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The Refuge at Ocklawaha

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INNS AND LODGES
The Refuge at Ocklawaha
Ecocorrectness and gator tails in the heart of Florida

Despite its surfeit of sunshine, bargain airfares, and cheap car rentals, central Florida has long been a flyover zone for travelers seeking solitude and encounters with wild critters of the nonanimatronic variety. Until this June, that is, when the Refuge at Ocklawaha opened its ecofriendly doors less than 50 miles northwest of the paved and fertilized splendors of
Orlando. A 52-acre converted farmstead bordering the silty Ocklawaha River—and the sawgrass-and-marsh-choked wetlands of the 4,400-acre Ocklawaha Restoration Area—the Refuge (at right) is about as unflashy a destination as you can find in these parts without pitching a tent. “The Refuge is the flip side of Disney,Ô spins green-resort entrepreneur
Stanley Selengut, playing politically correct David to Walt’s Goliath. “He gives people wonderful fantasy; we give them wonderful reality.Ô

A former importer of Peruvian woolen goods and native son of Greenwich Village, 70-year-old Selengut is one of ecotourism’s founding fathers; he’s renowned for developing an environmentally savvy (and profitable) cluster of platform tents called Maho Bay Camps more than 25 years ago on St. John in the U.S. Virgin Islands. For the Refuge, Selengut landed backing from
some of environmentalism’s heaviest hitters: Excel Legacy Corporation (his partner in the venture), Pew Charitable Trusts, the St. Johns River Water Management Office, and the Florida Audubon Society. And while the team’s high-concept vision won’t be fully realized until next June, the Refuge (doubles, $100–$125; 800-392-9004) is certainly worth checking out
now.

Guests stay in 23 Florida cracker-style cottages with tin roofs and screened porches, some of them Depression-era sharecropper’s quarters now spruced up with terrazzo tile and Shaker-style rocking chairs. (Tentative plans call for another 37 cottages, complete with solar showers, composting toilets, and Internet access, by January.) The former rancher’s house, a
high-ceilinged, cypress-paneled affair, now serves up Old South delicacies such as Cajun steamed crabs and grilled baby gator tail. At the kennel-cum-studio, local artists teach free courses ranging from basket weaving to nature photography. Future diversions include crafting refuse into useful household items, conservation lectures, and a photovoltaic energy
exhibit.

The wetlands surrounding this hubbub of activity, thankfully, needed little earnest improvement. Overgrown with ferns, blackberries, and the country’s second-tallest magnolia, the Refuge hosts 135 bird species, including ospreys, ibis, and roseate spoonbills; Audubon staffers lead regular outings. A ten-mile trail winds atop the Ocklawaha’s bermed riverbank, an
optimal predawn spot for watching black bears, armadillos, and feral pigs. Or explore the otter- (and gator-) infested waters. The resort rents bikes for $15 a day, horses for $30, and canoes for $25.

If you’re not careful, an activities-crammed sojourn at the Refuge can become a bit exhausting. Happily, when the odd summer monsoon sweeps through, guests can content themselves with stretching out on a porch and listening to the rain tap on the tin roof. —STEPHANIE GREGORY


SMART TRAVELER
Terminal Fitness
In these skyports, catching a flight doesn’t have to be a waste of time

While most airports seem to have discovered coronary-neutral snacking options (hail the smoothie stand!), terminal-based workout options are still generally limited to long walks to the gate and those embarrassing isometric exercises you’re supposed to do in your seat. At a handful of domestic and international hubs, however, you can now sneak in a workout at health
clubs located either right on the concourse or inside on-site hotels. (All provide locker and shower facilities.) With any luck, it’s the start of a trend: Dayton, Ohio–based Airport Fitness recently opened a gym in Pittsburgh and plans to export the concept to Philadelphia in September and Cincinnati early next year.
—GRANT S. DAVIS

AIRPORT LOCATION FEE EQUIPMENT AND AMENITIES MORE INFORMATION
Chicago O’Hare Hilton Chicago O’Hare (adjacent to Terminal 2) $9 Sauna, steam room, indoor pool, Reebok elliptical trainer, Tectrix steppers, LifeCycles 773-601-1722
Pittsburgh International Airport Fitness (adjacent to international arrivals area) $10 Saunas, Schwinn rowing machines, Cybex weight trainer and stationary bikes, free weights, Versa Climber 412-472-5231
Miami International The Miami International Airport Hotel (on Concourse E) $8 Outdoor running track, rooftop pool, sauna, LifeStride and Precor treadmills, LifeStep steppers, Nautilus weight machines 800-327-1276
Philadelphia International Airport Fitness (between Concourses A and B; to open in September) $10 Steam room, Trotter treadmills, weight trainers, Reebok elliptical trainers, juice bar 937-294-3828
Frankfurt International Frankfurt Marriott $13 Steam room, Trotter treadmills, weight trainers, Reebok elliptical trainers, juice bar 937-294-3828

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