Showing posts with label florida tourism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label florida tourism. Show all posts

Thursday, February 23, 2012

The Florida Tourism Of Sunsets

The Florida Tourism Of Sunsets
Florida still tourism king

Sunsets like this one over the Gulf of Mexico are one of the reasons Florida tourism was up last year. Last year set many tourism records around the world, but none even comes close to Florida Vacation which welcomed 85.9 million tourists in 2011. That’s 65 per cent higher than the entirety of what Mexico is expecting next year, for instance, and 70 per cent higher than New York’s record year. It’s more than eight times Toronto’s own record, and 25 times the number of people who visited Israel last year.


The hot spot for your next trip

Online itinerary builder luxury wegoplaces.com just added factory tours to its list of things to do on vacation. If you’re in Ohio, you might stop by the Airstream factory in Jackson Center. Boulder, Col., is home to a Celestial Seasonings vacation tour. 


Read More:


For More Information About  Travel & Vacation: Florida villas

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Launch Of Space Shuttle Endeavour Boosts Florida Tourism


Florida tourism receives much required boost due to the launch of Space shuttle Endeavour. Friday's launch of Endeavour has increased tourism in Florida as thousands of tourists are traveling to Cape Canaveral.

Endeavour Space Shuttle

Around 700,000 people are expected to visit Florida for the final launch of the Endeavour space shuttle. The hotels in Titusville are completely booked. To meet the demands of the tourists local people have started to offer their homes on the rent.

Generally space shuttle launch generates around $5 million for the local tourism industry. But this time tourism industry expects $15 million from the event. Apart from the Endeavour other star attractions present at the launch would be US President Barack Obama and Arizona Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords who suffered serious injuries following the assassination attempt.

The restaurants in Titusville are also expecting twice the revenues comparing to the usual launch. Even though big revenues are expected from the Friday's launch, local tourism industry is worried about the aftermath. The NASA Space shuttle program will soon come to the end that could mean much less tourists than the usual numbers for the tourism industry.

So what are you waiting for book yourself one of the Orlando vacation villas or Florida luxury villas and enjoy your Florida holiday watching the launch of the space shuttle.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

“Wrong turn” could have led to tourist murders in Florida




The two British tourists shot dead in a Florida ghetto could have taken a wrong turn whilst trying to find a 24-hour diner, according to police.

Detectives are trying to find out why James Cooper and James Kouzaris could have ended up on the notorious Newton projects area after a night out in the upmarket resort of Sarasota.

The Gator Bar, the last venue the pair are believed to have visited early on Saturday morning, is just 1.5miles away from a branch of IHOP, a popular 24-hour diner chain and one of the few places in the city to get food at that time.

Captain Sutton described it as “very possible” that the tourists, under the influence of alcohol, could quite easily have “lost their bearings”, taken and ended up in streets of Newtown, a low-income housing project.

The IHOP is on 12th street while the men turned off on 21st street.

Read More

http://www.breakingtravelnews.com/news/article/wrong-turn-could-have-led-to-tourist-murders-in-florida/



Monday, April 18, 2011

Boy charged for killing of two British tourists in Florida

Boy charged for killing of two British tourists in Florida


A 16-year-old boy has been arrested and charged for the suspected killing of two British tourists in Florida.

James Kouzaris, 24 and James Cooper, 25, had been on holiday with family and friends in the Gulf coast town of Sarasota.

Their bodies were found peppered with bullets in a deprived residential area renowned for gang violence.

Sarasota Police Captain Paul Sutton told new agency AFP: “It’s unusual in that it’s public housing, there’s no open businesses, and they are in the area just before 3 in the morning.”

“The men were on a family vacation and staying in Longboat Key, a nearby beach resort community,” he added.

“One of the victims’ parents were travelling with them. It’s a horrible incident.”

The two men, both graduates of the University of Sheffield, did not have a car.

The motive of the murders has yet to be established, although police suspect it might have been a street robbery or a drug deal that went wrong.

Police confirmed neither of the men were in possession of drugs, although they would not say whether they had cash or weapons.

The area is a hotspot for gangs.

They had been staying on the upmarket island city of Longboat Key, about 12 miles from the less affluent area where they were killed.

