Wednesday, 31 January 2018

31 January – Eastpoint to Miramar Beach

We had a leisurely drive along the coast, with a stop at Seaside – the town used as the set for the Jim Carrey movie “The Truman Show”. Really nice little place, but they value privacy and most of the streets and beach accesses are for residents only.


We stopped at Panama City beach as well, for a leg stretch, then on to Camp Gulf. Right on the beach but the most expensive RV park we’ve stayed at - $99 per night. Usual prices $30 - $40 per night. But the beach is amazing, white sand that looks like snow on the beach, blue and turquoise water, and pelicans.





What a wonderful bird is the pelican
His beak can hold more than his belly-can
He can hold in his beak
Enough food for a week
And I’m damned if I know how the hell-he-can

(paraphrased – apologies to the author)


30 January – Eastpoint

We decided to kick around the area today and started with a visit to St George Island. The island is a barrier island and reached by a very impressive bridge. We pulled in first at the lighthouse, which was located on Little St George Island, but fell down in 2005 and was recovered and rebuilt in the current location. Nice view from the top and an interesting museum in the lighthouse keepers cottage.


We drove from one end of the island to the other for the views, lots to see. Lunch at The Blue Parrot was lovely, lots of seafood and very friendly staff. We had a mixed seafood platter and snow crab.





After lunch we walked on the beach, then headed off the island and to the town of Apalachicola (no, we can’t pronounce it!). We browsed the arty shops and sampled chocolates at the local chocolatier. All very quaint. 

29 January – Perry to Eastpoint

We headed West from Perry, towards the Gulf Coast. Miles of very straight roads through swamp forests. We detoured into a small place called St Marks for lunch at a riverside café - seafood was tasty. Steve had the gumbo, rice, chilli, seafood and sausage. Not much to St Marks, so we pushed on.

Finally on the coast and it was breathtaking. The road follows the coast line closely, through tiny communities of houses on stilts, often right on the water with jetties. We were enjoying the view and decided to pull in at an RV campsite right on the water. We got a front row spot, within a stone’s throw of the water. Even though it was early, we called it a day. They have WiFi, which is a bit of a treat, so we can catch up on emails.




Click the link below to see where I am located.
http://fms.ws/sBP5G/29.75387N/84.84229W

If the above link does not work, try this link:
http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&geocode=&q=29.75387,-84.84229&ll=29.75387,-84.84229&ie=UTF8&z=12&om=1

Monday, 29 January 2018

28 January – Crystal River to Perry

In the morning we headed into the township of Crystal River and caught the trolley bus to Three Sisters Spring, where manatees gather and you can see them from the shore. Like the springs we saw in the Ocala Forest, the many springs on the coast come out of the ground at around 72 degrees F (23C) and provide the manatees with a heat source during the winter. When the water is too cold for them, they swim upriver to the springs and loll about like cows chewing cud, in the warm water.
The Three Sisters Spring is shaped like a 3 leaf clover, with a spring boil in each lobe. There were around 50 manatees in the springs this morning, although we were told that on Monday it was cold and there were 350 of them.



The water is clear and turquoise blue, due to the concentration of tiny particles reflecting light. The manatees are big and somnolent, occasionally breaking the water with their noses to take a breath.  In the right light they almost look like big river boulders, tumbled into oval shapes by the water, as they cluster over the spring boils, basking. Odd to think that ancient mariners thought they were beautiful women with fish tails and the legends of mermaids began. If you squint, and remember that sailors often didn’t see women for months on end, maybe and after a flagon o rum, just maybe you can see it…



On the drive north we stopped in at Cedar Key, a delightful little town. Unfortunately it started to rain, so we decided to drive on. Buckets of rain made the highway driving unpleasant and we were glad to find a truck stop with a small RV parking lot for the night.

