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Cortez founded on mullet

Cortez founded on mullet

CORTEZ – A visit by Dr. Angela Collins to the Cortez Cultural Center furthered the organization’s mission to “preserve the past and protect the future.”

The University of Florida Sea Grant marine extension agent told visitors last Thursday all about mullet, the reason Cortez was founded in the late 1880s, and still its most profitable crop.

Fisheries are part of Florida’s second-largest economic driver, agriculture, Collins told a group of about 25 visitors, many of them tourists, supporting the state’s largest industry.

Collins quizzed visitors about why mullet jump. It could be to rid themselves of parasites, or because they like it, people ventured. Scientifically, no answer has been discovered, but scientists have learned that when you see a fish jump in Florida, nine times out of 10, it’s a mullet, she said.

The fish can live to be 13 years old, are scavengers, and it’s tough to catch them with hook and line.

As a result, ancient tribes in Florida used gill nets to catch the fish, using coconuts as floats and shells to weigh them down, and herding them into dead-end canals to have fresh fish close at hand, Collins said.

Cuban fishermen traveled to Cortez to catch mullet, especially during Lent in February and March, when demand was particularly high since many Catholics eat fish on Fridays in Lent when other meat is forbidden.

In the late 1960s, the mullet fishery shifted more to roe – fish eggs – than the fish itself, due to the high prices it brought in foreign markets. Mullet became known as “Gulf of Mexico gold,” Collins said.

“Sailfish is the state fish of Florida,” she said. “It should be mullet.”

Gill nets continued to be used until 1995, when voters passed a state Constitutional Amendment banning them, believing mullet fishing was depleting mullet and other bycatch species caught in mullet nets. Mullet fishermen now rely on different types of smaller nets, she said.

Cortez is special, Collins said, with its status on the National Register of Historic Places, its 95-acre FISH Preserve on Sarasota Bay and some descendants of original settlers from Carteret County, North Carolina still living in the village.

As a working waterfront on very valuable Florida property, Collins said, “There is no place left like Cortez in Florida.”

Cortez prevails in post office closure

Cortez prevails in post office closure

CORTEZ – A short walk to the post office today was a big victory for residents of the historic fishing village, who fought for and won a reprieve from the federal government on the closure of their post office.

An announcement posted on the window that the post office would close on Oct. 24 mobilized residents to contact U.S. Rep. Vern Buchanan (R – Manatee) and Manatee County commissioners earlier this month, saying they did not want to travel more than 5 miles each way to the Palma Sola post office to get their mail every day.

“The United States Postal Service is pleased to announce to our customers that we have reached an interim solution to allow operations to continue at the Cortez Post Office,” Corporate Communications officer David Walton said Friday in a statement. “We are currently working with the lessor on a long-term solution so we can continue to provide postal services to residents of Cortez from our existing location.”

Landlord John Banyas did not renew the lease on the post office in his strip mall at 12112 44th Ave. W. after postal officials refused to add him to an insurance policy, which he requested after being sued by a man injured by a falling flagpole owned by the post office.

Suncoast Postal District Manager Stephen Hardin said the federal agency is optimistic there will be a long-term agreement reached this week, according to Buchanan, who wrote the agency about the closure.

“I am pleased to see the Cortez post office remain open for now. This offers local residents, many of whom are elderly, a reprieve from any undue burden closing this facility would have caused as the Postal Service works on a more permanent solution,” Buchanan said in a statement. “I will continue my efforts working with the Postal Service to ensure my constituents in the area have convenient mail service.”

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