick Herron & Kathleen Herron of the Herron Group, RE/MAX Alliance Group would be glad to show you any of the properties listed on Sarasota’s Barrier Island of Lido Key, Longboat Key, Siesta Key, Casey Key, Manasota Key, and Island of Venice. Call 941.350.5035.