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The Mucky Duck, with its Gulf-view location on Andy Rosse Lane, is seen here in this file photo from June 26, 2015. The restaurant-bar attracts visitors for its gorgeous sunset location, pub fare ...
The Mucky Duck in Captiva, a beloved waterside restaurant and bar, suffered extensive damage during Ian and dug itself out of mounds of wet sand to recover.
South Seas Island Resort is a 330-acre (1.3 km 2) resort located on the shores of the Gulf of Mexico in the community of Captiva in Lee County, Florida.The original resort, South Seas Plantation, was opened in 1946 as a fishing resort by Clarence Chadwick, following a dry hurricane (salt-water storm surge kills the plants) which ended commercial farming on the island.
A flock of Royal Terns in flight above the western beach of Upper Captiva Island. Captiva is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in Lee County, Florida, United States. It is located on Captiva Island. As of the 2020 census, the population was 318, [4] down from 583 at the 2010 census.
The Captiva Current is a newspaper that circulates around the island of Captiva off of Florida's southwest coast. [1] The first issue was printed in August 1990 starring the chief of the island's fire department on the front page. [1] It is printed weekly on Thursdays as a section of the Island Reporter. [2] [3]
A pair of Tampa residents interrupted a live CNN report by rowing an inflatable duck down a flooded road. Meteorologist Derek Van Dam appeared amused as the duo made their way down Bayshore ...
Cayo Costa State Park is a state park in the U.S. state of Florida, on Cayo Costa (formerly known as La Costa Island or Padilla Rancho), an island directly south of Boca Grande (Gasparilla Island) and just north of North Captiva Island, approximately 12 miles (19 km) west of Cape Coral. The park is accessible only by charter boat (with or ...
North Captiva Island is an island in Lee County in Southwest Florida, located just offshore in the Gulf of Mexico. It lies just north of Captiva Island, separated by a channel called Redfish Pass which was created in a 1921 hurricane. It lies just south of Cayo Costa Island, separated by Captiva Pass. [1]