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Allmann Bros, Bruce Hornsby headline Wanee

Wanee Festival at Spirit of the Suwannee Music Park in Live Oak announced its 2012 lineup and it's a doozy. Continue Reading: Allmann Bros, Bruce Hornsby headline Wanee

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Allmann Bros, Bruce Hornsby headline Wanee

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Apalach to Zolfo: A Guide to Florida Places and Pronunciations

What’s in a name? Here’s what. Learn for example that Lutz , north of Tampa , isn’t Lutz like Klutz. It’s Loots, like Coots. Hobee? No-bee. Hobe Sound rhymes with Globe Round. Newmans like the condiment maker? No. Newnans like the lake east of Gainesville. Fort Mose isn’t Mose like in Doze. It’s Mo-zay like in Rose (which of course isn’t Rose but Ro-zay). Kissimmee ? You can unpurse your lips and just simmer instead. It’s Kis sim mee. pullquote Steinhatchee like a gaudy Bavarian mug? Sorry, no. Like in plain Osteen across the state. Lake Tohopekaliga is best handled as Lake Toho. Same as Apalachicola , or Apalach. The river made famous by Stephen Foster isn’t Swanee but Suwannee (though pronounced the same), and its tributary is A lap aha, not Ala pa ha. The farming region below Miami is the Redland , not Redlands, and the old cow town east of Tampa is Tho nota sassa , not Thono tasassa. Mickler Landing won’t tickle your fancy. It’s on the coast so, helped by the Irish personification of the sea, think mikeLer. For some natives, that song isn’t “Moon Over Miami.” It’s “Moon Over Mah-a-muh,” as in its namesake river that means Big Water, which it emphatically is not. Lake Okeechobee is way bigger – the largest freshwater lake in America that doesn’t freeze in winter – and it means Big Water. Which brings us to the flora-inspired. Florida boasts fragrantly named Mango (near Thonotasassa) and flagrantly named Orange Mountain. There’s also Azalea Terrace, Bamboo Key, Banana Creek, Berry, Cabbage Grove, Cane, Carraway, Cassia, Cherry Lake, Citra below Gainesville , Citrus County on the Gulf Coast, Cottondale, Cypress Hill, Ferndale, Floral Park, Flowers Still, Fruitland north of Leesburg, Fruitland Peninsula below Palatka , Goldenrod next to Orlando , Hedges, Hibiscus Lodge in West Palm Beach , Honeyville, Juniper, Lantana, Laurel, Lemon City (now part of Mah-a-muh) and Mulberry below Lakeland . There's also plain Oak, Oak Dale, Oak Groves, Oak Hills, Oak Knoll, Oak Landing, Oak Park, Ridge and Terrace. Yet, there are twice as many Oranges, though no Grapefruit (even in Upthegrove Beach). Also, Orchid, Palm (plain old and every other which way, too), Peach Orchard, Pecan Park, Pumpkin, Satsuma (not to be confused with Samsula), Shamrock, Spuds, Tangelo Park, Tangerine, Tarpon and the Hills helpfully named Tomato and Walnut. As you may know, a hammock is a high patch in a marsh, though Cooks Hammock always puts me in mind of where chefs might chill a while back of their kitchens. That is, if there were any cooks – any anything – in this high ground below (go figure) Mayo . Wildlife persists in place names: Alligator, at least one Skunk Island, Bass, Bee Ridge, Buffalo Bluff, Coral Gables , Crows Bluff, Curlew, Deerfield Beach (from when more deer than people populated the north end of Palm Beach County ), Dog Island (heavenly unbridged getaway off Carrabelle ), Dog Town, Duck Key, Eagle Lake, Early Bird, Fish Creek, Gull Point, Hen Scratch, Hogtown, Manatee County , Mosquito Lagoon, Oriole Beach, Otter Creek, Owl’s Head, Pompano Beach , Quail Hollow, Squirrel Hill and two Tiger Bays. Want more numbers? We've got lots of one-of-a-kind places: Two Egg. Four Corners. Five Points, Seven-Mile Bridge, Calle Ocho, and Nine Mile, Eleven Mile and Thirteen Mile, those last three motes along Highway 98 between Apalach and Mexico Beach. Back to business (as it were). Tate’s Hell is up in northwest Florida, while down in Islamorada ( Eyela -more- ahd -a) is Hog Heaven Sports Bar , close to Paradise Yoga. Throughout the