June 11, 2011

Sunset in Key West



We started the day walking around town exploring all the sites. Key West has a lot of historic buildings to see.
The Strand Theater opened in the 1920's and became Ripley's Believe It or Not Museum in 1993. It has since became a Walgreens.
In 1969, the Coast Guard decommissioned this lighthouse and it was later turned into a museum.
The cemetery is 19 acres and it is estimated that 100,000 people are buried there. This is a lot considering the population is only around 30,000. You will notice that, in many case, tombs are stacked on top of each other.
The Southernmost Point Marker is a popular area for photographs and only 90 miles from cuba.
Completed in 1866, Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park played a major role in the Civil War and Spanish-American War. Today, this area offers some of the most popular beaches in Key West.
Want to know how far away you are?
At Sunset in Key West, you will find tourists gathering around Mallory Square to watch the many street perfomers.
Some visitors catching the final sunset.
One of the many street performers.
A party boat coming in from a day out.
Dominique's Circus Cats are always great fun
The Cat Man poses with Doug
Key West is where Highway 1 begin.

For more pictures, click here
To be continued...

June 10, 2011

Heading For Key West

There are 42 bridges from Miami to Key West.
0
The longest bridge is 7 miles long and was built after the railroad bridge had considerable damage from the Labor Day Hurricane in 1937. The current bridge was built from 1978 to 1982.
Setting up camp at  Geiger Key Marina RV Park near Key West, Florida
View behind our RV
If we had a boat, we could pull it up right behind the RV.

  

For more pictures, click here.

To be continued...

June 9, 2011

Everglades Outpost A Wildlife Rescue

Today we visited the Everglades Outpost Wildlife Rescue Center here in Homestead, Florida.

Founded in 1994, the center provides a place to live for more than 200 animals.

Welcome to my world!

Do you have any lettuce or melons?

Rocky the tiger belonged to an exotic dancer.

This grizzly bear was being kept as a pet in a backyard on Miami Beach.

Fill my food dish...please.

Robert Is Here was established in 1959 when six year old Robert was sitting on a corner selling cucumbers and no one saw him. The next day his dad put two large signs that said Robert Is Here and he sold all of his cucumbers . Robert Is Here was born.

Gotta try one of Robert's mango shakes.
For more pictures, click here.  To be continued...

June 8, 2011

Flamingo Visitor Center Everglades National Park



America's Everglades is the largest subtropical wilderness in the United States.
The Everglades span over 1.5 million acres.

There are a lot of walkways that let you get up close and personal with nature.

Even if it is a grasshopper.

Alligators everywhere.  I think we will stay on the walkway.

Doug gets his picture with the waiting vultures.

Home of the Nike missile site.  Tours are offered December to April.

It's slow traveling for this Everglades creature.

You never know just what you might see in the Everglades.

Remains of the Flamingo Visitor center after two hurricanes came through the area.

Hurricanes Katrina and Wilma hit The Flamingo Visitor Center in 2005.

The walkways go from wooded areas to

waterways filled with alligators.

Which way do we go?

Let's see?  Did they run into any bugs on the way down here that we can eat?

Big hill coming up!

Overview of the road cutting across the Everglades.

For more pictures, click here.

To be continued...

June 7, 2011

Gator Park, Shark Valley, Everglades National Park

Our first stop today was at Gator Park for an airboat ride through Everglades National Park.

We were early-birds today, arriving before the first boat had departed.

Early departures usually see more wildlife.

As we left the dock, everyone was searching for gators.

And we found them in the water.

We found them in the grass.

Another airboat prepares to pass us going in the opposite direction.

After the airboat ride, guests were treated to a wildlife show featuring snakes, scorpions and a little alligator wrestling.

Marlon has the knack for captaining a boat...

as a resident chicken looks on.

Next we officially entered Everglades National Park for a tram tour through Shark Valley.

Sawgrass is a unique type of grass with very sharp edges (like a saw) which can be felt when running your hand up the stalk. In the Everglades, it is a favorite food of the white tailed deer.

The sawgrass marshes of Everglades National Park will be flooded during the wet season and will be covered with brownish green algae mats, called periphyton, which will float on the water surface.

We didn't find any sharks in Shark Valley, but we did find a bunch of baby alligators just off the tram path.

Another type of habitat in Everglades National Park are these high, dry tree islands known as hammocks.

Hammocks are often surrounded by moats formed when acids from decaying plants dissolved away the limestone. These moats provide the hammock a fire barrier.

We ventured into this hammock and found the temperature inside the hammock much more pleasant than the temperature outside the hammock. With the park currently in a drought, the dreaded mosquitoes were virtually non-existent.

Happy tram tourists continue through Shark Valley.

At the mid-point of our tour, we arrived at the 50 foot-high Shark Valley Observation Tower.

Expansive views of the Everglades, alligators, turtles and birds awaited us all at the top of the tower.

We were lucky enough to meet a couple of new friends visiting the States from Israel.

Here's a video of our tours today.

On our way home, we could see a large fire which had started nearby the previous day.

For more pictures, click here .

To be continued...

The Bodyguard at Theatre Winter Haven, Winter Haven, Florida

Tonight, we attended the next to final performance of The Bodyguard: The Musical at Theatre Winter Haven. The curtain call for the four main...