Walkers Cay, Bahamas Past History
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| Walkers Cay Club
(1972) |
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Type of Activity
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Communications Support Trips
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Location
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Location
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Bahama Islands
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Date of Activity
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Various
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Coordinates
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27°15′27.8″N 78°23′40.7″W
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Robert Abplanalp
purchased the lease for Walker's Cay in 1968, and continued the island's
development as a sport fishing destination, while also cautiously eyeing the
impact on conservation in the waters surrounding it. Abplanalp also took steps
to protect the marine life around Walker's Cay. He was a pioneer of
tag-and-release fishing, and he worked with the Bahamian government to
establish a marine reserve around the island. Over the next three decades,
Walkers Cay became the hub for sport fishing in the northern Bahamas.
Abplanalp was a close friend and supporter of
President Richard Nixon, Grand Cay became a popular destination for Nixon and
his friend Bebe Rebozo. Grand Cay was a nearby private island that Abplanalp
owned and was available to the President anytime he decided to visit.
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Walkers Cay Club, Bahamas (note radio antenna), WHCA maintained UHF system |
I thought Walkers Cay was a true "Paradise" and only a short 90 minutes by helicopter to be in a different world. The Key Biscayne Detachment of
WHCA was responsible for maintaining the radio system that connected the Florida
White House to Walkers Cay and Grand Cay providing communications whenever President
Nixon vacationed at this private retreat on Grand Cay. Robert Abplanalp was a close friend of President
Nixon, and owned both Walkers Cay Club, and Grand Cay.
The Walkers Cay Club, and
Marina was a popular fishing resort, particularly known as a location for billfishing, with huge Atlantic
blue marlin caught in the area; angling for bonefish was also popular there. Walker's Cay was also known for its annual billfish tournaments that were held there, Walkers
Cay Billfish Tournaments attracted some of the best anglers in the world, During Abplanalp's ownership, Walker's Cay became a
world-renowned destination for sport fishing and marine conservation.
It was a very exclusive resort
as the only way to reach the island was either by boat or by air. Walker's Cay Club had a 75-slip fully equipped marina
complete with bait,
tackle, and snack shop supplying guests with anything they needed. The island's hotel, marina, and airstrip were all
upgraded.
The island's airstrip is suitable only for light aircraft. The resort had regularly scheduled flights from Ft
Lauderdale, Fl. by Grumman Mallard Sea Plane. Travel by WHCA to the island was generally by
helicopter.
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Guests would arrive on
a Grumman Mallard Sea Plane
| Ariel view of the Hotel, swimming pools, Marina,
Chapel, and Guest villas |
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We would travel to the Walkers Cay to perform monthly maintenance on all of the communication equipment on the island.
The relatively small hotel was nothing fancy, but most people were not looking for a luxury hotel, just a place to sleep and take a shower between marathon fishing. The decor in the rooms, hotel lobby, and marina was all very rustic with a Bahamian flare, and often had a dirty appearance with sand on floors in hotel rooms and the carpeted areas were very worn and lots of sand. The light switches and cover plates were all a hodge podge and didn’t match, some installed upside down. We were aware of the need for proper grounding on our equipment and would use a multimeter to look inside the switch plates to ensure that everything was normal. We would have to crawl under a deck, and open the box and see the grounding wires connected to the next box which was linked with plastic PVC pipe instead of metal conduit for traditional conduction. All of the A/C was individual through the wall window type units, and they were not efficient or reliable. The unsteady generator power and frequent surges was not friendly with the A/C units. The units that were working would also often leak condensation all over the room.
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The hotel’s outside bar and pool area (1973)
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The hotels fresh and salt water pool area adjacent to the hotels outside bar |
The hotel also housed the resorts bar, restaurant and two
swimming pools, one fresh water and one salt water. There were several
buildings where the staff lived while on the island. The island had its own
power plant and desalinization station for all drinking water.
