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Miami Outdoor Adventures provide an eco adventure you’ll never forget!

Oceans cover over two-thirds of the earth's surface, helping to control the planet’s weather and containing a rich variety of life forms.


Yet our oceans are in deep trouble.


Offshore drilling, destructive overfishing, coastal pollution from fertilizers and toxic materials, habitat destruction from bottom trawling, coastal dredging and filling, and rising ocean temperatures all affect the ocean’s health and ability to bounce back from changes.

When Europeans first arrived in North America, south Florida was a lush, subtropical wilderness of pine forest, hardwood hammocks, swamps, marshes, estuaries, and bays.

Wetlands dominated the landscape. The region contained one of the largest wetlands in the continental United States.

Help us to keep our waters clean following a responsible boating practice.

Miami is the youngest major city in the U.S. Its history is very unique and knowing this helps understand what Miami is all about. The first inhabitants came to the region 10,000 years ago and erected settlements on the Bay and on the river.


They named this settlement Mayami. The powerful Spanish claimed this land as theirs until 1821 when the United States decided to acquire it as another state we know now as Florida.


The Miami River evolved over thousands of years from a tidal channel into a freshwater stream that carried water from the Everglades to Biscayne Bay. It is the oldest natural landmark in Southeast Florida. The word "Mayami" is said to come from an Indian word meaning "sweet water".


Native Americans first inhabited the area. Archaeologists recently found the remains of a village that existed at least 2,000 years ago on the river's south bank, in a site known as Miami Circle. There, native people cut a pattern of circular holes and basins into the limestone bedrock. This pre-historic structure on the south bank of the river's mouth was recently preserved through the assistance of the Trust for Public Land.


The river ran clear and clean for four miles, fed by natural springs at its bottom and from tributaries, and from the tea-colored waters of the Everglades. Juan Ponce de Leon was probably the first European to set eyes on the Miami River, when he discovered Biscayne Bay in July 1513. There, he noted the large Tequesta Indian village on the north bank.


At the same time Bahamian seamen as well as the Seminole Indian tribe, which had been pushed away from their land in other U.S. states, also establish their home in Florida. During this time the area known as Mayami was nothing but a wild empty tract of undeveloped land.

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