Florida Travel: Visit Marco Island and Naples

From bird watching to beachcombing, the Paradise Coast tantalizes outdoor enthusiasts with miles of natural thrills.
 

There's a good reason it's called the Paradise Coast. More than 80 percent of Collier County in southwest Florida, which encompasses Naples, Marco Island and the western side of the Everglades, is designated as parkland and nature preserves. The beachside communities are surrounded by tranquil tropical forests, islands and estuaries, which provide safe habitats for hundreds of species of birds, fish and mammals.

In other words, it's impossible to experience all the Paradise Coast has to offer by staying inside. Pick your favorite pastime and read on to find the perfect spot for an outdoor adventure within this scenic, wildlife-rich region along the Gulf of Mexico.

Bird Watching

About 200 species of birds have been spotted in the area, earning it several notations on the Great Florida Birding Trail. Hotspots include:

Did you know? In birding lingo, "fallout" means the sudden arrival of large numbers of migratory birds that descend on a given locale as a result of meteorological or seasonal forces.

Dolphin Spotting

Sea Excursions' 10,000 Islands Dolphin Project, the only ongoing study of wild dolphins in southwest Florida, allows visitors to become a daily part of their scientific research team. The ecotours cruise the Gulf waters around Marco Island on the Dolphin Explorer. When a bottlenose dolphin is spotted – with your help – it's photographed, its location and behavior are recorded, and the pictures are immediately downloaded and printed on the boat. An on-board naturalist gives lessons in identifying the area's playful residents by their distinctive dorsal fins. The three-hour trip also stops on a barrier island beach such as Keewaydin for shelling. Added bonus: from May to September, manatees often pop up en route.

Did you know? Dolphins squeeze in about eight hours of slumber a day. They accomplish this with short naps and only shut down half of their brain at a time so that they remain alert to predators.

Paddling

The Paradise Coast Blueway provides a GPS-coordinated network of paddling routes through the cypress, mangroves and Gulf waters that hug the area's shoreline, creating a template for adventurous day trips or overnight camping on uninhabited islands. The Blueway's completed first phase traverses Everglades National Park and the Ten Thousand Islands National Wildlife Refuge.

Need a guide? Rookery Bay offers kayak trips into the wild.

To the north, the Rookery Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve runs guided kayak trips on the two-mile Shell Point Canoe Trail; it's a relaxed paddle around mangrove islands and across shallow stretches of bay. Don't miss Rookery Bay's Environmental Learning Center, where exhibitions and a 2,300-gallon aquarium add eye-opening context to the area's natural wonders.

Did you know? Sandfly Island, within paddling distance of the Everglades National Park Gulf Coast Visitor Center, is actually a 75-acre shell mound constructed by Native Americans more than 2,000 years ago.

Boating and Fishing

If self-propelled touring isn't your cup of tea, sit back and let one of the area's boat captains handle your Paradise Coast navigation. Everglades National Park runs daily trips into the mangrove wilderness from its Gulf Coast Visitor Center. Florida's toothy denizens make regular appearances on the Airboats and Alligators tours of Lake Trafford, northeast of Naples. Numerous fishing charters carry anglers into the Gulf to land grouper and permit, or patrol the backwaters for redfish, tarpon and seatrout; the Ten Thousand Islands area of Everglades National Park ranks among the top fishing grounds in the state.

Did you know? The mangroves and sea grass beds of the Ten Thousand Islands act as a nursery for many of the area's fish.

Beachcombing and Sunset Strolls

White-sand beaches dot the coast, creating postcard-worthy backdrops for everything from shelling expeditions to romantic sunset walks. Within the last five years, Naples Beach landed on Conde Nast Traveler's list of the "20 Best Beaches in America," and took home top honors from the Travel Channel, which called it "America's Best All-Around Beach."

On Marco Island, Tigertail Beach Park offers easily accessible sands, a protected tidal lagoon and an aquatic toy concession. A lush coastal hammock of sable palms and gumbo-limbo trees greets visitors to 342-acre Barefoot Beach Preserve County Park, set on a barrier island at the northernmost end of Collier County.

Did you know? Horseshoe crabs would do well on "Survivor." These kind of spiders, which can be found at Tigertail Beach, have remained virtually unchanged for 250 million years and can go a year without eating.

Places to Remember