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Sanibel Island
Learn more about
the beautiful island of Sanibel, Florida.
Sanibel and Captiva are barrier islands connected to the mainland
by a three-mile-long causeway that stretches from the southern
reaches of Fort Myers out across Pine Island Sound, where the
Sanibel Lighthouse.
Caloosahatchee River empties into the Gulf of Mexico.
Created by nature to protect the mainland,
the palm- and pine-tree lined islands are famous for their beaches
and the incredible variety of shells on their shores. And also for
their reluctance to allow too many intrusions of the modern world:
there are no stoplights on either island, and buildings on
Sanibel are “no taller than the tallest palm tree."
Sanibel J.N. “Ding" Darling National Wildlife Refuge and
Captiva have been used variously as stopovers for Spanish explorers
and resorts for the rich and famous, including one very special
cartoonist, Jay Norwood Darling, who helped create the more than
6,400-acre national wildlife refuge that bears his name.
Visitors to both islands enjoy not only the natural, ungroomed
beaches, but also the languid pace of island life, great
restaurants, theater, small museums and, of course, abundant native
flora and fauna. Captiva feels (and is) more remote than Sanibel,
with a tiny village connecting beach houses and
resorts of all sizes and vintages with “civilization."
Brush away the beach sand and you will find, buried beneath the
surface of Sanibel and Captiva Islands, layers of environmental,
historical and cultural depth. Some 5,600 make the their principal
residence on Sanibel Island, 500 on Captiva. The islands'
population swells to 22,000 in winter.
Island people live in condominium communities, close-knit
neighborhoods and exclusive developments. They occupy historic
cottage renovations, new "Old Florida-Style" stilt homes, and
low-slung stucco houses. They buy homes centered around a boating
lifestyle, a golf course tennis or children. They
are single-family home-dwellers, second-home owners and young
renters. They serve the tourist and other service-related
industries, commute to mainland professions, volunteer to the
benefit of their community, and quietly retire from executive and
governmental careers.
Real estate options along Sanibel Island's canals, waterfronts,
golf courses and side streets are wide and varied. Captiva Island,
with its tucked-away mansions and old-time cottages, has higher
property values for a more specialized market.
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