Click the link below to see where I am located.
http://fms.ws/s7tGN/28.89958N/82.625W

If the above link does not work, try this link:
http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&geocode=&q=28.89958,-82.625&ll=28.89958,-82.625&ie=UTF8&z=12&om=1 

27 January – Juniper Springs to Crystal River

In the morning we hiked to Juniper Springs. It’s a pretty place, with a historic waterwheel and mill house that was used to generate electricity in the 1930s. The spring boil was deep and from the right angle we could see it is a small underwater cave.



We saw kayakers heading off downstream, but one of them was having trouble staying upright. The water was less than knee deep, so he wasn’t getting all that wet though.

We also walked a section of the Florida trail, through the forest, before packing up and heading out.
We had an uneventful drive South and across to the West coast of Florida to Crystal River. It took two tries to find a campsite as there is a Bluegrass festival in town for the weekend. Crystal River is where the main population of manatees hangs out in winter, the spring water is warmer than the rivers and lakes, so they head in for the warmth.

Click the link below to see where I am located.
http://fms.ws/s7tGN/28.89958N/82.625W

If the above link does not work, try this link:
http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&geocode=&q=28.89958,-82.625&ll=28.89958,-82.625&ie=UTF8&z=12&om=1 

26 January – Alexander Springs to Juniper Springs

In the morning we hired a canoe for a couple of hours and explored the river. The canoe hire is pretty laid back, they give you a canoe, paddles and life jackets and point you in the direction of the boat ramp.

We managed to launch without getting wet, and headed downstream at a leisurely pace. The wind and the current were going the same way, so it just took a bit of steering and gentle paddling to keep us underway. As we left the spring basin the river was shallow and sandy bottomed, with water lilies lining the banks.


We saw lots of wildlife – diving birds that bob their heads up for air, herons wading in the lilies, turtles sunning on the logs, and a big alligator. It was around 5 feet long, big bellied, grey, and lying on a log with its feet dangling lazily. We paddled as close as we felt safe to get pics and admire from a distance. It ignored us completely. The locals had told us that alligators are mainly scared of people and will run away, not like big salty crocs that hunt you down for dinner. Just as well, cos we imagine that the alligator could swim a lot faster that we could possibly paddle.


The canoe was pretty easy to handle and we made good speed to the bridge, where we had been told to turn around. The lilies were budding, big yellow buds, they would probably be spectacular in flower. It was beautifully peaceful, just the splash of the paddles and the ripples of the canoe cutting across the water, with bird sounds and the breeze.


The return trip was harder work as we were paddling against the current. Mr Gator was still at ease on his log, with his mouth open this time in a big grin. We kept to the other bank.


We passed several other canoes and kayaks heading downstream, seems like a popular place.
When we got back the canoe hire people were surprised that we weren’t wet. It’s supposed to be very easy to tip a canoe over.


We decamped and headed up the road to Juniper Springs. We decided to take an easy afternoon, reading and resting in the warm weather. 

25 January – Alexander Springs

In the morning we went down to the springs again for a hike. The Timucuan Trail is an interpretive hiking trail with regular information signs. Lots of interesting facts about the plants and how the native tribes used them for food, building, making baskets and even distilling liquor.


 
We saw (and heard) woodpeckers – they make a huge mess out of rotten trees, more turkey vultures, and assorted birds.

After lunch we drove about 40 minutes to Silver Glen Spring, which pumps 65 million gallons a day into Lake George. The spring was again, crystal clear with a white sandy bottom. The spring boil is in a small cove and we could see lots of large fish swimming around inside the boil. There are lots of mullet in the spring pool, and they frequently leap out of the water.



We walked a hiking trail to the sand boils, an area in a little stream where the springs are very small and bubble up through the sand. It was a lovely walk through the palmettos. On the way back we stopped at the edge of the lake and the fish came swimming up to check us out. People must feed them, because they hung around looking hopeful for ages.



We took another hiking trail that ran along the lake edge. Again, very pretty and a lovely way to spend the afternoon.


Back to our tranquil campsite at Alexander Springs.

