The Florida Panhandle comprises about 12,000 square miles of diverse settings, from densely wooded state parks and oyster-rich river basins to small towns as neat as stage sets and dazzling Gulf Coast beaches with sand dunes as white as sculptured marble. It’s closer in culture to Georgia and Alabama than much of the Northern-influenced Florida peninsula, and has cool winters and a summer high season. Its visitors — just a small sliver of Florida tourists — tend to be the types who seek out off-the-radar regions.
Read the Full Story
Greenfield, B. (2008, March 7). On the Gulf Coast, the South Is Still the South. New York Times. p. 6
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