Mr Kouzaris, from Northampton, was a guest of the Cooper family, from Warwick who were on holiday in the area.

“Both victims were white,” said Sarasota Police Captain Paul Sutton.

A spokesman for the British consulate in Miami said: ‘British consular officials can confirm that two British nationals were killed in Sarasota, Florida, on April 16. Next of kin have been notified.

Shootings of tourists re rare in the U.S. but in November 2009 Thomas Reeve was gunned down while drinking with friends in a Texas bar.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Florida beaches get $30 million tourism boost from BP




TALLAHASSEE, Fla (Reuters) - Hoping to bring tourists back to Florida's Panhandle beaches, Governor Rick Scott joined BP officials and local tourism leaders on Monday to announce a $30 million marketing grant for the region, which lost much of its business last year.

Scott lauded BP's commitment to "do the right thing" by earmarking nearly $82 million so far for tourism and commercial seafood testing since the April 20 explosion of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig and subsequent spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

"I thank BP for stepping up, especially at this time, because it's terribly important that we get the tourist season up and going," Scott said at a press conference.

Unlike South Florida, the Panhandle region's peak season occurs in the summer months.

BP has already made tourism payments of $18 million to Mississippi and $22 million to Alabama, according to the company's recovery website.

Last month, Louisiana's 64 parishes split $5 million in tourism aid from the company. Those funds were the first of six BP payments to Louisiana that will total $30 million.

The grant money announced on Monday for Florida will be distributed through the Northwest Florida Tourism Council, a non-profit group set up after the disaster to represent tourism officials in seven Panhandle counties affected by the spill.

Funds will be divvied up among the counties, which produced marketing plans that have been approved by the regional council.

"We have seen the plans and have great confidence that they will result in great help to the tourism industry there," said Luke Keller, BP's senior vice president in charge of Gulf restoration efforts.

Marketing efforts are expected to include media buys in nearby states where people can easily drive to the Panhandle beaches for vacation but also in places farther afield.

Other incentives include coupons, vouchers and package deals.

"Each of those counties has very different plans," said Dawn Moliterno, chairwoman of the regional tourism council.

"But what you can expect to see are concentrated, targeted initiatives in each of those counties to the customers of their targeted markets."

Read More

Friday, April 8, 2011

Safari Wild will have to wait on Commission



The proposal is an outgrowth of a controversy over an animal-oriented tourist destination called Safari Wild that was proposed in the Green Swamp Area of Critical State Concern.

A hearing officer last year struck down Polk County's approval of the project because it violated several county regulations.

This is the second time the proposed regulation had been continued because of questions about whether the regulations needed to be better defined.

"I don't think this is ready for prime time," Commissioner John Ryan said.

He said he wanted to exempt Class I and II wildlife from being part of agritourism.

Class I animals include lions, bears, apes, rhinoceros and other large animals that are potentially dangerous. Class II animals include monkeys, smaller cats, antelopes and other less dangerous animals.

Dr. Stephen Wehrmann, a veterinarian who is one of the owners of a game ranch that could take advantage of the ordinance, argued antelopes and other hoofed animals fall under the state definition of livestock and shouldn't be restricted.

Ryan said he'd be willing to discuss a revision, but said he wasn't sure a lot of situations involved legitimate agriculture.

"I don't see a zoo on a farm," he said.

The unanimous vote for continuance came following a series of failed motions to recommend approval and then denial. The first motion tied 3-3. The second failed 4-2.

Assistant County Attorney Jan McDonald recommended commissioners consider the issue when they were fresher.

The case didn't come up until after 7 p.m. during a meeting that had begun at 9 a.m.

The case, which planners had been trying to fast track to the commission, had been scheduled for a public hearing before the Polk County Commission next Tuesday.

Wehrmann is co-owner of the licensed exotic game farm off Moore Road that also is the site of the proposed Safari Wild tourist attraction.

Florida Wildlife Ranch is a scaled-back version of Safari Wild that Wehrmann said could attract some tourists -- he's not really sure what the market is -- to provide some income to pay for running the ranch that contains 160 exotic animals ranging from various species of African antelope to Indian rhinoceroses.

