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Pilot House Restaurant/Marina PDF Print E-mail
Written by Keys George   
Thursday, 12 February 2009 10:24

"Wow, We never knew this place was here" is the one comment uttered most often by tourists returning to Key Largo the first time they set foot on the "Docks of Key Largo". Only a couple of blocks off the main drag, Pilot House Restaurant and Marina www.pilothousemarina.com is sheltered not only from storms, but from the hordes who ride US-1 thinking it's what the Keys are all about. Pilot House has been around almost since Lake Largo was blasted out of solid coral rock in 1958. Now the restaurant hangs over the same lagoon where all of the local fresh catch arrives daily at Key Largo Fisheries. The "Glass Bottom Bar" provides locals and tourists alike the opportunity to hang out on the water with friends and watch the fish "shop for dinner" right beneath their feet. It's pretty much a party all the time. At night the water lights up from the underwater lights scattered below the decks. There's a green glow to the water and a wide array of fish, lobster, and the occasional manatee or bottlenose dolphin cruise through to the delight of the crowd.

But I digress...the food is fresh local seafood direct from Keys waters, to wings, to sandwiches, to steak or ribs. All "hand made" as chef Sal Ornelas says, in the open kitchen with the big blue neon sign proclaiming "Sal's Place". His Conch Chowder and Creamy Crab soup are the stuff of culinary legend. The guy's been around Key Largo all his adult life having cooked in the best places and now calling Pilot House home. It's all priced "Family Friendly"-(Hard to find in a tourist town!) and sure to make the whole crowd happy. They'll even cook your catch and not just fried. Sal's got about six different ways. And that's just the ones on the menu.

Speaking of a party, when the sun goes down and the lights pop on under the water, that's about the time the talent hits the stage. There's usually a local musician or band to liven things up and the bartenders are legendary for trying to "Bushwhack" the locals-and probably a tourist or two! I personally say a tourist one night trying to retrieve a shoe from the water with a two by four.

The Marina provides dry stack storage and dockage for yachts up to 65'. Entrance is by a short canal near the headpin to the main Key Largo canal. There's a jetty to starboard and a private lighthouse to port. You can hail the dockmaster on VHF 16. There's transient dockage at the restaurant. In fact, there's a sign hanging by the water originally put there as a joke. "Main Entrance".

 Whatever way you get there, it's worth the time spent. From the traffic light at Walgreens turn east toward the ocean, then immediately right on Homestead. Homestead becomes Ocean Bay Drive and 4 blocks down there's a big arrow "PILOT HOUSE". Turn left on Seagate. It's on the right. Have fun!

 

Last Updated on Thursday, 12 February 2009 10:41
 
Local Wildlife PDF Print E-mail
Written by Sue Sparkes   
Thursday, 13 March 2008 15:33

Oh, just another day in Paradise.  

Driving to work this morning, 2 great white herons swooped over the highway, squawking their displeasure at whatever had rousted them from their mangrove perches. Later, I spotted a snowy egret stalking a chameleon in someone’s front yard. Seeing an osprey diving and fishing, or nesting, is such a common sight here, people can forget to notice them after awhile. I relish noticing them!  

A few years back, I was driving home to Key Largo from a long day at work in Miami, with the sun setting in a blaze of fire across the Everglades, when two roseate spoonbills swooped down low over the roadway, right in front of me! They banked as they rose, their wings catching the orange firelight of the sunset, and they were as pink as the inside of a queen conchshell. It was a singular moment for me, since spoonbill sightings are quite rare (they are very private creatures and usually nest deep in the Everglades, away from people). While I don't miss the commute to Miami anymore, I do kind of miss sunset and bird watching on the 18-Mile Stretch of US1.

 Since that time, I’m constantly on the lookout for local wildlife. I’ve seen great white & blue herons, snowy egrets courting in a parking lot while passersby stopped and watched their graceful dances. Ospreys, hunting, nesting & teaching their chicks to fly. Red tailed hawks, Florida wood storks, kingfishers, the ever-present cormorants, owls, crocodiles, marsh rabbits, manatees, dolphins, and four-foot-long swimming iguanas that climb out on your dock and feast on red hibiscus blossoms (they really like tomatoes, too!). I did not make up the part about the iguana, I swear! For a reformed city girl, this is an amazing place to live, work and play. 

