| Sophistication and
Fun in a Natural Gulfcoast Gem Florida's
Central West Region
Encompassing the southern portion of Florida's Nature Coast, as
well as the popular vacation destinations of Tampa, St. Petersburg,
Clearwater and Sarasota, the Central West region of Florida offers
a vast array of cultural, historical, natural and recreational riches
along gem-colored waters and sun-drenched beaches.
Family-Friendly
Vacations In Central West Florida, families can visit
world-famous attractions, meet friendly creatures of all shapes
and sizes, marvel at intriguing cultural treasures and explore historical
sites hundreds of years old.
Hillsborough County is an exciting bundle of thrills, chills and
spills for the entire family. From screaming roller coasters and
scary sea creatures to gale-force winds and frolicking manatees,
families will enjoy rides, entertainment and educational exhibits
throughout the Tampa area. Explore the intrigue of turn-of-the-century
Africa at Busch Gardens, a 335-acre family entertainment park packed
with thrill rides, live entertainment, animals in natural settings,
shops, restaurants and games in nine distinctly themed areas. With
more than 3,400 animals roaming throughout the park, Busch Gardens
is one of the top zoos in the country. And thanks to the new "Edge
of Africa" expansion, visitors can now wander through an African
village populated by hyenas, a fishing village housing hippopotamuses,
baboons and various species of fish and a safari encampment overrun
by lions. At Busch Gardens, visitors can also try to tame the park's
other savage beasts - a collection of record-breaking roller coasters.
On "Montu," one of the world's tallest and longest inverted
steel roller coaster, visitors' feet dangle below the car as they
drop nearly 13 stories and flip through a corkscrew finale. While
on "Kumba," the southeast's largest and fastest roller
coaster, riders travel at over 60 mph down nearly 4,000 feet of
track towering at a height of 135 feet. Younger children will enjoy
playing in the Land of Dragons, featuring climb-through mazes, watery
play areas, corkscrew slides, net climbs, secret rooms and reptile
exhibits.
Nearby, Adventure Island offers acres of twists and turns through
17 unique water play areas, including the new "Splash Attack,"
a treehouse maze of 50 interactive water elements overflowing with
fun. A championship volleyball complex, game arcade and outdoor
cafes round out the park's offerings.
Families can also spot exotic creatures from faraway places at
Lowry Park Zoo. Ranked as one of the top three mid-size zoos in
the country, Lowry Park Zoo features a free-flight bird aviary,
an Asian Domain, a variety of primates - from chimpanzees to woolly
monkeys - and the Florida Wildlife Center, a special sanctuary for
native Floridians such as alligators, panthers, bears and red wolves.
The zoo's Manatee and Aquatic Center is one of only three manatee
hospitals and rehabilitation centers in Florida. Next door, at the
Children's Museum of Tampa, kids can roam through a miniature outdoor
city built to scale and chock-full of educational and entertaining
activities.
Along downtown Tampa's waterfront, the distinctive glass-domed
Florida Aquarium showcases more than 4,300 animals and plants in
natural fresh- and saltwater habitats. Walking through the aquarium's
huge galleries, visitors can explore Florida wetlands, bays, beaches,
coral reefs and offshore depths. For the ultimate hands-on aquatic
adventure, visit the new "Explore A Shore" exhibit, where
children of all ages can climb among mangrove tree roots, dig for
buried shells, crawl through coral caves and touch live sea creatures
in a pool teeming with everything from sea stars and anemones to
horseshoe crabs and angelfish.
Families will experience wonders of a different kind at the Museum
of Science and Industry (MOSI). At this scientific playground filled
with more than 450 "minds-on" activities, visitors learn
by doing. Encounter the gale-force winds of a Gulf Coast hurricane,
explore the universe in space simulators or wander through a free-flight
butterfly garden. And at Florida's first IMAX Dome, a 350-seat,
85-foot domed theater, viewers can experience the thrill of various
films up-close.
