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Island
and Inland Intrigue in Old Florida Port Charlotte, Fort Myers, Cape Coral, Marco Island and Naples
With unspoiled alabaster beaches,
exotic wildlife and lush subtropical foliage, southwest
Florida - comprised of Charlotte, Lee, Collier, Hendry
and Glades counties -- combines the sophistication of a
pampered island resort with the relaxed style of Old
Florida. From the Ten Thousand Islands that lie in
tranquil azure waters off its coast, to the vast
wilderness preserves that claim its southern reaches,
Southwest Florida luxuriously rolls out the welcome mat,
beckoning visitors to enjoy idyllic beach getaways and
captivating backcountry adventures.
Family-Friendly Vacations
Along Florida's southwestern
coast, family adventures reach the beach and expand
inland to wild animal parks and historical sites galore!
The Lee Island Coast, from Boca
Grande to Bonita Springs, offers more than 50 miles of
beaches famous for rare shells and calm Gulf of Mexico
waters. Families particularly enjoy the gently sloping
sands of Fort Myers Beach on Estero Island, long
recognized as one of the world's safest beaches.
Brilliant sugar-white sand for sculpting sandcastles,
and numerous public parks with plenty of amenities, make
Fort Myers Beach an ideal family playground.
Heading to the mainland, families
can hop on the downtown tram for a narrated tour of Fort
Myers' colorful history. Along the way, stop at the
side-by-side winter estates of Thomas Edison and Henry
Ford, two famous friends who spent years as neighbors
along the Caloosahatchee River. At the Edison Winter
Home, let the kids explore the "old-Florida"
style home, laboratory and experimental gardens of one
of the most inventive men who ever lived. Also on the
grounds is a museum showcasing the world's largest
collection of Edison's inventions and memorabilia,
including 200 Edison phonographs and his collection of
rare antique automobiles. In 1916, automobile pioneer
Henry Ford bought the house next door, with only a fence
-- called the "Friendship Gate" by both
families -- separating the two estates. Today, visitors
will find Ford's 16-room, bungalow-style home, known as
"Mangoes," much the way it was in the 1920s
when he and his wife Clara lived there. A beautiful
Florida garden of citrus and palm trees surrounds the
home and antique Ford vehicles fill the garage.
Let the living history lesson
continue at the Burroughs Home, where charming tour
guides in 1920s-era costumes share insight about the
Georgian revival-style home, considered Fort Myers'
first luxury residence. And the Fort Myers Historical
Museum, housed in a restored Spanish-style train depot,
showcases exhibits from ancient Indian civilizations to
early European settlers. On the museum's grounds,
explore a plush private rail car and a replica of a
rustic 1800s Florida cracker-style cabin.
Jump into the modern era at
Imaginarium Hands-On Museum and Aquarium, where kids
will enjoy interactive exhibits on weather and gravity,
and touch live sea creatures in a hands-on aquarium. At
the Children's Science Center, in Cape Coral, kids will
marvel at the dazzling optical illusions, ferocious
dinosaurs and stunning solar systems on display.
The Lee Island Coast also offers
plenty of "wild" family adventures. Visitors
are immersed in native flora and fauna at the Calusa
Nature Center and Planetarium, in Fort Myers, which
features three nature trails, live-reptile exhibits, a
freshwater aquarium and a natural history museum just
for kids. Wander along rustic boardwalks through
subtropical surroundings to a Seminole Indian village or
stare at the heavens during the planetarium's star and
laser-light shows. Located in Bonita Springs, Everglades
Wonder Gardens is one of Florida's oldest wildlife
attractions. The zoo and botanical gardens, established
in 1936, feature exotic Everglades wildlife, from bears
and birds of prey to panthers and crocodiles. During the
zoo's wildlife shows, kids of all ages will laugh at the
antics of otters and gasp at the ferocious agility of
alligators. For wild water fun, head over to Sun Splash
Family Waterpark in Cape Coral, where 12 acres of slides
and rides offer lots of thrills and spills for everyone.
In Collier County, families can
enjoy beachcombing along the pristine shores of Naples
and the Ten Thousand Islands. Public beaches offer
plenty of picnic facilities, playgrounds, showers and
other amenities for a memorable day in the sun and sand.
