Florida
Mall Hotel (Formerly Adam’s Mark Orlando) and City
of Orlando Information
The Mickey Mouse draw card has turned Orlando into the third-ranking
US destination for overseas travellers, after Los Angeles and New York
City. The city 'built on the peel of an orange' has also established
itself as part of Florida's high-tech corridor.
While everybody knows the big-name theme
parks - they've spawned smaller versions
in most of our home countries - the real
treasures of Orlando's psyche are the sidekicks:
Holyland is peddling God; Reige's Firearms
rent out real semiautomatics for a blast;
and Skull Kingdom is endearingly low-tech.
Orlando boasts not only the space technology
industries focused on the Florida Space Coast
but a healthy dose of bits and bytes makers
as well. So you'd better watch your step
in this 21st-century boomtown: according
to a 1998 study, the stampede to Orlando
has made it the most dangerous place in the
US for pedestrians.
Orientation
The biggest city in central Florida, Orlando
is dominated by Lake Eola in its northeastern
downtown quadrant. The most famous downtown
icon is Church Street Station, a collection
of restaurants, bars and shops located between
Interstate 4 and the railroad tracks. Orlando
is 6km (4mi) from Universal Studios, 16km
(10mi) from Sea World, and 32km (20mi) from
Walt Disney World, all located southwest
of downtown in an area appropriately known
as the Tourist Quarter.
When to Go
Orlando's temperate climate - and the lure
of the Mouse - make it a year-round destination.
Planning to visit Disney World is akin to
studying Sun Tzu's The Art of War. Visiting
Orlando can be much the same if the D-World
is on your itinerary. As a general rule,
avoid school holidays. Otherwise, try to
avoid the peak summer period; before Thanksgiving
and after (up until Christmas) and then late
January are good bets.
Downtown Orlando
If you're looking for Walt Disney World,
look again - it's located in the entirely
separate city of Lake Buena Vista. Orlando's
a city in its own right, and the locals would
feel just fine, thank you very much, if all
those ear-wearing yahoos would just get back
in their cars and keep moving.
Once the outta-town attractions are pared
away, Orlando's main distractions comprise
the Harry P Leu Gardens, an estate with over
2000 varieties of camellia and an 18th-century
mansion; the Orlando Science Center, which
has a gator hole and the physics-phriendly
Tunnel of Discovery; and the Orlando Museum
of Art, which showcases Mayan archeological
finds. Given these heart-pounding highlights,
most visitors use Orlando as a base from
which to make excursions to nearby theme
parks.
SeaWorld
A combination amusement park, aquarium and
beer garden, SeaWorld is fine family entertainment.
If you like leaping dolphins, sliding sea
lions and crashing whales, you're in for
a treat. Highlights include the Kraken
roller-coaster, dolphin nursery, Terrors
of the Deep aquarium and the ever-popular
otters.
Not quite as crass as it sounds, SeaWorld
puts its money where its mouth is, sending
out a SeaWorld Animal Rescue Team to rescue
endangered manatees and restore them to health.
It has one of the best animal rescue outfits
in the country, and the team is partially
funded by park admissions.
Universal Studios
Orlando's Universal Studios is a combination
working movie studio and theme park. What
this means essentially is that you can
admire stars from afar and live vicariously
through them. Some of the trademark attractions
include Terminator 2: 3D, a spectacular
3D experience where you get to be Ahhhhnold,
and Back to the Future, with phenomenal
special effects.
Walt Disney World
This is a self-contained city. Apart from
the four main parks (Magic Kingdom, Epcot,
Disney-MGM Studios and Animal Kingdom),
there are three water parks, a shopping
district, 22 hotels, countless eateries,
a police force, transport systems, medical
centres, even kennels for the pooch. Watch
out for the mouse.
In its first year, Disney World saw over
10 million visitors, and it remains one of
the world's top tourist destinations, now
attracting more than 20 million visitors
a year. It's also the world's biggest amusement
resort, covering an area twice the size of
New York's Manhattan. It would have made
Walt very, very happy.
Blue Spring State Park
For hundreds of years the Blue Spring area
was home to the Timucuan Indians, until
settlers killed them off in the mid-1800s.
