You are here: Home / Travel News Media Center / Media Kit / Media Kit
Media Kit
<< Return to media kits
Everglades Backgrounder
Information on the Western Everglades and Ten Thousand Islands.
View File
Media contact:
JoNell Modys
(239) 252-2425
jonellmodys@colliergov.net
EVERGLADES CITY
THE GULF COAST GATEWAY TO EVERGLADES NATIONAL PARK
Everglades City, Fla. (2009) – Visiting Everglades City is like stepping into the Florida of days gone by. Surrounded by Everglades National Park, the Ten Thousand Islands National Wildlife Refuge, Big Cypress National Preserve, the Florida Panther National Wildlife Refuge, Picayune Strand State Forest, Collier-Seminole State Park and the Fakahatchee Strand Preserve State Park, this is a small town on the edge of the Florida wilderness.
Everglades City and nearby Chokoloskee Island provide a glimpse into Southwest Florida’s past with several notable museums and quaint small town charm. Known as the Stone Crab Capital of the World, Everglades City’s numerous stone crab processing facilities provide ample supplies of this fresh Florida delicacy to restaurants in town and all along Florida’s coast during stone crab season each year from October 15 through May 15.
While still enjoying the slow pace of a rural village, Everglades City underwent something of a renaissance in recent years due to escalating real estate values. As waterfront property skyrocketed in demand, the town’s small bungalows began to be replaced by elegant multistory Florida Cracker-style homes overlooking the Barron River.
STONE CRAB AND SEAFOOD
Everglades City was a boomtown during construction of the Tamiami Trail highway at the turn of the century. In later years, residents turned to hunting and fishing to support their families. Hunting restrictions came with the establishment of Everglades National Park in 1947, and with the passage of a ban on gill net fishing in 1994 in Florida, many mullet fishermen turned their attention to stone crabbing or tourism related endeavors. Today Everglades City is known as the Stone Crab Capital of the World. Close to half a million pounds of stone crab claws are processed each season between October and May in Everglades City for shipment to other area, for use in local seafood restaurants and for the annual
Everglades City Seafood Festival, held every year during the first weekend in February. Lunch and dinner are great reasons to visit Everglades City, with a number of popular seafood restaurants in town. Private pilots even fly in to Everglades Airpark, the town’s general aviation airport, to buy stone crab claws “to go” or to enjoy lunch at an area waterfront restaurant.
EVERGLADES NATIONAL PARK
Everglades National Park is the only subtropical preserve in North America and is part of the largest wetlands ecosystem in the United States. It contains both temperate and tropical plant communities, including sawgrass prairies, mangrove and cypress swamps, rare orchids, pinelands, and hardwood hammocks, as well as marine and estuarine environments. The park is known for its rich bird life, particularly large wading birds, such as the roseate spoonbill, wood stork, great blue heron and a variety of egrets. It is also the only place in the world where alligators and crocodiles exist side by side. Everglades National Park has been designated a World Heritage Site, an International Biosphere Reserve, and a Wetland of International Importance.
The western gateway to Everglades National Park is the
Gulf Coast Visitor Center in Everglades City. There is no charge to enter the visitor center’s education display area, and there is also no charge for embarkation via canoe or kayak from the center’s docks. Visitors can purchase tickets to hop aboard daily guided boat trips from Everglades National Park Boat Tours into the mangrove estuaries of the Ten Thousand Islands section of the park. These boat trips run approximately every half hour 9:00 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. The trip lasts one and a half hours. One of the daytrips on the GPS-marked Paradise Coast Blueway paddling trail departs from the Gulf Coast Visitor Center heading to Sandfly Island. Paddler should allow at least 3 to 4 hours for the trip, as the island, an ancient Native American shell mound, has a nice hiking trail.
Canoe and kayak paddlers in search of adventure have many close encounters with wildlife including manatee, bottlenose dolphin and sea turtles, along with abundant bird life including bald eagles, osprey, roseate spoonbills, swallow tailed kite, Everglades snail kite, wood storks, brown pelicans, white pelicans and much more. Paddlers may obtain the required backcountry camping permits at the Gulf Coast Visitors Center to tackle the
Wilderness Waterway, a 99-mile waterway route from Everglades City to Flamingo that is often considered to be the paddling trip of a lifetime. The entire trip takes seven to nine days for paddlers with no civilization along the route. The Wilderness Waterway may also be traversed by small motorboat, a popular adventure for fishermen and nature lovers. Phase 1 of the new
Paradise Coast Blueway system of paddling trails provides GPS-marked trail routes from Everglades City to Goodland on Marco Island.
www.paradisecoastblueway.com.
The park and its surrounding preserve areas provide some of the most unique and easily accessible opportunities for viewing rare flora and fauna in North America – it is home to 2,000 species of plants, many extremely rare, more than 200 species of birds and over 160 animal species. Along the outskirts of the national park, numerous private tour operators provide airboat and swamp buggy excursions through the sawgrass plains, swamps and hardwood hammocks that comprise the western Everglades ecosystem. Adjacent preserve lands provide ranger-led and self guided tour opportunities, including the Big Cypress National Preserve, the Florida Panther National Wildlife Refuge, Ten Thousand Islands National Wildlife Refuge, Collier-Seminole State Park and Fakahatchee Strand Preserve State Park, home to the epiphytic ghost orchid (made famous through Susan Orlean’s book
The Orchid Thief) and many other rare plant species.
