Chad Gallivanter

The Most Walkable City in America Might Be in Florida. Here's the Proof.

12 min · 28. Mai 2026
Episode The Most Walkable City in America Might Be in Florida. Here's the Proof. Cover

Beschreibung

St. Augustine, Florida has been nominated by USA Today's 10Best Readers' Choice Awards for Most Walkable City to Visit in the United States - and this episode makes the case for why it should win. Voting is open now through June 15, 2026, and you can cast one vote per day at the link below. This isn't just a campaign plug. St. Augustine has a walkability argument that no other city on this list can make: its streets were designed for human foot traffic in 1565, more than 200 years before the United States existed. The city's compact historic core - laid out according to Spanish colonial planning principles that prioritized pedestrian movement - puts the Castillo de San Marcos, the Cathedral Basilica, Flagler College, the Plaza de la Constitución, and dozens of restaurants and galleries within a few blocks of each other. That's not modern urban planning. That's 460 years of infrastructure that was never designed around a car. In this episode we break down what the USA Today campaign actually is and how voting works, why St. Augustine's case for walkability is fundamentally different from every other city on the list, and where to actually walk when you're there - including the corridors most visitors never find. We cover St. George Street and the historic downtown, Aviles Street (the oldest documented street in the United States), the Matanzas bayfront seawall, the Lincolnville Historic District and its Civil Rights history, the Uptown district along San Marco Avenue, and King Street's concentration of Gilded Age architecture. St. Augustine has landed as high as 4th on this list in previous years. This year it should be number one. Go vote. 🌎 Keep Gallivanting With Me If you liked this story, you’ll love what’s waiting on my YouTube channel: youtube.com/@ChadGallivanter [https://youtube.com/@ChadGallivanter] See more photos, behind-the-scenes, and upcoming trips on Instagram: instagram.com/ChadGallivanter [https://instagram.com/ChadGallivanter] More travel stories, history deep-dives, and extras live at: ChadGallivanter.com 📬 Questions, ideas, or media requests? Email me at info@ChadGallivanter.com

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Episode The Most Walkable City in America Might Be in Florida. Here's the Proof. Cover

The Most Walkable City in America Might Be in Florida. Here's the Proof.

St. Augustine, Florida has been nominated by USA Today's 10Best Readers' Choice Awards for Most Walkable City to Visit in the United States - and this episode makes the case for why it should win. Voting is open now through June 15, 2026, and you can cast one vote per day at the link below. This isn't just a campaign plug. St. Augustine has a walkability argument that no other city on this list can make: its streets were designed for human foot traffic in 1565, more than 200 years before the United States existed. The city's compact historic core - laid out according to Spanish colonial planning principles that prioritized pedestrian movement - puts the Castillo de San Marcos, the Cathedral Basilica, Flagler College, the Plaza de la Constitución, and dozens of restaurants and galleries within a few blocks of each other. That's not modern urban planning. That's 460 years of infrastructure that was never designed around a car. In this episode we break down what the USA Today campaign actually is and how voting works, why St. Augustine's case for walkability is fundamentally different from every other city on the list, and where to actually walk when you're there - including the corridors most visitors never find. We cover St. George Street and the historic downtown, Aviles Street (the oldest documented street in the United States), the Matanzas bayfront seawall, the Lincolnville Historic District and its Civil Rights history, the Uptown district along San Marco Avenue, and King Street's concentration of Gilded Age architecture. St. Augustine has landed as high as 4th on this list in previous years. This year it should be number one. Go vote. 🌎 Keep Gallivanting With Me If you liked this story, you’ll love what’s waiting on my YouTube channel: youtube.com/@ChadGallivanter [https://youtube.com/@ChadGallivanter] See more photos, behind-the-scenes, and upcoming trips on Instagram: instagram.com/ChadGallivanter [https://instagram.com/ChadGallivanter] More travel stories, history deep-dives, and extras live at: ChadGallivanter.com 📬 Questions, ideas, or media requests? Email me at info@ChadGallivanter.com

28. Mai 202612 min
Episode Flagler Beach Without the Pier: Is It Still Worth the Stop? Cover

Flagler Beach Without the Pier: Is It Still Worth the Stop?

The Flagler Beach Pier is gone - and for a lot of people driving past on A1A, that's a reason not to stop.  This episode asks whether that assumption is right.  Hurricane Ian knocked out the old wooden structure in 2022. What's going up in its place is taller, wider, and built entirely from concrete.  But while those pilings go in, the town is still operating - the Saturday farmers market, the Gallery of Local Art, Swillerbees, the Compass Hotel by Margaritaville.  Locals are still showing up. Visitors are still finding reasons to pull over.  We talk to the people who are here now, watching the build and choosing to stay.  This is Flagler Beach before the pier comes back. And the question is whether the town is worth showing up for before it does. 🌎 Keep Gallivanting With Me If you liked this story, you’ll love what’s waiting on my YouTube channel: youtube.com/@ChadGallivanter [https://youtube.com/@ChadGallivanter] See more photos, behind-the-scenes, and upcoming trips on Instagram: instagram.com/ChadGallivanter [https://instagram.com/ChadGallivanter] More travel stories, history deep-dives, and extras live at: ChadGallivanter.com 📬 Questions, ideas, or media requests? Email me at info@ChadGallivanter.com

