Miami Beach Hotels And Suite test South Beach where to Eat Miami Beach Boutique address Super Yacht Motor or Sailing South Beach Nightlife Miami Beach and South Beach Magazine Miami Beach maps to eat, clubbing and shop South Beach Media Center with Images and Video
time in SoBe :: 2:18 pm  

marco-island-florida

A few hours south (about 200 miles) on 1-75 will get you to Everglades City (take Route 29, the first exit after the toll booth), gateway to Everglades National Park and Ten Thousand Islands.

The town lies about 20 miles south of the interstate.

From the ranger station, you can catch a tour boat year-round; in the winter, check out the canoe tour and other interesting ranger-led programs. You’ll see alligators, manatees, dolphins, and birds by the flock.

The 100-mile Wilderness Waterway trail begins here and travels through the mangrove wilderness of Ten Thousand Islands to connect to Flamingo.

Canoeists who follow the trail can camp at covered platforms called chickee huts.

Stop at Rod & Gun Club alligator tail and other Southern-style meals in Everglades City. Nearby, Museum of the Everglades gives a history lesson on the region. Outfitters and charters in the area can take you canoeing, kayaking, fishing, or airboating.

Read more »

key-west

As the topographical tail of the United States, Key West dangles off the end of the Florida Keys chain, an island of unfettered freedoms and capricious charms.

It is a nonchalant, end-of-the-road kind of place where people who never want to grow up feel right at home. It is crazy, indulgent, uninhibited and hip, full of small town gossip and big city panache.

The city’s architecture a blend of Spanish, Bahamian, New England and Southern is world famous, with grand tropical mansions adorned with gingerbread railings dotting even the most ordinary of streets.

The resident population a combination of old Conchs, rich yuppies, middle-class families, Cuban immigrants, Bahamians, military employees and gays totals about 25,000, but when you add the million tourists who visit each year, the island can feel very crowded.

Technorati Profile

Read more »

Visit Tropical Fruit & Spice Park in the historic agricultural community of Redland for a taste of what’s grown in this fertile soil reclaimed from Everglades swamp lands. 
South on Route 997, you’ll come to the intersection of Route 9336, Palm Avenue. 
Head east 10 miles on Route 9336 to the 181,500-acre Biscayne National Park, 95 percent of which is under water. This begins the teeming coral reef environment that continues through the Florida Keys. 
At the park’s visitor center and marina, you can sign up for a snorkeling, diving, or glass-bottom boat tour to experience the incredible marine life in these parts. You can even catch a water taxi out to one of the islands for primitive overnight camping. Alternatively, if you turn west at the intersection of routes 997 and 9336, you’re just 9 miles from the eastern access of Everglades National Park. On your way, stop at Robert Is Here fruit stand. 
Robert sells fresh and exotic fruits and vegetables and shelves full of Florida honeys, jams, preserves, and hot sauces. As if that weren’t enough, you can also get the best fresh fruit ice cream shakes imaginable. 
Try for example the Key lime, passion fruit, or a combination fruit shake. 
The kids will like looking at the turtles out back. 
Everglades Alligator Farm is also along the way. Stop here for an airboat ride (you won’t find any within nationa park boundaries) and a look at thousands of alligators and other Florida critters. Before you enter the national park gates, stop at the main visitor center for a smooth and sophisticated introduction to this oddball world. 
Inside the gates, veer off to the left about a mile down the road at Royal Palm Visitor Center. A walk along Anhinga Trail is a must. Kids will go wild over all the alligators and birds they will see. Along the park’s 38-mile drive, you can pull off at a number of trails, overlooks, and recreational areas. 
The main recreational area lies at the end at Flamingo, where this is also a motellike lodge. Cabins and campgrounds provide alternative accommodations, The emphasis is on outdoor activity. There’s another visitor center offering ranger-led programs that take you into the often-forbidding land of the Everglades. 
Go to Eco Pond for more wildlife watching.
Rent a canoe, kayak, bike, or skiff to fish or sightsee. Board a tour boat for an on-water ecology lesson; you’re bound to see saltwater crocodiles, alligators, coots, herons, ibises, and other birds. 
The marina also rents houseboats and provides fishing charters. You can rent anything you need-including binoculars-at the marina store. The lodge has restaurants, but hours are cut during the hot, wet, buggy summer season. 
(Approximately 90 miles)

Biscayne-National-Park

Follow Highway 1 South out of South Miami to reach Homestead, threshold to two major national parks and crucial ecological systems. An agricultural town known for its tropical fruits and landscaping plants, Homestead lies at the crossroads of Highway 1 and Route 997 (Krome Avenue). 

Visit Tropical Fruit & Spice Park in the historic agricultural community of Redland for a taste of what’s grown in this fertile soil reclaimed from Everglades swamp lands. 

