Hanging out on the beach in the sun and breeze always gives me a good appetite. For that reason, we prefer to rent condos and houses on vacation instead of hotel rooms. With four children, I get tired to eating out (and paying for eating out) at least two meals a day for a week. With a real vacation rental, you get a full kitchen and can make a simple dinner after everyone is showered and ready to chill in the air conditioning. Cooking on vacation may sound like a punishment. But for me, Stouffer's lasagna, a glass of wine, and all of us piled on the couch watching tv and playing board games, sounds like relaxation. However, trying out new restaurants is part of the fun of travel. Unless you end up at the one with the most billboards that turns out to be just mediocre. Do yourself at favor and jot a list of the top Fort Myers restaurants on this link, courtesy of Trip Advisor. I think we will go with #2 Kenwood Lane Grille. I like the way the reviewers called it a hidden gem.
What to do in the area? (besides lie in the sun and swim)
Do you know this trick? Buy a membership to your local science museum and then visit whatever science museum that offers reciprocal membership is in the area of your vacation destination. Not really a trick, I guess, but I always feel so smart walking into a science museum on a rainy day of vacation and getting in with my big family for free. While all the other tourists stand there adding up the ticket prices. Here's the link for the list of science centers and museums that offer reciprocal admission with a membership:ASTC Passport Program Right in Fort Myers is the Imaginarium of Fort Myers.
Another option for a rainy day: The Edison and Ford Winter Estates Museum and Lab $20/adult, $11/child. This would be very interesting for those without kids or with kids too old for the Imaginarium.
To see wildlife, here are some options: Right on Sanibel, there is the J. N. Ding Darling National Wildlife Refuge With a name like Ding Darling, it has to be fairly cool. Inside Ding Darling is an outside company offering kayak tours, walking tours, etc. Tarpon Bay Explorers Nature Tours and Rentals Another is Shark Valley Tram Tours. I'm not sure why they call it Shark Valley. There are alligators, but no sharks. Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary. This one is right in Naples, very close to Fort Myers. Everglades Island Air Boat Tours This tour leaves from Everglades City, which is the northwest corner of the Everglades, closest to Gulfside beaches. Manatee Guides. This is an outfit that takes you out in kayaks for several hours to paddle to see either manatees, or dolphins, or birds. Of all the tour companies in the area, this one is the highest rated on Trip Advisor. Just make sure your tour is with Tim, the primo naturalist for this tour company.
On the way home, I am tentatively thinking of Huntsville, Alabama for our stopover spot from Ohio to Florida. We don't drive through the night. Just can't seem to do it like everyone else. Not driving through the night causes our drive to take two days, but we prefer it to falling asleep at the wheel. Several years ago, we tried to stop in Huntsville, Alabama, on the way from Dauphin Island, Alabama but we left the Gulf too late and it didn't work out. What's in Huntsville, Alabama? NASA is! The U.S. Space and Rocket Center And guess what?! They are on the ASTC passport program. So we'll get in free! An extra fee IMAX shows. And if anyone wants to stay on a week for space camp. Just kidding; Space Camp costs the equivalent of several vacations. The non-rich need not apply. Huntsville is twelve hours from Fort Myers. So, we'll leave in the morning, drive all day. Sleep in or near Huntsville. The next day, we'll spend all day checking out stuff like the Saturn V rocket that took Neil, Buzz, and Michael up to the moon. Then we'll sleep again around Huntsville and drive home the next day daydreaming about whether the space program will revive in time for one of my sons to become the next man to take the "one giant leap for mankind."