Keys, Paradise attaches like lovebugs to all sorts of businesses. A small sampling: Grooming, Health & Fitness, Optical, Plumbing, Tattoo and Transmission Service. Clearly, Florida commands the planets with Apollo Beach ; yesteryear’s Celestial Railroad that connected Juno, Jupiter, Mars and Venus; Satellite Beach; Sun City; and a different Venus and Neptune Beach beside Jacksonville . You can find Pluto at Disney World and Saturn at car showrooms. Puzzle time: If Nalcrest stands for the National Letter Carriers retirement community, how about next door’s Fedhaven ? Pennsuco (Pen- sook -o) was a worker town of the Pennsylvania Sugar Company now part of Miami, while who could possibly have coined Methobapterian for Red Bay’s proximate Methodist, Baptist and Presbyterian churches? As for Beluthahatchee (Beh- looth -a- hat -chee), that’s the preserved home west of St. Augustine of late folklorist-writer Stetson Kennedy, who often entertained Arlo Guthrie’s famed father Woody. Of the big B, the 1939 WPA Guide to Florida (contributions by Kennedy as well as by Zora Neale Hurston, among others) explains it was “a land of forgiveness and forgetfulness. When a woman accusingly reminds her man of something in the past, he replies, ‘I thought that was in Beluthahatchee.’” That Works Progress Administration was a creation of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, but FDR is hardly the only president hallowed in Florida. He had Camp Roosevelt, while others (not including a few already celebrated herein) are Washington County , tiny Adams (near Jasper in the county named for Hamilton, who had presidential ambitions but died in a gun duel), Jefferson County (county seat: Monticello). Madison County (its own seat), Monroe County , Jackson all over the place, Quincy for John Q. Adams, Harrison (close by Lake Tsala Apopka), Polk County , a Fillmore-shorn Millard, Fort Zachary Taylor , Buchanan (close by Zolfo Springs), Lincoln City, Park and Lincolnville in St. Augustine and Grant. There's no Hayes (but, boy! Did he ever steal his election in Florida!) and no Garfield (but Palm Harbor for years used Garfield the Cat for an icon). Theodore Roosevelt did at least embark his Rough Rider invasion of Cuba from Tampa . And one after another, Taft, Wilson (close to Kennedy Space Center ), a Harding Avenue in Surfside , while the Lakeside Inn in Lake County loudly thumps that Silent Calvin Coolidge paid a visit. There’s a Herbert Hoover Dike around the Big O, and a savvy flack once attired Harry Truman in a splashy, flashy floral shirt while HST vacationed at the Little White House in Key West . ( The Truman Show was filmed way up in northwest Florida at Seaside ). Among colors galore look for Black River, White Springs , Bowling Green, Grayton Beach , Emeralda, Bluewater Bay, Red Head (not far from Scratch Ankle, now folded across the tracks into Milton ). Also Yellow River, all those Oranges, Silver Springs and Golden Glades. Tallahassee is home to admired Florida writer Susan Cerulean. Otherwise, Turquoise Beach on Choctawhatchee ( Chock -taw- hatch -ee) Bay and a Purple Onion Deli & Bakery in Seminole (which is not in Seminole County but in Pinellas, which means Pineapple). But what about that Orange Mountain? Hilolo better sums up Florida’s highs and lows, where there’s a Blue Mountain Beach, Clermont , Crestview, Florida Hills, Highland Meadows, many Hilltops, a Lake of the Hills, Mount Dora , Montverde, Mount Pleasant, Iron Mountain and Skytop. At 95 feet, it's dwarfed 5-to-2 by Clermont's 226-foot Citrus Tower just off to the west that once, as the chief attraction in Central Florida , overlooked a vast realm of groves. Today, it's chiefly Disney – where Cinderella’s Castle stands at 189 feet. Highest Florida point is Britton Hill, 345 feet up, at the far bottom of which is Florala, where a 'Bama B&B keeper used to offend Floridians by telling guests, “It may be the highest point in Florida, but it’s the lowest highest point of all the states.” Maybe it all started when Juan Ponce de Le

