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The Florida Panhandle Detour
By Paul Rubio
Each fall, Florida’s capital city, Tallahassee, swells with
thousands of students ready to take on a world of scholarship,
adulthood, binge drinking, and explorative promiscuity. A few
years back, national polls revealed that the city’s flagship
university, Florida State University, boasted some of the
hottest college guys in the world. It’s not hard to see why.
Innocent ball tossing on grassy patches looks more like a
homoerotic Abercrombie & Fitch shopping bag circa 2006.
Shirtless studs assert their dominance across campus, comparing
pec muscles at sports games, six packs at frat parties, and fake
IDs at nightclubs. The young and the beautiful congregate at the
Leach (the student recreation center/gym),
pumping iron and exchanging locker room butt slaps as they talk
about their latest “score.”
Beyond
FSU eye candy, Tallahassee has evolved as an entity far more
attractive than the typical university or government town. Most
recently, the unveiling of hyper-modern Hotel Duval
(850.224.6000,
www.hotelduval.com) ushered in an element of uber glam
relatively unknown to the Tallahassee scene. The rooftop bar,
Level 8, has quickly become North Florida’s
answer to big city sophistication, packing the house nightly for
bespoke cocktails served by gorgeous servers in a South
Beach-esque setting. Pimped out contemporary suites grace levels
1 to 7 of the hotel, with impeccably stylish furnishings and
amenities, including varnished tree trunk stools, oversized rain
showers and a bit of tech-y fantasia via ICE, the digital
in-room concierge! Hotel Duval’s trendsetting prowess is so
unexpected and refreshing, flaunting a vibe, a clientele, and a
product usually found in the world’s greatest metropolises. Accordingly, a number of restaurants and bars have also upped the ante to partake in this mini renaissance. Tallahassee’s mid-town area brings on the gastropub phenomena with Midtown Filling Station (850. 224.8272, www.midtownfillingstation.com) while the Wine Loft (850.222.9914, www.thewineloft.net) matches handpicked wine selections with succulent small bites like the Shrimp and Lump Crab Empanadas and daily artisanal cheese plates. Kool Beanz caters to the eclectic, Portland types, with an emphasis on fresh, funky, and different, living up to its amazing reputation. (850.224.2466, www.koolbeanz-cafe.com). A bit further afield, the gay owned and operated Lee’s Wine Bar (850.692.3404, 1700 North Monroe Street) facilitates an ideal commingling of gay and straight crowds over house cava and delicious wines from around the world. Tallahassee has yet to re-establish an exclusively gay bar or nightclub since the closing of Brothers in 2008. Instead, weekend gay nights have cropped up around town, fulfilling the desire to dance, drink and hook up, supplementing what cannot always be achieved online! The night begins early on Friday at Lee’s, Wine Loft, or the gay friendly, 101 restaurant (850.391.1309, www.101tallahassee.com), known for its dirt-cheap happy hour prices. By 11 p.m. Friday night, everyone checks into Rehab (926 W. Tharpe Street) for the hot Friday night party, "Relapse." The weekend party continues with Out & Out Saturdays at Paradigm (850.224.9980, www.paradigmrestaurant.net) in the heart of downtown. For
those not prone to massive hangovers or nextday‘ Haze Him’
remorse, Tallahassee offers a surprising wealth of natural and
cultural heritage by day. Once considered part of the Deep
South, America’s largest concentration of original plantations
(71 plantations over 300,000 acres) begins in Tallahassee and
ends in nearby Thomasville, Georgia, 28 miles north. Several of
these plantations remain open to the public, including
Goodwood Museum and Gardens (850.877.4202,
www.goodwoodmuseum.org), which still operates as a working
plantation. Docents indulge the curious in the sordid and
splendid history of the plantation, beginning with its
construction in 1837 to its southern antebellum reinvention
circa 1911 by the illustrious (and
stocky) socialite, Fanny
Tiers. Detailed tours highlight the original, antebellum period
furnishings as well as the sprawling colorful grounds, replete
with centuries old oaks, Spanish moss, and manicured gardens.
The 17th century Spanish mission and Apalachee Indian
settlement, Mission San Luis (850.245.6406,
www.missionsanluis.org), functions as a bizarro living
museum recreating daily life during a time when these two
cultures first met (though I don’t think these encounters really
played out like an Epcot exhibit…). Thirty minutes south, Edward Ball Wakulla Springs State Park (850.926.0700, www.floridastateparks.org/WAKULLASPRINGS) reveals a glimpse of old Florida’s natural beauty, housing several miles of protected forest along and around the largest and deepest freshwater spring in the world. Stanch protection since the 1930s has allowed generations of manatees, alligators, turtles, wood ducks, and 181 other bird species to prosper and regenerate, resulting in an ecological treasure teeming with charismatic wildlife unafraid of human presence. Yes, that means if you decide to swim in the springs, you could be quickly met by a group of curious manatees or friendly gators. Older generations may recognize the park as the jungle setting for some of the original Tarzan films starring Johnny Weissmuller, looking exactly as it did decades ago.
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