24 January – Orlando to Alexander Springs

Laundry in the morning, then we headed out for the Ocala National Forest. The Ocala Forest is on an area of ancient limestone and has many springs that pump out water at a constant temperature year round. We decided to stay at Alexander Springs for a couple of nights and do some hiking. Alexander Springs is a big pool of water with a spring boil (where the spring bubbles up) that is about 30 foot deep - and you can scuba dive in it. The spring pumps out around 70 million gallons of water a day which then flows out to form a river.

We walked down to the springs to take a look around, and it was very pretty. The water is really crystal clear and the bottom of the pool is white sand. Lots of signs about alligators and Florida black bears. We didn’t see any of either, but saw lots of turkey vultures, herons and fish.




We are primitive camping, with no services, not even a phone signal this far out. Once we turned the generator off for the night it was so peaceful.


Wednesday, 24 January 2018

22-23 January – Orlando Universal Studios

It was a 45 minute drive into Universal Studios and they have parking for RVs, but right down the very far end of the complex. The security is very intense. Steve had to give the guard his licence, and the guard spent about 5 minutes checking the number plates and registration details of the van before we were allowed to proceed to the parking lot. And that was just to park the van. It was a bit of a hike to the gates, and more security – more like going through airport security this time. A metal detector gate and running all your bags through a scanner. Even though it was a weekday, it was pretty crowded.


That got us onto the City Walk, with shops and restaurants, a movie complex, and lots of souvenir booths. We spoke to a concierge, who suggested that we start with Universal Studios then move to Universal’s Islands of Adventure later. At the gates we opted for express tickets that get you into the fast lane for the attractions. Very glad we did. It must have saved us hours of queueing. With most of the attractions the express line took you right to the front of the queue and straight onto the ride. Sometimes we walked past 400-500 people in line.

Being Harry Potter fans we went first to the Wizarding World of Harry Potter – Diagon Alley. And we were not disappointed! It was just like the movie, with so much to see. The animations are brilliant, and the attention to detail makes for an immersive experience. We looked at wands in Ollivander’s, dropped into the Leaky Cauldron and drank butterbeer (really tasty, kind of a soft drink with foam on top which we think is butterscotch flavoured cream). We visited Knockturn Alley, browsed through Fred and George Weasley’s joke shop and looked at the all flavoured jelly beans and chocolate frogs in the lolly shop. When we had seen everything we went to Kings Cross station, and platform 9 and 3/4 for the train to Hogsmeade (in the Islands of Adventure park).






The train was amazing. We expected just a train ride, but the windows are screens that show you an abbreviated version of the scenery on the way from London to Hogwarts. Hagrid flies alongside the train on his motorcycle, Hedwig soars alongside for a while, and the Weasley’s flying car makes an appearance too. The doors of the cubicles are also screens and on the door side, you can see people walking and talking in the corridor - Harry, Hermione and Ron buying food from the food trolley, the Dementors attacking the train, and chocolate frogs escaping and climbing up the door.

At Hogsmeade we had lunch at the Three Broomsticks and then headed up to Hogwarts castle for “Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey”. Again, it was done brilliantly, with a mix of 3D big screen, and moving roller coaster style cars, that took you through the castle, following Harry and Ron on broomsticks as they soared over the rooftops, played Quidditch and outran dementors. We got whomped by the Whomping Willow and raced through the Forbidden Forest. Even though there was a lot of movement of the cars, most of the effect was created by the screens and the 3D. It was very cool.



We headed into the rest of the park to see what else was on offer. First was Jurassic Park, with animatronic dinosaurs. Then we went on “Skull Island: Reign of Kong”. Another very well done ride, with 3D effects. The truck we were in was attacked by dinosaurs, but Kong came to the rescue and fought them off.

Toon Lagoon was fun to walk through, then Marvel Super Hero Island, where we went on “The Amazing Adventures of SpiderMan” ride. Another 3D simulator, again, very well done. The special effects and 3D is very realistic.

