Key West... And The Florida Keys... What Not To Miss...

AKL_Megs

DIS Veteran
Joined
Jul 26, 2006
Messages
6,037
DH turned down a Disney vacation this year. :sad2: We have something like 500 Disney Rewards points, but he said absolutely not, so... next year, we should have a vacation on Chase! :thumbsup2

Anyways... I said I wanted WARMTH and FLORIDA at least, and he said if we do Florida, he wants to do the Keys.

So there you go.

We plan on flying into Miami. We might do the Everglades.

We know we will venture all the way to Key West, of course.

So, with all of those places in mind, what are some "key" ;) things we shouldn't miss?
 
I know this sounds morbid, but the cemetery is beautiful. It's very historical and there are many old old graves there. There are also quite a few with funny sayings such as the town hypochondriac who has "see, I told you I was sick" on hers.

We were able to get a map to the most famous of the gravestones free at the B&B we stayed at.

We also enjoyed para-sailing (you can get good deals if you go before noon usually).

We also enjoyed the nightlife/entertainment at Mallory Square in the evenings.

Key West is so small, there is no need for a car (more trouble than it's worth actually to try to find parking) so we just rented bikes to get around. Plenty of places to lock them up.


Hope that helps a little

H2SL

ETA: all of these things are in Key West btw
 
I'd go at least a 1/2 day deep sea fishing, or snorkleing..I know fishing may not sound all that fun for some, but if you do not get sea-sick, it can be pretty fun. Grassy Key has the Dolphin rescue center and you can swim with htem....it's a really nice set up there and nice knowing your $ is going to rescue/research. Look them up to schedule a swim, really, that would be the #1 thing on my list..then Hog'sBreath Saloon!:thumbsup2
 

Do not miss the Blond Giraffe Chocolate Dipped Frozen Key Lime Pie on a Stick in Key West!!!!!!!!!!!!! So good that I went back for seconds!!!!!!! :love:YUMMMMMMM!!!!!!:cloud9:
 
Thanks for ALL of the great ideas! Keep them coming! :thumbsup2

We also enjoyed para-sailing (you can get good deals if you go before noon usually).

Key West is so small, there is no need for a car (more trouble than it's worth actually to try to find parking) so we just rented bikes to get around. Plenty of places to lock them up.
Great tip on the parasailing... DH would love that.

And about the car... what do you DO with the one you got down there in?

Do not miss the Blond Giraffe Chocolate Dipped Frozen Key Lime Pie on a Stick in Key West!!!!!!!!!!!!! So good that I went back for seconds!!!!!!! :love:YUMMMMMMM!!!!!!:cloud9:
Sounds GREAT!
 
Visit the Key West Aquarium, the Aloe shop and the Sandal Factory. Have fun on Duval Street and visit Sloppy Joe's.

ETA: Go to the sunset festivities in Mallory Square.
 
Thanks for ALL of the great ideas! Keep them coming! :thumbsup2

Great tip on the parasailing... DH would love that.

And about the car... what do you DO with the one you got down there in?

We just left ours parked at the B&B and rented bikes from there. If the place you are staying doesn't rent bikes, then I'm sure there will be one close by that does (and probably delivers too). I can't remember how much they charged, but I know it was pretty cheap, plus they provided helmets.
 
On your way down you can stop at John Pennekamp State park

http://www.pennekamppark.com/

here's a Keys site that looks nice

http://www.fla-keys.com/islamorada/?source=overture

Not sure for how long you are going, but you may think about splitting the vacation with half in the upper Keys. If you or your husband have experiences with boats, you can rent one. We used to have a blast just trucking along. Depending on when you go you can pull right up and moor on a sandbar. Everybody pulls out the chairs and sits in the water. Strange to look over and see the shore so far away and you are lounging in the beautiful water soaking up the sun. And of course no one is a stranger in the Keys. You will make friends on the sandbars and everywhere you go.
 
Thanks for ALL of the great ideas! Keep them coming! :thumbsup2

Great tip on the parasailing... DH would love that.

And about the car... what do you DO with the one you got down there in?

Sounds GREAT!

About the car -leave it parked at your hotel.

