Things to do: Pensacola’s beaches are a top attraction, including the unspoiled shorelines of Gulf Islands National Seashore and the “lost island,” Perdido Key. Fans get a breathtaking view of Pensacola Bay during Blue Wahoos games and any number of tournaments and community events in the stadium all year long. The stadium regularly leads all their Southern League peers in attendance despite being the smallest ballpark, only holding about 5,000 fans. The key also has a fire station, an elementary school and a church.Pensacola Blue Wahoos (Minnesota Twins AA affiliate)īallpark : Blue Wahoos Stadium, home of the titular team since 2012, is consistently a top draw in the Southern League.
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There is an excellent kayak eco-tour departing from the marina plus canoe and kayak rentals available. Today, Sugarloaf Key, which is 17 miles from Key West, boasts a motel and restaurant, a marina with a bait and tackle shop, a convenience store/deli/gas station, a post office, a bank, an airstrip, a large marine dealer and repair business and an auto repair shop. The bait was put out, but the bats never showed up, leaving the tower a conversational point of interest to this day. The fifty foot wooden tower was built to house large colonies of bats which in turn would hopefully devour the clouds of mosquitoes. On the north side of the highway, near the airstrip and behind the Sugarloaf Lodge marina and restaurant can be found the famous "Bat Tower" constructed by Richter C. The second theory is that it was simply named after the Sugarloaf Pineapples which were once grown here commercially. One would tell us simply that there was once a very large Indian mound near the eastern shore just north of what is now the Bow Channel bridge, that was shaped like an old fashioned loaf of sugar, hence the name. There appears to be possibly two theories on how Sugarloaf Key got it's name. The island has a marina-dive-bait shop, a convenience store/deli, a county sheriff station, three restaurants and an excellent veterinarian. Bow Channel which separates Cudjoe and Sugarloaf Keys was named after a lady pioneer, Lily Lawrence Bow, who resided on the western shore from 1904 to 1906.
A third theory has a freed slave residing here taking the name Cudjoe for himself in reverence to a Jamaican rebel slave leader.Ĭudjoe Key is mostly inhabited on the southern shores below US 1, while much of the rest of the island is wetlands and pinewoods, with many cabbage palms, a somewhat rare plant in the Keys. Another talks of an early Key Wester with a speech impediment who referred to his cousin Joe, then living on the island, as "Cud Joe". One is simply that early settlers would come here to "cut joe", the joewood trees that were so prevalent. This Key also has some interesting theories about it's name. Located about 21 miles from Key West, Cudjoe Key is probably best known for "Fat Albert", a military aerostat blimp tethered at the north end of the island since the Cuban Missile Crisis in the early sixties. These include: two large marine dealers, two dive shops, two bait/tackle shops, two convenience/gas stations, a post office, two banks, two beauty shops, two liquor stores, a major chain grocery store, boat rentals, kayak rentals, video rentals, florists, three building supply/hardware stores, dentists, doctors, gift stores, eleven restaurants and more. Most of Big Pine Key is pine lands and hardwood hammocks fringed by wetlands and transitional wetlands.Īlong US 1 you will find much more diverse commercial activities and businesses. The developed areas are scattered about the island with state and federal protected lands in between. Big Pine lies within both the Key Deer and Great White Heron National Wildlife Refuges. Points of interest include The Blue Hole which contains fresh water turtles, fish and alligators, and the Nature Trail which meanders through federal refuge lands. It is also home to the famous little Key Deer. It is named for the extensive stands of Southern Slash Pines that are found here and on nearby No Name Key and Little Pine Key.
Located about 30 miles from Key West, Big Pine Key is the largest of the Lower Keys, while being second largest only to Key Largo.