Today, Blue Spring State Park is practicing
karmic retribution by doing everything
it can to protect a beleaguered resident
of a different kind - the endangered manatee.
This park is the best place in the state
to see manatees in their natural habitat,
especially between November and March, when
the St John's River to the north gets cold
enough to drive the manatees to Blue Spring's
warmer waters. There are campsites and cabins
within the park, but book ahead as things
get crowded and you can't see a manatee through
somebody else's tent.
Blue Spring State Park is about 65km (40mi)
north of Orlando off I-4, near a town called
Cassadaga.
Kennedy Space Center
To some people, the finest words ever spoken
by an American were Neil Armstrong's 'One
small step for man, one giant leap for
mankind,' spoken as he became the first
man to walk on the moon in 1969. Since
then, we Earthlings have had a longstanding
love affair with space travel and the scientists
who make it possible. There's no better
place to stand in awe of the 'right stuff'
than the Kennedy Space Center, off the
coast of central Florida.
The centre draws 2 million people a year
to its Gallery of Spaceflight, packed with
real spacecraft and scale models. It was
established in 1958, when the National Aeronautics & Space
Administration (NASA) started Project Mercury
to compete with the Soviets' successful launch
of Sputnik. The US started launching its
spaceships from Cape Canaveral, a stone's
throw from the Kennedy Space Center, because
of its weather, its proximity to the ocean
(for splash landings) and the huge, unpopulated
tracts of land available to the government
for testing. Mercury was succeeded by Project
Gemini, then Project Apollo, which landed
a man on the moon. The Space Coast still
maintains facilities for unmanned and space
shuttle launches.
Titusville, the main gateway to the Kennedy
Space Center and the wildlife refuge, hosts
the Astronaut Hall of Fame, dedicated to
exhibiting every detail of the astronauts'
lives and boasting a shuttle-landing simulator
ride and G-force trainer. Titusville also
has excellent vantage points from which to
watch shuttle launches.
The Kennedy Space Center is on Merritt Island,
on the eastern side of the Intracoastal Waterway
(called Indian River here). The NASA Causeway
is the main east-west thoroughfare and begins
at the junction of Highway 405 and Highway
1. The Banana River separates the main Kennedy
Space Center complex from Cape Canaveral,
the site of the first launches of the US
space program. You'll need a car to get to
the Space Coast. Greyhound buses only get
as close as Titusville, 7 miles (11km) west
of the Space Center, off Highway 405.
Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge
NASA only uses 5% of its land area for making
things go boom. It turned over its unused
land to the US Fish and Wildlife Service
in 1963, who in turn established the Merritt
Island National Wildlife Refuge, where
migrating birds stop on their way to and
from South America. Manatees, alligators
and turtles also inhabit the refuge. The
best time to visit is from October to May.
Black Point Wildlife Drive, a 6-mile (10km)
loop, is a good road for self-guided tours.
A two-hour bus tour leaves from the Kennedy
Space Center, taking visitors around the
coast.
Ocala National Forest
The Ocala National Forest is a gigantic,
old established Florida park with several
natural springs and lakes, and fantastic
hiking, canoeing, fishing and swimming.
You can camp anywhere in the park. Three
major spring areas make up the park: Juniper
Springs, Salt Springs and Alexander Springs.
Juniper Springs are incredibly clear and
beautiful and offer great canoeing. Salt
Springs and Alexander Springs have trails
through cypress forests. The Lake Eaton Sinkhole
is 24m (80ft) deep and 135m (450ft) in diameter,
and a staircase leads down into the hole.
Nearby Lake Eaton is a good spot for swimming
and sunning.
The Ocala National Forest is 16km (10mi)
east of Ocala, which is about 96km (60mi)
northwest of Orlando and is the best base
for exploring the forest. Highway 19 runs
north-south through the park and Highway
40 east-west. You'll need private transportation
to get there.
Discount Hotel Links
CRS
Hotels (Central Reservation
Service)
More Boston-specific
links
ATM
Locator
Mastercard's search page provides addresses and maps for 780,000 ATMs
worldwide. If your card has the Cirrus, Maestro or Mastercard logos,
it should work at any of the machines listed here.
Embassies
of the World
Need to know if there's an Embassy, Mission or Consulate at your destination?
This web site has an impressive listing, and it's easy to use.
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