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Fort Myers Beach © Lee County Visitors and Convention Bureau |
Overview: Billed as 'Florida's tropical island getaway', Fort Myers Beach is a haven for Floridians themselves seeking a relaxing family holiday, as well as visitors from the rest of the United States and abroad. The locals favour it simply because it still smacks of 'old Florida', and while it offers endless sport and recreational activities like the more frenetic destinations of the east coast, this beautiful resort town on the Gulf of Mexico remains affordable, relaxed, friendly and casual. Situated on Estero Island, facing the Gulf, the palm-shaded Fort Myers Beach has a wide white sandy shoreline sloping gently into the ocean, and locals claim it is the world's safest beach. The village area is clustered along a tree-lined pedestrian walkway at the north end of the beach, offering shops and restaurants. The south is where numerous beachfront resorts with condominiums and hotels have sprung up around Lovers Key State Park. In between, the beach is lined with parks, recreation areas and marinas offering fishing and boating charters, sightseeing trips, dining and dancing cruises and even offshore gambling jaunts. On the opposite side of the narrow Estero Island, facing the mainland, is the Matanzas Pass Wilderness Preserve with dozens of acres of mangrove swamps, live oak hammocks and local wildlife to explore from elevated boardwalks.
Shopping: Fort Myers Beach offers fun surfside shopping for visitors and holidaymakers to enjoy. The casual village area at the north end of the beach is called Times Square, offering restaurants, clubs, shops, hotels, picnic areas, a playground and water sports rentals. Barefoot is as good as high-heels in this busy spot where you can buy all you need in the way of resort wear and beach essentials. Further south is the cobble-stoned Seafarer's Village, ideal for souvenir and gift-hunters, where you will find everything from wooden sculptures to seashells and sunscreen. For more serious shopping head across to the mainland for the area's centre of commerce, the city of Fort Myers itself, which boasts the Edison Mall, largest shopping mall in southwest Florida. The mall is anchored by the main Florida favourites like JC Penney and Sears, with 150 speciality stores. The city also offers the Tanger Outlet mall with more than 60 shops for clothing, houseware and gifts, and the Spanish-style plaza called Bell Tower Shops, home to Saks Fifth Avenue and other major retailers. Fort Myers also has two flea markets, which pack in the crowds at weekends. Fleamaster's has more than 900 stalls selling souvenirs, gifts, arts and crafts, while Ortiz Flea Market deals mainly in locally grown produce.Nearby Attractions
Edison and Ford Winter Estates Famous inventor, Thomas Edison, and his friend, automobile magnate Henry Ford, both spent dozens of winters in the city of Fort Myers in the early years of the 20th century. Edison's home is the region's top historic attraction, and has been preserved as... see full details | |
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In the dying years of the 19th century a former Civil War surgeon, Dr Cyrus Teed, founded a pioneer settlement on the banks of the Estero River south of Fort Myers where he led the community to practice a religion he termed Koreshanity.... see full details | |
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A sighting of an endangered West Indian manatee, a shy and lumbering walrus-like creature whose numbers are dwindling, is a must for visitors to Florida. At the Lee County Manatee Park on the Orange River in eastern Fort Myers these animals can be... see full details | |
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The beaches along this area of the Florida coast are world-renowned for their seashells and the largest collection of shells, fossils, corals and sponges in the world is the focus of a unique family oriented attraction north of Fort Myers. The Shell Factory not... see full details | |
South West Florida Museum of History The Museum of History in Fort Myers is housed in the former Atlantic Coastline Railroad depot and chronicles the history of Southwest Florida, from the Paleo Indians through the Calusa, the Seminoles and the Spanish explorers to the early settlers. A pioneer cracker house,... see full details |