They have lots of snorkeling and sunset cruises. We also did a jet ski tour once. All very good. I'd say make sure you see Hemingway's house and the southernmost point in the US. Neither will take long, and they're not far apart, but good picture spots. My sister and I have one with the Hemingway 6 toed cats :cutie:
 
On your way down you can stop at John Pennekamp State park

http://www.pennekamppark.com/

here's a Keys site that looks nice

http://www.fla-keys.com/islamorada/?source=overture

Not sure for how long you are going, but you may think about splitting the vacation with half in the upper Keys. If you or your husband have experiences with boats, you can rent one. We used to have a blast just trucking along. Depending on when you go you can pull right up and moor on a sandbar. Everybody pulls out the chairs and sits in the water. Strange to look over and see the shore so far away and you are lounging in the beautiful water soaking up the sun. And of course no one is a stranger in the Keys. You will make friends on the sandbars and everywhere you go.
Oh, thanks! Unfortunately, we don't know much about boating, but DH would LOVE this. What do you have to do to rent a boat? Do you need a license?

About the car -leave it parked at your hotel.

They have lots of snorkeling and sunset cruises. We also did a jet ski tour once. All very good. I'd say make sure you see Hemingway's house and the southernmost point in the US. Neither will take long, and they're not far apart, but good picture spots. My sister and I have one with the Hemingway 6 toed cats :cutie:
Oh yes, those two things are on our list!!!
 
You've gotten some good ideas of things to do while in Key West. I wanted to add something to keep in mind in case you don't know it. If you are leaving Key West on a Sunday, allow plenty of time to get back to Miami. We were there last month and it took us SEVEN hours to get from Key West to the Miami airport. We would have missed our plane if the plane hadn't been late. I was shocked at how bad the traffic was leaving Key West, plus we saw wreck after wreck and had to take a detour for hours. Next time we will fly into Key West instead of Miami!
 
You've gotten some good ideas of things to do while in Key West. I wanted to add something to keep in mind in case you don't know it. If you are leaving Key West on a Sunday, allow plenty of time to get back to Miami. We were there last month and it took us SEVEN hours to get from Key West to the Miami airport. We would have missed our plane if the plane hadn't been late. I was shocked at how bad the traffic was leaving Key West, plus we saw wreck after wreck and had to take a detour for hours. Next time we will fly into Key West instead of Miami!
Thanks for the tip on the traffic... but you MAY not want to fly into Key West... $780 a person round trip into KW, $320 round trip into Miami! :scared1: I was shocked! Unless, of course, you could find something better!
 
Don't miss the Key Deer, they are on Big Pine Key. Also there is a great bar/pizza place called No Name Pub, very interesting and fun.

Bahia Honda State Park is a nice beach and you can walk on part of the old Bahia Honda bridge.

Key West has so much to do. Mallory Square at sunset is not to be missed! Sloppy Joes, Hogsbreath and Capt. Tony's are some of our favorite bars. The Duvall Crawl is always fun too. The Key West Aloe shop, Fast Buck Freddies, The Key West Kite Shop and the shell shop near the aquarium are a little different than all the t shirt shops.

If you've never been salt water fishing I recommend that too. You never know what you are going to pull up! We had our own boat and my grandpa had a commercial fishing license we always had a ton of Yellowtail Snapper. I miss the Keys and really wish my dad hadn't sold his vacation home there after my mom passed away.
 
We love Key West! We like to stay at the Ocean Key. The address is 0 Duval Street - they have the sunset pier and are in the heart of everything: http://www.oceankey.com/

Some other useful Key West links:
General restaurant/menu info: http://www.keywestmenu.com/

A couple of our favorite restaurants by water:
Turtle Kraals: http://www.turtlekraals.com/
Half Shell Raw Bar: http://www.halfshellrawbar.com/home.html
Schooner Wharf - local bar by water: http://www.schoonerwharf.com/
Key lime pie: http://www.blondgiraffe.com

The drive from the mainland to Key West is listed on National Geographic's "Drives of a Lifetime" website:
http://traveler.nationalgeographic.com/drives/florida-keys.html

The Overseas Highway Florida Keys
The 113-mile (181-kilometer) drive on Highway 1 from mainland Florida to Key West induces sensory overload. Besides the natural beauty along the route—tidal flats, teal waters dotted by distant islands—the so-called Overseas Highway awes you in its own right as an engineering marvel. Its concrete stretches across impossible expanses of water, the Atlantic spreading out to the left, the Gulf to the right.