The
Walkers Cay experience was always a great one . Hard work during a Presidential
visit, but there were a lot of rewards during our maintenance visits. We are
out there living the life eating lobster and fresh seafood, while the hotel bar
served the best conch fritters with cocktail sauce in the world!
What
"Flavour" of drink would I order? No, I didn't spell it wrong. Flavour
was the hotel’s bartender, and he made awesome "mega hot" Bloody Mary’s.
He also made great Yellow Birds, and Planters Punch, then "GOOD NIGHT"
lights OUT! Next to the bar was a game room equipped with a regulation pool
table and a bumper pool table. There were some pretty competitive games with
the loser buying the next round of drinks (all drinks were free), which meant
they had to walk to the bar and bring the drinks back. I was the uncontested champion
of the bumper pool table because I never lost a game! Adjacent to the game room
there was the card room, We spent many evenings playing pool or playing poker or
hearts to pass the time since there was limited television or other forms of
entertainment. There was a lot of Per Diem won and lost during our stay. Then after
drinking and playing cards until the wee hours in the morning, we had to either
get up to go to work or get ready to go back to Key Biscayne.
I remember when Dave Dersham arrived
at Key Biscayne just out of school and new to WHCA, We broke him in as we did
all new radio guys a trip to Walkers Cay to introduce him to the most unique
UHF radio system in the world! LOL. After working 24 straight hours
re-wiring the radio room, I sent Dave back to Key Biscayne while Chuck
Rasmussen and I stayed behind to finish up and completed testing the radio equipment.
Dave and I worked together until I was discharged
in 1974. Our Walkers Cay’s Club membership of the Key Biscayne Detachments
personnel that maintained the communication equipment is getting smaller each year. Probably only
about 6 of us left.
When we called Homestead AFB with an
updated weather report for a chopper to pick us up. We always exaggerated the
weather conditions and tell them tell them high winds, low visibility, and
getting worse by the minute. If they would cancel our scheduled evacuation on
Friday afternoon, then we were committed to stay through the weekend, they also
could never support a mission on Mondays. If you could convince them NOT to fly
on Friday, you would have 4 full days of down time.
The
Grumman Mallard Sea Plane brought paying customers
from Ft Lauderdale to the island on a daily basis and many of us used that as
backup when space was available, but we never really begged to get off if we
had the chance.
Some of my most memorable moments in
all my years in WHCA took place at Walkers Cay and Grand Cay.
UHF
Radio System to the Bahamas
Prior to 1969 there was little or no communications on Walkers Cay or Grand Cay. There was a low power radio at the Walkers Cay Club that they used to communicate to their office in Ft. Lauderdale, and for emergencies. There was nothing on Grand Cay!
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The
Radio Tower viewed from offshore from Walkers Cay (1973) |
The Key Biscayne Detachment was responsible for the installation and maintenance of the radio system which included an 8 Channel Cardion UHF link between Grand Bahama Island (GBI), and Walkers Cay, and then an Army GRC-103 12 channel between Walkers Cay and Grand Cay.
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UHF
Radio system from GBI to Walkers Cay to Grand Cay |
AT&T provided the voice circuits from Key Biscayne to a NASA submarine cable that terminated at a down range missile tracking station on GBI. This location was used for tracking launches from Cape Canaveral. WHCA used an existing radio tower to install a Farinon UHF radio system on the Air Force facility. GBI shot directly to Walkers Cay where the circuits terminated. All of this was interfaced at GBI to the NASA undersea cable. This system was very labor intensive due to saltwater corrosion from the air.
On Walkers Cay there were telephones installed in the Walkers Cay Club’s office and several of the hotel rooms where supporting staff would stay during all Presidential trips and of course all of the WHCA areas. The radios were located in a building adjacent to the 125 ft. tower, FM base stations were also installed for any necessary communications for WHCA, Secret Service, or the White House Staff staying on the island, and in a separate building near the radio room housed a small switchboard and communications center for TTY and fax messages.
