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WSMR really sounds not much better in Tampa even at full power. Any news about the translator?
Here is a more believable one (give it time to load).ai4i said:That map being very generous...
Technically, Fort Myers and Miami are not on the peninsula.ai4i said:And we have to live in the only market on the Florida peninsula where the fullltime classical station is all analogue!
Fort Myers WGCU-2
Fort Pierce: WQCS-1 & 2
Gainesville: WUFT-2
Jacksonville: WJCT-2
Miami: WKCP analogue![]()
Orlando: WMFE-2
Sarasota: (too small, nobody cares)
Tallahassee: (not on the peninsula)
Tampa / St.Pete: WUSF-2
West Palm Beach: WXEL-2
No ???badjef said:Technically, Fort Myers and Miami are not on the peninsula.
badjef said:Technically, Fort Myers and Miami are not on the peninsula.
Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!
jmtillery said:badjef said:Technically, Fort Myers and Miami are not on the peninsula.
Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!
Realizing I may be missing something relevant, I have to ask "Am I missing something?" When were the communities of Miami and Fort Myers moved off the mainland Florida peninsula? The last time I checked, each community was still geographically located on the Florida peninsula mainland while Miami Beach and Fort Myers Beach have always been geographically located on respective islands just slightly off the mainland coast. Hence, Miami Beach and Fort Myers Beach are not geograpically situated on the Florida Peninisula mainland and, instead, qualify as islands.
Considering the entire state, excluding the Panhandle, beginning at the Florida / Georgia line North of Jacksonville, ranging South to the beginning of the Florida Keys, heading towards Marco Island / Naples and back North towards Fort Myers, Tampa Bay Crystal River and ending just past Taylor County on the West Coast, this part of the state qualifies as the mainland Peninsula with the exceptions of any islands along the way, such as Cedar Key, which are technically not a part of the Peninsula itself as they are islands.
Again, if I am missing something, please explain how Miami and Fort Myers are not a part of the Peninsula? I'm looking forward to your response.
jmtillery said:I thought about the waterway; However, I was unaware it crossed the entire state, literally severing the Southern portion from the mainland. Apparently I must have a "defective" Florida atlas which I will take a much closer look. This literaly makes the most Southern portion of Florida an island which, again, I was unaware.
Thank you for the explanation as your statement got the better part of my curiosity.
If we do not count all that undocumented wilderness to the southwest, it would have to be this tree at the end of SW 1'st Ct (give the whole thing time to fully load) although Cape Coral is a full city, not a town!badjef said:What is the most southern town on the peninsula of Florida?
Cape Coral is correct!ai4i said:If we do not count all that undocumented wilderness to the southwest, it would have to be this tree at the end of SW 1'st Ct (give the whole thing time to fully load) although Cape Coral is a full city, not a town!badjef said:What is the most southern town on the peninsula of Florida?
ai4i said:So, you are saying all of Florida south of this waterway is one big island and a bunch of small islands?