South on Route 997, you’ll come to the intersection of Route 9336, Palm Avenue. 

Head east 10 miles on Route 9336 to the 181,500-acre Biscayne National Park, photo above, 95 percent of which is under water. This begins the teeming coral reef environment that continues through the Florida Keys.

Read more »

carl-fisher

Carl Fisher (in the foto Fisher at the Harlem racetrack, near Chicago, Illinois) was energetic and colorful, a generous, domineereing, daring audacious, profane, hard-drinking, pratical-joker man’s man.

His child bride, Jane, saw her future written on leather pillow in his bachelor digs: “A woman is only a woman, a good cigar is a smoke.” He believed in middle- American values and conventions while routinely ignoring or defying them himself. 

He was innovative and instinctively entrepreneunal, pragmatic and brash, a sophisticated business-man and a social diamond in the rough. And he thrived on action. When Fisher was at the peak of his success in Miami Beach he started another resort in Montauk, Long Island. 

Why, he was asked, when you don’t need the money? Hell, he said, I just like to see the dirt fly. Fisher didn’t need the money when he began work on Miami Beach; he was already a multi-millionaire from the sale to Union Carbide of his Prest-o-Lite company, which manufactured a headlight that ran on cornpressed gas. 

But the challenge presented by Miami Beach, combined with the potential for profit, made the project irresistible. 

Read more »

four-season-hotel-miami2

Comments and Reviews:

The hotel is lovely. The lobby and particularly the Botero sculptures are magnificant.

We stayed in a premier bay view suite – Great views of the bay, well executed color scheme and the usual tasteful FS bathroom. Service was excellent. Everyone remembered my name.

The pool area is well designed and landscaped. The staff is attentive. The concierge (Jakie) was very helpful also in organising our nightlife in Miami Beach. It was great fun and I highly recommend it! 

Excellent concierge service. Great (typically Four-seasons style) rooms. Perfect place for business

Very nice hotel…love their coctayl and their pool. Great team at the concierge. Far from the glamour and sometimes noise of south beach

First Class as always

Great hotel. great view and really modern entrance hall but still somehow classic. a must see.

Book the Four Season Hotel in Miami

MySoBe.com, a Cool Guide to South Beach.

the-setai-miami-beach

Comments and Reviews:

A place to go, simply …beautiful

Amazing rooms, great service, really good restaurant, probably the best in Miami.

By far the best hotel in Miami!

Were at the Setai last month. Very nice and relaxed place. The penthouse in the Tower is fab!

Best Hotel in Miami ever! Really good food and extremely serviceminded personal! Could really recommend this hotel!

Nicest hotel on South Beach by far. I know, I’ve tried all the five star hotels. Their service is lacking. Ideal situ would be The Setai with the Mandarin Oriental service. Avoid rooms on the south side of the residence tower. Music too loud from the clubs. Best suite is the two bedroom ocean-front…or 07 unit that runs 2,000 to 2,500 a night.

Read more »

miami-beach

Miami’s geographical and cultural position brings a uniqe flavour to the great American tradition of cosmopolitan life.

Largest city of the southern United States, it has become in many ways the northern most city of South America 

Up in the gleaming glass and steel skyscrapers of the banking and business districts, the city provides a vital link in financial relations between North and South America.

Down in the streets, the smells and sounds of Miami may recall the delicatessens and supper clubs of New York and New Jersey, strong Cuban coffee and cigars and perhaps the exotic beat o Haitian chants. 

This is the place where the sun spends the winter, a sub tropical haven that never seen the snow. Even in January, the coolest month, thermometer average around 74° Fahrenheit, while the trade winds temper the summer highs. 

With a good hat and the right lotions, you can enjoy this town all year round. 

The city stands at the mouth of the Miami River on the shore of Biscayne Bay. 

Read more »

halifax-river-daytona-beach

A popular way to get some beach time when visiting Orlando is to head up to Daytona Beach. Interstates 4 and 95 make this a fast, easy drive of less than two hours. 

On the way, you may want to make time for some interesting side trips. 

Start by heading northeast on I-4. Visit historic Sanford and the nearby Central Florida Zoo, located off I-4 on Route 17/92. Hop back on I-4 for twelve miles to Cassadega, a small town known for its spiritualist community. 

Have your palm read while you’re there. 

If you discover that a trip to the beach – less amazing on Miami Beach of course -  is in your future, continue on to Daytona (I-4 intersects with I-95; head north there for 1 mile). Before you get to the beach, 2 miles east of I-95, you’ll pass Daytona International Speedway on International Speedway Boulevard (Highway 92), exit 87.

Read more »

miami beach and south beach copyright