Conference
Highlights:
This
advertisement (actual size) was passed out at the 1998 conference.
It provided everyone with information about the 1999 conference dates.
It also provided a sample of grits. When the cover was lifted, inside
was a recipe for making “Folly Island Style Shrimp and Grits.”
(Clever girls........ those co-chairs for the conference: Wendy Allen
and Paula Keener-Chavis.)(Photograph
by Susan Leach Snyder)

Right:
This conference announcement was distributed prior to the conference.
(Photograph
by Susan Leach Snyder) (Click
on the image to enlarge it.)
The South
Carolina Marine Educators Association welcomed NMEA to the lowcountry
of South Carolina. From the welcoming dinner reception at the Charleston
Visitor Center, where conference committee members dressed as southern
belles, served mint juleps, and chamber music was played..... to the
Grand Finale at Middleton Place (a former plantation and National
Historic landmark), conference participants knew they were experiencing
truly great southern hospitality.

Left:
Conference Program (Photograph
by Susan Leach Snyder)

The
Campus at the College of Charleston was beautiful. (Photographer
is unknown)
On the first day
of the conference, prior to the evening welcoming festivities, some
people pre-registered for the all-day (4:30 A.M. to 4:30 P.M.) “Living
in Water,” hands-on curriculum workshop presented by Valerie
Chase. Others attended the NMEA Board and committee meetings.

Left:
Each conference participant received a conference notebook. (Photograph
by Susan Leach Snyder)
The second morning
began with a continental breakfast and a keynote address titled “To
See a World” by Rudy Manche, Director of Science and Nature
Programming for South Carolina Educational Television. Next were symposia
titled “The South Carolina Department of Natural Resources---Advocate
for and Steward of South Carolina’s Coastal Resources”
by Paul A. Sandifer, Director of the South Carolina Department of
Natural
Resources and “Preserving the Gullah Culture in a Changing Coastal
Environment” by Emory S. Campbell, Executive Director of Penn
Center. An extensive assortment of concurrent sessions and a delicious
dinner at the maritime Center of the South Carolina Aquarium filled
the rest of the day.
Conference
Mug
(Photograph by Susan Leach Snyder)
The
focus of day three was field trips and special workshops. Field trips
included, but were not limited to deep sea fishing, performing an
inventory of a loggerhead sea turtle nest, scuba diving, kayaking,
stomping around a cypress swamp, doing a harbor trawl, and cruising
aboard a shrimp boat. The two workshops were: a study of plate tectonics
and sweetgrass basket weaving. After the field trips and workshops,
the “Taste of Charleston” and NMEA Auction took place
in the Colonial Room of the Westin Francis Marion Hotel.
Right:
What a treat........watching a loggerhead hatchling emerge from its
nest. (Photographer is unknown.)
Left:
What fun...learning how to weave sweetgrass and pine needles into
baskets. (Photographer is unknown)

Robin
Goettel (IL-UN), Mike Klepinger (MI), Rosanne Fortner (OH), and Jim
Lubner (WI) found some time to discuss the Great Lakes Sea Grant network
project on exotic species. (Photographer is
unknown.)

Jeff
Sandler (Mr. Fish) (ME) auctioned off PIKE.
(Photographer is unknown)
Day four was a
day of more symposia and concurrent sessions, poster sessions and
chapter meetings. The symposia were “The Sustainable Sea Expeditions--A
New Opportunity for Marine Education” by Francesca Cava, Project
Manager of the Sustainable Seas Expedition for the National Geographic
Society and “H. L. Hunley: Recovery of a National Treasure”
by Dr. Robert Neyland, Hunley Project Director at the Hunley Research
Center. The evening ended with the “Beach,Boogie, and Blues
Dinner” at the Sand Dunes Club on Sullivan’s Island.
The fifth day
began with Sea Faire/Sea Swap and a continental breakfast. Next was
the Stegner Lecture. This was a special treat, titled “A Celebration
of Barrier Islands: Restless Ribbons of Sand” in which Mary
Edna Fraser (visual artist), Dr. Orrin Pinkey (coastal geologist),
and Marjory Wentworth (poet) combined their efforts in a presentation
of large scale batiks on silk, scientific textoriginal maps and poetry.
Concurrent sessions were
presented
after the lecture, and they were followed by a bus trip to the Grand
Finale at Middleton Place, where local artisans demonstrated their
crafts and a lowcountry banquet was served.
The
landscape at Middleton Place was exquisite. (Photograph
by Susan Leach Snyder)

Plantation
singers entertained the NMEA crowd.
(Photographer
is unknown.)
The final day
of the conference offered field trips to hunt for fossils, sail in
the harbor on a tall ship, spend an afternoon and evening studying
turtles, and to learn about Charleston’s Heritage.