The main issue isn't whether farms may be great places to bring tourists, but whether there are adequate controls on issues such as traffic and noise to protect adjacent rural landowners.

A state administrative law judge last year quashed Polk County's approval of Safari Wild, concluding county officials ignored their own growth plan and development regulations.

The ruling came after officials at the Florida Department of Community Affairs, which oversees development permits in the Green Swamp Area of Critical State Concern, challenged the county's decision.

Lois Murphy, a sixth-generation Floridian whose family owns a ranch near Wehrmann's property, was one of the prime critics of Safari Wild and the county's handling of it.

She asked planners to take more time reviewing the proposal.

"I have a fear that this is more about tourism than about agriculture," she said, explaining she's afraid the result could be to weaken agriculture.

"I don't think a (development code change) should be driven by one case; that seems strange to me," she said.

Read More

http://www.newschief.com/article/20110408/NEWS/104085138/1021/news01?Title=Safari-Wild-will-have-to-wait-on-Commission

Monday, April 4, 2011

South Florida Enjoying Record Tourism Numbers


Two of the most well-known holiday destinations in Florida, Fort Lauderdale and Miami, have announced that they experienced strong tourism growth over the winter months with hotel occupancy in Fort Lauderdale alone reaching 75% in January this year. The news, which was revealed by the both Fort Lauderdale and Greater Miami Convention and Visitors Bureau, shows that Florida has become a very attractive destination for travellers, say ulookubook.com.

Ian Raine of ulookubook.com, comments: “Florida has always been a popular holiday choice with travellers, and tourism in both Fort Lauderdale and Miami has increased dramatically, compared to the figures from last year. According to the authorities in Fort Lauderdale, the hotel occupancy of 75% in January this year was 27% higher than it was in January 2010, and the total amount of passenger traffic at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood airport had increased by 5.1% year-on year. The results are simply staggering, as they show that more people are choosing to travel to Florida, specifically South Florida, on holiday.”

In Miami, the GMCVB have revealed that 12.6 million people visited Miami-Dade County last year, and spent $18.8 million, making it a record year for tourism in the area. Similarly, in 2010, 10.84 million people visited Fort Lauderdale, where they spent just over $8 million, which shows that tourist demand for South Florida is growing.

Raine continues: “Last year was truly an exceptional year for tourism in Florida, in fact the figure of 12.6 million tourists is the highest number ever recorded in Miami. These numbers are very impressive, but when it comes to air traffic, international travellers have risen dramatically, with an increase of 16.3% in the number of foreign travellers travelling to and from Fort Lauderdale in January this year alone, which represents the 17th consecutive month of air traffic growth for the airport. These figures show that Florida is still a popular holiday destination, and judging by its growth over the past year, it could very well become more popular in 2011.”

If you are planning a Florida vacation check the cheap and best Orlando holiday rentals, Florida luxury villas and Orlando Villas at Fabvillas 

Monday, March 7, 2011

Vegas-style casinos to boost Florida tourism




It's already one of the most visited states in the US, the home of Disney World and the chosen retirement destination for most of the American middle class. But if a group of senators get their way, Florida could also be home to large Vegas-style casinos - a new initiative to increase the state's conference revenue and encourage gambling fans to make their vacations locally.


The proposed legislation, filed by Floridian senators Dennis Jones and Maria Sachs last Friday, would allow for up to five casino-resort complexes which would have to contain at least 1,000 rooms and 500,000 square feet of meeting space. Currently, the largest casinos in the state, owned by the indigenous Seminole people, have around 500 rooms.

The senators estimate the five casinos could bring in an extra 5 million new visitors to Florida each year, as well as encouraging more of its 3.5 million citizens who venture out of state for gambling trips to stay local. The large-scale meeting facilities could see the state take a bigger slice of trade show revenue, too. "Right now we're not a major player in the trade show industry", said Jones, who heads the Senate Regulated Industries Committee, responsible for gambling permissions in the state. "And if the Legislature thinks this bill is worthy, they'll help move it along."

The news comes after reports of significant recovery in the state's property industry, particularly in Miami, where cut-price repossessed homes are attracting growing numbers of overseas investors. The bill allows for one of the casinos to be in the Miami area, which could see an added boost to the local real estate market.


