Ben A.
Yelp
I suppose it's fitting for my 1500th review that I get to share my experience about something I've wanted to do my whole life, and finally got to enjoy this past summer, 2022. During out family's cross country road trip from Los Angeles to Key West, we spent an entire day visiting the Dry Tortugas National Park.
The park is located 70 miles west of Key West, on a group of tiny islands in the Gulf of Mexico. We boarded the Yankee Freedom ferry at 7 AM, and enjoyed the 2 hour trip on the top deck. Along the way, we passed the Marquesas Keys and some of the smaller, seldom travelled keys out past the end of Florida's A1A. The ubiquitous patches of Sargasso were occasionally inhabited by large sea turtles, flying fish, and a large sailfish that got spooked by the boat wake and frothed the water as it retreated.
We arrived at the National Park escorted by a flock of sea birds who joined an impossibly huge flock nesting on a long stretch of untouched beach. Once the ship tied off to the dock, we were able to go ashore. We explored the huge brick fort, navigating long corridors, circular staircases, and the remnants of buildings that housed troops here long ago.
The kids were eager to snorkel, and the area did not disappoint: great clarity and a variety of fish, including a 6+ ft. barracuda, a couple of black tip reef sharks, and more species of colorful corals, sponges, and fans than I can name. We even spotted a green sea turtle relaxing on the white sand bottom. We visited the north side beach where the water was a little more calm that day, and snorkeled out to both the left (around the fort moat wall towards open ocean) and to the right (into the rip rap and the reef that has grown around it.) Breathtaking, like being in a tropical aquarium.
Around 11:30, the huge cumulonimbus clouds opened up, and treated everyone to a brief but somehow refreshing downpour. As storms often do here, it ended as quickly as it started, and we dried in the sunshine.
Too soon, it was time to get back on the boat and head back to port. While boarding, I spotted a resident Goliath grouper hanging out under tue dock, all 200+ pounds of her. Heading home, the ship got buzzed by a fighter aircraft, presumably from nearby NAS Key West, who banked and waved at the passengers before climbing straight up in into the clouds and out of sight. More sea turtles on the way home, and plenty of lightning that the captain managed to keep well north of our path home.
When we booked this trip two months before our arrival, we literally bought the last 5 tickets for that sailing... we felt very fortunate to see this off-the-beaten-path location, and we even got a discount at the ticket window for being National Park Pass holders. Book early and plan ahead.... This was the perfect mix of history, nature, and adventure for our family, and a memory I will keep as long as I have marbles to bounce it around.
I can't imagine how or when, but I'd love to visit here again.