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About the Lower Keys

By
Real Estate Agent with Coldwell Banker Schmitt Real Estate Co.
Big Pine through Sugarloaf
For the Real Estate buyer or investor, the Lower Keys start at Mile Marker 30 or Big Pine Key
You have arrived in a world that is more laid back, slower-paced, more isolated in most ways, and geographically shaped differently.

* Until now you’ve been driving along the mostly northeast-to-southwest spine of each narrow Key, ocean to your left, Florida Bay or the Gulf of Mexico to your right, with neither body of water more than a few hundred feet away (or much less), for almost 100 miles

* Now, beginning at Spanish Harbor, you head north and then due west, before resuming (at Cudjoe Key) the trek towards the southwest (direction: Key West) that you’ve been traveling ever since you left Key Largo. (Ever wonder why it’s Key West and not Key South?)

* And something else is different! We are now crossing Keys that run more north-south than east-west. The actual ocean and gulf are now miles away, to our south or north, while we cross mangrove forests, wetlands, and pine barrens.

* Check out a map: the group of islands we call the Lower Keys are obviously different enough geographically from the Upper and Middle Keys (which run east-west, and end at Marathon) to have been considered by Colonial Spain as a different group of islands altogether. They were administered from Cuba, not from St. Augustine like the rest of Florida.

* When Spain sold Florida to the United States it did not intend to include Key West and the Lower Keys; the young (then Lt.) Admiral-to-be Perry was sent in the USS Shark (true story) to enforce the USA’s claim to the contrary. The rest is history.

This geography has implications today mainly in two ways:

First, the fabulous ecosystem of the Lower Keys backcountry provides – some claim, anyway – richer opportunities for boating and fishing, and certainly better kayaking and birding than any other portion of the Florida Keys from the Mainland to Key West. Almost the entire area north of the Overseas Highway (US#1) is protected wild environment as part of either the National Key Deer Refuge or Great White Heron National Wildlife Refuge. And that makes this part of the Keys very special, from a homeowner’s or visitor’s perspective.

Second, this north-south orientation of the islands provides dozens of flow-through channels in the event of hurricane storm surges, helping to reduce the extent of water pressure and flood damage. I’ve ridden out one category 3 hurricane in my friend’s house on Cudjoe Key, and while we had to deal with extensive flooding common to these great and rare storms, the damage was much less than it might have been if the storm surge water had been blocked and therefore tumbled whole houses in its path instead.
» Bill Burress Nationwide Mortgage Originator
» Bill Burress Nationwide Mortgage Originator - Fort Myers, FL

Karen:

I like your post.  I always been fascinated by the Keys.

Sep 08, 2007 01:05 AM
Simon Conway
Orlando Area Real Estate Services - Orlando, FL
*sigh* - I really miss Key West! The laid back attitude is far closer to life in the Islands than it is to the US. I remember wandering down the street going shopping with my wife while we both had drinks in our hands. Try that in Orlando and see how fast you get arrested! *lol*
Sep 08, 2007 01:21 AM
Charlie Ragonesi
AllMountainRealty.com - Big Canoe, GA
Homes - Big Canoe, Jasper, North Georgia Pros

I am curious what do prices run for lots in your area? Also is it more of a home buying market? If you buy land is it toug to get building permits?

Thanks for the blog look forward to getting the info

Sep 08, 2007 01:29 AM
Charlottesville Solutions
Charlottesville Solutions - Charlottesville, VA
Karen, All right we are coming down for a visit!!! lol... sounds great, we have never been but will one day.
Sep 08, 2007 02:06 AM