A. Water Fantaseas, Inc. is pleased to provide the following sample itineraries and excursions as a base to begin planning your own charter from. Please note that these are not “group trips” or cruises that you can purchase individual tickets for, rather they are ideas, suggestions and samples of what you can do and where you can go when you charter a private yacht from A. Water Fantaseas, Inc.
TOUR THE MIAMI WATERFRONT & HOMES
(4 hours or more) ::
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The Miami area is home (at least part time) to more than a few well-known
celebrities. Since, as you might expect, many of their magnificent homes
are on the waterfront, it is quite easy to include some “star gazing”
among your charter activities. So let’s start this trip by heading immediately
to Star, Palm and Hibiscus Islands, which are on Biscayne Bay just
west of South Beach, and have some spectacular celebrity homes. Gloria
Estefan and her husband/producer Emilio live on Star Island, as does
the Miami Heat’s star center, Shaquile O’Neal. Oh yes, Sean Combs,
better known as “Diddy,” has a home on the island also, though he doesn’t
live here full time.
We must confess that some of the homeowners are richer than
they are famous, and many of the most beautiful homes will turn out to belong to
people you may never have heard of. But their dwellings are sure spectacular and
well worth seeing. This part of the bay also contains Monument Island, a
popular public park that’s accessible only by water and features an obelisk
built in tribute to Henry Flagler, one of Miami’s founding fathers. He
was the man who built the railroad that eventually reached all the way to Key
West and was largely responsible for the development of Florida’s east coast,
especially the communities of St. Augustine, Palm Beach and Miami. The
Monument Island area is also a good spot to anchor for swimming and/or to
use the WaveRunner, though there are better places elsewhere. But if you want to
be sure we don’t run out of “WaveRunner Time,” we can take care of that activity
right here and now. When we leave Monument Island we have a choice.
There’s a channel that runs just inside Miami Beach’s barrier islands,
all the way up to Bal Harbour. We can pass through the Venetian
Causeway’s East bridge to cruise up this channel and return via the ocean,
or, on those days when they ocean is less than hospitable, we can go north just
inside Miami Beach and return via the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway
that runs down the west (mainland) side of the Bay, just so we don’t have to
cover the same ground twice.
But let’s say the weather is perfectly delightful
today and the wind direction suggests a south to north trip would be the best
bet on the ocean. So we’ll head toward Government Cut, the main ship
channel, and go out into the Atlantic for a whole different view of the
glamorous strip of sand, sunshine and sea that is known to the world as South
Beach. As we head out Government Cut, we’ll have the very southern
tip of Miami Beach (known as South Pointe) to our left, and the exclusive
and ultra expensive community of Fisher Island to our right. Soon we’ll
have only stone jetties on either side, placed there to help keep the cut open
and deep enough to handle the cruise ships and freighters that also use this
route to and from the open sea. But once we reach the end of the jetties, we’re
not restricted to the marked channel, as are the huge ships. We can immediately
turn left and head back toward South Beach to run north just outside the
“swimmers only” area immediately off the beach. South Beach is
world-renowned for its glamour and excitement. People come here from all over to
see and be seen among the crowd. But not everyone gets to see South Beach
from the ocean. Running close to the beach gives us a different perspective of
the popular Ocean Drive and Art Deco District. Believe us,
everything looks totally different. But it is still exciting and memorable.
Actually, South Beach is only a third of the Miami Beach
experience. The barrier island, which runs from South Pointe to Bal
Harbor, actually has five separate sections. Within the City of Miami Beach
there are South Beach, Mid Beach and North Beach. Each is different, not only in
the accommodations and attractions ashore, but also as seen from the water. At
the end of North Beach comes the City of Surfside and then, Bal
Harbor. At the north end of Bal Harbor there’s another channel from ocean to
bay, called Baker’s Haulover. The name derives from ancient times: this
portion of the barrier island was, and is, narrower than it is farther north or
south. The Caloosas and Tequestas who lived here centuries ago
would haul their canoes over the beach at this point to get from bay to ocean or
vice versa, because they’d have the shortest haul. In modern times, this spot
was chosen for dredging by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers primarily because it
would require less work.
At Haulover, we head back down the channel that
runs inside the main barrier island of Miami Beach all the way back to
Government Cut. It passes by Indian Creek Village, a community so
exclusive that its few citizens built their City Hall over on the main barrier
island in Surfside so visitors wouldn’t have to drive onto the island!
This village, in which every house has water on one side and the island’s
central golf course on the other, is home to such notables as Don Shula
and Julio Iglesias. Further down we pass LaGorce Island, another
gated community with some interesting and historically notable homes. Then comes
North Bay Drive, a street of remarkable waterfront dwellings that includes one
estate where the occupants commute by helicopter, several homes that belong (or
once belonged) to world-famous entertainers, one that was used in the movie, On
Any Given Sunday, and one extremely unusual mansion that would seem to belong
more in a Gothic novel than on an island in Miami Beach. There are
several places along the way where there are no restrictions on using the
WaveRunner, so a stop to anchor is not out of the question, though if swimming
is also in your plans, continuing on down to Monument Island is perhaps
better because we can anchor closer to the shallows there. If there’s time,
which depends on what we’ve done along the way, we can also swing by the stars’
homes on Sunset Islands II & III. When we reach the Venetian Causeway,
we can go through the East Bridge to again visit Monument Island. If you
haven’t yet used the WaveRunner, this might be the time. But honestly, as long
as time permits, there’s no reason we can’t stop to do it again – many people
want that “just once more, please.” If you don’t wish to stop at Monument
Island at this phase of your cruise, we can take the channel that runs north
of the Venetian Causeway to cross over for a closer view of downtown
Miami including, American Airlines Arena (where the Miami Heat plays
basketball) Bayside Marketplace and Bayfront Park. As always, the
exact route will be up to you – and, of course, the limitations of time, which
always seems to run out all too quickly, regardless of the length of your
charter. So, ultimately, we must head back to where we started, and the end of
another memorable cruise.
Original Content: Boat Write