Rick Scott To Tour Across US For Florida Tourism


Gov. Rick Scott will tour across United States to promote Florida Tourism. Gov Rick Scott along with Florida Tourism will organize Share a Little Sunshine Tour starting March 1.

The aim of this tour is to encourage tourism in Florida. Gov. Rick Scott and his team will begin two day tour in Orlando which will move to Washington, Philadelphia, New York City and Chicago.

Visit Florida has aimed at the destinations recently suffered from the extreme cold weather. Gov. Rick Scott aims to encourage tourists from these cities to travel the Sunshine State of Florida.

This tour has been organized to boost tourism in Florida which suffered a major setback after the Gulf Oil Spill in April 2010. Several beaches in Florida were ruined by the tar balls. Even though oil spill affected less than 5 per cent beaches in Florida, media coverage exaggerated the situation.

All beaches of Florida are not clean and ready to host tourists. To attract tourists, Visit Florida has come up with several unique ideas. Share a Little Sunshine Tour is one of them.

During the tour 120 people will be selected randomly through the call-in to CBS Radio station in Chicago. These people will travel to Orlando along with Gov. Rick Scott in a chartered plane from Chicago to spend a four day stay.

Read More

http://www.easydestination.net/blog/index.php?itemid=1644


Thursday, March 3, 2011

Florida Strawberry Festival makes its berry sweet return


The Florida Strawberry Festival is back.

Take a stroll outta your Florida luxury villas

The 11-day festival rolls into Plant City on Thursday, complete with rides, shows and entertainment, and of course, some "berry" sweet food.

The 76th edition of the Strawberry Festival gets under way at 10 a.m., when the gates open at the festival grounds on North Lemon Street.

The festival features agricultural and livestock exhibits, a midway and concerts.
But the berry on top is the thousands of bowls of strawberry shortcake that will be dished out to guests.
Some big names in entertainment are headlining this year's Strawberry Festival, including:
  • Lady Antebellum
  • Billy Ray Cyrus
  • The Doobie Brothers
  • Rick Springfield
  • Chubby Checker
  • Kenny Rogers
Great weather is expected on opening day, and organizers said they expect about 40,000 visitors to show up on Thursday alone.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Oil Free Destin & Panama City Beach, FL, Offer Big Attraction Deals in 2011 to Lure Spring Break Travelers




It's been a challenging 2010 for most businesses along the coast of Northwest Florida as the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill caused thousands of travelers to spend their spring and summer vacations elsewhere. Luckily for those who live and travel to Northwest Florida, the region was spared and the beaches and emerald green waters are more beautiful than ever.

Read more: http://www.benzinga.com/press-releases/11/02/p876312/oil-free-destin-panama-city-beach-fl-offer-big-attraction-deals-in-2011##ixzz1EfzNt7Wm

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Florida tourism promoters turn on the stunts




Snow, snow go away was probably the least profane thing a commuter trapped in falling snow and 13 hours of gridlock surrounding Washington could say Wednesday night. But Florida's tourism officials say keep it coming.

Winter is always high marketing season for the Sunshine State, prime time to lure those northerners on the verge of impaling themselves on a snow shovel to strip off their itchy wool and burn their pasty skin amid the swaying palm trees on our beaches.

But this year's miserable weather is producing some extreme moments of schadenfreude among our tourism industry folks too big to pass up.

Earlier this week, as the snow began in New York's Times Square, the Fort Lauderdale Convention & Visitors Bureau unveiled four blocks of ice holding polka dot bikinis and brightly colored swim trunks. The pitch: "Defrost your swimsuit" in Fort Lauderdale.

"We do like to see the weather in other areas. We say 'Ha, ha I'm going to the beach and it's 22 degrees' " where you are, said Francine Mason, the bureau's spokeswoman and a former New Yorker who sought refuge in the sun. "I have some heart; we don't want them stuck on the road."

When a freak of weather produced snow in all 49 states — yes Hawaii, too — except Florida a couple weeks ago, the Palm Beach County Convention and Visitors Bureau produced a 10-second video called Not a Snowplow in Sight. It featured the sounds and sights of the ocean's rippling green-blue water.