There was a secure voice circuit installed that went to the Key Biscayne Commcenter but there was nothing, but voice circuits installed on Grand Cay. Voice circuits were also installed in the communication center for any DEX-1(facsimile) and TTY traffic.
We would travel to Walkers Cay from Homestead AFB each month for maintenance trips. A typical Walkers Cay maintenance visit was launched by a USAF helicopter from Homestead AFB, first stop was Grand Bahama Island AF Station to refuel because the helicopter did not have enough to reach Walkers Cay and return safely.
When refueling was complete we would take off and the pilot would fly at tree top level and curve the coastline before we headed to Walkers Cay. Many sunbathers did not have a chance to grab their towels and tops as they blew down to the beach. We did this routinely for at least two years before the Commander at the GBI USAF Station sent a memo to Homestead AFB flight group. This was always fun until on one flight as we were enjoying the view, the helicopter suddenly raised its nose sharply. None of us knew what happened until we landed at Walkers and the pilot told us that to avoid a direct bird strike, he quickly reacted causing a glancing blow instead of a direct hit, and he “didn’t want to be picking bird feathers out of his teeth”.
The same group of USAF pilots, all were combat veterans who had served in Vietnam and did some strange things on our flights. They would use a grappling hook with bait and go trolling for sharks. Feeling a 300 lb. shark shaking on a nylon rope below the helicopter was an experience, but often wondered how they would have explained if they went down in the shark infested waters. On one return flight while landing at Homestead AFB instead of the usual vertical landing the Pilot decided to land like a fixed wing aircraft on the Huey’s skids. I was told that this is a routine training exercise. In 1973 we expanded the radio system I remember building and installing a GRC-103 UHF radio system between Walkers Cay and Grand Cay. Mario Lilla who was also the father of the WHCA mini board, engineered the interface that we installed the systems at Walkers Cay and Grand Cay. The voice channels used Quindar Ringers, numerous relays, 4W to 2W conversions, interfacing the GRC-103 Radios with a Farinon UHF Radio Carrier to Grand Bahama Island where it was connected to AT&T submarine cable to Key Biscayne. We built and tested the interface and radio system at the CCT shop at Homestead AFB before going to the Bahamas to install it.
While we were on Grand Cay, we also buried a 50 pr cable from the radio room to the bunkhouse and both villas to install new phones and any future requirements.
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The GRC-103
UHF Radio system used from GBI to Walkers Cay and Grand Cay Islands |
The final leg of the was a GRC 103
UHF radio system, with a TD 660 multiplexer providing 24 voice circuits between
Walkers Cay and terminating on Grand Cay. Telephones were installed in
the Main residence and both villas, as well as the bunkhouse on the island.
The USSS CP also had phones installed and FM Radio Consoles on Baker and
Charlie frequencies. All equipment, tools, and personnel had to be sent
in on helicopters from Homestead AFB.
We would usually leave Homestead on
Monday or Tuesday with a return scheduled for Friday afternoon, normally about
2pm. Some of the USAF chopper pilots enjoyed coming early and enjoying lunch at
the hotel.
The
monthly maintenance trips to Walkers Cay were like paid vacations, we would be
choppered over from Homestead, We would spend two or three days doing PM's on
Walkers and traveling over to Grand Cay by boat. Plus, we would of course
have to man all locations during any official trips. We also had a UHF
system between Freeport on GBI to Walkers Cay which meant side trips to the
Casino in Freeport.
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Ariel
view of Grand Cay (1973) |
We honestly did do some work during some of these trips.
I never had any problem finding volunteers to help me on maintenance trips.
Most
of the maintenance was accelerated due to salt air corrosion and many of the
non-maintenance folks enjoyed being able to help with the grunt labor part of
changing out and upgrading various systems.
4 May 1973 to Walkers Cay to support the President’s visit on Grand Cay
All of the WHCA support personnel would stay on Walkers Cay
during the Presidential Trips except for one radio tech that would go to Grand
Cay and one radio tech would stay at GBI.