Overview
Highway 1 is festooned with classic Americana, from kitschy gift shops purveying seashell necklaces to burger stands offering shakes and fries. But that's just the half of it. Beneath the ocean surface lies a separate world of Technicolor fish and coral reefs. Below are the five best dive sites you'll encounter as you proceed from Key Largo, near the top of the island chain, down to Key West, at the end. At each spot, you'll park at a dive shop and motor out to the reef on a boat. The entire dive experience takes two to four hours, leaving ample time to watch the sunset and enjoy a seafood dinner. Meanwhile, non-divers will find plenty else to do, from snorkeling to exploring state parks to visiting museums. Major attractions are sited by mile marker, from MM 107 in Key Largo to MM 0 in Key West.

Begin in Key Largo
Key Largo calls itself the dive capital of the world. It's home to the 70-square-mile (181-square-kilometer) John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park (MM 102.5; 451-6300; www.pennekamppark.com). The park has a visitors center and beach, a good place to hone your snorkeling skills before boarding a dive boat. The best undersea attraction of the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary (floridakeys.noaa.gov) is the wreck of the Spiegel Grove (www.fla-keys.com/spiegelgrove), a 510-foot (155-meter) retired Navy ship sunk as an artificial reef in 2002 and now resting 130 feet (39 meters) underwater near Dixie Shoal. Fish you might spot include trumpetfish and angelfish lurking along the hull, which is covered with sponges and soft coral. You can also stop at Molasses Reef, suitable for snorkelers. Local dive operators include Ocean Divers (522 Caribbean Dr.; 451-1113; oceandivers.com) and Amy Slate's Amoray Dive Resort (MM 104.5; 451-3595; www.amoray.com), which offers morning coffee with its rooms and apartments.

Pennekamp
In the area: Locals stop by the Marlin (MM 102.7; 451-2454), a Cuban restaurant, for a café con leche and pastelitos (crispy, filled pastries; try the guava) before turning in to Pennekamp. After your dive, try Hobo's Cafe (MM 101.7; 451-5888; hoboscafe.net), an authentic Keys eatery serving burgers and fresh fish.

Tavernier
Tavernier, your next stop, accesses the Conch Reef. This is perhaps the Keys' best drift dive, in which you descend at Point A, drift down current, then resurface at Point B, where the dive boat retrieves you. "It's one of the most popular ways to see the reef," says Brenda Mace, whose Conch Republic Divers (MM 90.8; 852-1655; www.conchrepublicdivers.com) offers twice-daily reef and wreck dives. Other reefs near the southern end of Pennekamp, many with names as colorful as the fish, include Hens and Chickens, Pickles, and Alligator.

Islamorada
In the area: For breakfast, it's Harriette's (MM 95.7; 852-8689), known for its biscuits and generous servings. After a long day, treat yourself at Snapper's Waterfront Restaurant (MM 94.5; 852-5956; www.snapperskeylargo.com), frequented by celebrities. For a classic Keys lodging experience, stay at the quiet Kona Kai (MM 97.8; 852-7200; www.konakairesort.com), a restored 1940s bayside resort. Before you leave the Upper Keys, visit the Florida Keys History of Diving Museum (MM 83, Islamorada; 664-9737; www.divingmuseum.org), where you can try on antique diving equipment and see diving machines from the 1700s.

Duck Key
Duck Key and other parts of the middle section of the Keys are often overlooked by divers, but "from Tavernier to Big Pine Key is where you find the most pristine diving conditions," says Wendy Hall of Dive Duck Key (MM 61; 289-4931; diveduckkey.com). "It's quieter, with fewer residents here, and not as many commercial dive operations, so there's less pressure on our reefs." Lost and Found Reef, for example, has abundant life, such as vast schools of goatfish. "We get tons of giant sea turtles and spotted eagle rays," says Hall. "We see them every day."

