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Friday, June 8, 2012

Tours in Key West

A must on every vacation I take is a city tour, usually on a double decker bus. In Key West, we chose to take the Conch Train Tour. It's a Jeep dressed up to look like a tank engine and it pulls the cars behind it. My sons are obsessed with Thomas the Train, so they loved it.


The Spanish called Key West "Cayo Hueso," which literally means "bone key." When the Spanish arrived, the area was littered with bones from Native American battles. The tour goes by the Little White House, where Truman used to stay, Hemingway's house, where you can still see the descendants of Hemingway's six-toed cats. Notable architecture is pointed out, specifically the Gingerbread Houses. These homes have an overlay of latticework on their porches. Some of the latticework is in the shape of gingerbread men, others show a symbol of the profession of the house's original owner.


Mallory Square is the area for boat tours. While waiting for our boat, the kids enjoyed watching street performers in the square and food cart treats. We took a glass-bottomed boat tour. This was beautiful. You get to see the third-largest coral reef in the world, lots of yellow-tailed snapper and the occasional barracuda. I recommend taking the tour that ends at sunset. The sunset in Key West is hard to describe, it's like the water swallows up the sun. The tour includes a champagne toast at sunset. 

That said, one of my sons decided to have a screaming fit because he wanted to climb over the guard rails to get closer to the glass bottom.  I'm accustomed to being the person with the screaming child on the airplane, but this was the first time on a boat.  It's similar as far as being trapped.  At someone's home or a public place, you can find a spot to take your child and help him calm down.  On a plane or boat, there's really nowhere to go, so you are trapped and the other passengers are trapped right along with you.  On this boat trip, I ended up going into the airplane-sized bathroom stall and just sat on the toilet seat trying to calm down my son.  I think I might have cried.

I consequently handed my son over to my husband after that and had both our complimentary glasses of champagne. Despite all the trouble, it was worth it - the sunset in Key West is truly spectacular.  It looks like the water just swallows the sun, no other way to describe it.


Whenever I am on vacation, I try to go on a ghost tour. I love ghost tours. Ghost tours give you a taste of the history of a city. The tour I took in Key West begins at the Concha Hotel, which is alleged to be haunted. A young man was trying to help his waiter friend clean up so they could get to a New Year's Eve party. He pressed a button to open the elevator doors, not realizing you had to push another button to actually call the elevator. He plunged down the shaft to his death. Apparently at certain times you can hear phantom dishes crashing. There was a tragic tale of a man who killed his wife and children. There's a theater built on the site, but the tenants never stay for long due to the supernatural activity. Our tour guide told us a story of a time when she had a particularly obnoxious child on her tour. The group was about a block away from the theater and the kid pointed at the building and said, "there's seven children over there and they're sad." She hadn't even started to tell the story yet. There's also typical ghost tour stories of lost love and voodoo. After the tour, go for a drink in the Concha Hotel's bar, it's lovely.  This was an adults-only night out, Grandpa stayed at the hotel with the kids.

In summary, I would say yes to the train tour with kids; no kids on the boat tour or ghost tour.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

wow!!That sounds awesome. We can relate to the screaming fits in small places. Kristy and I have spent many hours in small rest rooms or spaces where we had to calm Kyle down. But we try not to let it ruin our time.
The post are great.
Thanks,
Jody