Destination Articles About Florida:

25 Destination Articles

  • Meet, Paddle, Take a Breath

    By Christine Loomis

    May 21, 2013

    The southwestern corner of the Sunshine State may be the perfect blend of resort chic, old-time Florida, wildlands, manicured golf courses and to-die-for beaches along the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico. More laid back than its Atlantic counterpart, the state’s southern Gulf Coast has perfected barefoot elegance at high-end resorts and just plain barefoot along its sublime beaches and blue-green waters populated by manatees, turtles and dolphins. While it doesn’t lack for any of the typical surf-and-sand based activities, it particularly excels at the most gentle of them, especially the moseying art of shell collecting, for which its beaches and its earliest inhabitants are known.

  • Energize!

    By Kate Silver

    March 26, 2013

    It’s not just a fact of physics. It’s a fact of life. In Houston, Texas, aka the Energy Capital of the World, many types of energy define the city, from culinary to culture and everything in between. It’s beyond kinetic.

  • The Panhandle Has A Southern Accent

    By Steve Winston

    January 29, 2013

    There's a place in Florida where you can find famed white-sand beaches and Southern style; resorts with an infusion of Southern hospitality; nouvelle cuisine and shrimp 'n' grits; and plenty of modern meeting facilities and smalltown charm.

  • Daytime, Nighttime, Anytime

    By Christine Loomis

    December 28, 2012

    Southeast Florida has long drawn visitors to its inviting white beaches and opulent resorts. The fortuitous confluence of railroads, sunshine and classic hotels helped make the area extending from Fort Lauderdale to the Florida Keys the vacation destination of choice for northerners escaping winter’s chill. But that was just the start.

  • The Call of The Wild

    By Jessie Fetterling

    November 20, 2012

    Florida is full of excitement, from Miami’s Latin-inspired festivities to Orlando’s never-ending theme-park rides. But it also offers a bounty of natural wonders to FdMisicaomvier : The tvheirrgdl aldaregse isn't cthorea sl orueethf . Tharrieern asytisotenm’s lianr gtehset wurobraldn opffar tkh sey cstoeamst of Jacksonville. And several national and state parks in between.

  • Florida Keys—The Other South

    By Christine Loomis

    September 25, 2012

    The 127-mile-long archipelago of the Florida Keys begins about 15 miles south of Miami, extending in a graceful westward arc to the Dry Tortugas, nearly 70 miles beyond Key West. The chain of coral islands divides the Atlantic Ocean to the east from the Gulf of Mexico to the west. Water—whether you’re along it, in it, on it or above it—is central to a stay here, no more so than when the sun dives below the horizon in a blaze of color that burns across the sky. In the Keys, wherever visitors and locals are, they pause to acknowledge nature’s artistry.

  • The Echoes of History

    By Steve Winston

    September 25, 2012

    When Ponce de Leon stood on the deck of his ship and first sighted these shores on April 2, 1513, he probably wasn’t thinking of it as a meetings destination. That’s a shame; he could have been the first to see the potential of Northeast Florida, which encompasses the region stretching from the Florida- Georgia border to just north of Daytona Beach. This is an area where the facilities are inviting and the welcomes are heartfelt. Plus, the weather is sunny, the beach is always nearby and rates define high value.