The latest pitch comes from the state's public-private partnership, known as Visit Florida, which produced a spoof of a news release featuring an incognito Punxsutawney Phil, the famous groundhog who burrows up from a hole and predicts, for millions of Americans, when winter will end, depending on whether he sees his shadow. According to the social media campaign, Phil had fled Pennsylvania for Florida and can be seen golfing, kayaking and, curiously, being held in the air by a shirtless man at a St. Petersburg resort.

It appears as though Phil is not willing to risk seeing his shadow Feb. 2 and does not plan to return home for Groundhog Day.

Tourism officials say there is a direct correlation between the weather up north and plans to visit a warm destination. The visitors bureau staff in Fort Lauderdale is so convinced of the connection that its uses the temperature to trigger media buys. When the mercury dips to 32 degrees in the Northeast, out come print, television and radio spots.

For those who can't get to Florida right away, the bureau features a live Webcam, trained on the beach.

"If that goes down, I can't tell you the number of calls we get," Mason said.

Perhaps that's what commuters stuck in the car in D.C. were watching on their iPhones


Read More

Monday, January 10, 2011

Florida Tourism industry will feel effects of gulf oil spill for years


As chairman of the Florida Restaurant & Lodging Association, he testified on Capitol Hill about fallout from the spill before a presidential commission investigating the disaster. He speaks regularly with Kenneth Feinberg, the attorney named by President Barack Obama to oversee payouts from the $20 billion BP victim compensation fund.

In a recent interview with the St. Petersburg Times, Overton talked about early friction over the fund, why he's convinced the oil spill caused last summer's tourism slump and problems for the industry that linger long after BP capped the Deepwater Horizon well.

How did you get to know Feinberg?

I first met him when we were testifying before the House Subcommittee on Energy. Everything he said initially, he didn't deliver on. Like he could deliver emergency payments in seven days. He really didn't understand the complexity of our business model. But he's a good listener and did a great job learning our business.

You were still criticizing him until a couple of weeks ago, right?


He took that position on proximity — that if you didn't have oil on the beach you weren't going to get paid. When he reversed it, that turned things around. Then he'd say, "Keith, you'll get paid. Just be patient." Six to eight weeks would go by and no one got paid.

I was inundated with calls to intervene from Florida representatives in Washington who said to either get this guy out or get him moving. It took him writing checks to get belief in the industry that everything would be okay.

How's the relationship now?

It's time our industry show him a little love. It's just fair that we take the politics out of it. I talk to him on the phone two or three times a week, and we e-mail all the time. I ask him about clearly compensable claims that are denied or administratively held up. And we've got to get (a formula for) long-term settlements taken care of.

A lot of people are skeptical that the downturn in local tourism resulted from the oil spill that never came here. How do you know it wasn't caused by the sluggish economy?

Once we got past the cold winter, things were looking up. There was pent-up demand for travel and such good deals, people were ready to release it. Things were supposed to be better and turned out not being better. BP is the only factor that caused that to happen.

Did the TradeWinds get stuck with empty rooms last summer when your customers went elsewhere?

Our occupancy didn't suffer. We had to react and did it by discounting. We shifted our focus from outside of Florida. There was a much broader misunderstanding of (where oil came ashore) in the Northeast and Midwest.

We targeted nearby travelers who knew things here were okay and could take advantage of the heavy discounts — in some cases 50 percent of what we'd normally charge. But it costs the same to service all those rooms (regardless of the room rate). It squeezed our profit in the five months when we (normally) make all our money.

Are there any feeder markets where the TradeWinds is still feeling effects of the spill?

We're down 30 percent in the U.K. market. Obviously, the (exchange rate) of the euro and the (British) pound to the dollar aren't what they used to be. But BP got more bad press there than in the U.S.

British travelers book package deals and for the most part they're two-week trips. So, they get a bill that reads the pound equivalent of $7,000 and say, "Am I going to risk that to go there?"

Will domestic travelers think twice about vacationing in Florida in the future?

One underlying thing people need to recognize is Florida has a brand that's the most powerful in all tourism: sunshine, beautiful beaches, blue water,Florida luxury villas and seafood. That brand has been damaged, and the impacts will last many years.