Setting off from Marco Island, the largest inhabited
isle of the Ten Thousand Islands, visitors can explore a
maze of mangroves and marshes. Or head for Collier
County's wild back country on guided airboat tours
through the Everglades.
From teddy bears to tiger lairs,
families can experience it all in a fun-filled day. The
one-of-a-kind Teddy Bear Museum, in Naples, whimsically
displays nearly 3,000 teddy bears, from antique to
animated and tiny to tremendous. Visitors can attend a
teddy bear wedding, observe a "Beard of
Directors" meeting and spot bears hibernating in
their dens. A life-size replica of the Three Bear's
house is sure to be a favorite with the kids. And after
meeting such famous literary bears as Pooh and
Paddington, parents can read stories to their youngsters
in the museum's reading library, which is stocked with
books about nothing but bears.
Nearby, the 52-acre Caribbean
Gardens and Zoological Park offers close encounters with
some not-so-cuddly animals. Enjoy free-roaming primates
as they entertain the crowd from their own private
island, or hold your breath as expert handlers come
face-to-face with wild lions, tigers and leopards. Kids
can meet prickly hedgehogs or get the ride of a lifetime
on the backs of an elephant. Families can end their
visit with a scenic stroll through one of the oldest
botanical gardens in the Southeast.
Take the family to the Collier
County Museum, where prehistoric fossils and vanished
Indian civilizations are on display. Kids can explore a
typical Seminole Indian village, observe an
archeological dig site and climb aboard a steam
locomotive.
Off-the-Beaten-Path
The southwest coast of Florida
features one eccentric beach enclave after another.
Roaming through the region's coastal villages and small
barrier islands, wayside wanderers will find pirate
hideouts, unusual pioneer settlements and famous winter
retreats. Many of the area's most unique
off-the-beaten-path locales are best reached by boat and
best navigated on foot or by bicycle.
In Fort Myers, visitors biking or
driving down McGregor Boulevard will soon discover how
the town came to be known as the "City of
Palms." Originally a cattle trail, the scenic
boulevard is now lined by nearly 1,800 royal palms, some
planted by the city's famed winter resident Thomas
Edison. Edison's mark can be seen elsewhere in the
picturesque city. Beyond his famed winter estate,
travelers can explore the Edison Park subdivision and
find the Thomas Edison Congregational Church as well as
an assortment of Mediterranean revival, neoclassical and
Greek revival homes dating back to the turn of the
century.
Sparkling off the Lee County
coast, Sanibel and Captiva Islands are among the best
known islands in the region, popular for their excellent
shelling and captivating beaches. But visitors will also
find picturesque paths and historical gems tucked along
Sanibel's main thoroughfare -- Periwinkle Way. On this
lush island, where all the buildings must be lower than
the tallest palm, the sites are best seen by cycling
along Periwinkle Way's canopy of whispering pines and
expansive banyans. Visit the Sanibel Historical Village
and Museum, which showcases the island's history with
special touches such as a pioneer-vintage island
residence and 1920s-versions of a general store, post
office and tea room. Or stop by the Bailey-Matthews
Shell Museum for a dazzling display of shells that wash
up on the island. At the east end of Periwinkle Way,
travelers can get an up-close look at one of the
region's most photographed landmarks, the Sanibel
Lighthouse, which dates back to 1884 when the entire
island was a wildlife refuge. Its two adjacent stilt
houses are typical of Florida architecture at the turn
of the century.
East of Sanibel, Pine Island is
peppered with tiny fishing villages along miles of
waterways and can be accessed by the "fishing-est
bridge in the United States." It was here that
tarpon fishing originated nearly a century ago. Today,
vacationers can visit the Museum of the Islands for a
lesson on how Lee County's islands were formed. Or catch
a glimpse of an altogether different era at Sunburst
Tropical Fruit Company, where visitors can tour one of
the state's oldest mango groves, featuring trees planted
in the 1920s.
Next, island hop to a string of
colorful communities with histories as retreats for the
rich and famous. Situated at Milemarker 60 in the
Intracoastal Waterway, Cabbage Key is actually a
100-acre ancient Calusa Indian shell mound. Accessible
only by boat, the island centers around a white
clapboard inn built by mystery writer Mary Roberts
Rinehart and her son in 1938. Today, the inn offers
rustic guest rooms and cottages, plus a restaurant
wallpapered entirely in autographed $1 bills. According
to legend, a local fisherman tacked the first one to the
wall so he would be guaranteed a cold beer on his next
visit. Subsequent visitors followed suit and today an
estimated $20,000 covers the walls. The inn's famous
clientele, past and present, include Ernest Hemingway,
Walter Cronkite and Julia Roberts. Music fans will be
interested to know it was the inn's delectable fare that
inspired Jimmy Buffet's song "Cheeseburger in
Paradise." Daytrippers can enjoy the inn's
hospitality and climb a wooden water tower for a
spectacular view of Pine Island Sound.