Although I visited Walkers over 20 times to perform maintenance on the
radio equipment and Switchboard, I only participated in this one actual visit at
Walkers Cay. I was the only Radioman at Walkers so I was assigned a pager and
and hung out at the hotel waiting for some thing to stop working.
My activities for the three days that the trip lasted consisted
of eating, drinking, playing pool and playing shuffleboard, OK, I also slept.
I do regret not being a fisherman, as I would have loved to experience the world-class
fishing at Walker's Cay.
During every Presidential visit to Grand
Cay, WHCA, the White House staff and the White House Press Corp would stay on Walker’s
Cay. Helen Thomas, the Dean of the White House Press
Corp who was in that position for what seemed like forever. During the Nixon
years, she would have already been a woman in her late 40's or early 50's. On
the trips to the Bahamas, she would lead the Press Pool and stay in the hotel
on Walkers Cay, some 7 miles from Grand Cay where President Nixon, Robert Abplanalp,
and Bebe Rebozo would relax on the beach.
The
WHCA Commcenter would actually file her stories and transmit them back to the Press Center, but her access to actual news was limited to
whatever the Military Aide would feed her.
Now,
the ugly! Helen Thomas routinely relaxed beside the pool at the Walkers Cay
Hotel. This woman should NEVER have been a candidate for a two-piece bathing
suit at any age! The image was enough to
permanently burn the retina of your eyes! All that being said, she did keep the
other correspondents in check and establish some rules of engagement, although
she could be as rough as any of them, especially during Watergate.
WHCA personnel were given instructions on the route between the
various coral rocks to make the 7 mile trip to Grand Cay via a small 13 ft Boston
Whaler. For two to three of us to head out on a maintenance trip was very
common, but for the Commcenter, they would go solo during TTY message delivery
during visits. It was a major short coming because the Commcenter was located
at Walkers Cay, and the President located across open water about 7 miles and
sometime as much as 45 minutes away on Grand Cay.
When the President departed, we boarded an USAF helicopter and
headed back to Crandon Park on Key Biscayne with stops at Grand Cay, and GBI
where we picked up other WHCA personnel.
I
still think the undertaking of installing permanent Communications to support
both Walkers Cay and Grand Cay in the Bahamas was one of the most challenging efforts
of WHCA over the years. It was a very elaborate set up and at the same time a
Rube Goldberg design.
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Note: Walkers Cay Club was severely damaged in 2004 by two hurricanes
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Walkers Cay Island in the Bahamas |
Walkers Cay Club after 2004 hurricane
Walkers Cay Club after 2004 hurricane season
Unfortunately the Walkers Cay Club was heavily damaged by hurricane Andrew and was closed down, the island and all of the facilities were, but in 2019 Walkers Cay was sold, renovated and the Marina re-opened as of 2022.
President Nixon visited Key Biscayne more than 50 times this also included several visits to Grand Cay between 1969 and 1974 when he resigned from office. After his resignation all of the Communications equipment was removed from GBI, Walkers Cay and Grand Cay.
After the death of Robert Abplanalp in 2003, the fortunes of Walker's Cay took a further turn for the worse when it was hit by two hurricanes in 2004, (Frances and Jeanne), which caused extensive damage. However, in 2005, the Abplanalp family decided to sell the island, marking the end of a 50 year era.
The island went through subsequent ownership changes, but its legacy as a top-tier fishing destination persisted. Additionally, a decline in tourism and changing travel patterns led to its gradual decline becoming a ghost town for fourteen years, with crumbling infrastructure and dilapidated facilities. Until in 2018 Walker's Cay was purchased by Texas businessman Carl Allen, who has begun the process of restoring the island it to its former glory.
Legacy of Robert Abplanalp's ownership of Walker's Cay
Robert Abplanalp's ownership of Walker's Cay had a significant impact on the island and the surrounding waters. He developed Walker's into a world-renowned destination for sport fishing and marine conservation. He also helped to promote tourism to the Bahamas and to create jobs on the island.
