Daytona Beach
The consummate Florida beach town, with its T-shirt shops,
amusement arcades and wall-to-wall motels, DAYTONA BEACH
owes its existence to twenty miles of light brown sand where the
only pressure is to strip off and enjoy yourself. Life in this
down-to-earth resort now revolves around three major festivals:
February's Daytona 500, Bike Week in early March, and the
relatively new Biketoberfest .
Pioneering auto enthusiasts, including Louis Chevrolet, Ransom
Olds and Henry Ford, came to Daytona's firm sands in the early
1900s to race prototype vehicles beside the ocean. The land speed
record was smashed five times by the British millionaire Malcolm
Campbell who, in 1935, roared along at 276mph. When high speeds
made racing on the sands unsafe, the Daytona International
Speedway was built three miles west of downtown along
International Speedway Boulevard (buses #9A and #9B).
Opened in 1959, it seats 150,000 and hosts several major race
meetings each year, starting in early February with the Rolex
24 , a 24-hour race for GT prototype sports cars. A week or so
later the qualifying races start for the year's biggest event, the
Daytona 500 stock-car race in mid-February. Tickets sell out
well in advance (a weekend package from $220; tel 904/253-7223);
book accommodation at least six months ahead. Though they can't
capture the excitement of a race, guided van tours (daily
except race days 9.30am-5pm, every half-hour; $6) take you around
the remarkable curves, whose gradients make this the fastest
racetrack in the world.
Immediately outside the Speedway, Daytona USA (daily
9am-7pm; $12) exhibits one of Campbell's many Bluebirds, the car in
which he broke the land speed record at Ormond Beach in 1931, as
well as interactive displays on the great races. A mile west, the
Klassix Auto Museum at 2909 W International Speedway Blvd
(daily 9am-6pm; $8.50) displays pristine examples of every Corvette
design from 1953 on, plus vintage motorcycles and a 1938 Woody
Wagon that boasts a top speed of 50mph.
For all the excitement that racing generates, the best thing
about Daytona is the seemingly limitless beach: 500ft wide at low
tide and fading dreamily into the heat haze.
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