Nine Wicket & Golf Croquet on Useppa

Useppa has a long history playing three versions of croquet; the stately and competitive Six Wicket, the more relaxed still challenging Nine Wicket version of the sport, and more recently, the rambunctious, conniving and hard hitting game called Golf Croquet.

Useppa Island Croquet Club held its annual spring tournament March 28th through the 30th. Six Wicket was not played. Nine Wicket players and Golf Croquet players took over the Sumwalt lawn.

Friday was dedicated to Golf Croquet on the big court. Twenty-four contestants met throughout the day. After six games each, Michael Albert was the leader going into the finals. He held on to win the Useppa Golf Croquet championship for the second year in a row. Richard Dimmitt placed second and Linda O’Connell shared third place with Paul Beisswenger.

On Saturday and Sunday, the lawn was divided into two courts for Nine Wicket games, and by the end of play on Sunday, Karen Connery-Albert was undefeated walking away with top honors. Her husband Michael Albert was second. Mike Zuro and Donald Beckstead tied for third place.

Photographs and Story by UseppaGin

A Place to Stop: Useppa’s Butterfly Garden

Butterflies light here, light there, savoring this, tasting that.  Useppans do too, and on a sunny afternoon, butterflies and islanders met in the garden becoming a resting place for both.

Heavy-duty equipment and men in action, members of the Service Department arrived. Tall trees once majestically guarded the Sumwalt Museum eventually growing too big nefariously pushing roots underneath, sticking branches through the roof. They had to be cut down, but in the timeless spirit of Useppa, chunks and pieces were delivered to the Butterfly Garden. A stump is a now table and fat branches places to sit.

Working with Rachel from the Island Nursery, new plants were added to the ones already there. Another arbor is coming. What Colleen and Craig Ligibell started is becoming an institution. Judith Sear and Karen Kaufman are its stewards. Useppans donate their time and money as well, but none of it could happen without the generous contributions of time, plants, and knowledge from the Service Department.

A garden party seemed just the right way to celebrate this collaboration, and when most of the people were gone, a small white butterfly just for a moment, settled on a new flowering plant.

Photos and Story by UseppaGin

Happy Birthday to the Barbara Sumwalt Museum

On April 2nd the Useppa Island Historical Society’s Barbara Sumwalt Museum celebrated its twentieth birthday with Banjo music, a buffet picnic supper, huge birthday cake, and a gathering of old and new friends.

President Bob Stevens welcomed the group and thanked all who made the Museum’s creation possible and all those over the years who contribute to its upkeep and expansion.

A toast to Barbara Sumwalt’s memory, a toast to Useppa’s last 10,000 years of history, and a toast to the stewards who care for the island we love.

Photos by UseppaGin

Sally Bergsten, 1933-2014

Sally Joanne Speicher Bergsten

April 13, 1933 – March 28, 2014

There was a time on Useppa when four island couples connected in a circle of friendship. For years the Bergstens, the Smiths, the Levensons, and the Bacons were a familiar group at the Collier Inn dressed in the old Saturday night tradition of formality. They shared their holidays together. They shared their families.

Back in the late 70’s, Sally and Peter Bergsten bought a place in the Village, and then in the 80’s built a home on Calusa Ridge overlooking Pine Island Sound. Harry and Phoebe Shaw were here then, and Dudley and Carole Kircher too with children and eventually grandchildren.

Sally Bergsten was known for her gardening skills, but she could also hunt and fish with any man. She was from old-fashioned mid-western Scandinavian stock, and could do almost anything…. always with her makeup on and lipstick just so.

Museum events had a bit more flare because of Sally’s involvement. There was always a contingent of immaculately groomed and well-dressed Bergstens at Easter sunrise services on the hilltop where chess is played. Bergsten grandchildren competed in relays, games, and kayak races with the Sipprelles and other spring visitors in the Museum’s Calusa Days. Izaak Walton Kids Fishing Tournaments might have Sally lending a hand to children reeling in their first fish.

Sally and Peter left Useppa a few years ago when life on the mainland was easier than schlepping back and forth, and the island lost a bit of its elegance with their departure. Now Fort Myers and Chagrin Falls, Ohio have lost some as well.

Sally Bergsten died the other day after a long and courageous battle with illness.

Her indomitable spirit is gone, but her example is a legacy left to her family and friends.

Peter and Sally Bergsten were true partners in life during a marriage that lasted fifty-eight years. Now we on Useppa lucky enough to know the Bergstens send Peter our love and our sympathy.

By UseppaGin

Spring Break…No Hurry, No Worries

Spring Break on Useppa is laid back. Even the Saint Patrick’s Day Parade was on Island time.

Instead of marching on the 17th, it was on the 18th that decorated golf carts followed the fire truck wending its way up and down the beach. 

Archeologists Bill Marquardt and Karen Walker along with other members of the University of Florida Museum staff came over for lunch one day, and Karen showed what might be the bones of a 3,000-year-old dog. The bone and teeth fragments were discovered last year in the South Knoll dig.

Harvard had the largest contingent of vacationing college students here, but there were also three girls from the University of Pennsylvania and one young man from Albright College.

Croquet was played under the tutelage of long-time Useppa friend Bob Kroeger. New players learned the correct way to hold their mallets and how to play the game. Old timers took lessons sharpening their skills.

Alan Symonds and Charles Shook finished another year sailing together in Saturday races. Still more UIYC members are looking forward to April’s McMahon Races.  Children in and out of the pool, running up and down the beach… the Swigert, Beisswenger & Wallingford grandchildren made all Island grandparents smile, and, for three weeks, the English Ip family touched our hearts with reminders of how lucky we all are to enjoy each day on Useppa.

Island spring…one more month to go.

Photos and story by UseppaGin

Cowboy Exhibit

Museum Presents “Florida Cowboys.”
by Rona Stage, Museum Director

The Useppa Island Historical Society has opened a new temporary exhibit in the Barbara Sumwalt Museum called “Florida Cowboys”. Featuring the photography of Carlton Ward Jr., a leader in conservation photography and cowboy memorabilia, the exhibit portrays the history and the present day life of the cowboy and cattle ranching in Florida, the first state in the country to begin cattle ranching in 1605. medicinechaser.com Florida is home to over 15,000 ranches. One of them is the largest beef producer in the nation, and six in the top ten. They cover nearly a fifth of the state of Florida, protecting the endangered species that occupy their land and the state’s water resources. The exhibit will be on display until May.
Carlton Ward will speak at the Museum on Saturday February 8th at 6:30. Ward is an eighth generation Floridian from a pioneering ranching family. His photography and writing appear in a wide variety of publications, including Smithsonian, Popular Photography, GEO, Africa Geographic, and Outdoor Photographer. A leader in conservation photography, he founded the Legacy Institute for Nature & Culture (LINC) to help connect Floridians with their natural heritage.

To see more photos from this gallery click here

Photos by UseppaGin