A short boat ride away, and
connected to the mainland by a short causeway near Punta
Gorda, Boca Grande is a snapshot of "Old
Florida." This sleepy Southern town located on the
seven-mile-long Gasparilla Island has succeeded in
maintaining its quaint fishing village atmosphere. As a
result, visitors can wander through numerous historic
shops and inns that have been in business for nearly a
century. The Gasparilla Inn, built in 1912 as a stylish
resort for the upper class, still hosts a famous
clientele. Fugate's, a department store owned and
operated by the same family since 1915, still sells
everything from rain slickers to wedding gowns. Relaxing
island pastimes include strolls along Banyan Street, an
enchanting avenue lined with tangle-limbed Banyan Tree in Ft. Myers, Florida. Great prices on vacation villa rentals,
or bike rides down paved paths perfect for exploring. At
the south end of the island in the shadow of an 1890s
lighthouse, Gasparilla Island State Recreation Area
offers a pretty stretch of beach with particularly good
shelling during the winter months. Daytrippers can
explore these communities on island-hopping boat trips
from Sanibel and Captiva.
Along the southern boundary of Lee
County, the remnants of an unusual pioneer settlement
are preserved on the banks of the Estero River. At the
Koreshan State Historic Site, curious passers-by can
tour a dozen buildings that once comprised an enclave
for members of the Koreshan Unity, an extinct religious
sect formed in the 1890s. Also on display is a
one-of-a-kind globe illustrating the Koreshan belief
that the earth was a hollow sphere with all life,
planets, moon and stars within it.
The sophisticated seaside retreat
of Naples, in Collier County, stridently protects its
"old Florida" charm by guarding its natural
resources and preserving older districts, so that
visitors can now bicycle through the city's quiet
neighborhoods to explore its diverse architectural past.
Spot intriguing widow walks and open porches around
homes built nearly a century ago or bright tin roofs and
wide verandas of down-to-earth Florida cracker-style
homes. In Old Naples, which is listed on the National
Register of Historic Places, cyclists can ride past
unchanged, turn-of-the-century homes where members of
Naples' original families still live. At day's end, join
locals at the landmark Naples Pier and watch as the
dazzling Gulf Coast sunset illuminates the beachfront
estates known as "Millionaires' Row."
Tucked amid the Ten Thousand
Islands strung along the southernmost reaches of the
Gulf of Mexico, visitors will find Marco Island.
Although today a popular beach vacation destination, the
island still retains remnants from its days as a
turn-of-the-century Indian trading post. Visitors can
dine at Olde Marco Inn, a quaint gathering place for
islanders since 1883 or stop by Smallwood's Store, a
1906 general-store-turned-museum that displays old
patent medicines, ledgers and hand tools, plus pelts and
hides once swapped for supplies. For more ancient and
mysterious sights, visit the remains of the Marco Island
witch's watchtower, remnants of the Caxambas clam
colony, ancient Indian burial mounds or the Cushing
Archaeological Site, where 3,500-year-old Native
American artifacts have been unearthed. On the mainland,
Everglades City, known as "the town where time
stood still," breathes the legacy of Indians,
poachers and gun-runners. The town's historical
centerpiece is the Rod and Gun Club, a grand Southern
lodge built in 1840 by fur traders. Now a 17-room inn
with an eccentric eatery, the club offers visitors a
wide veranda where they can sit in the same surroundings
that once hosted millionaires and dignitaries such as
President Roosevelt.
Nature-Based Travel
The three counties of Southwest
Florida boast more than one million acres of beach
recreation areas, wildlife sanctuaries and nature
preserves, making it easy for vacationers to explore the
unspoiled natural beauty of Florida on pristine beach
getaways or backcountry wilderness adventures.
