Summation Weekly August 31, 2016

Page 1

Summati

THE

n Weekly USPS Publication Number 16300

T h i s C o m mu n i t y N ew s p a p e r is a publication of Escambia / Santa Rosa Bar Association

Section A, Page 1

Vol. 16, No. 34

Visit The Summation Weekly Online: www.summationweekly.com

August 31, 2016

1 Section, 12 Pages

road trip Quick Trips Along Highway 90 by Kelly Oden

Who doesn’t love a road trip? Open road, open skies and the promise of adventure at every turn. Sometimes a quick getaway is all we need to reconnect with nature and recharge our batteries. Fortunately for us, Pensacola is just a hop, skip and a jump from a variety of historical sites, unique natural wonders and wildlife encounters. These locations are perfect for a quick day trip or even a long weekend. Either way, you’ll come back renewed and ready to face the work week ahead. Sometimes referred to as the Southern Route 66, Highway 90 runs from the ocean city of Jacksonville, Fla. to the desert town of Van Horn in west Texas. A portion of Highway 90 is also considered to be part of the original Old Spanish Trail, which once linked St. Augustine and San Diego via a partially brick-paved road. In Milton, visitors can still explore seven miles of that original brick-paved Old Spanish Trail. The trail connects to hundreds of miles of hiking and biking trails in the Blackwater River State Forest, the largest forest in Florida. The modern Highway 90 has its own charms, however. From quaint towns with significant historical sites to crystal clear springs, waterfalls and even caverns of limestone formations, Highway 90 holds many treasures that make for the perfect day trip.

Coldwater Gardens 7009 Creek Stone Rd. Milton, FL (850) 426-1300 coldwatergardens.com

So close to Pensacola, yet you will feel a million miles away at the organic, eco-chic agritourism and ecotourism retreat that is Coldwater Gardens. Nestled on hundreds of acres in Milton, Fla., Coldwater Gardens boasts rich organic and aquaponics gardens, treehouse and glamping accommodations, Coldwater Creek access, and 8 miles of trails and primitive roads. Coldwater offers education, recreation, and exploration of nature and agricultural practices. Visitors can enjoy the creek, eat from the gardens, hangout at the terrace and glamp the night away. Coldwater currently offers 10 primitive campsites (right on the sandy beaches of Coldwater Creek), six glamping tents, one tiny house, a “treehouse,” and four luxury cottages.

Defuniak Springs defuniaksprings.net defuniaksprings.com

The quaint town of Defuniak Springs is a mere hour and fifteen minutes from Pensacola. The town sits on the banks of the spring-fed Lake Defuniak, which is a true rarity¬¬¬—one of only two such almost perfectly circular bodies of water in the world. The other is located in Switzerland. A collection of Victorian homes surrounds the lake and adds to the nostalgic charm. Founded in the 1880s as a railroad stop for the L & N Railroad, DeFuniak

Springs retains its old Florida look and feel. In fact, the Walton County Library on Circle Drive is the oldest library in Florida still operating in its original building. It houses an interesting assortment of antiquities, including an impressive medieval weapon collection and many first-edition books. The former L&N railroad depot now houses the Walton County Heritage Museum. The town became the winter home of the New York Chautauqua, an educational movement that attracted thousands of visitors to Defuniak Springs in the late 1800s and early 1900s. Chautauqua Vineyards, a 40acre vineyard located 12 miles north of Defuniak Springs offer tours and tastings of their wide variety of muscadine wines.

Ponce De Leon Springs 2860 State Park Road. Ponce de Leon Springs, FL 32455 (850) 836-4281 www.floridastateparks. org/park/Ponce-de-Leon-Springs

Named for the famed explorer who sought the fountain of youth, Ponce de Leon Springs may not grant you eternal youth, but its majestic beauty will certainly relax your mind while its crisp cool waters are

Seacrest Wolf Preserve 3449 Bonnett Pond Rd. Chipley, FL 32428 (850) 773-2897 www.seacrestwolfpreserve.org

