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By Dorothy Camagna and Jennifer Cording 8.75" x 11.25" Hardcover, 112 pages in full color
Through Dorothy Camagna's artful photography and Jennifer Cording's essays, Chincoteague Revisited captures the essence of the community, ecology and the natural landscape of this unique place off Virginia's coast. Together, they tell Chincoteague's story; the life and history of the land, water and its people.
The first essay, "Community", welcomes readers to island life and to the islanders themselves; an uncommon culture of people who share a common bond. Local watermen, decoy carvers and shop owners ply their trade; visitors from everywhere transform the community in the spring; simple, whitewashed houses line Main Street, and the Channel Bass Inn bed and breakfast invites afternoon callers to tea. Townspeople and visitors enjoy the traditional Christmas parade and the tastes of the annual oyster festival. Chincoteague Island comes to life in poetry and pictures.
The next essay, "Refuge", centers on the mystery and beauty of the Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge; its seashore, marshlands, maritime forests and wildlife. Through Camagna's expert eye and Cording's sensitive language, the sun sets on the loblolly pine, and the great egret takes its majestic flight towards Chincoteague Bay. The most famous inhabitants of Assateague Island, the wild ponies, also call the refuge home. Each July, local cowboys herd the ponies for their swim across the channel to Chincoteague's shore, where the foals are auctioned at the annual Firemen's Carnival.
And finally, the essay titled "Transitions" focuses on the ecological and seasonal changes of Chincoteague and Assateague Islands. "It is a delicate balance," writes Cording of the fragile combination of a beautiful natural landscape and thousands of human visitors who descend on the island each season.
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