Stretching from Don Pedro Island in the north to Marco
Island in the south, vacationers will find hundreds of
barrier islands offering an array of activities from
beachcombing and fishing to sunbathing and diving. The
region is particularly renowned for its excellent
shelling. Along Lee County beaches, shellseekers will
find more varieties than anywhere else in North America.
In fact, the shelling posture is so common, it's been
given a name -- the Sanibel Stoop! More than 400
varieties of shells can be found covering the beaches,
particularly after especially high or low tides.
Vacationers can hop on scenic cruises to nearby
uninhabited barrier islands for beaches blanketed with
rare sea treasures, such as brown speckled junonia,
sculpted lion's paw, golden tulip and Scotch bonnet.
Also along the Lee Island Coast, visitors can observe
the endangered West Indian Manatee in their natural
habitat during the winter months of November through
March at Manatee Park.
Along miles of shell-strewn sand
edged by turquoise-blue waters, vacationers can enjoy
typical beach pursuits as well as unique eco-adventures.
In Charlotte County, the Don Pedro Island State
Recreation, accessible only by private boat or ferry,
offers secluded beaches ideal for nature study. Nearby
the barrier island of Boca Grande, Cayo Costa State Park
is as close to a deserted tropical island as most
vacationers can get. The park's vast stretches of sand
offer sensational shelling and acres of pine forest, oak
palm hammocks and mangroves swamps provide for a
spectacular display of bird life.
Sport fishermen will want to visit
Boca Grande Pass, considered the "Tarpon Fishing
Capital of the World," where the majestic tarpon
congregate during the May through September spawning
season. Anglers will have their hands full with the
massive fish, known for its aerial explosions and
pulse-quickening rushes when hooked.
To the south, vacationers can
enjoy delightful footpaths, winding canoe trails and a
five-mile scenic drive past lush mangroves and sabal
palms at the J.N. "Ding" Darling National
Wildlife Refuge, a 6,000+-acre preserve, on the
northeast side of Sanibel Island. The refuge offers
abundant opportunities for naturalists to witness
raccoons washing up before breakfast, alligators
snatching a quick bite or long-legged wading birds
stalking their prey.
A 25-cent trolley service takes
sunworshipers to the popular Fort Myers Beach, Bonita
Beach and Bowditch Park recreation areas. Nearby, nature
lovers will find several parks of particular historical
and natural interest. At Matanzas Pass Wilderness
Preserve on Estero Island, wander through more than 40
acres of unspoiled live oak hammock and mangrove
shoreline along an elevated boardwalk. Off the tip of
Estero Island, Mound Key, which is largely constructed
from shells deposited here by Calusa Indians hundreds of
years ago, is a favorite with professional
archaeologists, history buffs and picnickers. And at
Lovers Key Recreation Area, between Fort Myers Beach and
Bonita Beach, visitors walk through a scenic mangrove
forest to a secluded beach.
Continuing south to Collier
County, vacationers can spend the day canoeing through
mangrove forests teeming with wading birds or wandering
along an elevated boardwalk ending in the sugary sand of
a Gulf Coast beach at Clam Pass Park, selected as one of
the country's top 20 environmentally pristine beaches.
Also in Naples, Barefoot Beach State Recreation Area is
a preserve for purists offering practically untouched
stretches of sand. Off the southernmost tip of the
county, Marco Island's long, crescent-shaped beach
provides miles of whitewashed sand edged by calm
turquoise waters. Vacationers can take wave runner tours
through thousands of mangrove islands, spotting
dolphins, manatees, ibis and bald eagles along the way.
After enjoying the region's
beaches, head into its back country for unparalleled
wilderness exploration. In Charlotte and Lee counties,
Babcock Wilderness Adventures offers a taste of real
Florida and the excitement of a true wilderness
adventure. Visitors can take naturalist-guided swamp
buggy rides through the beautiful woods and deep dark
waters of the Telegraph Cypress Swamp, spotting
alligators, panthers, bison, exotic birds and wild
turkeys along the way. To the south, Collier County is
the perfect place for combining vacation pursuits with
environmental awareness and education. With the Big
Cypress National Preserve covering its eastern wilds,
Ten Thousand Islands floating off its western shores and
the Everglades hugging its southern border, the county
is dominated by pristine wildlife sanctuaries and nature
conservancies.
