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  • Sapelo Island resident Maurice Bailey catches a quick nap on the ferry back to the mainland from Sapelo Island, Ga. The state of Georgia's Department of Natural Resources operates the public access ferry that is used by residents, employees and visitors to the African Geechee-Gullah community of Hog Hammock. Property owners are facing higher taxes, and fees from the county tax collector threatening an already fragile community of Hog Hammock. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax25.JPG
  • Sapelo Island resident Maurice Bailey deposes of trash at the dump at on Sapelo Island, Ga. State of Georgia Department of Natural Resources employees and residents must maintain the site. Property owners are facing higher taxes, and fees from the county threatening an already fragile Geechee-Gullah community of Hog Hammock. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax15.JPG
  • Twenty-one-year-old Brandon Dixon drives a pick-up truck through the dirt streets of Hog Hammock, Thursday, Aug 23, 2012, on Sapelo Island, Ga. The roads in the African Geechee-Gullah community are simple dirt roads without traffic signs, marking or lighting. Property owners are facing higher taxes, and fees from the county threatening an already fragile community. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax21.JPG
  • Casting for bait off a state owned dock, Brandon Dixon fishes the creeks about Sapelo Island, Ga. The residents, whom many are decedents of slaves, share the island with Department of Natural Resources and the University of Georgia. Much of the infrastructure such as boat docks, paved roads and fire equipment are provided by state college or agency. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax19.JPG
  • Casting for bait off a state owned dock, Brandon Dixon fishes the creeks about Sapelo Island, Ga. The residents, whom many are decedents of slaves, share the island with Department of Natural Resources and the University of Georgia. Much of the infrastructure such as boat docks, paved roads and fire equipment are provided by state college or agency. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax18.JPG
  • Twenty-one-year-old Brandon Dixon throws a cast net for bait along one of the salt water creeks on Sapelo Island, Ga. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax00.JPG
  • Clouds move in as the afternoon ferry leaves the Geechee-Gullah community on Sapelo Island. Property owners are facing higher taxes, and fees from the county tax collector threatening an already fragile community of Hog Hammock. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax06.JPG
  • State of Georgia Department of Natural Resources employee Stanley Walker wipes his face while maintaining the trash dump on Sapelo Island, Ga. State employees and residents must haul their trash to the dump and maintain the site. Property owners are facing higher taxes, and fees from the county threatening an already fragile Geechee-Gullah community of Hog Hammock. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax13.JPG
  • Cornelia Bailey walks her dog in the yard outside her trailer-home in the Geechee-Gullah community of Hog Hammock, Thursday, Aug 23, 2012 in on Sapelo Island, Ga. Property owners are facing higher taxes, and fees from the county tax assessor's office. Bailey can trace her family's heritage back to slavery before the Civil War. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax11.JPG
  • Watching for rain Cornelia Bailey sits in the yard outside her trailer-home in the Geechee-Gullah community of Hog Hammock, Thursday, Aug 23, 2012 in on Sapelo Island, Ga. Property owners are facing higher taxes, and fees from the county tax assessor, threatening an already fragile community. Bailey can trace her family's heritage back to slavery before the Civil War. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax09.JPG
  • Brandon Dixon and Cornelia Bailey stop to talk on one of the main dirt roads in the Geechee-Gullah community of Hog Hammock, Thursday, Aug 23, 2012, on Sapelo Island, Ga. Many of the residents of the community can trace their heritage back to slavery before the Civil War. The residents are facing higher property taxes, threatening an already fragile community along the Georgia coast.(Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax05.JPG
  • The sun rises on a creek bank filled with spartina on Sapelo Island. Property owners are facing higher taxes, and fees from the county tax collector threatening an already fragile community of Hog Hammock. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax16.JPG
