Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Road Trip - Cedar Key, Florida

Brian and I make a great road trip team.  Some trips are short day trips and other are road trip vacations.  Before becoming a REAL RETIRED HOUSEWIFE OF FLORIDA, we explored all four corners of Ohio, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, West Virginia.  After becoming a REAL RETIRED HOUSEWIFE OF FLORIDA, we have taken trips exploring our new home state of Florida...New Smyrna Beach, Key West, St. Augustine, Gainesville, Everglades, Tarpon Springs.

A road trip starts with Brian picking the destination (or at least the direction).  Then I research the area, including what may pop up on the way there.

Recently, Brian and I picked Cedar Key for a road trip.  It is a fishing village/resort area on the Gulf, a couple hours northwest of home.  The feel of the town reminded me of Kelley's Island, Ohio, where we had a vacation home for a few years...memories, memories.

Our first stop was a roadside store for gas.  While Brian pumped the gas, I browsed the store.  I found a prize...a lemon tree (our second attempt at a lemon tree).




We headed downtown to checkout the pier and stroll along the main drag.  The fishing pier was busy with both fishermen and pelicans.  One fisherman caught a small blacktip shark (that he threw back).




We stopped for lunch at Seabreeze.  The food was okay, but the beer and view were great.




After lunch we drove around the island looking for geocaches.  I started geocaching in Ohio after seeing it mentioned on a Law & Order episode.  Often when researching a road trip destination, I will check out nearby caches.  Geocaching has led Brian and I to some off-the-beaten-path locations.  In Cedar Key, we found three caches.  Brian spotted all three.  I better work on my geocaching skills.

DISCOVER THE IRON WAY 

The cache was at the end of the Cedar Key Railroad Trestle Nature trail.  The trail started with a history lesson on the railroad line that ran from Cedar Key to Fernandina Beach from 1861 to 1932.  Along the trail many of the natural Florida plants and trees were identified.




BOARDWALK CACHE
 
The cache was hidden under a bench along a boardwalk that had great views of the tidal marsh
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DISCOVER THE RUDDY CRITTERS
 
The plaque says that this was a "park" with a "beach".  It was low tide, otherwise, there would not have been a "beach".  And the "park" was a parking lot and a bench.  Still it was an interesting area.
 
 
 
We ended our road trip with a visit to Dunkin' Donuts/Baskin Robbins for ice cream and coffee.  Whoever thought to put these two brands in one building was a genius!
 
 
 
 

 


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