Two nature centers run by the
Conservancy of Southwest Florida give visitors access to
some of the area's wild places. At the Naples Nature
Center, situated on 13 acres bordering a tidal lagoon
teeming with wildlife, visitors can join
naturalist-guided trail walks or take boat rides through
mangrove forests. Or wonder through nature exhibits
featuring a pelican/shorebird pool, aviary, loggerhead
sea turtle tank and "Snakes Alive"
serpentarium. At the Briggs Nature Center, located in
the 12,700-acre Rookery Bay National Estuarine Research
Reserve near Marco Island, adventurers can take guided
bird watching, shelling and nature cruises. Or stay on
land and spot plenty of wildlife and native flora along
a half-mile boardwalk through pinelands and mangroves.
Both centers offer canoe and kayak rentals for
vacationers interested in self-guided exploration.
Bird-watchers and nature
photographers will love the National Audubon Society's
Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary in Lee and Collier counties,
where a meandering two-mile boardwalk winds through a
natural cathedral formed by the largest strand of virgin
bald cypress trees in the country. The 11,000-acre
wilderness preserve is also home to alligators, bobcats,
otters and endangered wood storks, who use the swamp as
their winter nesting grounds. To the south, hikers can
explore more than six miles of wilderness trails at
Collier-Seminole State Park. Wildlife sightings are
common in the park's tropical hardwood hammock and salt
marshes, which are a haven for many threatened and
endangered species, including red-cockaded woodpeckers,
mangrove fox squirrels, Florida black bears and
panthers. For an overnight adventure in the wild,
backpack to the park's primitive campgrounds. Or launch
canoe excursions into the upper portion of the Ten
Thousand Islands, a collection of mangrove islands off
the southern Gulf Coast, where saltwater crocodiles are
known to hide.
In the eastern interior of Collier
County, nature lovers can explore the vast freshwater
marshlands of the Big Cypress National Preserve, located
35 miles south of Naples. The sanctuary affords
leisurely automobile or bike rides along miles of scenic
roads, where wild pigs, otters, alligators and wading
birds can be easily spotted. In Fakahatchee Strand State
Preserve, located near Everglades City, visitors can
take a rugged off-trail "swamp tromp" deep
into the heart of the strand, including portions
waist-deep in water. But the preserve's regal rows of
royal palms, exotic orchids and 600-year-old cypress
trees are also visible from the hard-packed limestone
road that cuts through the strand and along the
2,000-foot elevated boardwalk that wanders into ancient
forests.
Situated in the southeastern-most
tip of Collier County, Everglades City is the western
gateway to Florida's largest natural attraction --
Everglades National Park. This expansive "river of
grass" spans more than 1.2 million acres in south
Florida's Dade, Monroe and Collier counties. Endangered
species, exotic birds and the most fragile wetlands
remaining in the country are showcased along 31 miles of
tranquil observation sites. Visitors looking for
backwater adventure will find it on the 100-mile
Wilderness Waterway that weaves through the golden
sawgrass prairies and tangled mangrove pathways of the
Everglades. Guided air boat excursions offer up-close
views of the preserve's rich wildlife. More than 400
species of birds have been identified in the park, along
with 60 species of amphibians and reptiles, 25 species
of mammals and 125 species of fish. Wandering through
the remote wilderness, fortunate travelers can spot at
least 14 endangered species such as the Florida panther,
Southern bald eagle and Everglades mink. Virtually every
natural treasure in Southwest Florida can be reached
using a variety of water transport. Cruise boats go on
picturesque searches for the perfect seashell. Topsail
schooners ply the Gulf on sailing adventures. Kayaks
explore uninhabited mangrove islands under the
moonlight. Pontoon boats glide through wildlife-filled
Estero Bay. Canoes provide tranquil exploration of the
Everglades' grassy vastness. Swamp buggies take
rock-and-roll rides in alligator-infested swamps. Wave
runners skim across island waterways harboring quiet
manatees. And of course fishing boats head to offshore
reefs for the big catch.
In addition, several hotels in the
region coordinate special activities designed for
vacationers interested in discovering and sampling the
area's diverse environments.
Romantic Getaways
Sunset strolls along the
shell-strewn beaches that inspired Anne Morrow Lindbergh
to write her best-selling philosophy on life "A
Gift from the Sea" are just the beginning of what
Southwest Florida has to offer couples looking for the
perfect romantic getaway. Nestled in the region's
tropical island communities and sun-soaked beach
neighborhoods, couples will find treasures in the sea as
well as jewels on the land.