Thursday, January 6, 2011

2010 a mess for Florida tourism




The US state of Florida is still reeling in the wake of the ongoing recession, a record cold winter and the effects of the Gulf oil spill.

All of these factors have in turn contributed to a stall in tourist traffic to the state throughout 2010.

The Hubbard family, owners and operators of a marina complex and seafood restaurant in Madeira Beach on Florida’s Gulf coast, experienced turmoil last year.

“It was incredibly scary, because we didn't know if we were going to get oil” on nearby Florida beaches, said Kathleen McDole, a Hubbard sister whose Friendly Fisherman restaurant saw a 20 percent decline in business compared to 2009, according to USA Today.

Florida’s tourism industry employs approximately 1 million people and accounts for more than one-fifth of the state’s total sales tax revenue.

Prior to the oil spill, the state of Florida experienced freezing temperatures in January, spooking potential visitors and driving business away.

CEO and president of Visit Florida Chris Thompson was aware of the implications of these unfortunate events.

2011 is here and Florida is fabulous as ever so hope you book one of the Florida luxury villas and holiday in Florida soon

“The collective impacts of the economic downturn, and certainly the oil spill, were as significant a challenge as we've (ever) had to face.

“We realize we are in the recovery and restoration stage, and it's yet to be determined the extent of those two stages,” he said.

In light of the recent business downturn, Mr Thompson said Florida is expected to reap benefits from the Tourism Promotion Act, which was passed by Congress in February and created a non-profit corporation to promote U.S. tourism overseas

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Florida holiday travel to increase for second year in a row



Holiday travel in the state of Florida is projected to increase 3.1 percent this year from 2009, with more than 4.8 million Florida residents taking a trip of 50 miles or more away from home between Dec. 23 and Jan. 2.

Overall, travel in the U.S. is projected to increase 3.1 percent from last year, with more than 92.3 million projected travelers.

Holiday travel is mostly comprised of auto travelers, with the majority of Florida residents (4.5 million) traveling by automobile, an increase of 3.2 percent from last year.

AAA expects the average price of regular retail gasoline in Florida to be between $2.95 and $3.05 per gallon during the holiday travel period, respectively.

Air travel is expected to increase by 2.7 percent as well as travel by other modes, which is projected to increase by one percent in the state.

"This is the second year in a row we are seeing consistent increases in national holiday travel numbers,” said Brent Hubele, Vice President, AAA Travel. “This represents healthy growth following the relatively strong 4.4 percent increase in 2009 holiday travel and is a notable milestone in the travel industry’s recovery.”

Travelers projected to go farther from home

Not only is travel projected to increase, but also median spending and total distance traveled. The total amount spent per household is projected to increase 3.6 percent, from $670 in 2009 to $694 this year.

Total spending can be roughly grouped into two categories: transportation and spending that occurs at the travel destination that includes shopping, lodging, dining,in  luxury Florida villas and entertainment.

Travelers intend to journey an average of 1,052 miles round-trip during the year-end holiday period, which is 261 miles greater than last year’s average of 791 miles.

The increase is noteworthy since this year’s holiday period is one day shorter than last year’s period (11 days versus 12).

However, the holiday travel period is longer than any other holiday throughout the year, so it is not surprising that travelers plan to go the furthest during the year-end holiday compared to others.

Airfares decrease, hotel rates increase, car rental rates remain unchanged from last year.

According to AAA’s Leisure Travel Index, the lowest round-trip airfares throughout the year-end holiday are expected to decrease three percent from last year with an average round-trip rate of $174 versus the $179 rate in 2009.

Survey logistics

AAA's travel projections are based on economic forecasting and research by IHS Global Insight. The report is comprised of two key components—the actual travel forecast and the holiday traveler profile. The actual forecast is based on economic conditions while the holiday travelers profile is developed employing survey data on travel behaviors. The complete AAA/IHS Global Insight 2010 year-end holiday travel forecast can be viewed at AAA.com/news.