Hawks Cay
In the area: Hawks Cay (61 Hawks Cay Blvd., Duck Key; 743-7000; www.hawkscay.com) is a major resort with its own restaurants and an enclosure where you can get in the water to interact with the dolphins. Its sizeable villas offer privacy and plenty of room for your dive gear. Little Italy (MM 68.5; 664-4472) on Long Key is a favorite eatery serving Italian cuisine, steaks, and lots of seafood. In Marathon, the legendary lobster Reuben sandwich at Keys Fisheries Market and Marina (3502 Gulfview Ave., MM 48.5; 743-4353; www.keysfisheries.com) is worth a short detour off the Overseas Highway. South of town, walk, bike, or take a ferry to historic Pigeon Key, where the railroad museum (MM 45; 743-5999; www.pigeonkey.net) tells the story of the bygone era of industrialist and railroad magnate Henry Flagler, who built the first bridges linking Miami to Key West almost a century ago. In 1935, a hurricane flushed part of the railway into the Florida Bay. The surviving rail bridges were repurposed as roadway, and the Overseas Highway was born.

Looe Key
Looe Key, home of the offbeat Underwater Music Festival, is probably the most popular dive destination in the Lower Keys, the southern third of the island chain. And no wonder: No other site in the area has such dramatic underwater topography. Coral reefs rise from the seafloor into underwater mounds teeming with lobster and moray eels. Looe Key, serviced by Underseas, Inc. (MM 30.5, Big Pine Key; 872-2700; www.flkeysdiveshops.com/lkdiveshops/), Looe Key Reef Resort & Dive Center (MM 27.5, Ramrod Key; 872-2215; www.diveflakeys.com), and others, is especially attractive to snorkelers, who can readily view marine life from the surface and can easily free-dive to the tops of the mounds for an up-close look at the coral itself.

Big Pine Key
In the area: Swing by the No Name Pub on Big Pine Key (N. Watson Blvd.; 872-9115; www.nonamepub.com) for pizza and a cold one after your dive. For a true Lower Keys immersion, check into the Sugarloaf Lodge (MM 17, Sugarloaf Key; 745-3211; www.sugarloaflodge.net), a 31-room resort with private airstrip. Bahia Honda State Park (MM 37, Bahia Honda Key; 872-2353; www.floridastateparks.org/bahiahonda) beckons the dive-weary or sunbather with the nicest beach experience in the Keys—an abundant sand shoreline set against the backdrop of one of Flagler's most impressive surviving rail bridges.

Key West
Key West, famous for its colorful locals, was also one of the first places in the Keys to be dived, says historian Tom Hambright. It's known for its easy, relatively shallow dives with copious coral and fish. The "Southernmost City" is a launching point to nearby reefs such as the Eastern Dry Rocks and Sand Key; several notable wrecks, including the Cayman Salvager and Joe's Tug; and more remote sites like the Dry Tortugas. The sites are so compelling, Hambright says, that before World War II, "one enthusiast would construct masks of wood and glass for friends and family to catch a glimpse of the reefs." Local dive shops include Dive Key West (3128 N. Roosevelt Blvd.; 296-3823; www.divekeywest.com) and Subtropic Dive Center (1605 N. Roosevelt Blvd.; 296-9914; www.subtropic.com).

The Casa Marina Resort
In the area: Almost everything on the island is accessible by foot. The Casa Marina Resort (1500 Reynolds St.; 296-3535; www.casamarinaresort.com), used as military housing during WWII, is a trove of history. You'll find old photos from the days when the only way to reach Key West was by boat or train and from the early years of the highway. Also visit the Ernest Hemingway Home and Museum (907 Whitehead St.; 294-1136; www.hemingwayhome.com) and the Mel Fisher Maritime Museum (200 Greene St.; 294-2633; www.melfisher.org), which displays treasures salvaged from the sea. Good restaurants include the Caribbean-themed Bagatelle (115 Duval St.; 296-6609; www.bagatellekeywest.com), where you might try the tuna tataki appetizer, and Mangoes (700 Duval St.; 292-4606), for dining alfresco.

Road Kit
Traveling in winter avoids the summer and fall hurricane season, although for those interested in diving, summer offers the best water and wind conditions and hence peak visibility. Check current water and wind conditions at the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary Web site (www.floridakeys.noaa.gov/links/weather.html). For travel information, see the official tourism Web site www.fla-keys.com. The local area code is 305. From the car rental agencies at Miami International Airport, it's a 75-minute drive to Key Largo.
 







Receive up to $1,000 in Onboard Credit and a Gift Basket!
That’s right — when you book your Disney Cruise with Dreams Unlimited Travel, you’ll receive incredible shipboard credits to spend during your vacation!
CLICK HERE






DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest DIS Tiktok DIS Twitter DIS Bluesky

Back
Top Bottom