STAND on the observation deck of
La Concha Hotel on the corner of Duval and Fleming and inhale the fresh sea breeze drifting in from the
Gulf of Mexico. To the North East the 204 km (127 mile) tail of the
Florida Keys arcs languorously back towards the
US mainland along a curved asphalt spine built of highway and some 42 bridges. More than 800 islands and mangrove-swamped islets make up the
Keys, of which only 30 are inhabited. Flat (the highest natural point is 5.5 metres (18ft)), lush and protected by an offshore coral reef the
Keys, from the Spanish word
'cayos' meaning
'small islands', attract annually over a million tourists who island hop their way south towards
Cuba. Mile marker 127 on
US Overseas Highway 1 is
Miami. At mile marker zero you'll find
Key West, the southernmost point of the continental
USA.
Banyan trees and Spanish colonial clapperboard houses welcome you to mythological Key West. Immortalised by Ernest Hemingway in 'To Have and Have Not', this playground of pirates, wreckers, artists, writers, eccentrics and the just plain laidback has a big image to live up to but Key West doesn't care whether you're impressed or not.
Florida USA ('Visit Florida')
Address: 661 E Jefferson St,Suite 300,Tallahassee, FL 32301USA
Phone: +1 850 488 5607