Charlotte Harbor & the Gulf Islands

Charlotte Harbor & the Gulf Islands is a tranquil coastal getaway perfect for a relaxing and refreshing escape where you’re sure to get a healthy dose of good nature. Enjoy world class fishing and boating and miles of pristine beaches. Fascinating wildlife and Blueway trails provide a paddling paradise. Life is comfortable, the pace unhurried. No matter your vacation pleasure, you’ll find pure Florida beauty, good values and warm hospitality. “Isn’t it time to take advantage of our good nature.”

              

Helen D

                                     

                                        

The Second largestThe Second largest bay in Florida (after Tampa Bay), Charlotte Harbour is the centerpiece of a marine world hidden from the mainstream. Besides the great harbour, rivers and the Gulf of Mexico provide the region with waterfront to spare. Its Gulf islands lie well off the main arterials, insuring that they remain hidden and thus, are still overflowing with old Florida character.

Punta Gorda, the oldest major fishing-oriented community of Charlotte Harbour, began its life in the 1880s as a deepwater seaport and railroad resort town. Situated at the mouth of the Peace River, its old mansions, remembering the heydays of high living, line the waterfront across from lovely Gilchrist Park. The park today serves as a gathering spot for strollers, bikers and the occasional evening musical jam session.

To further help the town remember its long-reaching heritage, murals decorate the sides of downtown buildings – more than 20 in all. One pictures the old Hotel Charlotte Harbour and some of its more illustrious guests – Thomas Edison, Andrew Mellon and W. K. Vanderbilt. The murals are part of Punta Gorda’s Art Around Town movement, which includes rotating sculptures to decorate renovated downtown streets. Here browsers find delightful new shops and restaurants in old digs from brick edifices to jauntily painted bungalows. Fishermen’s Village, another popular shopping venue, occupies an old crab-packing plant on the water.

Not far way, history reaches back even further to Ponce de Leon, who was believed to have taken a fatal arrow blow at the waterfront spot now occupied by Ponce de Leon Historical Park and the Peace River Wildlife Center, a rehab facility for injured, sick and orphaned animals. In the eastern reaches of Punta Gorda, old cattle ranching land has been turned into a wilderness eco-adventure and recreational sites for sportsmen.

On the other side of the Peace River, the quiet little town of Charlotte Harbour faces Punta Gorda with its charming little motels, a fishing pier park, a miniature golf course, and the Charlotte County Historic Center.

sunset

Reaching the Gulf  islands requires a trip across the peninsula  separated from Port Charlotte b y the harbour. En route, small residential communities and golf courses appear until you reach Englewood, another modern town with a historic heart. Its downtown main street fills out with art galleries, coffee and ice cream shops, and delightful restaurants.

Englewood Beach occupies the southern end of Manasota Key, one of Florida’s most little known islands. Here again, the emphasis is on what’s in the water and Stump Pass and Lemon Bay Aquatic Preserve are flapping with fish. Hook up with a charter or rent your own boat. Or head to Stump Pass Beach State Park to cast from land and sun on the beach. The town’s public beach, more centrally located, provides an extra measure of recreation and easy access to local restaurants. At its northern extreme, Manasota Key remains a quiet bird sanctuary with a couple of beach accesses where combing the sand for shark’s teeth is a favourite pastime.

To the south trickles a string of islands, the largest of which is Gasparilla Island. Its town of Boca Grande is synonymous with one fish in particular, the mighty tarpon, which rolls through deep Boca Grande Pass in the spring and summer and inspires tournaments with fat purses. Boca Grande, founded by wealthy industrialists in the early 1900s, remains an exclusive, one-of-a-kind destination crowned by the gracious columned Gasparilla Inn. Shops, restaurants and beaches draw day visitors to this town, where the year round working class mingle easily with the social elite. A couple of museums and colonies of iguanas provide further distraction in this small town that all but closes down once tarpon season ends in the autumn.

Pristine beaches, peaceful rivers, spectacular wildlife, world-class boating and fishing and old-fashioned tranquillity make hushed sweet Charlotte Harbour one of the best-kept secrets for Florida visitors seeking to escape from the fast pace.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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