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Tanganyka Tidal Wave at Busch Gardens Africa in TampaBusch Gardens Africa in Tampa Bay


Tampa
Ybor City
Ybor City
Tampa Bay CVB
More than just a big city with all the sophistication, culture, industry and services that implies, Tampa is also a place for family holidays and encounters of the natural kind. Situated on Florida’s largest inlet, Tampa Bay, which separates it from sister city St. Petersburg, Tampa has a lot of shipping history in its past, and in its present. With its strategic position, it began as a Seminole War fort. Later its quick access to the Gulf of Mexico and deep port brought cigar making and Spanish-American War preparations to town.

The cigar industry, moved here from Key West, centred in the district of Ybor City. With the factories came immigrant workers from Cuba, Italy, Germany and Spain to flavour the town with the chatter, food and traditions of many cultures. The Cuban influence has stuck tenaciously and today Cuban restaurants, a redolent coffee-roasting plant, cigar shops and lively Latin festivals persist even though the factories are gone. Shopping and entertainment’s Centro Ybor occupies one of the colourful neighbourhood’s historic buildings. Ybor City Museum State Park resides in the old bakery. An inn, restaurants and shops line main street Seventh Avenue, home of the original Columbia Restaurant. Progenitor to a line of Spanish restaurant spin-offs throughout Florida, it stands out with its elaborate tiled exterior and flamenco dancing shows.

Downtown Tampa, the focus in recent years has returned to the harbour and the Hillsborough River that runs through town. Cruise ship business has picked up, and a trolley transports passengers to Ybor City and other attractions. At the Channelside District, an entertainment-dining multiplex has appeared along with big-name resorts, professional hockey and the Florida Aquarium, a seashell-shaped glass dome with more than 10,000 aquatic plants and animals inside. Next door, you can tour a WW II-era merchant marine ship.

Inner city, attractions old and new beckon. Railroad builder Henry Plant’s fantastical Tampa Hotel now holds university offices and the Henry B. Plant Museum, furnished for the 1890s, when
Busch Gardens
Busch Gardens
Busch Entertainment Corp
Teddy Roosevelt and his Rough Riders headquartered there. The Tampa Theatre is another elaborate historic specimen, standing in contrast to an ultra-modern performing arts hall and art museum. Bayshore Boulevard winds between the waterfront and its stately homes, known as the world’s longest unbroken pavement and site of the swashbuckling Gasparilla Pirate Festival in February. In historic neighbourhoods such as Hyde Park, shopping and dining opportunities excel.

In its northern reaches, Tampa satisfies family urges with the Lowry Park Zoo, a hands-on kids town, the wondrous Museum of Science and Industry (MOSI), Busch Gardens Tampa Bay and Adventure Island.

Begun as a tour of a beer factory, Busch Gardens stands today among Florida’s leading theme parks. Here the motif is Africa, and hundreds of real live animals add to the realism of exotic shows and thrill rides. New for 2008 is Jungala, a section of the park devoted to the jungle. Busch Gardens' sidekick water park, Adventure Island, is one of Florida’s oldest, biggest and most exhilarating.

Nearby Plant City has its Dinosaur World attraction to offer family holidaymakers, and its annual Strawberry Festival, a celebration of the town’s sweet and juicy crop.

Along Tampa’s fringes, the Hillsborough River, state parks and other natural kingdoms provide a quiet, bucolic flipside to the city life. The same river that plunges through city centre takes canoeists and kayakers on a nature odyssey where alligators, hawks and majestic domes of cypress trees dwell. A 6500-hectare reserve known as Wilderness Park surrounds the river and its branches and was made for paddlers and pedallers. The river also is centrepiece of Hillsborough River State Park, one of Florida’s oldest. Here, the river frolics around limestone upcroppings, providing rapids for experienced canoeists, who can rent vessels at the park. History buffs can tour a reconstructed Seminole War historic site, Fort Foster, and the park has campsites, a swimming pool and nature trails.

Head northwest of the city for more adventure. Once a vast cattle ranch, a wilderness park now encompasses miles of scrubland hiking trails. Deer, alligator and birds of all types feed off the land here.
 
   
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