We walked through Suess Landing, and had a ride on “The Cat in the Hat”- made for kids, but a bit of fun. Then The Lost Continent, where we had intended to try out “Poseidon’s Fury” but the ride was having a break for another half hour and it was getting late in the day, so we headed back to the Hogwarts Express.

On the return journey the movie experience was different and we saw the Forbidden Forest with centaurs racing alongside the train.

When we got back to Diagon Alley, we went to “Harry Potter and the Escape from Gringotts”. The ride followed the section in the movie where Harry, Ron and Hermione are caught sneaking into Gringotts and escape on a dragon. A mix of 3D screens, animatronics and roller coaster made for a thrilling ride.


Back to the RV, and the trip back to the RV park.

The next morning we left earlier to make the most of our second day. We started back at Universal studios at Production Central for “Despicable Me Minion Mayhem”. The premise of the ride is that you are minions in training. A bit like a version of the Minion Rush game. The 3D big screen combined with the movement of the seats gave a very realistic ride through Gru’s lab, dodging obstacles, bowling over other minions, chasing bananas, and lots of falling over.



After that we tried out “Shrek 4D”, which had normal cinema style seats that jolted a little, so most of the effects were via the screen, plus sprays of water and air. We rode with Shrek as he rescued Fiona from certain death. At the last minute Donkey and Dragon saved the day. All good fun, but the technology was definitely a step down from some of the other rides.

Steve then rode the “Hollywood Rip Ride Rockit” rollercoaster. Ros isn’t a fan of rollercoasters and sat this one out. It loops and spirals across the park and Steve came back with a huge grin.

We then went to “Race Through New York”, another brilliant combination of 3D and moving seats. We raced through the streets of New York, past the Statue of Liberty, Times Square and then a virtual rollercoaster to the moon and back. Lots of fun.

We took in lunch at Lombard’s Seafood Grille in San Fransisco, then we tried out “Men in Black: Alien Attack”. It was a shooter style game where the cars run you through the city and you shoot a laser at the aliens that pop up.

That was all the rides that we had wanted to do, except for the “Incredible Hulk Coaster” – Steve again, because it goes upside down. Following that, we skipped around the parks repeating rides that we had really enjoyed.

On the “Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey”, we experienced a breakdown. Luckily we were leaning back at the time, not tilting forwards or to one side, so it was reasonably comfortable to just sit there. The lights came on and we were interested to see how the ride was constructed. The pods of 4 seats each are on robotic arms that lift and twist them. At the time, we were about 10 - 15 feet from the ground, being attacked be a dementor, who wasn’t nearly as impressive frozen still.



Ros was sitting next to a little girl, maybe 7 or 8 years old, who was frightened and was crying quietly. So Ros held her hand and talked to her to keep her calm. She was visiting from Brazil and her family were on another car. We were strapped in with full body lock in bars, so there was no danger of falling, but she was getting very anxious as time ticked on. It seemed like a really long time, but realistically might have been 10 minutes, and then the ride suddenly kicked in again and we were moving. We made sure the little girl found her family when we got off. Really, she was way too young to be riding by herself.

On the way out Steve had one last rollercoaster and we did the Minion ride again. We finished the evening with dinner at The Cowfish sushi and burger restaurant, with some burgushi rolls – sushi rolls made with burger ingredients like steak and mushroom. Very tasty! 


Sunday, 21 January 2018

21 January – Titusville to Orlando

We packed up camp and headed out to Daytona Beach. We thought a nice drive up the coast would be good, before heading to Orlando. The drive up took us through little coastal towns and we took a few detours to see the sea on the way. As we got close to Daytona Beach it became much more built up, condos, shopping malls and multi lane highway. We stopped in for lunch at a supermarket, as we couldn’t find anywhere to pull off the road. That done, we turned south west for Orlando.

