Downtowns & Small Towns Fishing Kayaking Biking Parks Wildlife Outdoors & Nature Cedar Key Steinhatchee Canoeing Suwannee Equestrian
The Cedar Key & Steinhatchee area provides a reprieve from the state’s fast pace with its uninhabited islands and quiet streets off the waterfront.
On and around Cedar Key, Florida history moves in reverse. Once a thriving fishing and commercial port where pencils were manufactured from its namesake cedar trees, this island now boasts seclusion from the state's quickening pulse. It gathers along with a dozen isles protected as the Cedar Keys National Wildlife Refuge and nearly another 100 small low-lying keys, tucked into the marshy coastline of Florida's affectionately dubbed Big Bend.
Composed of shallow saltwater estuaries rather than sandy beaches, the island group provides the habitat of choice for fish of many varieties. Once the pencil industry had decimated the cedar population, the region turned its economic attention to fishing and seafood remains its main industry, form of recreation and culinary offering.
The town of Cedar Key itself occupies Way Key, the only inhabited island of the chain. From there, you can catch charters or kayak out to some of the other islands to observe remnants of historic settlement - a lighthouse and military installations - and throngs of birds. The rookery at Seahorse Key hosts nesting brown pelicans, egrets, herons and ibis and is off-limits during the nesting season, March through June.
Cedar Key, which still looks like a frontier town in places, has developed a reputation for its artisan shops and seafood restaurants along Dock Street. Commercial fishermen farm clams, which have become a culinary icon. Artists and artisans fill galleries with sea-themed works. Every year the town celebrates its two specialties with an October Seafood Festival and an April Old Florida Celebration of the Arts.
Off the waterfront, quiet streets hold a historic inn, fishing cottages, B&Bs, modern condominiums, and Cedar Key Museum State Park, which looks back at the islands' eras of turtling, sponging, shipbuilding, fishing and pencil making.
Cedar Key lies at the end of a long road tethering it to a mainland shore popularly known as the Nature Coast, one of Florida's most pristine stretches, protected by refuges and jotted with small fishing villages.
Heading north from Cedar Key, you reach the mouth of the Suwannee River - the same one Stephen Foster sang about but never saw - at the fishing hamlet named for it. Kayakers and houseboaters (rentals available in Suwannee) explore the river - forested with pine, magnolia and cypress and populated with prehistoric creatures such as the alligator, the manatee, and the Gulf sturgeon, a large fish that shows itself in violent catapults into the air. Along the way, they find seafood houses and time-stilled towns to discover. Scuba divers dive the river's depth, particularly at the City of Hawkinsville Underwater Archaeological Preserve, the wreck of a steamboat.
Swim in the ever-cool waters where the springhead forms a natural pool and pumps out 116.9 million gallons of crystalline water every day.
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Suwannee River Greenway at Branford
Steinhatchee Landing Resort
Cedar Key Chamber of Commerce
Manatee Springs State Park
Fanning Springs State Park
Levy County Visitors Bureau
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