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ROAD TRIP

Florida Panhandle

The northwestern coast of Florida sprawls out in one sandy strip. There's plenty of room for everyone--spring breakers and gators included
By Jeanine Barone, December 2005/January 2006 |

Activities

  • St. George Island State Park 1900 E. Gulf Beach Dr., St. George Island, 850/927-2111, floridastateparks.org/stgeorgeisland, car fee $5
  • St. George Island State Park was damaged in July by Hurricane Dennis, but it's open and being fully rebuilt (Kenneth Chen) [enlarge photo]

    Day 3: Apalachicola to Ft. Walton Beach

    Route 98 is the main road tracing the coast, and for 60 miles to the west, there isn't a whole lot to see other than stores selling spring-break souvenirs. We speed past Panama City, with its go-kart joints, video arcades, and body-piercing salons. In Seagrove Beach, we stop at Cocoon's, a deli and take-out market, to pick up tuna sandwiches and marinated artichoke salad.

    Then it's on to Eden Gardens State Park. Lois Maxon, a wealthy New York publisher, bought the former lumber baron's estate in the early 1960s and spent most of the decade renovating it and planting 11 acres of gardens. The Choctawhatchee River used to be the main artery for lumber barges, and we make a picnic in the park at a table beside the Tucker Bayou, an inlet of Choctawhatchee Bay, where the lumber was loaded and carted by barge up to Alabama and beyond. On a 45-minute house tour, the guide gives us the lowdown on Maxon's impressive antiques, which include the country's second-largest collection of Louis XVI furniture.

    The Panhandle of Florida is one of the only places in the country with coastal dune lakes. Because the lakes are filled with freshwater in addition to small amounts of salt water, migratory birds depend on them as a water source, as did Native Americans some 10,000 years ago. It begins drizzling just as we start walking down the two-and-a-half-mile Morris Lake nature trail toward one of the lakes at Topsail Hill Preserve State Park. Still, we continue on through the wet sand, and the sound of the ocean gets louder. A shimmering lake appears between the dunes; lily pads are floating on the surface, mist is rising from the water, bass are jumping and flopping. A quick look is all we can manage before we race back to the car, drenched. Later, someone tells us that alligators live there, too, but luckily we didn't cross their path.

    Lodging

  • Best Western Fort Walton Beachfront Hotel 380 Santa Rosa Blvd., Fort Walton Beach, 850/243-9444, bestwestern.com, from $119
  • Food

  • Cocoon's 4101 E. Hwy. 30-A, Seagrove Beach, 850/ 231-4544, tuna sandwich $5
  • Activities

  • Eden Gardens State Park C.R. 395 off Rte. 98, Point Washington, 850/231-1167, floridastateparks.org/edengardens, car fee $3, mansion tour $3
  • Note: This story was accurate when it was published. Please be sure to confirm all rates and details directly with the companies in question before planning your trip.

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