28. Mai 20269 min
Episode The Island in Pigeon Forge: No Admission. No Escape Cover

The Island in Pigeon Forge: No Admission. No Escape

Pigeon Forge, Tennessee has no shortage of ways to take your money. But The Island does something different.  It doesn't charge you to walk in. Parking is free. You can spend an entire evening there without ever making one clear decision to spend anything at all.  And yet somehow, people do.  A FloridaRentals.com analysis of TripAdvisor reviews ranked The Island sixth on a list of the biggest tourist traps in the United States.  One reviewer called it a "Good Tourist Trap." Another said they "ended up spending way more time here than expected."  That raises a specific question. Not whether The Island is popular - it clearly is. Not whether it is clean or well designed - it clearly is both.  The real question is whether a place can be a tourist trap without disappointing you. Whether the whole thing can be enjoyable, well built, and still fundamentally designed to hold your attention longer than you planned.  This episode makes the case that it can. And that the dinosaurs prove it. 🌎 Keep Gallivanting With Me If you liked this story, you’ll love what’s waiting on my YouTube channel: youtube.com/@ChadGallivanter [https://youtube.com/@ChadGallivanter] See more photos, behind-the-scenes, and upcoming trips on Instagram: instagram.com/ChadGallivanter [https://instagram.com/ChadGallivanter] More travel stories, history deep-dives, and extras live at: ChadGallivanter.com 📬 Questions, ideas, or media requests? Email me at info@ChadGallivanter.com

14. Mai 202617 min
Episode You’re Skipping Plant City. That’s a Mistake. Cover

You’re Skipping Plant City. That’s a Mistake.

Plant City sits between Tampa and Orlando, and most people treat it like a pass-through. In this episode, we slow down and take a closer look at what’s actually here. We start inside the original 1909 depot, now the Robert W. Willaford Railroad Museum, where the town’s entire reason for existing comes into focus. From there, it’s a walk through a downtown that still operates the way it was built to, including a stop inside State Theatre Antiques, a preserved 1939 movie house now filled with large-scale vintage pieces and still used for live events. Along the way, there are places to sit and stay a while, including Whistle Stop Cafe and Propagation Whiskey Bar and Kitchen, along with smaller stops like The Kandy Shoppe. Just outside downtown, the agricultural side of the town comes into view at Parkesdale Farm Market, where strawberries move in volume that’s hard to miss. A few minutes beyond that, inside Edward Medard Conservation Park, the terrain changes completely. The area known as Sacred Hills, shaped by former phosphate mining, creates a landscape that doesn’t resemble the rest of Central Florida and rewards anyone willing to climb through it. We wrap up at Keel Farms and take a look at how the Florida Strawberry Festival grew from an agricultural showcase into one of the largest annual events in the region. Plant City doesn’t ask for your attention. But it holds it once you give it. 🌎 Keep Gallivanting With Me If you liked this story, you’ll love what’s waiting on my YouTube channel: youtube.com/@ChadGallivanter [https://youtube.com/@ChadGallivanter] See more photos, behind-the-scenes, and upcoming trips on Instagram: instagram.com/ChadGallivanter [https://instagram.com/ChadGallivanter] More travel stories, history deep-dives, and extras live at: ChadGallivanter.com 📬 Questions, ideas, or media requests? Email me at info@ChadGallivanter.com

7. Mai 202611 min
Episode Don’t Drive By Micanopy, Florida - The Story Behind This Historic Town Cover

Don’t Drive By Micanopy, Florida - The Story Behind This Historic Town

Just south of Gainesville, Micanopy looks like a place you pass through. A few antique shops. A quiet main street. Live oaks stretching over the road. And then you keep driving. But that misses the point entirely. In this episode, we take a closer look at how this small inland town came to exist in the first place. The story begins long before storefronts and cafés, with a landscape shaped by Paynes Prairie, a Seminole leader whose name still marks the town, and a federal road that helped determine where people stopped and settled in early Florida. From there, the history deepens. We look at the role of Micanopy during a time when the United States was expanding into the territory, the impact of the Second Seminole War, and how transportation routes like the Bellamy Road shaped the town’s early development. What survives today is not just a preserved streetscape. It’s a place where multiple layers of Florida history are still visible if you know where to look. This episode focuses on how Micanopy came to be, and why it still looks the way it does. 🌎 Keep Gallivanting With Me If you liked this story, you’ll love what’s waiting on my YouTube channel: youtube.com/@ChadGallivanter [https://youtube.com/@ChadGallivanter] See more photos, behind-the-scenes, and upcoming trips on Instagram: instagram.com/ChadGallivanter [https://instagram.com/ChadGallivanter] More travel stories, history deep-dives, and extras live at: ChadGallivanter.com 📬 Questions, ideas, or media requests? Email me at info@ChadGallivanter.com

29. Apr. 202611 min