Twenty miles southwest of Tampa, Pinellas County's finger-like
peninsula dangles into the Gulf of Mexico, offering nearly 400 miles
of shoreline and encompassing the eight resort communities of Clearwater
Beach, Dunedin, Indian Rocks Beach, Madeira Beach, St. Petersburg,
St. Pete Beach, Tarpon Springs and Treasure Island. Families will
find the soft sandy beaches provide a refreshing break from the
fast pace of nearby attractions. Gulf beaches boast 361 days of
sunshine and an average water temperature of 75 degrees, making
nearly every day a good one for shelling, sunning, swimming, fishing
or sailing.
But family activities abound off the beach as well. In Tarpon Springs,
discover a seaside village settled by Greek sponge divers at the
turn of the century. Kids of all ages will enjoy the delicious Greek
pastries, and shoppers will find treasures in markets with a Mediterranean
flair.
At the Clearwater Marine Aquarium, vacationers can meet Sam, the
bottlenosed dolphin, Big Mo, a 500-pound loggerhead sea turtle and
get a fish-eye's view of a mangrove and seagrass community. Nearby,
Celebration Station offers a variety of rides including go-karts
and bumper boats, plus miniature golf and batting cages. And parents
will have a difficult time prying kids away from the park's two-story
arcade.
To the south, St. Petersburg offers numerous cultural activities
connected by the city's downtown trolley service, called the Looper.
Family-friendly stops include the St. Petersburg Museum of History,
where a replica of a Benoist airboat commemorates the world's first
commercial flight made from St. Petersburg to Tampa in 1914; and
Great Explorations: The Hands-On Museum, where kids can play inventor-for-a-day
as they help Einstein with his latest project, reconstruct a 40-foot-long
roller coaster or create their own symphony.
Along St. Pete Beach, kids can enjoy an amusement center full of
video games, while parents stroll through shopping villages set
in tropical surroundings.
Two Pinellas-area piers provide additional diversions. Jetting
out into Tampa Bay, the quarter-mile-long St. Petersburg Pier features
an inverted five-story pyramid housing a festival marketplace of
shops, numerous eating establishments, an aquarium and large observation
area. Plus, families can rent electric boats, visit the H.M.S. Bounty
exhibit in the winter months, play miniature golf, or celebrate
the end of a beautiful Gulf Coast day at Pier 60 in Clearwater Beach.
Overlooking the Gulf of Mexico, Pier 60 offers a sunset celebration
patterned after Key West's popular Mallory Square festival, but
with a decidedly family-friendly atmosphere. Craftsmen, artists
and entertainers perform nightly, two hours before and after sunset.
Manatee County bears the marks of centuries of history, from the
16th-century landing of the Spaniards to the 19th-century planting
of sugar cane. For a historical tour of the area, families should
start at the South Florida Museum in downtown Bradenton. The two-story
museum contains more than 50,000 square feet of exhibits, depicting
the state's history from prehistoric times to the Space Age. Life-size
dioramas portraying Indian life in early Florida and replicas of
16th-century Spanish buildings are popular highlights. While at
the museum, be sure to check in on "Snooty," the oldest
living manatee born in captivity, or take a peek at the solar system
at the Bishop Planetarium. Next, travel to DeSoto National Memorial
Park to see where Hernando DeSoto landed in 1539, beginning a four-year,
4,000-mile expedition that was the first European penetration into
what is now the southern United States. From December through April,
park rangers dressed in period costumes, demonstrate the use of
various 16th-century weapons and show how food was prepared and
preserved for long journeys.
Move forward several hundred years by visiting the Manatee Village
Historical Park, where life on the 19th-century Florida frontier
has been preserved. Roam through a 100-year-old general store complete
with merchandise from the era, meander down a brick-lined walk to
a Florida cracker-style settler home and explore a boatworks building,
where sailing ships were built for nearly 80 years. Next, tour the
antebellum South at Gamble Plantation State Historic Site in Ellenton.
Built in 1850, the mansion is the only surviving antebellum plantation
house in south Florida. Guided tours describe daily life on the
vast sugar plantation, which used to send molasses and sugar up
the nearby Manatee River to markets in New Orleans. Wrap up the
historical trek with a narrated sight-seeing trip through rural
Manatee County aboard a 1950s diesel-engine train, featuring old-fashioned,
open-window coaches.