If you travel to the Keys, be sure to spend some time looking for local wildlife (the bars are easy to find, it’s the birds and beasts you have to look for). If you want to get some closer looks, I highly recommend a visit to the Florida Keys Wild Bird Rehabilitation Center in Key Largo (MM 94). Operated completely on private donations, they offer guided and unguided tours of their amazing wild bird rescue center (some of the tour guides are a little small & have feathers, but they’re very enthusiastic).  In April, the Bird Center acquired an orphaned baby roseate spoonbill, which is just a pink as pink can be! Don't miss a chance to see this baby!

The Dolphin Research Center on Grassy Key (MM 59) can teach you lots of great stuff about aquatic mammals & has several “encounter” programs for the public. John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park in Key Largo (MM 102) has a great visitor center, an aquarium, and glass-bottom boat rides over the only living coral reef in the continental U.S. And when your day is done, choose one of our local “wildlife” gathering places on the water, order a frosty beverage, and toast the beautiful sunset. 

Yeah, just another day in Paradise.

Last Updated on Thursday, 17 April 2008 11:46
 
Fisherman's Cove, Key Largo PDF Print E-mail
Written by George Wilson   
Monday, 10 March 2008 16:11

You want all the Keys has to offer. The relaxed lifestyle, The finest food and drink. Spectacular views. Sunset terraces. Furnishings befitting the incomparable space surrounding you. You've just arrived at Fisherman's Cove. www.fishermanscovekeylargo.com

The Residence Club at Fisherman's Cove is Key Largo's first and only equity residence club community, located at mile 104, Bayside, and offering only 48 lucky owners the opportunity to own a luxurious 2300 sq ft fully furnished fee-simple waterfront vacation home in the Keys, for a fraction of the price. Owners can vacation at their club whenever they like, subject only to generous and flexible reservation policies. Even more appealing, the Club pampers owners with high-performance boats, housekeeping, a new on-site restaurant, The Big Chill, and a host of exclusive services and amenities designed to make every vacation relaxed, indulgent, and compeletely carefree with no maintenance hassles. If you want everything the Keys has to offer, with none of the headaches, you need to see Fisherman's Cove. Make a mental note. Repeat several times. "Fabulous!". Now go see it and tell me I'm wrong.

As of April 1, there are only 35 remaining opportunities. Check it out. www.fishermanscovekeylargo.com

Also, Until all the units are sold, the developer has placed two of them in our rental program for select dates. Contact Sue Sparkes (top of this page-Upper Keys Vacation Rentals) for information.  

Tell Scott, Bill, or any of the crew up there you heard it from the gang at Prudential. They treat us like locals. They'll make you feel right at home too.

Last Updated on Saturday, 26 April 2008 06:59
 
Snappers Waterfront Saloon and Raw Bar PDF Print E-mail
Written by Turtle Number 6   
Monday, 10 March 2008 15:02

So, it's mid afternoon. You've arrived in the Keys and you're ready to relax. Maybe not ready for the big party, but its been a long drive and you need to feel you're finally here. Start the process of unwinding. Take that deep breath. Inhale the salt air. Watch the sun on the water. Bond with the Locals. Order up a cocktail and kick back.

The first thing you need to know is ditch the dark socks! Then the long sleeve shirt and, as my kids used to call 'em, "long sleeve pants". It's pretty much a give-a-way that you're a touron if your shirt's still tucked in, but that's ok. It'll come out after a few days here.

If you're staying anywhere, and I mean anywhere near Key Largo, from mile 106 down to about the Tavernier Creek Bridge (90), the second thing you need to know is Snappers. www.snapperskeylargo.com Whether you're a local, or just want to feel like one, there is no other place in the Upper Keys that gives you such a sense of why the rest of us are here. There is no way for you to enter the inner sanctum of the locals any faster, than by walking up to the Turtle Club bar and introducing yourself. You're a stranger for about 2.5 seconds. As soon as you complete the initiation process: "Hi my name's (your name here), I need a (your drink here) and I'm here for (how long),- "the duration" works pretty well! you're in! Chances are the first thing you'll hear on the next visit will be: Hi (your name here); will you be having your usual. By then all the locals will know you, the name of your first born, and how you like your eggs. You'll be saying things like: Hi Susan, Hi Dicko, Hi Kirk, Hi Michelle, or "Thanks for calling that cab the other night. Was I really wearing a tutu, singing "I Love This Bar" on stage with Howie Wowie?"

The food's great, the locals forgiving, (make that "encouraging") and, most likely, you'll have stories to remember when you're sitting around in the home. You'll definitely have been to the Keys. If you see Howard, tell him ol' turtle #6 sent you. (as my sister Ellen once said to him in Boone: "Oh, So you know my crazy brother George?) He might not hold it against you!

 

Last Updated on Tuesday, 22 April 2008 22:20
 


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