Welcome to CheapTickets. Since 1986.

Cheap Travel Deals

Note: An infant who turns 2 before or during travel requires a child's fare.

Flight preference

Expand search options (Multi-city, preferred airlines, etc.)

One-way | Flexible dates

Total guests in all rooms

I have a promotion code.

What is a promotion code?

A promotion code is your key to redeeming discounts, special CheapTickets offers and rewards. To redeem, enter your promotion code below, then look for hotels marked with the icon. We'll apply the discount to the total cost when you pay. Promotion codes can only be used once with each purchase, and they're good only up to the total amount of your purchase (including service fee and taxes) or promotion code amount, whichever is less.

What's this?

Expand search options (Hotel Chain, specific hotel name, amenities, star rating, promotion code, etc.)

Sorry, we cannot perform that search at this time. Either the pick-up or drop-off location needs to be an airport.

 

Expand search options (Automatic/manual transmission, discounts, air conditioning, etc.)

Select a location
Travel date range

Note: An infant who turns 2 before or during travel requires a child's fare.

Flight preference

I have a promotion code.

What is a promotion code?

A promotion code is your key to redeeming discounts, special CheapTickets offers and rewards. To redeem, enter your promotion code below, then look for hotels marked with the icon. We'll apply the discount to the total cost when you pay. Promotion codes can only be used once with each purchase, and they're good only up to the total amount of your purchase (including service fee and taxes) or promotion code amount, whichever is less.

What's this?

Need help booking your trip?

Book online or call

1-800-504-3249 (toll free)

Note: An infant who turns 2 before or during travel requires a child's fare.

Flight preference

Need help booking your trip?

Book online or call

1-800-504-3249 (toll free)

Total guests in all rooms

I have a promotion code.

What is a promotion code?

A promotion code is your key to redeeming discounts, special CheapTickets offers and rewards. To redeem, enter your promotion code below, then look for hotels marked with the icon. We'll apply the discount to the total cost when you pay. Promotion codes can only be used once with each purchase, and they're good only up to the total amount of your purchase (including service fee and taxes) or promotion code amount, whichever is less.

What's this?

Need help booking your trip?

Book online or call

1-800-504-3249 (toll free)

Note: An infant who turns 2 before or during travel requires a child's fare.

Flight preference

I have a promotion code.

What is a promotion code?

A promotion code is your key to redeeming discounts, special CheapTickets offers and rewards. To redeem, enter your promotion code below, then look for hotels marked with the icon. We'll apply the discount to the total cost when you pay. Promotion codes can only be used once with each purchase, and they're good only up to the total amount of your purchase (including service fee and taxes) or promotion code amount, whichever is less.

What's this?

Need help booking your trip?

Book online or call

1-800-504-3249 (toll free)

 
Frommer's Logo
Florida Keys Florida Keys
Photo credit: Corel

The drive from Miami to the Keys is a slow descent into an unusual but breathtaking American ecosystem: On either side of you, for miles ahead, lies nothing but emerald waters. (On weekends, however, you will also see plenty of traffic.) Strung out across the Atlantic Ocean like loose strands of cultured pearls, more than 400 islands make up this 150-mile-long chain of the Keys.

Despite the usually calm landscape, these rocky islands can be treacherous, as a series of tropical storms, hurricanes, and tornadoes reminded residents in the summer and fall of 1998, when millions of dollars of damage was inflicted. The exposed coast has always posed dangers to those on land as well as at sea.

When Spanish explorers Juan Ponce de León and Antonio de Herrera sailed amid these craggy, dangerous rocks in 1513, they and their men dubbed the string of islands "Los Martires" (The Martyrs), because they thought the rocks looked like men suffering in the surf. It wasn't until the early 1800s that rugged and ambitious pioneers, who amassed great wealth by salvaging cargo from ships sunk nearby, settled the larger islands (legend has it that these shipwrecks were sometimes caused by the "wreckers," who occasionally removed navigational markers from the shallows to lure unwitting captains aground). At the height of the salvaging mania (in the 1830s), Key West boasted the highest per capita income in the country.