Wild animals are fascinating and potentially dangerous creatures. If you love the idea of spending time with wild wolves in a relatively safe environment, this is the trip for you. Seacrest Wolf Preserve, Inc. is a non-profit organization dedicated to wolf and wildlife conservation through education. At Seacrest Wolf Preserve, humans and wolves connect in nature for educational purposes. The rare hands on wolf-human interaction are profound learning opportunities for humans to connect on a deeper level with wolves in the hope that visitors will be inspired to join the effort to save America’s wolves and wild heritage. The preserve offers a variety of tour options, but the four-hour Saturday educational tour is the most economical. It includes plenty of wolf centric education and interaction with three wolf packs, including both Grey and Arctic wolves. The tour concludes at the small animal adventure where guests can cuddle with skunks, interact with foxes and feed the raccoons. Only children 12 and

stalactites, stalagmites, soda straws, flowstones and draperies. The park’s caves have a long and interesting geologic history beginning about 38 million years ago when this area was submerged beneath high sea levels. Shells, coral and sediments gradually accumulated on the sea floor and as sea levels fell, these materials hardened into limestone. During the last million years, acidic groundwater dissolved crevices just below the surface creating cave passages large enough to walk through. Sta-

Falling Waters 1130 State Park Road Chipley, FL 32428 (850) 638-6130 floridastateparks.org/ park/Falling-Waters

The star of the show at Falling Waters State Park is most certainly Florida’s highest waterfall. To see the waterfall, visitors follow Sink Hole Trail, a boardwalk flanked by huge trees and fern-covered sinkholes. Falling Waters Sink is a 100-foot deep, 20-

Seacrest wolf preserve

Ponce de leon springs sure to revive your senses. The crystal clear water maintains a year-round temperature of 68 degrees. Approximately 14 million gallons of pure water emerges daily from the Ponce de Leon Spring. Spring water emanates from the aquifer deep underground. European settlers and American Indians before them used this spring as a source of drinking water and recreation. While the spring is the main attraction, the park also offers ample opportunity for hiking, birding, fishing, snorkeling and even geocaching.

hole, New Deal-era golf course set in beautiful rolling terrain.

older are allowed on the wolf lactites, stalagmites, flowstone encounter tour. Camping is and other fragile cave-drip foralso available on the preserve. mations were by a similar disFlorida Caverns State solving process by the naturally acidic rainwater. The caves Park provide a habitat for the blind 3345 Caverns Road cave crayfish, cave salamanMarianna, FL 32446 ders and three species of cave (850) 482-1228 www.floridastateparks. roosting bats. The park also org/park/Florida-Cav- contains the Chipola River and Blue Hole Spring, which proerns Florida Caverns State Park is vide areas for fishing, canoethe only state park in Florida ing and boating. Florida Cavto offer cave tours to the pub- erns State Park is popular for lic. Inside the dry (air-filled) camping, picnicking, fishing, caves, visitors will see incred- hiking, and horseback riding. ible formations of limestone The park also features a nine-

foot wide cylindrical pit into which flows a small stream that drops 73 feet to the bottom of the sink. The water’s final destination remains unknown. Located a few miles south of I-10, the quiet and serene park also offers visitors the chance to see beautiful native and migrating butterflies in the butterfly garden, take a dip in the lake, or have a family picnic. Hikers enjoy trekking through the green, gently sloping landscape of North Florida. Fullfacility campsites nestled in a shady pine forest provide the perfect excuse for an overnight stay at Falling Waters. Flea Across Florida Sidebar Begun as a community-oriented event with the mission of bringing people to small communities along Highway 90, many of which have been bypassed since the construction of I-10, Flea across Florida is now considered Florida’s longest yard sale. The giant, 272mile yard sale stretches along Highway 90 from Live Oak to Pensacola and features thousands of vendors. For two days in April and September, shoppers and treasure hunters drive along Highway 90 in search of good deals and rare finds and to experience the charm of the many small towns, restaurants and inns along the way. The 2016 fall dates are Sept. 9 through 10. An interactive map of vendors is available at thefleaacrossflorida.com.


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Summation Weekly August 31, 2016 by Ballinger Publishing - Issuu