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Lotus
Villa |
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PRIVATE 3BR/2BA
WATERFRONT POOL
HOME WITH GULF
ACCESS
Situated in
Tropical
Southwest
Cape Coral, Gulf
Coast, Florida,
USA
Located Within
1/2 Hour Of Fort
Myers Beach -
RSW Int'l
Airport
Sanibel &
Captiva Islands
-
Dozens
of Local Golf
Courses
Boston Red Sox
& Minnesota
Twins Spring
Training Camps
LOTUS VILLA
VACATION HOME
A
Guide to Fort Myers
By
Necee Regis,
Boston Globe Correspondent
/
February 6, 2011
If You Go
What to do
Boston Red Sox Spring
Training
City of Palms Park
2201 Edison Ave.
239-334-4700,
877-733-7699
www.redsox.com
Tickets $10-$46.
Edison & Ford Winter
Estates
2350 McGregor Blvd.
239-334-7419
www.efwefla.org
Tour the historic homes
of Henry Ford and Thomas
Edison, as well as
Edison’s botanical
gardens, research
laboratory, and the
museum that houses
hundreds of his
inventions, $12-$24.
Art of the Olympians
1300 Hendry St.
239-332-5055
www.artoftheolympians.org
Doubleheader special:
Bring your ticket stub
from the ballpark and
get two admissions for
the price of one.
Suggested admission $5.
Fort Myers River
District
www.myriverdistrict.com
Shopping, dining, art
and culture.
Great Calusa Blueway
www.greatcalusablueway.com
Paddle along 190 miles
of trails through
coastal waters and
inland tributaries of
Lee County.
Lovers Key State Park
8700 Estero Blvd.
239-463-4588
www.floridastateparks.org
Per car $8.
Where to stay
Holiday Inn
2431 Cleveland Ave.
239-332-3232
www.holidayinn.com/ftmyersdwntn
Near City of Palms Park
and historic downtown;
122 rooms. In-season
doubles $159-$199.
Hotel Indigo
1520 Broadway
239-337-3446,
877-834-3613
www.hotelindigo.com/
fortmyersfl
Boutique hotel in the
River District; 67
rooms. In-season
standard $136-$169.
Where to eat
The Veranda
2122 Second St.
239-332-2065
www.verandarestaurant.com
Elegant dining in a
turn-of-the-last-century
home in the River
District. Entrees
$29.95-$38.95.
Blu Sushi
13451 McGregor Blvd.
239-489-1500
www.blusushi.com
Martinis and sushi in a
sleek, chic environment,
$4.95-$12.95.
French Connection
Café
2282 First St.
239-332-4443
Soup, salad, sandwiches,
entrees, full bar, and
pool table. Lunch
$6.50-$11; entrees
$12-$18.
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It’s time for spring
training in Fort
Myers.
Sox fans would — if
they could — spend
every minute of
their vacation in
the City of Palms
Park. But when the
practice games end,
the batting cages
empty, and the gates
close, is there
anything else to do?
Plenty. This is
Florida, after all,
and Lee County
offers over 50 miles
of white sand
beaches, with
seemingly endless
opportunities for
fishing, boating,
and swimming, as
well as hiking,
birding, and
wildlife viewing.
Add to that mix some
cultural activities
— theater, arts, and
history — and you’ll
wish you could stay
another week.
The beaches are
known for their
variety and
abundance of shells,
attracting
beachcombers with a
passion for
collecting. There
are 20 named beaches
in the area,
including
Bowman’s Beach
on Sanibel
Island, Turner Beach
on Captiva Island,
and Fort Myers
Beach
on the northern end
of Estero Island.
Fort Myers Beach
has a fun,
honky-tonk feel,
with trinket shops,
T-shirt joints,
casual restaurants,
pizza parlors, and
ice cream stores
clustered along
tree-lined
pedestrian walkways
in an entertainment
district called
Times Square. An
information booth
provides oodles of
choices for water
activities,
including fishing
charters, dolphin
and wildlife
cruises, shelling
tours, parasailing,
sunset party
cruises, pirate
cruises (“A
90-minute
swashbuckling
show!’’) and
leisurely schooner
sailing.
For a quieter
experience on
Estero, drive south
and cross a small
bridge to reach
Lovers Key State
Park. Composed
of four barrier
islands, this
1,616-acre park
offers over two
miles of beaches,
and eight miles of
trails for hiking
and biking. A
concession stand and
gift shop rents
canoes, kayaks,
bicycles, beach
chairs, and
umbrellas. Guided
kayak tours are
available and ranger
programs include
guided walks,
birding, manatee and
dolphin talks, and
more. A tram service
from the parking lot
to the south end of
the beach — where
there’s a gazebo,
restroom, and picnic
area — provides
access to visitors
with disabilities.
Kayak and canoe
enthusiasts should
seek out the Great
Calusa Blueway, a
190-mile, marked
paddling trail that
meanders through the
area’s bays, rivers,
backwaters, and
shoreline.
