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Julie
& Brock Wilson Toll Free (800)260-9081 ext. 6709 Office (239)393-6709 Cell (239)595-5983
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Marco Island is the largest of Florida's Ten Thousand Islands, located
on the Gulf of Mexico in Southwest Florida. It has been described as
Magical, Mystical and Alluring. Sunshine, frolicking dolphins,
There are a number of parks and preserves within short distance from the island. Just slightly north of the island on Shell Island Road off State Road 951 is the 9,400 acre Rookery Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve. In the mangroves you will find mullet, snapper, oysters, crabs, snook, pelicans, osprey, bald eagles, deer, bobcats, snakes and tortoises. Ten miles east of the intersection of State Road 951 along U.S. 41 is Collier-Seminole State Park. It is a 6,400 acre mangrove preserve and is home to alligators, the American crocodile, panthers, black bears and manatees. You'll find a 13 mile canoe trail and a 6 mile hiking trail there. The third largest park in the United States the Everglades National Park is only 15 minutes by car away from Marco and its entrance in Everglades City. In 1.5 million acres of wilderness is an abundance of wildlife. The park offers campsites, picnic areas, cabin rentals, boating, fishing and guided tours. The preserve is home to the Florida panther and many other endangered wildlife species. It also has the largest concentration of epiphytic orchids in North America. Roughly 30 minutes from Marco Island is the Big Cypress National Preserve
located on
Located on Santuary Road off Immokalee Road in north Collier County is the Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary which is owned by the National Audubon Society and home to the largest remaining stand of virgin bald cypress trees and the country's larges colony of nesting woodstorks.
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