2-Week Houston to Key West Sight-seeing Roadtrip over 2021 Christmas/New Year.
Hello all,
My buddy and I are planning a roundtrip roadtrip from Houston to Key West from 12/18/2021 to 01/02/2022. We are interested in seeing natural beauties and not-to-miss stops along the way. We are at the beginning of our planning phase. For now, we are thinking of stopping at Lafayette for lunch then New Orleans for one or two nights. Then we will stop at Destin or Panama City to stretch our legs at the beach for a little and then continue to Florida to rest for the night.
Our first question is whether we should take 75 or 95 down to Miami. I love the drive on the Highway 1 along the Big Sur coast in California and from what I've gathered, there is no route with similar ocean view in Florida even if I take the 95. Is that right? Is there any other routes that we should consider? Once again, we are interested in natural sceneries and unique not-to-miss culinary/historical/cultural attractions. We are not into bar/drinking/partying scenes.
After deciding between 75/95 route, our second question is where should we spend our first night in Florida (after the drive from New Orleans)? Tallahassee/Gainesville on the 75 or Jacksonville on the 95 or some other town?
Once we are down to Miami, we plan spend a day at the Biscayne National Park to snorkel. Will the water be warm enough to swim near the end of the year? Google results say that water temp around Miami is around 70 degree then but I'd love to confirm. Then we'll spend another day at Everglades National Park. Is a day enough to explore this park? Anything we shouldn't miss there?
After Everglades, we'll drive down to Key West and spend a night there. Will try to catch sunrise there. Are there any stops along the drive from Miami to Key West that we should consider?
We plan to spend New Year's Eve in Miami. What is the best place to catch the fireworks there?
On the way back from Miami to Houston, we aim to do the trip in 2 days only. Should we take a different route (especially in Florida) to experience some other unique quick stops?
I do realize that we have a lot of questions. We appreciate any advice/suggestions you can give us. Thank you for your time!
Some Personal Observations
Let's start with some basic truisms and then move onto a few specifics.
Truisms: Interstate Highways were never meant to be scenic routes. I-10 will not get you within sight of the Gulf except as you cross bridges in Mobile and Pensacola where you'll be able to glimpse their namesake bays. Neither I-75 nor I-95 will get you within sight of water. I-95 down the Atlantic Coast of Florida can be a nightmare as it's pretty much just one city after another and the highway tends to run on the landward side of all those cities. Overall, your basic route is about as flat as you can find anywhere, with no mountains or even modest hills to break up the monotony.
A few specifics: As to your question regarding I-75 or I-95 south through Florida, I would suggest neither. I mentioned the 'difficulties' with I-95 above. I-75 is good as far as roughly Orlando's latitude (but don't go into Orlando). After that, I personally would be looking at US-27, reachable from I-75 via either Florida's Turnpike or FL-44. US-27 rejoins the interstates around Miami, but there's also the option of using FL-997 from around Miramar down to Homestead and picking up US-1 over the keys. US-27 is a multi-lane divided highway that mostly ties together several retirement towns. While it's not as scenic as you might like, it's likely to be better than trying to negotiate Tampa/St. Pete or Miami and all the other coastal 'resort' cities.
I think that the best scenery available to you on this trip will be at wildlife refuges along the way. These are designed to be accessible but away from crowds. For example, you could leave I-10 at Stowell TX and head for Port Arthur on TX-73/TX-82. The later becomes LA-82, the Gulf Beach Highway then the Grand Chenier Highway, and eventually connects with US-90 into New Orleans. That routing would give you access to the Candy Abshier Wildlife Management Area, the Rockefeller Wildlife Refuge, and the Bayou Teche National Wildlife Refuge among others.
For beaches, at Pensacola you could switch over to US-98 to more closely follow the shoreline to roughly Fanning Springs FL where FL-26 would connect you to I-75 for the start of your leg south through Florida. In the end, though, your best scenery and beaches will be along US-1, the Overseas Highway, from Key Largo to Key West.
AZBuck