  • Hog Hammock resident Cornelia Bailey talks to a neighbor   in the Geechee-Gullah community of Hog Hammock, Thursday, Aug 23, 2012 in on Sapelo Island, Ga. Bailey and many of the residents in the community can trace her family's heritage back to slavery before the Civil War. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax10.JPG
  • The state of Georgia's Department of Natural Resources operates the only public access ferry used by residents, employees and visitors to the African Geechee-Gullah community of Hog Hammock on Sapelo Island. Property owners are facing higher taxes, and fees from the county tax collector threatening an already fragile community of Hog Hammock. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax26.JPG
  • Twenty-one-year-old Brandon Dixon throws a cast net for bait along one of the salt water creeks on Sapelo Island, Ga. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax17.JPG
  • Lula Walker, left, cleans up after serving dinner for more than 50 guests at her restaurant Lula's Kitchen on Sapelo Island, Georgia. Mrs. Walker is one of several African  Geechee-Gullah residents facing a property tax increase close to 1,000 percents from 2011 county tax assessments. Walker can trace her family's heritage back to slavery before the Civil War. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax12.JPG
  • The state of Georgia's Department of Natural Resources operates the only public access ferry used by residents, employees and visitors to the African Geechee-Gullah community of Hog Hammock on Sapelo Island. Property owners are facing higher taxes, and fees from the county tax collector threatening an already fragile community of Hog Hammock. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax24.JPG
  • The state of Georgia's Department of Natural Resources operates the only public access ferry used by residents, employees and visitors to the African Geechee-Gullah community of Hog Hammock on Sapelo Island. Property owners are facing higher taxes, and fees from the county tax collector threatening an already fragile community of Hog Hammock. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax23.JPG
  • Lula Walker takes a break after serving dinner to customers at her restaurant Lula's Kitchen on Sapelo Island, Georgia. Mrs. Walker is one of several African  Geechee-Gullah residents facing a property tax increase close to 1,000 percents from 2011 county tax assessments. Walker can trace her family's heritage back to slavery before the Civil War. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax08.JPG
  • Twenty-one-year-old Brandon Dixon drives a pick-up truck through the dirt streets of Hog Hammock, Thursday, Aug 23, 2012, on Sapelo Island, Ga. The roads in the African Geechee-Gullah community are simple dirt roads without traffic signs, marking or lighting. Property owners are facing higher taxes, and fees from the county threatening an already fragile community. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax04.JPG
  • State of Georgia Department of Natural Resources employee Stanley Walker maintains the trash dump at on Sapelo Island, Ga. State employees and residents must haul their trash to the dump and maintain the site. Property owners are facing higher taxes, and fees from the county threatening an already fragile Geechee-Gullah community of Hog Hammock. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax14.JPG
  • Several family members from Chicago visiting Lula Walker eat at her restaurant Lula's Kitchen on Sapelo Island, Georgia. Mrs. Walker is one of several African  Geechee-Gullah residents facing a property tax increase close to 1,000 percents from 2011 county tax assessments. Walker can trace her family's heritage back to slavery before the Civil War. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax07.JPG
  • The state of Georgia's Department of Natural Resources operates the only public access ferry used by residents, employees and visitors to the African Geechee-Gullah community of Hog Hammock on Sapelo Island. Property owners are facing higher taxes, and fees from the county tax collector threatening an already fragile community of Hog Hammock. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax22.JPG
  • Framed by spanish moss dripping from live oak trees, the sun rises on a creek bank of spartina on Sapelo Island. Property owners are facing higher taxes, and fees from the county tax collector threatening an already fragile community of Hog Hammock. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax20.JPG