We drove past the Daytona Speedway on the way. Its pretty vast!



Into Orlando, and parked up for the next few days at a place on the outskirts called Winter Garden. The RV Park is pretty basic, but it will do. We are planning on going to Universal Studios tomorrow, so looking forward to that.


20 January – Titusville

After yesterday’s excitement, we had a sleep in, then headed out to Cocoa Beach. Cocoa Beach is out on a barrier island, reached by a causeway, and was made famous in “I Dream of Jeannie”. We pulled in at the Cocoa Beach Pier and parked. The parking attendant only charged us for one parking space, even though we took 2. It was lovely and warm and the beach looked very inviting, so we went for a long walk, past beach volleyball games, surfers, families at play, and people walking and on pushbikes. When wet, the sand is a light brown colour, hence the name.




After the walk we strolled along the pier to the end and sat at the Tiki Bar for a drink and to take in the view and the live music. It got a little chilly, so we moved into the restaurant for lunch. Steve had Buffalo wings and Ros had a prawn bucket.




After lunch we headed into the town of Cocoa and the quaint historic shopping district. We browsed, did some wine tasting, and dropped into a pirate shoppe. All good fun and a nice way to spend the day. 

19 January – Titusville

We jumped online early and found that the launch had been rescheduled for tonight, and we were able to get VIP tickets. The VIP area only has 300 people and is considerably closer – only 2.3 miles from the launch pad, and as close as you can be safely.

We had a behind the scenes bus tour booked for 10.30 am, so we headed out for Kennedy Space Centre again.

The bus tour was great. We spent 2 hours driving around all the technical areas of the Centre, including the launch pads, and the Vehicle Assembly Building. NASA constructs its rockets upright, so the building is huge. The building is 525 feet tall and the doors are 456 feet, to accommodate the Saturn V. The building covers an area of 8 acres. There is a US flag on the side, 209 feet long. When the rockets are assembled, the big crawler transporters bring them out, for the long hike out to the launch pads. The crawler road surface is made of special river stone that won’t spark when crushed, as you don’t want sparks around rockets.




When we returned to the Visitor Centre we went to the Astronaut Hall of Fame, and watched a really interesting 3D movie about the history of space exploration. Then it was back to the RV to get rugged up for the launch – take 2!

The VIP experience was much more civilised. We bussed to the viewing area where they fed us dinner and gave us commemorative T-shirts. There was no jostling for seats on the bleachers and by 7.30 everyone was seated and there was a commentator telling us what was going on at the launch site just over the river from us. By that stage we were past the check that the rocket had failed yesterday and it was looking hopeful. They patched us in to the audio feed from the launch command centre and it was thrilling to listen to the checks coming in one by one as “OK”.


It was dark by then, but we could see the launch pad lit brightly, and the rocket standing tall and white against the dark of the towers. As the final checks came in the announcement was “clear for launch”. It seemed like the whole crowd held its collective breath as the first glow started at the base of the Atlas rocket. Within a split second the glow exploded into a bright ball of light that made us shade our eyes, and the rocket started to move. Slowly at first, then clearing the towers and accelerating into the sky. It took several seconds before the sound arrived, a deep roar that you could feel in your chest, a vibration that you felt in your bones. The crowd reacted, some cheers, some gasps, and a heap of exclamations of awe. We watched, transfixed, as the Atlas soared into the sky, trailing flame and smoke. We saw the first stage separate from the main rocket and jets of flame as it broke free and began falling to earth. In free fall, it was moving so much slower than it had been on the way up, giving us perspective on just how fast the Atlas was moving. Before long, the flames went out and we couldn’t see it falling anymore, but the Atlas continued rising. Finally, the rocket was gone, dwindling to a pinprick of light, and vanishing.





The announcer told us that by the time we were back at the visitor centre, about 40 minutes from launch, the Atlas would have done its job and the satellite deployed.

That was a once in a lifetime, bucket list experience. And we would do it again, anytime!