FISHING
Everglades City first became famous as a fishing mecca with numerous notable guests checking into the Rod & Gun Club in its heyday beginning the 1920’s. Today, backcountry fishing reels in plenty of snook, tarpon, redfish, trout, pompano and many more species. Experienced guides are readily available for Everglades fishing excursions departing from Chokoloskee, Everglades City, Goodland, Marco Island and Naples. These include backcountry flats fishing and deep-sea charters into the Gulf of Mexico. The waters of the Ten Thousand Islands are renowned by fishing enthusiasts around the world, yet the shallow waters and meandering trails through miles of mangrove islands requires local knowledge to navigate. Local guides are recommended. Kayak fishing is the fastest growing segment of saltwater fishing – and a local guide service,
EvergladesKayakFishing.com, a division of
Everglades Area Tours.com, provides popular motorboat-assisted trips, speeding kayaks and fishermen deep into the Wilderness Waterway for access to the best shallow water fishing in the ‘Glades. Multi-day kayak fishing and camping trips as well as paddling eco trips are also available.
ACCOMMODATIONS
Everglades City provides accommodations for those who enjoy the quiet small town atmosphere as well as the close proximity to nature-based tourism, adventure and fishing activities. The Ivey House B&B
provides a pleasant atmosphere, daily breakfast and a swimming pool with tropical garden, as well as guided canoe and kayak trips into the surrounding wilderness. The Ivey House is designated as a Florida Green Lodging. The historic Rod & Gun Club Lodge provides a lodge atmosphere and restaurant on the banks of the Barron River. Also available are the Captain’s Table Lodge & Villas, River Wilderness Waterfront Villas, Everglades City Motel, Glades Haven Cozy Cabins at Glades Haven Marina, Parkway Motel & Marina and several campgrounds on Chokoloskee Island and in Everglades City, Ochopee, Collier-Seminole State Park and the Big Cypress National Preserve. Many visitors to nearby Marco Island and Naples enjoy day trips to the Everglades City area.
HISTORYThe earliest settlers known to inhabit the area around Everglades City and neighboring Chokoloskee were Native Americans, many of them members of the Calusa tribe, whose civilization flourished in the Southwest Florida area 2,000 years ago. The first modern day settler to Everglades City came in 1868. In 1889, George Storter, Jr. of Alabama bought the area for $800. By 1920, the town was still a small fishing village. Then, in 1923, Baron G. Collier, a New York advertising industry millionaire, began buying land in what would later become Collier County. It became apparent that a road was needed for travel between Tampa and Miami, and Everglades City, due to its location, became the center of the Tamiami Trail road building project – turning the sleepy fishing village into a boomtown. When the federal government ran into delays, Barron Collier offered to finish the road through the Everglades cypress swamps in return for the new County being named after him. The Tamiami Trail was opened to great fanfare in 1928. Everglades City, known in those days as Everglade, served as the County seat of Collier County. County offices were moved to Naples in 1961 after the devastating effects of Hurricane Donna, which struck in 1960, took their toll on Everglades City. The Storter family home became the Rod & Gun Club in 1925, a gathering place for hunting and fishing enthusiasts – many of them famous, including Ernest Hemingway and Dwight D. Eisenhower. The Rod & Gun Club is still run as a lodge and restaurant today.
Several of the buildings from this historic era are in use today. The town’s old laundry building now houses
The Museum of the Everglades, a showcase for the history of the Everglades region – open Tuesday through Saturday from 11:00 am. To 4:00 p.m. The town’s bank now houses a bed and breakfast inn, and the old recreation center is now part of the Ivey House B & B. On Chokoloskee Island, the
Historic Smallwood Store museum recreates the actual trading post, store and post office that opened there in 1906, serving the Native Americans and pioneers who made their living from hunting, fishing and faming in the wild areas of the Everglades and Ten Thousand Islands. This museum features an extensive collection of books, including the well-known trilogy by author Peter Mathiessen, including
Killing Mr. Watson, about the story of Ed Watson, an infamous Ten Thousand Islands resident who was gunned down at the store by townspeople after rumors of murders and other ill deeds.
GETTING THERE
Southwest Florida International Airport is located about one and a half hours north in Fort Myers. The Marco Island Executive Airport offers private jet service and charter flights to and from nearby international airports. Everglades Airpark is Everglades City’s general aviation airport. Access from Orlando, Miami, Ft. Lauderdale and Palm Beach is available via the Alligator Alley portion of I-75 to State Road 29. Everglades City can also be reached from Miami via U.S. 41, the Tamiami Trail, designated as a U.S. Scenic Byway and Florida Scenic Highway. This is a two-lane road through the heart of The Everglades, with numerous picturesque places to stop during the drive.
For a free visitors guide, brochure or other information on places to stay and things to do along the Paradise Coast of Naples, Marco Island and the Everglades, visit
www.ParadiseCoast.com or call 1-800-688-3600. International visitors may call (239) 225-1013.
The Naples, Marco Island, Everglades Convention and Visitors Bureau is the official tourism marketing agency for Collier County, Florida, funded entirely by the Collier County tourist development tax.
###