  • Twenty-one-year-old Brandon Dixon drives a pick-up truck through the dirt streets of Hog Hammock, Thursday, Aug 23, 2012, on Sapelo Island, Ga. The roads in the African Geechee-Gullah community are simple dirt roads without traffic signs, marking or lighting. Property owners are facing higher taxes, and fees from the county tax assessor, threatening an already fragile community. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax02.JPG
  • Rainwater collects in the ruts of dirt roads in the African Geechee-Gullah community of Hog Hammock on Sapelo Island, Ga. Many of the dirt roads in the small community of 70 residents are without traffic signs, markings or lighting. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax03.JPG
  • A small wooden row-boat on the bank of a creek near a salt-water marsh near the Geechee-Gullah community of Hog Hammock on Sapelo Island. Property owners are facing higher taxes, and fees from the county tax collector threatening an already fragile community of Hog Hammock. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    SapeloTax01.JPG
  • Mud creek banks, like this one at the Long Tabby site, are a concern for researchers at the University of Georgia Marine Extension Service and their partner on Sapelo Island, Ga. Over a hundred years ago the Sapelo estuary oyster reef where destroyed due to over harvesting. Oysters act as a natural barrier along thousands of miles of creeks in the estuary. Without that barrier, currents erode the banks more quickly. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    Sapelo_LEAF_05.JPG
  • LEAF interns Terry Davis of Atlanta, left and Albert Leda of NYC, right, move a quadrat as they sample an area on a experimental oyster reef on Sapelo Island, Georgia. The Nature Conservancy's Leaders in Environmental Action for the Future (LEAF) program works with environmental high schools across the nation to combine classroom lessons with real-world conservation work experience for urban youth. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    Sapelo_LEAF_09.JPG
  • A group of interns with the Leaders in Environmental Action for the Future program walk to the experimental oyster reef at the Ashentilly site during low tide on Sapelo Island, Georgia. The Nature Conservancy's program works with environmental high schools across the nation to combine classroom lessons with real-world conservation work experience for urban youth.(Stephen Morton for The New York Times).
    Sapelo_LEAF_13.JPG
  • University of Georgia Coordinator for Oyster Restoration, Daniel Harris briefs a group of interns from The Nature Conservancy's Leaders in Environmental Action for the Future (LEAF) program after they collected samples off a oyster reef on Sapelo Island. The LEAF program works with environmental high schools across the nation to combine classroom lessons with real-world conservation work experience for urban youth. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    Sapelo_LEAF_17.JPG
  • Leaders in Environmental Action for the Future (LEAF) intern Jordan Herring, 17, of Atlanta uses a caliper to measure a young oyster from the Ashentilly oyster reef site in Sapelo Island. The program works with environmental high schools across the nation to combine classroom lessons with real-world conservation work experience for urban youth.(Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    Sapelo_LEAF_15.JPG
  • University of Georgia Coordinator for Oyster Restoration, Daniel Harris briefs a group of interns from The Nature Conservancy's Leaders in Environmental Action for the Future (LEAF) program before starting work documenting a oyster reef at the Long Tabby site at low tide, Tuesday, July 24, 2012 in Sapelo Island, Ga. The LEAF program works with environmental high schools across the nation to combine classroom lessons with real-world conservation work experience for urban youth.(Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    Sapelo_LEAF_06.JPG
  • University of Georgia Coordinator for Oyster Restoration, Daniel Harris, foreground, speaks to a group of interns from The Nature Conservancy's Leaders in Environmental Action for the Future (LEAF) program before starting work sampling a oyster reef at the Long Tabby site at low tide on Sapelo Island, Georgia. The LEAF program works with environmental high schools across the nation to combine classroom lessons with real-world conservation work experience for urban youth.(Stephen Morton for The New York Times)..