However, wars, fires, hurricanes, mosquitoes, and the Depression took their toll on these resilient islands in the early part of the 20th century, causing wild swings between fortune and poverty. In 1938, the spectacular Overseas Highway (U.S. 1) was finally completed atop the ruins of Henry Flagler's railroad (which was destroyed by a hurricane in 1935, leaving only bits and pieces still found today), opening the region to tourists, who had never before been able to drive to this sea-bound destination. These days, the highway connects more than 30 of the populated islands in the Keys. The hundreds of small, undeveloped islands that surround these "mainline" keys are known locally as the "backcountry" and are home to dozens of exotic animals and plants. Therein lie some of the most renowned outdoor sporting opportunities, from bonefishing to spear fishing and -- at appropriate times of the year -- diving for lobsters. To get to the backcountry, you must take to the water -- a vital part of any trip to the Keys. Whether you fish, snorkel, dive, or just cruise, include some time on a boat in your itinerary; otherwise, you haven't truly seen the Keys.

Of course, people go to the Keys for the peaceful waters and the year-round warmth, but the sea and the teeming life beneath it are the main attractions here: Countless species of brilliantly colored fish can be found swimming above the ocean's floor, and you'll discover a stunning abundance of tropical and exotic plants, birds, and reptiles.

The warm, shallow waters (waters are deeper and rougher on the eastern/Atlantic side of the Keys) nurture living coral that supports a complex, delicate ecosystem of plants and animals -- sponges, anemones, jellyfish, crabs, rays, sharks, turtles, snails, lobsters, and thousands of types of fish. This vibrant underwater habitat thrives on one of the only living tropical reefs in the entire North American continent. As a result, anglers, divers, snorkelers, and watersports enthusiasts of all kinds come to explore.

Heavy traffic has taken its toll on this fragile ecoscape, but conservation efforts are underway (traffic laws are strictly enforced on Deer Key, for example, due to deer crossings that have been contained thanks to newly installed fences). In fact, environmental efforts in the Keys exceed those in many other high-traffic visitor destinations.

Although the atmosphere throughout the Keys is that of a laid-back beach town, don't expect to find many impressive beaches here, especially after the damaging effects of the tropical storms and hurricanes in 1998. Beaches are mostly found in a few private resorts, though there are some small, sandy beaches in John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park, Bahia Honda State Park, and in Key West. One great exception is Sombrero Beach in Marathon, which is well maintained by Monroe County and is larger and considerably nicer than other beaches in the Keys. Sombrero Beach features a beachfront park, picnic facilities, a playground, and a protected cove for children at the west end of the beach.

The Keys are divided into three sections, both geographically and in this chapter. The Upper and Middle Keys are closest to the Florida mainland, so they are popular with weekend warriors who come by boat or car to fish or relax in towns like Key Largo, Islamorada, and Marathon. Further on, just beyond the impressive Seven-Mile Bridge (which actually measures only 6 1/2 miles), are the Lower Keys, a small, unspoiled swath of islands teeming with wildlife. Here, in the protected regions of the Lower Keys, is where you're most likely to catch sight of the area's many endangered animals -- with patience, you may spot the rare eagle, egret, or Key deer. You should also keep an eye out for alligators, turtles, rabbits, and a huge variety of birds.

Key West, the most renowned -- and last -- island in the Lower Keys, is literally at the end of the road. The southernmost point in the continental United States (made famous by the Nobel Prize-winning Ernest Hemingway), this tiny island is the most popular destination in the Florida Keys, overrun with cruise-ship passengers and day-trippers, as well as franchises and T-shirt shops. More than 1.6 million visitors pass through each year. Still, this "Conch Republic" has a tightly knit community of permanent residents who cling fiercely to their live-and-let-live attitude -- an atmosphere that has made Key West famously popular with painters, writers, and free spirits.

 




Top Hotel Destinations

Top Vacations

Cheap Cruise Deals

CheapTickets® guards your privacy and security. We're certified by TRUSTe and Verisign.
© 2002-2008, Trip Network, Inc. (d/b/a CheapTickets) All rights reserved.

CST 2062836-40; Florida ST-35651; Hawaii TAR-5863; Iowa TA-721; Nevada 2002-0423;
Washington 601 205 049 001 0001