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ABOUT THE AREA
Located on
North Carolina’s Outer Banks, Ocracoke is accessible only by water
or air. The relative
isolation has spared the island development that plagues
so many beach towns. You can park your car for the week and walk, bicycle or
paddle everywhere you need to go. Part of the Cape Hatteras National Seashore, the National Park Service owns all Ocracoke Island except for the 1000 acres that comprise the original village. For 13 continuous miles, the island’s dunes and marshlands are untouched and the pristine beaches earned the distinction of #1 on the 2007 list of top beaches (compiled by Stephen Leatherman, a Florida International University coastal geologist who rates beaches nationwide, www.drbeach.org/drbeach/). |
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Home to about 800
year-round residents, the Ocracoke community, established in the
early 1700s by people of British descent, has remained relatively
isolated from the mainland. |
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