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Time and Temp in
South Padre Island TX

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Island
Event Photos & Design Studios
1004 padre blvd , South Padre Island.956-371-3339
Photography, Web design, hosting and marketing services for the island and
beyond. Also now offering in studio audio, video production services.

The weather
is perfect all year-round: hot and breezy in the summer, cooler in the
winter months, but still warm enough to attract the snowbirds. With this
mild climate, South Padre offers an ideal haven for sportsmen, nature lovers
and outdoor enthusiasts.
If fishing's your game, you've come to the right island. The cheapest method
may be to pack your own fishing gear, obtain a Texas fishing license and
some live bait from a local bait-and-tackle shop and find a good spot to
cast from.
Small bands of anglers sit on the rocks along Dolphin Cove or venture out
onto the jetties in the gulf, hoping to reel in a trout or two and perhaps
spot a family of dolphins in a shrimp boat's wake. Surf-fishing on the beach
up north allows more chance for solitude and less chance of snagging a
swimmer. Fishing from bayside piers, especially near sunset, is a superb way
to angle for redfish, speckled trout or black drum.
Fishing boats in the Sea Ranch Marina offer daily trips for $15 per person,
though rods and reels cost extra. For a heftier price tag, anglers can go
deep-sea fishing for blue marlin, tuna, red snapper and shark on the
family-operated Murphy's Law or a private charter.
However you manage it, fishing on South Padre is ideal if you enjoy cooking
local delicacies in your motor home. If you'd rather eat out, though, most
seafood restaurants, like Amberjack's Bayside Bar and Grill, will broil,
blacken or fry your catch for you.
The Sea Ranch
Marina houses more than just fishing boats. Large cruise ships, such as the
70-foot Fish Tales, offer dolphin-watching trips, birding excursions and
marine-ecology tours for roughly $10 per person. More intimate nature tours,
like Colley's Fins to Feathers, may have less boat space but provide more
one-on-one interaction with the dolphins. For a firsthand look at the island's
migrating birds, stroll along the Laguna Madre Nature Trail, a free-of-charge
boardwalk through the coastal wetlands near the Convention Center. There you'll
spy egrets, herons, terns and perhaps the alligator that lives among the reeds.

Taking a private walk through the wilderness north of the city is another way to
appreciate the island's wildlife. Coyotes, jackrabbits, lizards, rattlesnakes
and more than 400 species of birds and waterfowl dwell within the grasslands,
beaches, dunes and tidal flats. Sea turtles, including the endangered Kemp's
ridley, sometimes swim ashore during the nesting season -- an incredible sight.
Some islanders have struggled to educate visitors about these creatures and save
them from extinction.
Though a terrific spot for fishermen and naturalists, South Padre also boasts a
wide range of water sports. Swimmers, surfers, tubers and boogie-board
enthusiasts abound on the gulf side, while several operations offer personal
watercraft rentals, banana-boat rides, parasailing excursions and sailboat
cruises. If you're willing to spend a bit more, you may opt for scuba-diving
lessons or rent a small boat and go water-skiing.
The Laguna Madre is also a prime location for swimmers, waders and windsurfers
of all ages. Residents and tourists crowd the beach near the Convention Center,
the official windsurfing access point, designated by a row of RVs and Jeeps
along the shore. Some windsurfers look as if they've done this before, decked
out in neon-tinted wetsuits, riding top-of-the-line boards. Others are just
beginning the sport, perhaps taking lessons.
"You couldn't find a better place to learn," says Valerie Ekstrom, an island
resident for 20 years. "It's shallow and warm. If you fall in, you're only
waist-deep."
Vacationing
families will find water fun tailor-made for the kids. The Aqua Dog, an
amphibious vehicle, takes visitors across the bay to Barracuda Cove, where they
comb the beaches for sand dollars and scan the landscape for exotic shorebirds.
The Schlitterbahn Beach Waterpark, which opened last summer, lures kids of all
ages with four water coasters, two tube chutes, a wave lagoon, a surf machine
and a five-story water funhouse.

For beach fun without the water, you can rent dune buggies from Island Fun
Rentals or go horseback riding with experienced guides from the Island
Equestrian Center. Beach-chair rentals are available for those wanting to
sunbathe, or you can play a game of volleyball in the sand. With its consistent
gulf breezes and miles of soft sand, South Padre is a perfect spot for
kite-flying or building sandcastles.
If shopping's more your style, Padre Boulevard houses a wealth of shops, enough
to fill an entire day of strolling. Like many tropical towns along the Gulf,
South Padre has its share of gargantuan T-shirt shops, providing everything from
beach towels to seashell picture frames. But dress boutiques, tattoo parlors,
novelty shops and used-book stores also line the streets, offering lovely
souvenirs or conversation with local characters. For a more exotic shopping
experience, you can drive across the Mexican border, just a few miles south, or
ride a tour bus to the bustling cities of Matamoros or Progreso for a day of
bargain-hunting and sightseeing.
When you've tired of shopping, the island's elegant restaurants and casual cafes
offer a medley of refreshments, from Mongolian cuisine and fried fish to
cheeseburgers and spicy ceviche. Most offer cheap lunch specials and reasonable
dinner entrees. We enjoyed oyster-and-shrimp po'boys for less than $8 from
Amberjack's bayside patio and Mexican fajitas for two for $20 at the Palmetto
Inn.
After hours, the
island comes alive with lights and activity. Several watering holes along the
bay offer the perfect spot to sip drinks and watch the gorgeous night sky, dance
to live music or play a round of pool over beer and buffalo wings. Depending on
the season, nighttime crowds can be thick in this area. There are also two movie
theaters on the island.
More than just an affordable vacation spot, South Padre is an island rich with
natural and cultural treasures. For beachcombers, there are miles and miles of
seashells and wave-carved driftwood. Some treasure-seekers search the shoreline
with metal detectors, hoping to find lost rings or coins. But local hunters
research the island's complex past and, armed with shovels and metal detectors,
seek the long-lost Spanish bullion or Civil War bullets they've read about.
South Padre is close to other activities as well. It's a short drive back to
Port Isabel, a coastal community with its own share of seafood restaurants and
fine boutiques, not to mention the longest fishing pier in Texas and a
historical lighthouse with a terrific view of South Padre. Several 18-hole golf
courses are found on the island also.
South Padre is busiest in the summertime, cheapest in the winter months and
teeming with teenagers during spring break, but, no matter when you visit or how
long you stay, you'll probably encounter one of the island's many annual events.
South Padre is abuzz with activity throughout the year, including fishing
tournaments, fireworks events and seafood cook-off's.
Yet, despite such liveliness, South Padre is a slow-moving, relaxing place to
visit, where wearing a tie is rumored to be against the law. The natives refer
to "island time," claiming that, after awhile, this laid-back attitude becomes
contagious.
Like many island residents, you may cross the causeway in your motorhome and end
up staying for decades. Or perhaps you'll find yourself returning every winter
to savor the ambiance of this island paradise at the tip of Texas.
Article by: Laura Raitman
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