Posts Tagged With: Winter Park FL

2018 Trip 5: Orlando and Palm Beach, Oct. 27-29

Rollins College in Winter Park, FL

Kissimmee, FL October 29

We have been to Orlando and Florida so frequently that I can visualize many of our highway exits in advance. The flight down on Saturday was easy but Chris had the window seat for a change. My cold and cough were practically gone but her hacking was still quite noticeable. She got the window seat away from people. Her inability to talk to her neighbor was mitigated since the aisle seat was only occupied for one-half of the flight anyway and we both watched inane movies that distracted us.

For the first five nights we are staying at Vacation Village at Parkway, one of many timeshares in the area. It is big; 20 buildings with 7 to 13 stories each. We have found it clean and pleasant with the usual amenities. VV at Parkway was chosen primarily because it is on the south side of Orlando and we will be driving south to Palm Beach Thursday.

Sunday was spent in the Winter Park area. In this part of Florida there are four “Winter” towns; Winter Park, Winter Haven, Winter Springs, and Winter Garden. All are in the 30-40 thousand population range but Winter Park is a bit older and more established as a town. We had been to the Charles Hosmer Morse Museum in Winter Park previously. Northern business magnates established the town in the late 1800s; with the arrival of the railroad the little town was prospering. The downtown area along a lake was active with people eating at cafes and strolling along the lake front. Today our first stop was for a one hour boat tour of three of the inter-connected lakes in the area.

Our boat excursion was with Scenic Boat Tours. On the tour, we found it was the oldest operating attraction in the state of Florida, beginning in 1938. The boats are comfortable, not fancy; basically stripped down pontoon boats with pleasant seats but no canopies. This tour covers Lake Virginia, Lake Osceola, and Lake Maitland. There are numerous spring-fed interconnected lakes in this part of Florida (Winter Haven has over 50) and the three lakes we rode on are home to expensive mansions.

Scenic Tour boats going through one of the canals

There are narrow canals that provide the waterway connection; creeks that had been previously used by lumber companies to ship timber to a sawmill on Lake Virginia. During the Depression, WPA crews widened and improved the banks so the canals are kept boat accessible year around. At least most of the time; our driver indicated two years ago during a dry time, the canals were not deep enough.

The canals operate on a chance basis. They are basically wide enough for one boat and you hope you do not encounter another boat coming at you before you complete the one-two block long winding canal. The tour operates 6-7 boats who go through the canal about 250 feet apart and the last one through tells any waiting traffic that it is clear to proceed. Our boat did encounter two paddelboarders working feverishly to get out of the canal before we caught up to them.

Examples of homes along the lakes in Winter Park and Maitland FL

The tour guide talks extensively of the homes along the shores. Stories such as: the home of the NBA star whose home when sold had to be renovated to lower the height of the light switches, counters, and toilets; the home of a Cortland NY 1800s lumber baron who in order to convince his wife to come down to Florida built an exact replica of their Cortland home; and the largest home on the chain of lakes at 30,000 square feet.

We saw the water side of Rollins College, a small liberal arts college with an endowment of $300 million, in the top ten percent of colleges. The lake has buoys marking the slalom practice area for the water skiing team. The tour guide extolled the chapel and art museum so we later stopped by there also.

It was a surprise to us to learn that Fred Rogers (Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood) went to Rollins. Evidently his family had big bucks from local business operations and after one year at Dartmouth, Fred transferred here. His family bought a lake home for him and his grand piano while he finished the last three years at Rollins. He met his wife here and they wintered in a home along the lake frequently. (He also lived in the Squirrel Hill neighborhood of Pittsburgh.)

Knowles Chapel at Rollins College in Winter Park, FL

After the tour we visited a few land sites pointed out on the boat tour. The Kraft Azalea Garden is probably a nice site to hold a small wedding but nothing distinctive. The Knowles Memorial Chapel at Rollins College was designed by Ralph Adams Cram who designed more than 75 churches and cathedrals. He declared it his favorite. We were not impressed, it was pleasant but nothing notable. The exterior was more striking with the soft white across the blue sky, the interior dark.

The Cornell Art Museum at Rollins is small. It may have notable acquisitions but few, if any, were on display. There was a special, small, exhibit organized by the Ringling Museum out of Sarasota with several striking paintings under the theme of “Dangerous Women”.

Views along our walk at Mead Botanical Garden

The Mead Botanical Garden was our final stop. It is fall and not much flora was in flowering mode but we had a pleasant walk here. Most of the visitors were with a photography group that was utilizing the grounds for a special outing or with a weekly yoga group.

