Wednesday, February 29, 2012

The Best Beaches in Florida: A rundown of the top 10 most charming Florida beaches for a relaxing and exciting beach vacation

The Best Beaches in Florida: A rundown of the top 10 most charming Florida beaches for a relaxing and exciting beach vacation Review



5 Star Reviews:

"This work really did a great job at discussing the local attractions, activities, and people who you will be encountering at these beaches...Overall, a great read and will serve everyone well who reads it!"

"The author gives just enough information about the historical backgrounds of these beaches so that the reader will want to investigate more for himself not to mention travel to each place to see it up close and personal. This book is perfect for a first time visitor to these lovely venues who will soon find out why these beaches are deemed the best in Florida."

Description:

If you are looking for a great spot for a beach vacation, The Best Florida Beaches book will be a great guide. We'll reveal our top 10 Florida beaches and give you an idea of the history and charm of our favorite beaches as well as exciting things to do while you are there. To be honest, I'll be surprised if you can get through the entire guide without being compelled to book a vacation at one of these wonderful and charming beaches.

As someone who has grown up in Florida and has visited many Florida beaches, I have many favorites. In my book, I'll present my top 10 beaches in Florida, in no particular order. It was just too hard to try to rank them individually, since each has its own charm. You can’t go wrong visiting any of these top Florida beaches. So pick one that sounds good, and have a great time! Or, better yet, plan on visiting all of them. Enjoy the book and don't forget to bring your bathing suit, sun glasses, and sunscreen!

What's Inside:

1. Small town charm

2. Captivated

3. The best city beach

4. Steeped in rich history

5. Sophistication and lure

6. Eastern gem of Florida

7. SoBe in Florida

8. You will be dazzled

9. A tropical paradise

10. She sells seashells


Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Florida Roadkill: A Novel

Florida Roadkill: A Novel Review



Sunshine State trivia buff Serge A. Storms loves eliminating jerks and pests. His drug-addled partner Coleman loves cartoons. Hot stripper Sharon Rhodes loves cocaine, especially when purchased with rich dead men's money.

On the other hand, there's Sean and David, who love fishing and are kind to animals -- and who are about to cross paths with a suitcase filled with million in stolen insurance money. Serge wants the suitcase. Sharon wants the suitcase. Coleman wants more drugs . . . and the suitcase. In the meantime, there's murder by gun, Space Shuttle, Barbie doll, and Levi's 501s.

In other words, welcome to Tim Dorsey's Florida -- where nobody gets out unscathed and untanned!


Tuesday, February 14, 2012

The Hiking Trails of Florida's National Forests, Parks, and Preserves

The Hiking Trails of Florida's National Forests, Parks, and Preserves Review



For Florida hikers, vacationers, outdoor enthusiasts, and wildlife watchers who want to plan and execute their own adventures, this second edition of the popular guidebook will be indispensable. Molloy and Friend explore the trails of Florida to provide readers with an easy-to-use, accurate, and thorough guide to hiking in more than 2 million acres of federally owned wilderness. These areas contain some of the Sunshine State's most spectacular scenery--from pristine beaches and emerald oceans to towering pine forests and sparkling spring-fed lakes.
Illustrated with photographs by the authors, this guide describes every marked and maintained trail in Florida's national forests, parks, and preserves. Each description contains a profile of the path, detailing and rating its condition, length, and difficulty and describing the highlights and hazards of the trail. Profiles also give trailhead directions, trail connections, and hiking season information, followed by a running narrative describing what hikers can expect to see and experience on the trails. This updated edition covers large and small changes in the trails since 2000, most notably the new western corridor of the Florida Trail through Ocala National Forest and the storm-driven changes to the same trail at Gulf Island National Seashore and in Everglades National Park. Also included is a new section on Canaveral National Seashore.
The book also features vignettes of natural and human history along the trails. Many of the areas border sinkholes and other geologic formations, wind through fascinating ecosystems such as the Everglades, and pass by historic sites such as old roadways, mail routes, battlefields, and military forts, and Molloy and Friend highlight these throughout the book in fascinating anecdotes. They also provide information on what to wear and bring on hiking expeditions to maximize safety and comfort along the great hiking trails of Florida’s protected lands.



Sunday, February 12, 2012

Fodor's Florida 2011 (Full-color Travel Guide)

Fodor's Florida 2011 (Full-color Travel Guide) Review



• Full-color guide • Make your trip to Florida unforgettable with illustrated features, 57 maps, and 406 color photos.
• Customize your trip with simple planning tools • Convenient overview of each region and its highlights • Top experiences and attractions • Easy-to-read color regional maps
Explore Miami, Walt Disney World, the Everglades, and beyond
• Discerning Fodor’s Choice picks for hotels, restaurants, sights, and more • “Word of Mouth” tips from fellow Fodor’s travelers
• Illustrated features on the best Florida beaches, shelling on Sanibel Island, and snorkeling and diving in the Florida Keys • Best fishing, shopping, and dining
• Opinions from destination experts • Fodor’s Florida-based writers reveal their favorite local haunts • Revised annually to provide the latest information


Friday, February 10, 2012

Freddy Goes to Florida

Freddy Goes to Florida Review



It's winter, and the barn is cold. There's no central heating for the ducks. No quilts for the mice. The animals of Bean Farm know that Mr. Bean can't afford to fix up their barn properly for the coming winter, so Freddy and friends decide to do the next best thing: head to Florida for a vacation. On the way south with the migrating birds, Freddy, Jinx the Cat, Charles the Rooster and the other animals foil burglars, outwit a band of hungry alligators, meet the President, and even uncover buried treasure.


Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Florida's Incredible Wild Edibles

Florida's Incredible Wild Edibles Review



Florida's varying habitats are blessed with a wide variety of native plant species. These have roots, stems, leaves, flowers, fruit, and seeds that provide good and interesting food for people. All of these plants, if we are to enjoy eating them, need identification and interpretation, which this book provides. This illustrated book has descriptions, recipes and notes for many different plants. From "Dandelion Dip" to "Elderflower Champagne," the authors have found the woods and fields to be a table always spread.


Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Piracy off the Florida Coast and Elsewhere

Piracy off the Florida Coast and Elsewhere Review



Piracy off the Florida Coast and Elsewhere is presented here in a high quality paperback edition. This popular classic work by Samuel A. (Samuel Abbott) Green is in the English language, and may not include graphics or images from the original edition. If you enjoy the works of Samuel A. (Samuel Abbott) Green then we highly recommend this publication for your book collection.


Sunday, February 5, 2012

Florida Heat Wave

Florida Heat Wave Review



Florida—like hell, only hotter.

Florida Heat Wave, edited by Michael Lister, is a collection of crime stories set in the gun-shaped state by Florida’s foremost crime writers.

Oppressive.

Stifling.

Crazy-making.

The suffocating heat makes you do things—it seeps in through your pores and sucks the life out of you. Like the bloody smear of a swatted mosquito on sweat-soaked skin, violence erupts suddenly, but the damage it does lingers long after.

From the pine-tree lined rural highways of North Florida through the tourist traps of Central Florida to the tropical, international environs of SOBE, come stories of sun-faded noir, orange pulp served up freshly squeezed by the Sunshine State’s very best practitioners.

Stories from: James O. Born, James W. Hall, Lisa Unger, Alice Jackson, Jonathon King, Jim Pascoe, Carolyn Haines, Tom Corcoran, Raven McMillian, Mark Raymond Falk, Christine Kling, John Lutz, Carolina Garcia-Aguilera, Michael Lister, John Dufresne, Bob Morris, John Bond, and Mary Anna Evans.


Thursday, February 2, 2012

Sport Fish of Florida

Sport Fish of Florida Review



Sport Fish of Florida Feature

  • Florida Sportsman 0-936240-16-4
  • Fishing > Accessories
  • SKU VL-6506300
  • UPC: 053394000224
THE ANGLER'S PRACTICAL GUIDE

The good, the bad, the ugly--for the very first time, they're all here together in a book of their own, a book that illustrates and describes virtually every kind of fish an angler in Florida--or the Bahamas or Caribbean Islands--could expect to find on the end of a line.

In this book you'll find the scoop on every hook-and-line species from the mightiest Marlin to the lowliest Lizardfish, along with advice on how to catch each one and how good it is to eat.

Because it's designed as a practical guide for fishermen, every effort has been made to keep biological jargon at bay. However, there is one nod to the world of science that is unavoidable--the inclusion of scientific names so that each of the species can be definitely pinpointed. Without scientific names, confusion would reign, because most species are known by more than one common name and, in many cases, two or more different species share the same common name.

It would have been nice to sort the species by their preferred environment--offshore, inshore, reef, flats or whatever. But as fishermen realize all too well, fish have tails and can swim where they please. The same kind of fish you catch on a flat today and in a bridge channel tomorrow may well strike your bait out on the deep reef next weekend. The constant element of surprise is one of the most appealing aspects of angling in this great area.

Alphabetical and strictly scientific classifications would have other drawbacks, so it was decided to use a mixed system that lets the species fall into whatever groupings would be natural. Most of the chapters cover a particular family of fishes. Some, however, deal with species that are not related but have certain habits or attributes in common. All are listed in a complete index at the end of the book. BE SURE TO ABIDE BY THE LAW

A great many kinds of fish are protected by conservation laws that may include licenses, daily bag limits, possession limits, minimum and maximum size limits, permitting and other legal requirements. Many different jurisdictions and agencies are involved in managing the fisheries--at least a half-dozen in Florida alone, to say nothing of other countries-and their regulations sometimes conflict.

In Florida, information is available from such sources as Florida Sportsman Magazine, county courthouses and many tackle shops. Visitors to Florida or the Islands usually are able to get the needed information from their travel agents, resorts, fishing camps or charter captains. BEWARE OF TOXIC FISH

Ciguatera is a type of poison carried by certain individual fish in tropical waters. Although only a minute number of fish are affected, people sometimes acquire the toxin, mostly by eating very big specimens of predatory types, such as the Great Barracuda, Amberjack, and even some larger varieties of Grouper and Snapper. The resulting illness can be serious and lingering, but is rarely fatal.

Ciguatera seems to be more common in some species than in others, but its occurrence is rarely predictable. In a given area, a few fish of a particular species may be carriers of the toxin while the majority of individuals of that same species are perfectly safe to eat.

The toxin comes from microscopic organisms called dinoflagellates that attach themselves to marine algae. Grazing fishes acquire the toxin by eating the algae. Predators acquire it by eating the grazers; however, it must accumulate in the muscle tissue of the predator for a considerable amount of time before reaching levels that are dangerous to human beings. It is always wise to let the big predators go and eat the smaller ones.

A second kind of marine fish illness--Puffer poisoning--is more serious--often fatal, in fact. But it is also far more easily avoided. All you have to do is refrain from eating a