    Sapelo_LEAF_04.JPG
  • Interns with the Leaders in Environmental Action for the Future program walk to the experimental oyster reef at the Long Tabby site right after dawn, Tuesday, July 24, 2012 in Sapelo Island, Ga. The program works with environmental high schools across the nation to combine classroom lessons with real-world conservation work experience for urban youth. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    Sapelo_LEAF_03.JPG
  • The early morning sun makes the spartina grass of the Sapelo Island estuary glow bright green near the Long Tabby developmental oyster reef where a group of LEAF interns are taking samples. The LEAF program works with environmental high schools across the nation to combine classroom lessons with real-world conservation work experience for urban youth. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    Sapelo_LEAF_18.JPG
  • The tools of LEAF program intern Jordan Herring of Atlanta include a muddy pair of gloves and a caliper he uses to measure young oysters from sample site in Sapelo Island. The program works with environmental high schools across the nation to combine classroom lessons with real-world conservation work experience for urban youth.(Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    Sapelo_LEAF_14.JPG
  • LEAF interns Joshua McCloud, 16, of Atlanta, right, and Brandon Latorie, 16, of New York City call out oyster shell measurements to The Nature Conservancy mentor Leander Lacy of Ft. Collins, Colorado on an experimental oyster reef during low tide sampling on Sapelo Island,  Georgia. The program works with environmental high schools across the nation to combine classroom lessons with real-world conservation work experience for urban youth.(Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    Sapelo_LEAF_08.JPG
  • Reportage.com Story of the Week #441: Geechees Fragile Culture -  Launched October 2, 2012 - Full multimedia experience: audio, stills, text and or video: Go to http://www.zReportage.com to see more - Sapelo Island, Georgia, has the largest community of folks who call themselves saltwater Geechees or Gullah people. They have inhabited this coastal southeast for more than 200 years, and now property owners are facing higher taxes threatening an already fragile community. These Creole-speaking descendants of slaves have fought developments that have turned islands into tourism destinations. Property owners who payed a few hundred dollars a year will now have to pay 2-3 thousand dollars, which is a 5-600% increase. It is a poor community with not a lot of work and paying these new bills will be tough. Locals are asking for better local services - there are no street lights no trash pick up, sewer services. The problem faced is how to preserve one of the most fragile cultures in the US. (Credit Image: © Stephen Morton/zReportage.com/ZUMA)
    zReportage Sapelo.JPG
  • Terry Davis of Atlanta, an intern with the LEAF program,  reaches for a sample on an experimental oyster reef at the Long Tabby site on Sapelo Island, Ga. The Nature Conservancy's Leaders in Environmental Action for the Future (LEAF) program works with environmental high schools across the nation to combine classroom lessons with real-world conservation work experience for urban youth. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    Sapelo_LEAF_12.JPG
  • University of Georgia Coordinator for Oyster Restoration, Daniel Harris, left, stands over a group of interns from The Nature Conservancy's Leaders in Environmental Action for the Future (LEAF) program on a developmental oyster reef made of shells and other material.  A hundred years ago the Sapelo estuary oyster reefs where destroyed due to over harvesting. Inters with LEAF program are getting real-world experience on how to restore such creeks with a natural breakwater.  (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    Sapelo_LEAF_16.JPG
  • Grouped together on the back of a flatbed truck while traveling to sampling sites, interns with the Leaders in Environmental Action for the Future (LEAF) program share a laugh. The LEAF program works with environmental high schools across the nation to combine classroom lessons with real-world conservation work experience for urban youth.(Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    Sapelo_LEAF_02.JPG
  • Researchers at the University of Georgia Marine Extension Service and their partners have developed a technique for restoring oysters reefs that where long ago destroyed by harvesting. What they developed is a substrate of old shells where young oysters can develop and grow. Oysters act as a natural barrier along miles of creeks in the estuary. Without that barrier, currents erode the banks more quickly. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    Sapelo_LEAF_11.JPG
  • Researchers at the University of Georgia Marine Extension Service and their partners have developed a technique for restoring oysters reefs that where long ago destroyed by harvesting. What they developed is a substrate of old shells where young oysters can develop and grow. Oysters act as a natural barrier along miles of creeks in the estuary. Without that barrier, currents erode the banks more quickly. (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    Sapelo_LEAF_07.JPG
  • University of Georgia Coordinator for Oyster Restoration, Daniel Harris, center, takes notes from interns with The Nature Conservancy's LEAF program. The group is working on documenting  a developmental oyster reef made of shells and other material. Inters with the LEAF program are getting real-world experience on how to restore such creeks with a natural breakwater.  (Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    Sapelo_LEAF_10.JPG
  • A group of interns with the Leaders in Environmental Action for the Future (LEAF) program are slow to wake up while traveling to a sample site to collect data on experimental oyster reefs. The LEAF program works with environmental high schools across the nation to combine classroom lessons with real-world conservation work experience for urban youth.(Stephen Morton for The New York Times)
    Sapelo_LEAF_01.JPG
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