AAA Auto Club South is the third largest affiliate of AAA, with 79 branch offices serving more than 4.1 million members in Florida, Georgia, Middle/West Tennessee, and Puerto Rico. Since its founding in 1938, AAA Auto Club South has worked to protect and advance freedom of mobility and improve travel safety.



Friday, December 10, 2010

Harry Potter park chips away at Disney’s dominance



Michael Douglas, Catherine Zeta-Jones and their children had a holiday in Florida enjoying their Florida villas.Also they visited Disneyland recently and took a ride on the Flight of the Hippogriff at University Orlando Resort.


ORLANDO, Fla. — The new Harry Potter attraction at Universal Orlando has drawn huge crowds since it opened in June, while attendance at Walt Disney World stayed flat.

Industry and Florida tourism officials are now wondering if Universal can maintain the momentum and gain some permanent ground on Disney, whose footprint on central Florida is massive. Universal reported a 36 percent increase in attendance at its Orlando parks in the three months after the attraction opened compared to the same period last year.

Everyone agrees that the eye-popping success of The Wizarding World of Harry Potter has been a shot in the arm for all the Orlando-area attractions, which had seen crowds drop off in the dismal economy.

Friday, November 26, 2010

Boat parades: A unique Florida holiday tradition




Let's face it, Floridians, we don't do the holidays in the Sunshine State the way they do up North.

In previous Postcards installments, I've written about my family's tradition of heading out to the beach on Christmas Day for a game of touch football in the sand — not something that's an option, say, in Idaho.

Here's another holiday tradition that's unique: The holiday boat parade.

Hey, anyone can decorate a house. When you're putting lights on a houseboat, it's something different.

For the tourists this will be a great sight of Florida, for those who are confused about where to go here are some places you could consider to visit during your stay at Florida.

Once you step out of your Florida Villas There are an assortment of floating festivities, including:

•46th Annual St. Johns River Christmas Boat Parade: This year's flotilla is slated to cast off at 6 p.m. on Dec. 11 at Catfish Bend (Marker 36) north of Whitehair Bridge on the St. Johns River in DeLand. It travels south, finishing at roughly 8 p.m. at the north end of Lake Beresford.

There are a few recommended spots to watch from shore, including Ed Stone Park, at State Road 44 in DeLand and the Lake Beresford Yacht Club. For entry information and other details, call 386-801-5685.

11th Annual Halifax River Yacht Club Christmas Boat Parade: It begins at 6:30 p.m. Dec. 4 north of the Seabreeze Bridge on the Halifax River. From there, the boats travel south to the basin in front of the Halifax River Yacht Club, then turn into the north basin at the Daytona Beach City Marina for judging.

Viewing is available anywhere along the river or on downtown bridges at Seabreeze and Main streets or International Speedway Boulevard. For details, visit dbchristmasboatparade.com or call 386-255-7459.

•Marathon's Boot Key Harbor Lighted Christmas Boat Parade: Watercraft ranging from dinghies to yachts will cruise the harbor in a sparkling procession starting at dusk on Dec. 11. Best viewing sites include Lazy Days South, Marathon Marina, Sombrero Dockside Lounge and Burdine's Waterfront. (305-743-9629; bootkeyharbor.com/christmas_parade).

•Key Largo Boat Parade: This year's theme for the parade on Blackwater Sound is "Under the Sea," marking the 50th anniversary of John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park. It starts at 7:30 p.m. Dec. 11. (305-451-4502; keylargoboatparade.com)

•Winterfet Boat Parade: The 39th 'Seminole Hard Rock Winterfest Boat Parade' will have Cirque Shows, holiday displays, BMX racers, a floating airplane, dancers, music and dazzling floats. Selected as the kick-off event for the City of Fort Lauderdale's Centennial, this year's parade will be held on Dec. 11. The Grand Marshal is current Dancing With the Stars cohost and former winner Brooke Burke. Tickets to view the parade at the Grandstand Viewing Area are $16 for children and $21 for adults. For more information call Winterfest, Inc. at 954-767-0686


Read More

Miami Beach deals with hookworm fears




After relaxing in your Florida Villas with a beach view you would be inclined to take a stroll in the golden sands of Florida with a cool breeze but the latest news is that:

I went to Miami Beach and all I got was this lousy hookworm isn't the kind of catchphrase South Florida's biggest tourist destination would want.