For beach explorers, Bradenton and the Gulf islands of Anna Maria
and Longboat Key boast 27 miles of dazzling sand beaches unmarred
by high-rise condominiums or hotels. Shelling, sunbathing and swimming
opportunities abound at numerous public beaches, while airboat rides
offer an up-close look at the vibrant marine ecology of the Gulf
islands.
Known as "Florida's Cultural Coast," Sarasota offers
world-class art and entertainment the entire family will enjoy.
Kids will be thrilled to discover the city was once the winter home
of John Ringling and his world-famous Ringling Bros. Circus. Today,
the circus magnate's legacy is on display at the John and Mable
Ringling Museum of Art. Given as a gift to the people of Florida
upon Ringling's death in 1936, the palatial estate includes the
art museum, Circus Museum, Asolo Theater and Ringling mansion.
Housed in a pink Italian Renaissance villa, the John and Mable
Ringling Museum of Art features one of the country's largest and
most celebrated collections of Baroque, Italian and Flemish Renaissance
paintings as well as exquisite 17th-century tapestries. Also on
the grounds is the Circus Museum, an assemblage of original circus
art and artifacts, including elaborate costumes and carved circus
wagons. Children will especially enjoy the Animated Miniature Circus,
a scale model of the Ringling Bros. Circus as it appeared in the
mid-1930s. Visitors will also marvel at the historic Asolo Theater,
the only authentic 19th-century Italian theater in the United States.
The rococo-style theater, with rising tiers of boxes and dazzling
pastel and gold ornaments that reflect the glow of candles, is an
exhibit-in-use. Visitors can enjoy the splendid decor while attending
the concerts, lectures and art films still held in the theater.
Situated on Sarasota Bay, Ca'd'Zan, the Ringling's 30-room Venetian
Gothic mansion, will dazzle visitors with its terra cotta balustrades,
European tinted glass, whimsical carvings and painted ceilings.
For treasures of another kind, families can visit the Mote Marine
Aquarium, south of Longboat Key. The centerpiece of the aquarium
is a 135,000-gallon outdoor shark tank. After the shark tank, take
the kids to the 30-foot "Touch Tank," where horseshoe
crabs, rays and sea urchins can be gently handled. Also on display
are octopuses, sea turtles and manatees, among many other creatures.
The aquarium offers two types of environmental boat tours - a nature
cruise of Sarasota Bay with an onboard naturalist sharing interesting
tidbits, and a winter bird observation tour of the mangrove islands
in area bays.
Vacation Value
Visitors to Central West Florida have always gotten plenty of things
for free - dazzling sunshine, soft Gulf Coast breezes and powdery
white sand. An array of special discounts can help make the rest
of the region's attractions almost as economical.
Travelers can make the most of their Tampa-area vacation with "Great
Tampa Getaways," a new year-round package program that pairs
up Tampa attractions and hotel accommodations throughout Hillsborough
County, offering visitors a value-oriented vacation plan with lots
of options. Travelers can select from a range of package options,
including admissions to area attractions and museums, tickets to
professional sports events and outdoor activities such as deep sea
fishing, canoe trips and hot air balloon expeditions. Package prices
start at $79 per person, per night.
In addition, some of Tampa's most popular attractions, such as
Busch Gardens, the Florida Aquarium and MOSI, offer an average of
10 percent off admissions to senior citizens and students. For quick,
affordable transportation to many of the area's cultural and historical
attractions, families can take advantage of the Tampa-Ybor Trolley's
25-cent fare.
Southwest of Tampa, enjoy an average of 361 days of sunshine for
free on the Pinellas Suncoast, which encompasses eight Pinellas
County communities from Tarpon Springs to St. Pete Beach. Although
sunny year-round, many hotels offer special packages during the
summer, when the average room rate dips to less than $52 per night.
And with average meal prices ranging from $3 for breakfast to $9
for dinner, vacationers may find feeding the family to be less expensive
than they planned.
Within an easy drive to Tampa-area attractions, Manatee County
features hotel and resort rates from just $40 per night, while campgrounds
and state parks offer natural accommodations beginning at $10 per
night. In addition, visitors can enjoy the Manatee Village Historical
Park and DeSoto National Memorial for free. Other Manatee County
attractions, such as the Gamble Plantation State Historic Site and
the world's longest pier, cost less than $5 per person.
