More Ditleff Point Photos
Posted by gerald in St. John USVI, St. John Virgin Islands, tags: ditleff point, St. John, St. John USVI, St. John Virgin IslandsWelcome back!
Posts Tagged “ditleff point”
Dec
19
2009
More Ditleff Point PhotosPosted by gerald in St. John USVI, St. John Virgin Islands, tags: ditleff point, St. John, St. John USVI, St. John Virgin IslandsWelcome back!
Dec
17
2009
Ditleff Point Morning, St. John US Virgin islandsPosted by gerald in St. John USVI, St. John Virgin Islands, St. John Virgin Islands Beaches, tags: ditleff point, st john. st john virgin islands, St. John US Virgin Islands, St. John USVIDitleff Point Passing through the open gate, I began to walk down the now bulldozed and paved road, which not long ago was a rugged dirt track. Along the way I met Miles Stair of Holiday Homes fame. He slowed his pace and waled with me. On our way back to the main road a squall blew in from the east. The mist from the squall produced a beautiful rainbow that arched over the Point from east to west. I’m excited to come back here, shoot some photos, and take a few jogs, before, and hopefully this never happens, that access is closed off to St. John residents and visitors. About Beach Access “Historically, land access to Ditleff Point goes back to the first inhabitants of indigenous peoples who had a settlement there some two thousand years ago. Poor whites abnd freed slaves lived there during colonial times. During substance farming days, a family lived in a house whose foundation still exists, lying just inland from the southern end of the beach. After that Ditleff Beach was used primarily as access to the sea for fishing and the gathering of whelk and conch as well as recreationally for swimming, snorkeling, diving and fishing. Original trails were replaced by a bulldozed road when a group of mainlanders purchased the point declaring that they had no intention of developing it. For many years St. Johnians and visitors used this road as access to the beaches. When the mainlanders passed away and the property passed to their heirs, the land was cut up into parcels, developed and put on the market, with a gate at the entrance to control access. |