But weeks after media reports highlighted a parasitic problem near the city's shores, Miami Beach and Miami-Dade Health Department officials are still trying to get a grasp on conditions contributing to a recent outbreak.

With the winter tourist season kicking off soon -- Art Basel starts in little more than a week -- Miami Beach is hoping to juggle the twin task of spreading awareness while reassuring beachgoers the hookworms aren't a widespread problem.

``The problem is that with all our dependence on tourism, on money coming in from that source, the last thing you want people to associate with our beaches is that it's a dangerous condition or a dangerous situation,'' said Vincent Conte, senior physician of the Health Department. ``That's why we're trying to get a handle on this now before it gets out of hand.''

The hookworm infections in humans are blamed mostly on feral and stray cats. Health officials say the infected cats spread microscopic hookworm larvae by defecating on pathways to the west of the beach's sand dunes.

Conte said the Health Department first learned of the problem from a WPLG-ABC10 reporter in late October. Since then, an investigation has confirmed seven hookworm infections contracted between July and September. Eight more are under investigation, including that of a 3-year-old boy who reportedly contracted the disease on the beach this month off 87th Street.

HOT SPOTS

In response to the findings, authorities say that during the last four weeks, officials with the county, health department and the city of Miami Beach have worked to identify hot spots from 40th Street to 65th, an area expanding out from an outbreak epicenter at 50th Street.

Health department and city crews have separately searched for signs of cats and droppings, sanitized areas and treated possibly infected cats -- sometimes by lacing food with medication. The nonprofit Cat Network is helping. And meetings with private condos are expected.

Conte acknowledged that other illnesses threatening South Florida -- such as dengue fever and encephalitis -- may pose a higher health risk. But the red, itchy and blistering rash that appears after a mature larva burrows between layers of the skin requires medication and can be ugly and alarming.

The Health Department has passed out hundreds of informational hookworm fliers to beachgoers, in hopes of prompting people to report infections and offer tips on avoiding the parasites: Don't walk barefoot. Stretch out on a towel, not the sand. Rinse off before heading home.

But at the same time, tourism and business representatives are trying to put the issue in perspective.

``The hope is that the media doesn't blow it out of proportion,'' said Jerry Libbin, a Miami Beach commissioner and the city's chamber of commerce president. ``We don't want this to become a situation of, `Oh my God, the sky is falling.' ''

Libbin pointed to Center for Disease Control findings that in 2002 there were 1.3 billion cases of hookworm worldwide.

``It's not a rare kind of thing,'' he said. ``It is serious, but it's being dealt with seriously.''

ANXIOUS PARENT

For Nakary Eriksson, whose 3-year-old son is among the cases being investigated by the Health Department, that may not be much comfort.

``The thought to know that your child has a living larva in his skin is horrible,'' she told Miami Herald news partner WFOR-CBS4.

Assistant City Manager Hilda Fernandez said the city began addressing the problem as soon as officials learned of infections from the Health Department.

But Fernandez emphasized that there is no proof that the hookworm larvae exist in the sands of the beach area east of the dunes where people lay their blankets and lawn chairs.

``We're out there cleaning. We're out there sanitizing, but fortunately we're seeing it's not in our sand,'' she said.

The Greater Miami Convention & Visitors Bureau has also been brought in on meetings as authorities have recognized the potential impact to tourism, though Rolando Aedo, senior vice president of marketing for the bureau, says there is no evidence that has happened.

Reducing some of the urgency: Miami Beach's hotel hub is south of 40th Street, though some major resorts such as the Fontainebleau and Eden Roc are within the target area.

NORTH BEACH

Fernandez said the city is concentrating on the 25-block stretch in North Beach for now, but will check the rest of the city's beaches to make sure there aren't any other areas that could lead to infections.

Joe West, a Florida International University professor of hospitality management and chairman of the board of the local chapter of the Florida Restaurant and Lodging Association, said feral cats are far more prevalent among the city's residential area of the beach than the hotels to the south.

``I'd be concerned about it if it becomes widespread,'' he said. ``A couple of cases, though, doesn't worry me.''


Read more: