By DAVID RAINER, Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources
A native son was honored Monday when the Christopher Blankenship Eco-Tourism Area & Kayak Launch was unveiled to the public on Dauphin Island at Aloe Bay.
The honoree was reared on Dauphin Island and started work as a deck hand on Capt. Mike Thierry’s Lady Ann charter boat as a teenager. He continued his Dauphin Island connection as an enforcement officer with the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources’ (ADCNR) Marine Resources Division (MRD). In 2017, Alabama Governor Kay Ivey appointed him as ADCNR Commissioner.
“Growing up on Dauphin Island, this is the best place ever to be a teenager,” Commissioner Blankenship said. “This is definitely a special, special place. I started working on a charter boat when I was 14 years old. I used to ride my bike up to the marina at 5 o’clock in the morning to start loading supplies on the boats. You’d fish all day, get back and clean fish. You’d get home about 8 o’clock at night. I made what I thought was a ridiculous amount of money at the time, about $100 a day. I thought as a 14- and 15-year-old, what am I ever going to do with all this money!
“That not only instilled a love for fishing and the outdoors, but also hard work. When you do that at a young age, what we do now seems like a vacation.”
The Commissioner met his wife, Allyson Tomberlin Blankenship, on the island, and he said his three children love Dauphin Island. He spent 23 years on the island with MRD, including seven years as MRD Director.
“Dauphin Island is one of a kind with great people, a great quality of life, great pace of life, and great leadership,” Commissioner Blankenship said. “Leadership is the key for places that thrive. I have the opportunity to travel all over the state and do work with town councils, county commissions and mayors. I’m not just saying this because my name is on this area, and y’all have been really nice to me, but the mayor and town council at Dauphin Island have done a fantastic job. I can’t say enough about Mayor (Jeff) Collier, Gene Fox, Trey Alderman, Shirley Robinson and the rest of the council for their dedication. They don’t get rich doing this. They do it because they love their community. They love the people, and they want to do the right thing.”
Commissioner Blankenship praised the Town of Dauphin Island staff who have been able to manage major projects with a minimum number of people on the staff to coordinate funding sources and getting the work completed.
“There are more than $203 million of projects either completed, underway or approved for Dauphin Island,” he said. “That is amazing. When you put it all together, they are really transforming the island, not only transforming, but also protecting the things that make Dauphin Island special.”
Dauphin Island Mayor Collier said there were doubts if the Blankenship project would ever come to fruition.
“It was one of those things that, just when you thought it would never happen, it finally gets to closure,” Mayor Collier said. “It took a lot of coming together. Of course, initially, we had to purchase this from the private property owner. You have to have a willing seller. You have to come with a design, and this one was a little more complicated because it had an upland portion but also the living shoreline.
“What you see here today is really representative of what Dauphin Island is and what people come to and enjoy about Dauphin Island. It’s the fact you can connect with nature.”