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Apalach to Zolfo: A Guide to Florida Places and Pronunciations

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Iceploration Opening Day

Catch the unveiling of Busch Gardens newest show Iceploration on Thursday. The show combines skaters, larger-than-life puppets, amazing costumes and more. See the original post: Iceploration Opening Day

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Iceploration Opening Day

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Southwest, AirTran trim TIA flights

By August, Southwest plans to cut 12 weekday flights from Tampa and focus on long-haul flights as part of AirTran merger View article: Southwest, AirTran trim TIA flights

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Southwest, AirTran trim TIA flights

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Universal ready for upgrade

With its Jaws attraction a construction zone for the rest of the year, Universal Studios Florida has unveiled several new and upgraded attractions. Read More: Universal ready for upgrade

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Universal ready for upgrade

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Legoland Florida adds water park

Legoland Florida in Winter Haven has released renderings of its rebuilt water park, planned for a May opening at Cypress Gardens. Follow this link: Legoland Florida adds water park

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Legoland Florida adds water park

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AirTran pulling out of Sarasota

AirTran Airways will pull out of Sarasota-Bradenton International Airport in August, a move by its new parent Southwest Airlines. Visit link: AirTran pulling out of Sarasota

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AirTran pulling out of Sarasota

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Discovering the Past and Enjoying the Present at De Soto National Memorial

Just beyond the tall water oak trees dripping with Spanish moss, next to a hut thatched with palmetto fronds, and between nature trails that lead to white beaches and thick mangroves, a grassy rise in Bradenton offers a view of Florida’s present-day natural beauty – and a peek into its early, turbulent history. Standing at De Soto Point today, which on a map looks like an index finger pointing toward the northeast, your eyes gaze at the surging fresh waters of the Manatee River as it mingles with the saltwater of the Gulf of Mexico and Tampa Bay – the only place in Florida where three bodies of water flow into each other. But in 1539, when Spanish conquistador Hernando De Soto sailed into the area, he saw not only the same confluence of river and sea but a series of 30-foot-high mounds made of earth and shells rising from the shore. The mounds held thatched huts at the very top, housing the native Tocobaga Indians and serving as burial grounds or religious centers. pullquote De Soto’s ships headed toward a village of about 300 people, where men spent their days in dugout canoes, harvesting clams and mussels, or hunting, while women made pottery, wove baskets and cooked. But on that day, the Tocobaga Indians had spotted De Soto’s fleet of nine ships. And as De Soto’s expedition moved along the coast, they sent puffs of gray smoke into the air, signaling danger. Conch shells also trumpeted a warning to beware of the Spaniards on the horizon. The story of this intersection between two cultures comes alive at the De Soto National Memorial , a U.S. National Park within easy drive of downtown Bradenton. Today, sailboats and motorboats ride the waves and wooden docks jut out from the coastline in front of stately, Florida homes. In the De Soto Park itself, people stroll along sandy beaches, search for shells and swim in a nearby cove. But the park offers a counterpoint to such pleasant, present-day activities with an eye toward the past. Park ranger interpreters offer a “living history” of the early 1500s by recreating scenes from that period, dressed up as Spanish soldiers and demonstrating European and Indian weapons. They also give kayak tours. Visitors can also view authentic armor and a historical video about the De Soto expedition in a theater housed in the 2,500-square-foot park center. Looking out upon the bay, Ranger Dan Stephens evokes the images of that fateful day when De Soto first arrived near modern-day Bradenton. The story he relates captures the tension that ensued: As De Soto’s ships filled with more than 700 people sailed toward them, the Tocobaga Indians made preparations to flee. They remembered the fearful stories of an earlier Spanish expedition led by P

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Discovering the Past and Enjoying the Present at De Soto National Memorial

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Florida residents get a Cirque deal

Starting Jan. 31, residents get a 25 percent discount at La Nouba , the trippy Cirque du Soleil in Downtown Disney. Continue Reading: Florida residents get a Cirque deal

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Florida residents get a Cirque deal

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The need for speed

Brand-new Exotic Driving Experience at Walt Disney World Speedway offers gearheads the chance to drive their dream cars. More: The need for speed

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The need for speed

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