Orlando Attractions near Caribe Cove
Orlando visitors are looking for new and exciting activities
in addition to their visits to the area’s major theme parks.
Whether its adrenaline sports like skydiving, or looking for ways
to connect with nature, the Orlando area has something for everyone.
In promoting Caribe Cove, we are actively advising guests of all
the terrific activities just around the corner.
These include:
Downtown Disney, with shops, restaurants, movie theaters, shows,
and nightlife
Cirque du Soleil’s “La Nouba” show (at Downtown
Disney)
House of Blues (at Downtown Disney) - great live music, shows,
and Gospel Brunch on Sundays
Fishing and Eco-Tours
Blue Springs State Park - See the Manatees
Shopping at Premium Outlet Mall, Florida Mall, Mall at Millenia,
Gift Shops and Boutiques
Championship Golf Courses
Miniature Golf
Hot Air Balloon Rides
Fantasy of Flight - Air Museum and Air Show Events
Glider Rides and Lessons - Florida’s largest glider port
is just 10 minutes from Caribe Cove
Everglades Airboat Adventures
International Drive / Convention Center (approximately 20 minute
drive) - Events and Shows
Blue Man Group show at Universal City Walk
Gatorland - See Florida’s alligators, up close and personal
(great for kids)
Medieval Times Dinner Show
Arabian Nights Dinner Show
Kennedy Space Center (approximately 50 minute drive)
Ripley’s Believe it or Not Museum - Oddities from Around
the World (on International Drive)
Wonderworks Museum - The strange and the fantastic (on International
Drive)
Nightlife - Pleasure Island at Downtown Disney (bars, nightclubs,
movies)
Theater - Bob Carr Performing Arts Center - Broadway plays, orchestra
performances, ballet
Museums - Orlando Science Center; Orange County Regional History
Center
The ticket sales desk in receptions will offer all of these discounted
park tickets for our guests.
Caribe Cove Resort Kissimmee Information
The lure of Walt Disney World has turned Orlando into the third-ranking
U.S. destination for overseas travelers, just behind Los Angeles
and New York City. The city has also established itself as part
of Florida's high-tech corridor. While everybody knows the big-name
theme parks – there are plenty of smaller versions of entertainment
type parks and destinations all around Orlando – catering
to just about any taste or age group. Orlando boasts not only
the space technology industries focused on the Florida Space Coast,
but a healthy dose of bits and bytes makers as well.
Orientation
The biggest city in Central Florida, Orlando is dominated by
Lake Eola in its northeastern downtown quadrant. The most famous
downtown icon is Church Street Station, a collection of restaurants,
bars and shops located between Interstate 4 and the railroad tracks.
When to Go
Orlando 's temperate climate - and the lure of the Mouse - make
it a year-round destination. Planning to visit Disney World is
akin to studying Sun Tzu's The Art of War. Visiting Orlando can
be much the same if the D-World is on your itinerary. As a general
rule, avoid school holidays. Otherwise, try to avoid the peak
summer period; before Thanksgiving and after (up until Christmas)
and then late January are good bets.
Downtown Orlando
If you're looking for Walt Disney World, it's located in the
entirely separate city of Lake Buena Vista. Orlando is a city
in its own right, with a thriving downtown, and suburbs with a
diverse array of art galleries, shops and restaurants.
Outside of the theme parks, Orlando's main attractions are: the
Harry P. Leu Gardens, an estate with over 2000 varieties of camellia
and an 18th-century mansion; the Orlando Science Center, which
has a gator hole and the physics-friendly Tunnel of Discovery;
and the Orlando Museum of Art, which showcases Mayan archeological
finds.
Walt Disney World®
This is a self-contained city. Apart from the four main parks
(Magic Kingdom® Park, Epcot®, Disney-MGM Studios®,
and Disney’s Animal Kingdom®), there are three water
parks, a shopping district, 22 hotels, countless eateries, a police
force, transport systems, medical centers, even kennels for the
pooch.
In its first year, Walt Disney World® saw over 10 million
visitors, and it remains one of the world's top tourist destinations,
now attracting more than 20 million visitors a year. It's also
the world's biggest amusement resort, covering an area twice the
size of New York's Manhattan.
Blue Spring State Park
For hundreds of years the Blue Spring area was home to the Timucuan
Indians. Today, Blue Spring State is the best place in the state
to see manatees in their natural habitat, especially between November
and March, when the St John's River to the north gets cold enough
to drive the manatees to Blue Spring's warmer waters. There are
campsites and cabins within the park, but book ahead as things
get crowded. Blue Spring State Park is about 40 miles north of
Orlando off of I-4, near a town called Cassadaga.
Kennedy Space Center
To some people, Neil Armstrong's, "One small step for man,
one giant leap for mankind," spoken as he became the first
man to walk on the moon in 1969, are legendary. Since then, we
have had a longstanding love affair with space travel and the
scientists who make it possible. There's no better place to stand
in awe of the "right stuff" than the Kennedy Space Center,
off the east coast of central Florida.
The center draws two million people a year to its Gallery of Spaceflight,
packed with real spacecraft and scale models. It was established
in 1958, when the National Aeronautics & Space Administration
(NASA) started Project Mercury to compete with the Soviets' successful
launch of Sputnik. The USA started launching its spaceships from
Cape Canaveral, a stone's throw from the Kennedy Space Center,
because of its weather, its proximity to the ocean (for splash
landings) and the huge, unpopulated tracts of land available to
the government for testing. Mercury was succeeded by Project Gemini,
then Project Apollo, which landed a man on the moon. The Space
Coast still maintains facilities for unmanned and space shuttle
launches.
Titusville, the main gateway to the Kennedy Space Center and the
wildlife refuge, hosts the Astronaut Hall of Fame, dedicated to
exhibiting every detail of the astronauts' lives and boasting
a shuttle landing simulator ride and G-force trainer. Titusville
also has excellent vantage points from which to watch shuttle
launches.
The Kennedy Space Center is on Merritt Island, on the eastern
side of the Intracoastal Waterway (better known as Indian River
in Orlando). The NASA Causeway is the main east-west thoroughfare
and begins at the junction of Highway 405 and Highway One. The
Banana River separates the main Kennedy Space Center complex from
Cape Canaveral, the site of the first launches of the U.S. space
program. You will need a car to get to the Space Coast. Greyhound
buses only get as close as Titusville, seven miles west of the
Space Center, off Highway 405.
Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge
NASA only uses five percent of its land area. It turned over its
unused land to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 1963, who
established the Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, where
migrating birds stop on their way to and from South America. Manatees,
alligators and turtles also inhabit the refuge. The best time
to visit is from October to May. Black Point Wildlife Drive, a
six mile loop, is a good road for self-guided tours. A two-hour
bus tour leaves from the Kennedy Space Center, taking visitors
around the coast.
Ocala National Forest
The Ocala National Forest is a gigantic, old, established Florida
park with several natural springs and lakes, and fantastic hiking,
canoeing, fishing and swimming. You can camp anywhere in the park.
Three major spring areas make up the park: Juniper Springs, Salt
Springs and Alexander Springs. The Juniper Springs are incredibly
clear and beautiful and offer great canoeing. Salt Springs and
Alexander Springs have trails through cypress forests. The Lake
Eaton Sinkhole is 80 feet deep and 450 feet in diameter, and a
staircase leads down into the hole. Nearby Lake Eaton is a good
spot for swimming and sunning.
The Ocala National Forest is 10 miles east of Ocala, which is
about 60 miles northwest of Orlando and is the best base for exploring
the forest. Highway 19 runs north and south through the park and
Highway 40 runs east and west. You'll need a car to get there.
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