Heading to or from
Fort Myers Beach,
there are a couple
of great places to
stop for lunch along
Fisherman’s Wharf in
the shadow of the
Matanzas Pass
Bridge. Depending on
your style, try the
tidy fish house and
sports bar Doc
Ford’s Rum Bar and
Grille, with its
entertainment
license and souvenir
store, or head
around the corner to
Bonita Bills,
where dogs are
welcome, “No Shirt,
No Shoes, Can We Get
You a Beer?’’ is
printed on the menu,
and they only take
cash.
The renovated
historic downtown,
dubbed the “River
District,’’ is a
destination all its
own. Early
20th-century brick
buildings have been
restored to their
former glory and are
home to eclectic
boutiques, jewelry
shops, restaurants,
bars, antiques
emporiums, cafes,
art galleries,
nightclubs, and the
award-winning
regional theater,
Florida Rep.
An afternoon stroll
along First Street
should include a
stop at the newly
opened Franklin
Shops in the former
Franklin Hardware
Building. The
two-level space is
divided into
exhibition and
retail showrooms for
unique retailers,
designers, and
artists selling
everything from
beachy interior
decor (pillows with
starfish, coral
bottle stoppers) to
skin and beauty
products to
chocolates,
swimwear, fine art,
and jewelry.
Around the corner,
Main Street
Antiques and
Collectibles has
a similar set-up
(they rent space to
20 vendors) with a
funkier vibe. In the
same location for 18
years, this
hodgepodge of a
store will keep you
busy for hours,
especially if you
like to poke through
vintage clothing,
knickknacks,
records, handbags,
hats and jewelry.
And yes, the player
piano works.
Stop for lunch at
the French
Connection Cafe
for a fresh,
perfectly grilled
ahi tuna salad on
crisp greens — and a
quick game of pool —
or go for grilled
panini at the chic
and affordable
restaurant,
Delicious Things.
At the nearby
waterfront, along
the Caloosahatchee
River, look for the
new Art of the
Olympians
gallery and
educational center.
One of only five
places operating as
a licensed
organization of the
US Olympic
Committee, this
10,000-square-foot
space is dedicated
to the relationship
between art and
sport.
“Both of these
fields require
discipline,
excellence, and
commitment,’’ said
J.J. Cochrane,
community
development officer.
Rotating exhibitions
on the first floor
examine the history
and culture of
sports and athletes
through equipment,
films, and
memorabilia. The
second-floor gallery
features paintings,
photography,
drawing, sculpture,
and multimedia work
by over 40 Olympic
athletes, including
Peggy Fleming and
the late Florence
Griffith-Joyner, and
the gallery’s
founder, Al Oerter,
(1936-2007), a
four-time
consecutive Olympic
gold medalist in the
discus.
The February
exhibition will
feature the drawings
of Liston Bochette,
who competed in five
Olympics (bobsled,
decathlon) while
bringing along his
drawing paper and
Prisma pencils.
“I grew up in Fort
Myers, but I was
always a Carl
Yastrzemski fan,’’
said Bochette. “I
wrote him a letter
as a kid and he sent
back a postcard. I
kept that on my desk
till I went to
college. There
wasn’t any baseball
in the Olympics back
them, but my five
Olympics were
inspired by him.’’
Of course, one can’t
talk about
inspiration in Fort
Myers without
mentioning the
prolific inventor
Thomas Edison. He
first visited in
1885, eventually
buying 13 acres
along the
Caloosahatchee to
build his winter
home. In 1916, his
close friend Henry
Ford purchased the
adjoining property.
Today, the Edison
and
Ford Winter Estates pay homage to the many
technological
innovations and
creativity of these
two men. It’s
possible to tour
both their homes,
well-tended gardens,
and the Estates
Museum that’s full
of artifacts
relating to Edison’s
inventions and
businesses, as well
as information about
Ford, their
families, friends,
and Florida history.
The estate served as
a workshop and a
winter getaway for
Edison, who set up a
laboratory during
World War I in order
to discover a
cheaper, domestic
source of rubber
from latex-producing
plants. Peek into
the lab that looks
untouched from the
time of his death in
1931. The smell of
wood permeates the
space with its high
ceilings, exposed
beams, and long
tables with
antique-looking
tools.
Outside, an enormous
India banyan tree
could be declared a
natural wonder. At
the time of its
planting in 1925,
the tree was 4 feet
high and 2 inches in
diameter. Today it
is an acre in
diameter with 350
roots.
After a day of
sports, culture, and
beachcombing, make
sure to reserve a
table at the
Veranda, a Fort
Myers institution
for more than 30
years. Located in an
early-20th-century
home in the River
District, the
Veranda serves
Southern foods (blue
crab cakes
remoulade, fried
green tomato salad,
Gulf yellowtail
snapper with
crawfish) in genteel
style. The stylish
night crowds flock
to Blu Sushi, a
martini and sushi
bar along McGregor
Boulevard.
In the morning, it’s
back to the
ballpark. Check out
the gift shop for
team merchandise
that’s only
available in
Florida, such as
caps with the Sox
logo and palm trees.
For those who plan
ahead to the 2012
spring training
season, Fort Myers
is scheduled to open
a new 10,000-seat
ballpark that will
be a miniature
replica of Fenway
Park complete with a
Green Monster wall.
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