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Destinations / Key Largo

Key Largo

Overview

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As you drive south into the Florida Keys, you'll see the signs for the first of the islands ... Key Largo. If you're a fan of old movies, you'll probably think of Bogart and Bacall, trapped with some gangsters in a hotel during a hurricane. Key Largo was mostly filmed on a Hollywood sound stage, but the script was written in the island's only hotel at the time, and the 1948 classic helped create the mystique of the keys as the last-chance, tropical end-of-the-road on the Atlantic Seaboard.

Today Key Largo, the longest in the island chain, is a popular bedroom community and a favorite stop for divers, who split their underwater time between several offshore wrecks and famed John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park. Covering more than 70 square miles offshore, it was the country's first underwater state park and remains a wonderland of corals and tropical fish (more than 600 varieties).

This being the keys, fishing, kayaking, and eco-tours also have their field days. (Ever seen a manatee or roseate spoonbill? The islands of Everglades National Park are less than 2 miles away.) And that trip into the everglades might just put you into the mood to hop aboard the African Queen ... how the rundown steamer used in that Bogie-Hepburn classic ended up as a tour attraction at a Key Largo Holiday Inn is anybody's guess. But this is the Keys, remember?

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DIVING

In June, 2002, the Spiegel Grove, a landing ship almost the length of two football fields, became the newest - and most spectacular - artificial reef off Key Largo. The ship, already home to large schools of fish, rests on the bottom 6 miles offshore in 130 feet of water and joins the Duane and the Bibb, a pair of Coast Guard cutters purposely sunk in 1987. Experienced wreck divers can explore the interior of the Spiegel Grove, but even snorkelers can peer down at the eerie outlines of the hull and decks about 50 feet below.

FISHING

Key Largo guides like to brag that about 1 of every 10 saltwater and flyfishing record fish have been landed here. While the sailfish and marlin offshore may be the most prized catches, savvy fishermen know that the real challenges here are the bonefish (along the flats) and the tarpon in the backcountry waters of Florida Bay.

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