Off-the-Beaten-Path
Dotting the region's coastline, a host of unique diversions await
on the roads less traveled. Down scenic bayfront avenues and tucked
off quiet Gulf beaches, gilded architecture, ethnic enclaves and
historic villages can be explored at a leisurely pace reminiscent
of a bygone era.
Rising above the Hillsborough River, the six silver onion-shaped
minarets atop the former Tampa Bay Hotel are the first clue that
travelers are approaching a hallmark of the city's gilded age. The
former hotel, with its distinctive Moorish architecture, still stands
but now operates as the University of Tampa, with one wing - the
Henry B. Plant Museum - furnished as it was in the late 1800s. Visitors
can wander through opulent rooms, such as the restored parlor suite,
domed dining room and magnificent solarium. The museum also showcases
Victorian art, furniture and fashions.
For another fine example of ornamented architecture, tour the Tampa
Theatre, a restored 1926 movie palace, built to resemble a Moorish
courtyard, complete with colonnades, balconies and Greek and Roman
sculpture replicas. Visitors-in-the-know will want to take advantage
of free guided tours offered on a monthly basis. On the tours, visitors
can explore the theater from balcony to backstage, see a special
film screening of "American Movie Palaces" and hear a
mini-concert on the Mighty Wurlitzer theater organ. In addition,
open house tours are held periodically on selected Wednesdays and
Saturdays.
Interesting museums nearby include the Tampa Museum of Art, specializing
in classical antiquities and showcasing Florida's acclaimed and
emerging artists; and the Tampa Bay History Center, featuring exhibits
on the area's historical and multicultural influences. Visit these
and other cultural sites on walking tours of the city's art and
architecture.
Across the bay, St. Petersburg's trolley service provides travelers
with easy access to a variety of downtown cultural treasures. Stops
along the route include the world-famous Salvador Dali Museum, which
houses the world's largest collection of works by the Spanish surrealist;
the Florida International Museum, the state's premier museum for
blockbuster exhibitions such as the "Treasures of the Czars"
and "Titanic: The Exhibition;" and Museum of Fine Arts,
housed in a waterfront Mediterranean villa and noted for its collection
of French impressionist paintings. Since relocating from nearby
Madeira Beach, the Tampa Bay Holocaust Memorial Museum and Educational
Center, which features a concentration camp boxcar from Treblinka,
Poland, has been added to the trolley's route. And near downtown
St. Petersburg, one of Florida's original roadside attractions still
thrives. Sunken Gardens features an exotic collection of more than
50,000 tropical plants and flowers as well as a walk-through aviary,
wax museum of biblical characters and gator wrestling shows.
Pinellas County's particular blend of culture and history is also
wonderfully preserved in several vibrant communities awaiting discovery.
Strolling through Tarpon Springs, vacationers get the impression
they are visiting a seaside Mediterranean village. Here, the aroma
of freshly baked Greek pastries and festive melodies fill the air,
while fisherman and shopkeepers exchange greetings in Greek. This
special flavor is an outgrowth of one of Florida's most fascinating,
one-of-a-kind industries - sponge diving. Considered "America's
Sponge Capital" at the turn of the century, Tarpon Springs
has retained the colorful traditions and atmosphere introduced by
Greek sponge divers over a hundred years ago. Today, visitors can
explore the Sponge Exchange, once the "Wall Street for Sponges,"
now converted into a shopping and dining district featuring Greek
foods and handicrafts. Learn about the history of the community
at the Spongeorama or get a first-hand look at a diver harvesting
sponges on sightseeing cruises. Nearby, visitors can marvel at the
neo-Byzantine architecture of St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Cathedral,
featuring Grecian marble, elaborate icons and exquisite stained
glass windows.
In Dunedin, passers-by can peruse the town's Scottish heritage at
the Dunedin Historical Museum, housed in the original Orange Belt
Railroad station. Or take walking tours of the picturesque downtown
area, featuring quirky antique shops and cafes in a village-like
atmosphere. Step into turn-of-the-century Pinellas County at the
Heritage Village in Largo. The 22-acre village features a fascinating
collection of restored homes and buildings that depict the county's
pioneer lifestyle. Spinning, weaving and other exhibitions are held
regularly and add to the authentic atmosphere.
Wandering down Sarasota County's shimmering Gulf Coast, travelers
will find fragrant gardens and numerous small towns offering quiet
and refreshing points of interest. Overlooking Sarasota Bay, Marie
Selby Botanical Gardens fills nine tranquil acres with more than
20,000 colorful plants in 20 distinct garden areas. Renowned for
its rain forest canopy research, the garden also features 6,000
orchids, a banyan grove, bamboo pavilion and butterfly garden. Nearby,
Sarasota Jungle Gardens showcases lush tropical vegetation and exotic
waterfowl as well as a petting zoo and shell museum.
At Historic Spanish Point in Osprey, visitors can explore a late
Victorian-era pioneer homestead, Native American burial mound, archaeological
dig, 19th-century chapel and cemetery and the remnants of a turn-of-the-century
estate's formal gardens. Further south, the delightful island village
of Venice offers beaches that are rarely crowded and avenues graced
by northern Italian architecture and fine shopping centers. In North
Port, visitors can take a rejuvenating dip in one of nature's original
health spas, Warm Mineral Springs. Relax in 87-degree, mineralized
water that soothes aches and pains right away.
Driving along the fresh-smelling back roads of Florida's three
Nature Coast counties - Citrus, Hernando and Pasco - travelers will
be enchanted by glimpses of small-town America. Floral City's village-like
atmosphere is accentuated by the Avenue of Oaks, a cathedral of
trees planted in the 1880s. The Ted Williams Museum and Hitters
Hall of Fame, located in the Citrus County town of Hernando, is
also worth a stop. Baseball buffs will love the museum's memorabilia
and may even catch sight of Williams himself, who lives nearby and
annually picks new inductees into his hall of fame.
For more than 50 years, the beautiful mermaids of Weeki Wachee
Springs have captivated crowds with their legendary performances
in the world's only underwater spring theater. Located in Hernando
County, the park also features a wilderness river cruise, exotic
bird show and petting zoo. Next door, Buccaneer Bay Waterpark offers
cool refreshment as the state's only natural spring-fed family waterpark.
Road-weary travelers can plummet down giant slides into the spring's
cool waters or relax on a lazy river ride.
Tucked amid Pasco County's green pastures and gentle, rolling hills,
travelers will find the charming antique district of Dade City,
featuring unique shops in early 20th-century cottages and houses.
With names like "Tickle Your Fancy," "Bea's Antiques
and Sweets" and "The Picket Fence," shops sell everything
from collectible dolls and folk art to vintage clothing and handmade
chocolates. Visitors can also peruse old-fashioned hardware stores
selling pitchforks and plows or watch potters work on the wheel
at Glades Pottery and Gallery. Just a mile from downtown, passers-by
can stroll through the hilltop grounds of the Pioneer Florida Museum,
stopping to inspect horse-drawn buggies and a steam-powered locomotive.
The museum also features the replicated office of a pioneer doctor
and a miniature doll collection of Florida's first ladies in their
inaugural gowns.
At Skydive City in nearby Zephyrhills, adventurous vacationers
can leave the beaten path altogether for the experience of a lifetime.
Join the ranks of skydiving enthusiasts who travel from across the
globe to the world-famous "drop zone" for a plunge through
Pasco's brilliant blue skies. Expert training, full equipment, group
rates and video and photography services are available.
Moving inland, DeSoto County offers small-town appeal characterized
by the sights and sounds of Florida the way it used to be. Whether
getting away for a romantic weekend or traveling with the family,
visitors will enjoy comfortably elegant accommodations beneath towering
oaks and shaded verandas at one of the quaint bed and breakfasts
in historic Arcadia. Guestrooms provide a pleasant "home away
from home" with the charm of turn-of-the-century Victorian
décor. Walking tours allow visitors to observe some of Florida's
finest examples of early 1900s "boomtown" architecture.
DeSoto County is Florida's "cowboy country" where the
days of the open range have been a part of historical heritage since
the 1850s. The Arcadia All-Florida Championship Rodeo with Wild
West shootouts and parade attract visitors twice a year to celebrate
the granddady of all rodeos. Cattle may be king, but watermelons
reign in May. Celebrate watermelon mania with the annual watermelon
festival, complete with seed-spitting contests, raft races and beauty
contests.
Nature-Based Travel
Encompassing the southern portion of Florida's Nature Coast as
well as three of the world's top beaches, the region is teeming
with nature-based recreational activities. From swimming with manatees
to flying over secluded barrier islands, a Central West Florida
vacation can include eco-adventures of every kind.
Whether it's canoeing down the Hillsborough River, soaring over
Tampa Bay in a hot air balloon or catching a cobia in blue-green
Gulf waters, visitors can experience more of Tampa Bay-area's nature
than ever thanks to "Tampa Outdoor Adventures," an alliance
of several businesses offering alternative outdoor excursions in
the area. Canoe Escape provides a window to the "Real Florida"
on scenic canoe trips down the Hillsborough River. Along the way,
paddlers are likely to see alligators, soft shell turtles, woodpeckers
and a variety of native plants. For high flying adventures, vacationers
can take a hot air balloon or float plane ride over the area, glimpsing
vistas of bay waters, secluded islands and Tampa's distinctive skyline.
For sport fishing, knowledgeable captains take passengers to spots
perfect for catching tarpon, cobia, redfish, trout and snook.
Hillsborough County also provides plenty of outdoor recreation
for visitors who want to explore the area's natural beauty on their
own. Northwest of Tampa, the Hillsborough River State Park is one
of Florida's oldest parks and includes an authentically reconstructed
Seminole War-era fort and bridge, complete with park rangers that
carry out their duties as though it were still 1837. Visitors can
hike along eight miles of nature trails through live oaks, sabal
palms, hickory and magnolias bordering the scenic Hillsborough River.
In addition, 11 county parks offer a range of unique activities.
Eureka Springs, the only botanical garden in the park system, includes
a greenhouse, trellised walks, trails and boardwalks. The 600-acre
Lake Park features a bicycle motorcross track, archery range and
equestrian facilities as well as five lakes, pine flatwoods and
hardwood hammocks. To combine canoeing with fishing, explore the
Alafia and Little Manatee rivers, both are state-designated canoe
trails that empty into Tampa Bay and offer fresh- and saltwater
habitats. For truly extraordinary outdoor recreation, visit Two
Rivers Ranch in Thonotosassa, where fox hunting takes place on the
17,000-acre ranch from late-November through mid-March. For more
than a quarter of a century, riders have followed foxes and hounds
through pristine pastures until the Master of the Fox Hounds declares
the hunt over.
To the southwest, Pinellas County boasts 35 miles of sandy shores
along the sparkling Gulf of Mexico, including three of the top beaches
in the world - Caladesi Island, Fort DeSoto and Sand Key.
The 600-acre Caladesi Island State Park offers miles of undeveloped
beaches, edged in sea grass and palmettos. On the bay side, visitors
can explore a mangrove swamp, which offers refuge for numerous wading
birds and shorebirds. A three-mile nature trail provides extensive
nature study as it winds through the island's interior of virgin
pine flatwood and live oak hammocks. Connected to the mainland by
a causeway, nearby Honeymoon Island State Recreation Area is a popular
retreat for sun seekers, shell collectors and picnickers and provides
regularly scheduled ferry service to Caladesi Island, which is accessible
by boat only.
To the north on the Pasco-Pinellas county line, Anclote Key State
Preserve offers excellent swimming off a beautiful four-mile-long
beach and nature study in six distinct biological communities. The
preserve can be reached by private boat only.
At the mouth of Tampa Bay and the Gulf of Mexico, Fort DeSoto Park
attracts record numbers of visitors wishing to sample some of Florida's
most picturesque beaches, picnicking grounds and camping spots.
The park consists of five connected barrier islands south of St.
Petersburg. Mullet Key is the largest and is the site of Fort DeSoto,
a Spanish American War-era artillery installation with unusual weaponry.
The island also offers beautiful waterside camping, four miles of
bicycle and in-line skating trails, ample saltwater fishing spots
and a large playground for kids.
For beach scenery unlike any other, visit the Suncoast Seabird
Sanctuary in Indian Shores. Here, cages cover an acre site along
the beach, comprising one of the largest wild bird hospitals and
sanctuaries in North America. Visitors can get an up-close look
at more than 500 birds, including the largest collection of brown
pelicans in captivity.
With nearly 400 miles of shoreline, it's not surprising that boating
and fishing are popular pastimes in the St. Petersburg/Clearwater
area. Both fresh- and saltwater fishing are welcome from piers and
parks throughout the county. And anglers have their pick of numerous
deep sea fishing charters, including more than 20 at the Clearwater
Municipal Marina.
Inland, the 15-foot-wide, paved Pinellas Trail follows abandoned
railroad tracks for 34 miles through the county, providing the perfect
locale for in-line skating, biking, walking and jogging.
Leaving the Pinellas Suncoast, head south to Manatee County across
the rebuilt Sunshine Skyway Bridge, which soars 183 feet above the
shimmering Tampa Bay. Travelers taking this four-mile ride at sunset
will be treated to some of the most spectacular vistas on the Gulf
Coast. The southern section of the original bridge has been converted
into the longest fishing pier in the world. The mile-and-a-half-long
pier is open 24 hours a day for fishing and sightseeing.
At the mouth of Tampa Bay lies the remote, historic island of Egmont
Key, home of the threatened gopher tortoise and site of the crumbling
Fort Dade, a military outpost built during the Spanish American
War. The island can be reached by private boat or on a guided charter
trip with the Miss Cortez Fleet, which includes a walking tour that
gives explorers an ecological and historical look at the island.
Aboard airboats, visitors can explore Manatee County's inland bays
where porpoises play and sea turtles paddle by or glide through
narrow mangrove hammocks where sandhill cranes and wood storks nest.
Adventurous paddlers can hop in a canoe and follow the Manatee River
into Florida's interior, where white sandbars suddenly appear around
bends in the waterway and rich subtropical vegetation lines the
riverbanks. Nature lovers can visit 15 manatee watch areas throughout
the Bradenton area for glimpses of the county's namesake.
Stretching for 35 miles from Longboat Key to Englewood, Sarasota
County's numerous public beaches offer powdery white sand full of
shells, rock jetties with ideal fishing spots and calm Gulf waters
popular for snorkeling. While in the area, vacationers can visit
South Lido Park, a 100-acre public recreational area at the tip
of Lido Key. Here, a variety of rich coastal Florida environments
including bayous, lagoons and mangrove hammocks, can be explored
along wooden walkways, nature trails and canoe trails. Great blue
heron, tiny red fiddler crabs and pink shrimp are among the hundreds
of species easily spotted throughout the park. Or visitors can go
fossil hunting on Venice Beach, dubbed the "Fossilized Shark
Tooth Capital of the World," for the sharp teeth routinely
found along its shores.
Inland along the twisting Myakka River, visitors can explore, the
Myakka River State Park, a 36,000-acre wilderness preserve replete
with oak palm hammocks, grassy marshes, sloughs and lakes. For an
up-close view of these habitats and the wildlife they contain, take
a boat or tram tour through the park. Along the park's 39 miles
of hiking trails, adventurous backpackers will experience dry prairies,
pine flatwoods, numerous ponds and a 140-foot-deep sinkhole. Primitive
campsites, rustic log cabins and family campgrounds offer additional
ways to enjoy the river's beauty. Sarasota is also home to the Oscar
Schere State Park; which has many bird species, including the endangered
scrub jay.
DeSoto County boasts Florida's most popular state canoe trail on
the Peace River. The meandering course takes paddlers on a scenic
journey through cypress swamps, hardwood forests and old ranchlands.
Besides canoeing and kayaking, camping, wildlife viewing, fishing
and fossil hunting are other favorite pastimes on and along the
flat blackwater of the beautiful Peace River.
Three Central West Florida counties - Citrus, Hernando and Pasco
- comprise the southern reaches of Florida's Nature Coast, an eight-county,
980,000-acre natural reserve set aside for recreation and conservation.