A visit to the scenic shores of
Sanibel is a must for couples searching for the perfect
place to wile away the day. Attracted by secluded
stretches of sand and stunning sunset scenes, many
newlyweds also choose to honeymoon on nearby Captiva
Island.
After shellseeking along the soft
sand, visitors can bike down lush island paths to
Sanibel's Bailey-Matthews Shell Museum, a one-of-a-kind
museum showcasing shells from around the world as well
as ones likely to wash ashore on area beaches. Couples
will enjoy viewing "sailor's Valentines,"
whimsical creations by sailors trying to pass time. In
North Fort Myers, the Shell Factory offers a treasure
chest of Neptune's jewel. At the pearl pavilion, couples
can pluck pearls from Japanese oysters and select
exquisite jewelry settings.
Combing for treasures of another
kind, visitors can explore Lee Island Coast's quaint
shopping districts. Along historic First Street in
downtown Fort Myers, shoppers will find apparel shops,
book stores and restaurants as well as street musicians
and artists. On Sanibel, the island's main thoroughfare,
Periwinkle Way, is Sunday-drive picturesque with
interesting shops, art galleries and restaurants tucked
along a canopy of Australian pines. The island's
historic trolley provides the perfect transportation
from one shop to the next.
The Lee Island Coast is already a
popular honeymoon destination spot, but couples can also
get married in unique ceremonies high over the
glistening Gulf in hot air balloons, on the beautiful,
secluded beaches on Lovers Key or surrounded by
Georgian-revival splendor at the Burroughs Home in Fort
Myers. For a romantic excursion, hop aboard the Seminole
Gulf Railway's old-fashioned dining trains for a
first-class meal and a round-trip jaunt from Fort Myers
to Bonita Springs and back.
Couples will find a wealth of
pleasures await them further south in the seaside
paradise of Naples, where romantic pursuits include
window shopping along waterfront avenues, bicycling
through friendly neighborhoods and sight-seeing aboard
an old-fashioned trolley.
Picturesque shopping districts
steeped in history offer a special ambiance for
strolling, shopping, dining or simply absorbing the
relaxed lifestyle for which Naples is famous. Hugging
the sparkling Gulf of Mexico, Old Naples retains much of
its turn-of-the-century charm and many of its original
structures are still in use today. Visitors will find
upscale boutiques and gourmet eateries tucked inside
1920s-era buildings as well as art galleries, outdoor
cafes and antique shops tucked off fountained courtyards
and lush green parks. And couples will be delighted by
the Village on Venetian Bay's pastel-hued shops topped
with terra cotta roofs. Reminiscent of its Italian
namesake, the village offers sunny sidewalk cafes, art
galleries and boutiques set along the sparkling
waterfront. Nearby, the Waterside Shops provide an
open-air setting nearly as spectacular as the shops
themselves. Couples can stroll along covered walkways en
route to dozens of designer boutiques and elegant
restaurants or relax on garden benches amid cascading
waterfalls and lush tropical plants.
Shoppers-in-the-know make stops at Tin City and Dockside
Boardwalk, where treasures and trinkets are sold
side-by-side in a rustic waterfront setting.
Scenic tours of the city can be
made by trolley, horse-drawn carriage or boat. The
Naples Trolley offers daily tours covering more than 100
points of interest, and guides tell fascinating tales
about the days when Ponce de Leon, the Calusa Indians
and Gaspirilla the Pirate were exciting residents in the
area. On Naples Horse and Carriage Tours, couples can
explore Old Naples to the gentle clip-clop of horse's
hoofs. Or hop aboard an authentic riverboat sternwheeler
for dining and dancing under the stars over Naples Bay.
In romantic counterpoint to the
wildness of the Florida Everglades, Marco Island offers
pampered resort getaways along sprawling white-washed
beaches and turquoise Gulf waters. Romantic
accommodations range from exotic chickee huts tucked
under palmetto hammocks to elegant plantation-style
inns. For the perfect end to a Marco Island day, couples
can sip champagne as the setting sun casts passionate
purple shadows across the sky.
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Florida vacation rental villas in
Orlando, Sarasota, Naples, Fort Myers , Bradenton,
Gulf Coast, Siesta Key, Longboat Key, Port Charlotte, Cape Coral and Captiva
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