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Sightseeing Activities in Key West


This landmark is just 90 miles from Cuba.

For a town whose major activity for many is slowly stepping out of their room and heading down to the nearest air-conditioned pub on Duval Street, Key West still has plenty of activities to stir a person's adventurous soul.

Not surprisingly, water sports are abundant. Fishing, diving, snorkeling, jet skiing, parasailing, boat rides and swimming are everywhere. It's a small drive or ride back toward the mainland, but snorkeling or diving is excellent at Looe Key or Big Pine Key (the latter at MM30). Excursions are also available closer to home base.

For a place surrounded by water, one would think Key West would be covered in sand, but it has only three beaches, the best of which is Smathers Beach near the airport.

South Beach and Dog Beach are located next to each other near the Southernmost Point in the Continental United States, a must-stop in its own right. This is the very end of U.S. Highway 1, which begins more than 1,000 miles to the north in Maine and is as close as one can get to Cuba without actually going there (it's a mere 90 miles away). A giant land marker is positioned at the end of the road and is the most photographed place on Key West. This being Key West, several souvenir barons sell everything from conch shells to the ever-present t-shirts.

The Dry Tortugas is America's' most inaccessible National Park 70 miles west of Key West in the Gulf of Mexico. Once there, it offers white-sand beaches, excellent snorkeling, bird watching and a tour of a fort (though who would attack such a remote outpost is a mystery to us). One can ride a ferry (294-7009) or even in a seaplane (294-0709).

If you are into biplane rides, look up Fred Cabanas. You'll see him buzzing over Key West all day. Fred made his way into local legend a few years back when he himself was buzzed by a Cuban military pilot who escaped to Key West in one of Castro's fighter jets.

Key West was originally put on the international map by one of American's greatest writers, Ernest Hemmingway. The Hemmingway House Museum (Oliva Street, about halfway down Duval) offers tours ($7). The big attraction here are the many cats that have a run of the place.

Figuring if it's good enough for Hemmingway then it's certainly good enough for a president, Harry Truman slipped down here to escape the rigors of Washington during his tenure at the top. The Truman Little White House (11 Front St.) is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and also offers tours and has a Presidential gift shop.

It's a bit touristy, but the Conch Train is an effortless way to get a guided tour of the island without having to stnad up. Trolly tours are also available.

Some of the more unique adventures include the Key West Ghost Tour (294-9255) and the Key West Cemetery Tour (294-8380).

Key West also has a lighthouse worth visiting, an aquarium, a Shipwreck Museum, skydiving and more.

Pamphlets on these and other Key West adventures are readily available at all hotels and motels.

Then again, one can choose to do nothing except order another drink with a promise that "I'll do it tomorrow."

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