Tessa Taylor - Everglades Adventure ((link)) May 2026
Tessa Taylor doesn’t call herself a hero. She doesn’t even call herself an explorer. “I’m just a woman who loves a place that most people drive past,” she told me, scrubbing mud from her airboat’s propeller. “The Everglades doesn’t give up its dead easily. But if you’re quiet, if you’re respectful, and if you’re stubborn enough to go where the GPS says you shouldn’t… sometimes, it hands you a piece of magic.”
The Everglades at dawn is a different world. Mist curls off the water like breath. Birds you never see by noon—roseate spoonbills, wood storks, the secretive limpkin—emerge from shadows. Tessa navigated by memory and instinct, cutting through sawgrass that rose twelve feet high, slicing around gator holes as familiar to her as potholes on a hometown street. tessa taylor - everglades adventure
The air tasted of wet earth and ancient secrets. For most visitors, the Florida Everglades is a place of stillness—a slow, tea-colored river of grass where alligators drift like logs and the heat hangs heavy enough to press you into silence. But for Tessa Taylor, the Everglades has never been still. It hums. Tessa Taylor doesn’t call herself a hero
“She said it was real,” Mary whispered. “My grandmother said the bell was for guiding souls lost in the storms. You found it, Tessa. You brought them home.” “The Everglades doesn’t give up its dead easily
Tessa slipped into her waders, stepped into waist-deep water, and followed the sound. Fifty yards north, beneath a curtain of strangler fig, she found it. Not a trading post—its remains. A collapsed roof of palm thatch, a stone hearth overgrown with orchids, and scattered among the roots: shards of blue-and-white ceramic, a rusted machete, and a small, tarnished bell no bigger than her fist.
Tessa learned to listen.
“There you are,” she whispered.