Sunday dinner was in our timeshare, one way to save money and avoid lines at restaurants in this top visitor destination. Monday we exercised walking throughout VV at Parkway in the morning and spent the afternoon by the pool.

One of the pools at Vacation Village at Parkway, Kissimmee FL

Ed and Chris
October 30, 2018

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2015 Trip 1, Feb. 16-17, Florida in Winter

Orlando, Monday Feb. 16

The morning was boring. Well, breakfast at the Sweet Magnolia Inn was nutritious, tasty, and provided good company. But the first 2/3 of the trip to Orlando was two lane road through small towns with the scenery changing from aggregate mining/lumber harvesting to dairy and cattle ranching with scrub forests in between. Seen it before, not all that exciting.

Paynes Prairie Preserve State Park

Paynes Prairie Preserve State Park

We tried to ratchet up the excitement factor by stopping at Paynes Prairie Preserve State Park. It is just south of Gainesville, Florida. This park is a vast grassland (prairie), similar to those out west except for the swampy overlay. Slight uplands provide small forests around its edges. However, it is better known for re-introducing three animals that were present here in the 1700 and 1800s; bison, swamp cattle, and Spanish horses.

Part of a trail at Paynes Prairie Preserve State Park

Part of a trail at Paynes Prairie Preserve State Park

Bison in Florida? Ubetcha! Along with the horses and cattle introduced by Spaniards, the three animals exist in small herds in this park. The park also is home to alligators, feral pigs, and numerous birds plus your usual rodents, etc. The possibility of one place in Florida combining bison and alligators was too good to be passed over.

Part of the horse herd at Paynes Prairie

Part of the horse herd at Paynes Prairie

Alas, we either walked in the wrong areas or did not spend enough time here. We did see the wild horses but no gators, pigs, or bison. This park may have to be a destination for another year.

We arrived in Orlando just before dark. Our home for the next eight nights will be a small unit at the Hilton Grand Vacations timeshare in Orlando. It is basically a hotel room with a kitchenette. The smaller room allows us to stretch our time share allocation into 8 nights here along with four more nights in Miami Beach at the end of March. We are right off International Drive, so a quick trip to Publix for groceries was easy to accomplish.

Orlando, Tuesday Feb. 17.

Leu Gardens Orlando FL

Leu Gardens Orlando FL

Rain and high winds are forecast for this afternoon. We took advantage of the morning warmth (70-78 F) and partially sunny skies and made a visit to the Leu Gardens in Orlando. This is a botanical garden, so flowers and plants are on display but they also try out new plant species and varieties to determine if the plants will thrive in the Orlando climate. Azaleas and camellias were out but most camellia bushes seemed to be past their peak. The gardens are set alongside one of the Orlando lakes.

Leu house

Leu house

One of the frog sculptues, Leu Gardens

One of the frog sculptues, Leu Gardens

Harry Leu ran an Orlando hardware store and sold agricultural machinery that became a large industrial supply distributor. In 1932, he married his 20 years younger secretary and they became the fourth owners of the house and its grounds (almost 50 acres). They traveled and they enjoyed gardening at the home, which at that time, was “out in the country”. They donated the land, gardens, and remodeled home to the city in 1961. Now it is a lovely garden and the home is open for tours. The gardens currently have a special sculpture exhibit throughout the grounds. The artist, J.A. Cobb, has created copper frogs in various poses.

One of Cunningham's paintings, from a brochure

One of Cunningham’s paintings, from a brochure

After the gardens and lunch, we went to the Mennello Museum of American Art. Marilyn and Michael Mennello are Orlando philanthropists (I never received an answer as to exactly what Mennello did to make his money.) The museum shows exhibits of American art, with its major focus the works of Earl Cunningham. Cunningham, who died in 1977, painted folk art, sometimes his work is called primitive work, primarily landscapes. He painted scenes as he saw them or wished to see them, not trying to paint a realistic depiction. We found his use of color and imagery quite enthralling. The museum shows a video about him, his life and his works. The Mennellos were early enthusiasts who, some years after his death, began acquiring large numbers of his work to put on display. The Mennello Museum is the result of that and is now owned by the City of Orlando.

The Mennello also displays rotating exhibits. The current one is the works of Dale Kennington. Her work is realistic, she takes photographs of scenes, normally focusing on people in everyday activities, and then her painting may be a composite of elements from many photographs. Her work was also striking, frequently including subtle social messages. All in all, a pleasant time at a small museum. (We could not take photographs inside the museum; the photo included here is from a brochure.)

By this time, the afternoon was moving on and the clouds and winds had moved in. We decided to forego another museum and returned to our lodging just before the rain.

Ed and Chris Feb. 17

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