His ownership of Walker's Cay spanned several decades, during which the island thrived as a haven for the wealthy and fishing enthusiasts. However, in 2005, the Abplanalp family decided to sell the island, marking the end of an era. The island went through subsequent ownership changes, but its legacy as a top-tier fishing destination persisted.
Abplanalp's legacy is still felt today. Walker's Cay is still a popular destination for sport fishing and tourism, and the marine reserve that he helped to establish continues to protect the marine life around the island.
Walker's Cay continues to draw visitors from around the world, offering them the chance to experience the same pristine beauty and world-class fishing that attracted Robert Abplanalp and his distinguished guests. The island remains a testament to the vision of a man who transformed a secluded paradise into an exclusive retreat, leaving an indelible mark on the history of Walker's Cay.
The New Walkers Cay
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Walkers Cay current Logo (2023) |
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Marina Entrance (2023 pictured Don and Becky Cammel) |
Philanthropist and marlin fishing enthusiast Carl Allen purchased Walker's Cay in 2018 with a vision to restore it to its former glory. Allen is the founder of Allen Exploration, a company that specializes in underwater exploration and research. He is also a passionate advocate for marine conservation. Since purchasing, Carl Allen, has begun the process of restoring Walkers Cay. There are plans for redevelopment and modernization, aiming to position the island as a premier tourist destination once again. Sustainable development initiatives are being implemented to preserve the natural beauty and ecological balance of the island.
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Walkers Cay (2023) |
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The restored Marina at Walkers Cay Island in the Bahamas (2023) |
Allen's restoration of Walker's Cay is already having a positive impact. The decaying infrastructure on the island was entirely revitalized. The island's marina has been fully restored and there has already been two billfish tournaments conducted with a third scheduled for Memorial Day weekend 2024. The Airstrip has been extended and modernized, the 2,500-foot-long (760 m) runway is now suitable for light aircraft.
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The Chapel on Walkers Cay under construction (2022) |
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The Chapel on Walkers Cay under construction (2022) |
The Islands chapel has also been restored with the wood carvings of Joseph and Mary that were on each side of the entrance door of the old chapel survived, have been saved, restored, and are on display inside the new chapel.
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Walkers Cay’s restored chapel (2023) |
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Walkers Cay’s restored chapel (2023)
Today, there are only a few structures that have been completed. The new chapel is beautiful, and the “Welcome House” for Customs is a very nice looking building just off the runway. A new resort is scheduled to open in 2023 or 2024 and Allen has hired a team of local residents to work on all of these projects thus creating jobs and economic opportunities for the people of Walker's Cay. He is working with local residents to develop a sustainable fishing industry and to create new tourism attractions. Allen is also investing in education and training programs for local residents. Carl Allen's dedication to Walker's Cay has borne fruit. The island is once again becoming a destination of choice for travelers seeking adventure, relaxation, and natural beauty. It's a testament to what can be achieved through a combination of entrepreneurship, conservation, and a deep respect for the environment. Walker's Cay will not only be a thriving resort but also an eco-friendly destination that upholds responsible tourism. Its restoration serves as a model for sustainable tourism. The island will be powered by renewable energy, and all wastewater will be treated on-site. Allen is also working to restore the island's natural ecosystems, including its mangroves and seagrass beds. The restoration of Walker's Cay, led by Carl Allen, is a remarkable story of vision, dedication, and environmental stewardship. It demonstrates that even the most challenging restoration projects can succeed with the right mix of passion and commitment. Today, Walker's Cay stands as a testament to the enduring beauty of the Bahamas and the resilience of nature, welcoming visitors from around the world to experience its rejuvenated splendor. I would like to thank CWO Don Cammel, US Army Ret. for his narrative and photos that I used in this article about Walkers Cay as it is today. |
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