Along certain parts of this Gulf Coast area, pristine coastal beaches
surrounded by serene marshlands give way to spring-fed rivers trailing
through vast hardwood forests.
Comprised of tracts in all three counties, the 142,000-acre Withlacoochee
State Forest features sandhill scrub and oak thickets in Citrus
County, ravines and abandoned rock mines in Hernando County and
pine forests and cypress ponds in Pasco County. More than 100 miles
of hiking trails snake through the forest, enabling backcountry
explorers to witness the biodiversity firsthand. Camping, horseback
riding, birding, motorcycling and archery hunting are also welcome
at various recreation areas throughout the forest. Meandering through
the forest, the Withlacoochee River offers canoe trails up to 83
miles long. For fun on land, bikers will enjoy the Withlacoochee
State Trail. The 46-mile-long trail follows abandoned railroad tracks
from western Marion County to northern Pasco County, traversing
upland mixed forests and wetland communities along the way.
Known as "Mother Nature's Theme Park," Citrus County's
spring-fed rivers, shallow Gulf Coast waters and underwater caverns
provide a natural wonderland for visitors to explore and enjoy.
Vacationers can explore the brackish marshes and bay islets of the
Chassahowitzka National Wildlife Refuge via boat, canoe or sea kayak.
Take wilderness excursions, including primitive camping and off-road
biking, through the land tracts owned by the Southwest Florida Water
Management District, which protects vast stretches of the coastal
area. Inland, the county's seven rivers, all of which are state-designated
"Outstanding Florida Water Bodies," offer scuba diving
in underwater caverns, canoeing through scenic side creeks and fishing
in marshy wetlands. Additionally, from October through March, visitors
can swim, snorkel and dive with the manatees that gather in the
natural springs along the Crystal River, the only place in the entire
United States where the public can swim/snorkel through organized
programs with manatees in their natural habitat. At the nearby 166-acre
Homosassa Springs Wildlife Park, manatees can be seen at close range
365 days of the year from an underwater observatory. And along the
park's unspoiled nature trails, visitors will spot deer, bear, bobcats
and cougars, as well as a wide variety of birds from colorful wood
ducks to flamingos.
Along Hernando County's coast, vacationers can spend the day walking
along pristine shores, netting delicious blue crab, diving for fresh
scallops or chartering a boat for a deep sea fishing adventure.
For coastal wilderness vistas from the car window, take a drive
along Shoal Line Boulevard.
Florida's Nature Coast officially ends in Pasco County, where visitors
soon learn "It's Only Natural" to expect a unique outdoor
Florida experience. At the 8,300-acre Jay B. Starkey Wilderness
Park in New Port Richey, vacationers can explore 24 miles of hiking,
nature, horse and bike trails through a variety of ecosystems, including
pine flatwoods, cypress swamps, freshwater marshes and wet prairies.
While at Crews Lake Park in Shady Hills, visitors can walk through
a live oak hammock with more than 300 old-growth trees. The park
also features a botanical garden, observation tower and bike path.
Romantic Getaways
Dazzling sunsets on secluded beaches, quaint restaurants in historic
districts and elegant culture in lavish surroundings, make Central
West Florida the perfect romantic getaway.
Just beyond Tampa's downtown business district are the historic
communities of Hyde Park and Ybor City, adding a nostalgic, romantic
flair to the city's bustling, modern-day pace. Nestled in the shadows
of the grand Henry B. Plant Museum lies Hyde Park, one of Tampa's
oldest neighborhoods. Established in the late 19th century after
the opening of the palatial Tampa Bay Hotel began attracting monied
visitors to the area, Hyde Park now features stately "Princess
Anne" style dwellings and brick-paved avenues perfect for strolling
or biking. In the heart of this National Register Historic District
is Old Hyde Park Village, a collection of upscale boutiques and
trendy restaurants ideal for casual shopping in elegant surroundings.
Nearby, Tampa's Latin Quarter - Ybor City - is filled with bakeries
that open before dawn and nightclubs that entertain until well after
midnight. Once the "Cigar Capital of the World" and home
to thousands of immigrants who worked in its famous cigar factories,
Ybor City is now a 110-block collection of historical buildings,
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