Links

The first and foremost link we want to provide is the link to the Sun Realty site for DuckAway and from which you can check the availability and rent the house.

We also own another house in Duck named Sea Notes, on the northern end of Duck Village that is located on the ocean front with direct access to the beach and ocean. It is on Sea Tern Drive, a short bike ride north of the Town of Duck. We also have a web site for Sea Notes at this link. Sea Notes is also rented through Sun Realty as house number 110-A, and this is the link to the Sun Realty site for Sea Notes. This link takes you to the home page for the Sun Realty website.

The Town of Duck is a terrific place to vacation on the Outer Banks of North Carolina. It is a small village with lots of good places to dine and shop, but still has the feel of a relaxing, small, quiet, ocean village. The town has a very good website that lets you know what is going on and you can link to it here. One of the things on the “Visitors” link is the most current copy of the Town of Duck Brochure for the current year. The town provides much for the vacationer to do (if you want to get away from sitting on the beach or around the pool for awhile). There is an extensive soundfront boardwalk passing by lots of natural areas along with many of the Duck shops and restaurants. At the town center there are various venues for a variety of activities for kids through adults. Particularly check out the links on their website to “Visitors” and to “Events”. You can view their recent photos of events on their web site or by clicking on this link.

Follow this link to get to the Outer Banks Voice which provides online daily news reports from around the Outer Banks along with a lot of current information about events and commercial activities.

You can find a wealth of visitor information at the Outer Banks Visitors Bureau, at the Outer Banks Chamber of Commerce, at the Currituck County Visitors Bureau, or at the Currituck County Chamber of Commerce.

There are a number of Museums and other places to visit that are too numerous to list here, but links to them can be found on some of the sites above. However, I want to mention the Graveyard of the Atlantic Museum in Hatteras because I have interacted with them after finding a piece of an old shipwreck on the beach in front of Sea Notes after Hurricane Sandy. The story of that is posted elsewhere on this website.