Tucked away from the Overseas Highway (Mile Marker 49.5) on a high deck overlooking the Boot Key Harbor Waterway, Chiki Tiki is an extremely laid-back, open-air bar and grill with a diverse menu that offers something for everyone. Highlights include certified Angus beef burgers (the green chile cheeseburger is a favorite!), shrimp baskets, blackened fish sandwiches, bacon wrapped BBQ shrimp, fresh-cut fries and much more. It’s the perfect place to grab an ice-cold beer or your favorite cocktail and enjoy the ocean breeze. Save room for the delicious key lime pie. Chiki Tiki features live music Wednesday and Friday nights. To reach Chiki Tiki, go East onto 15th Street in Marathon past an old trailer park to 1200 Oceanview Avenue.
Month: February 2018
Leicester Hemingway

Born on April 1, 1915, in Oak Park, Illinois, Leicester Clarence Hemingway was sixteen years younger than his famous brother, Ernest, and lived in the shadow of the literary legend his entire life. However, by all accounts, Leicester idolized his older brother and eventually became a respected writer in his own right. Ernest nicknamed his little brother, “the Baron.” In 1953, Leicester published his first novel, The Sound of the Trumpet, which was loosely based on his wartime experiences in France and Germany during World War II. In 1962, Leicester published the critically acclaimed biography, My Brother, Ernest Hemingway.
Believe it or not, Leicester founded his own micronation called the “Republic of New Atlantis” (actually an eight-foot-by-30-foot barge located just 12 nautical miles off the coast of Jamaica) in 1965. Stating that “there’s no law that says you can’t start your own country,” Leicester even created a New Atlantis flag, issued New Atlantis postage stamps, and created New Atlantis currency. Unfortunately, New Atlantis was completely destroyed during a tropical storm the following year. An active outdoorsman like his brother, Leicester frequently fished off the coast of Bimini and even published a monthly newsletter, The Bimini Out Islands News. He even appeared on a 1980 episode of In Search of … titled “The Bimini Wall.” Faced with several debilitating health issues, Leicester died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in his Miami Beach home on September 13, 1982, at the age of sixty-seven.
On Ernest’s Life
“Ernest lived as he died—violently. He had a tremendous respect for courage. During his own lifetime he traded in it, developed it, and taught other people a great deal about it. And his own courage never deserted him. What finally failed him was his body. This can happen to anyone.”
On Havana
“Havana is one of the loveliest, wickedest, most mysterious and enchanting cities in the world.”
On Robert Capa
“Robert Capa had come to Spain via central Europe as a photographer. He went where Ernest went, drank where Ernest drank, made jokes that made Ernest laugh, and generally proved himself one hell of a fine fellow.”
On Ernest’s Drinking Prowess
“Ernest was then drinking fifteen to seventeen Scotch-and-sodas over the course of a day. He was holding them remarkably well.”
On Ernest’s Love of Cats
“Much as been written about Ernest’s enormous fondness for cats. He claimed they were superior to people of unknown quality. ‘A cat has absolute emotional honesty, Baron,’ he told me once. ‘Male or female, a cat will show you how it feels about you. People hide their feelings for various reasons, but cats never do.'”
Schooner Wharf Bar

A legendary Florida Keys singer-songwriter, Michael McCloud has performed at some of the best dives in Key West, Florida. McCloud knows more than 3,000 songs (his all-time favorite is “Somewhere Over the Rainbow”) and his own songs include such classics as “Tourist Town Bar,” “Conch Republic Song” (Key West’s Official “Secession” Anthem!), “The Hurricane Blows,” “Billy’s Bayou Barroom & Backyard BBQ,” “Today is the Day” (a moving tribute to the late, great treasure hunter Mel Fisher), “Peace and Quiet” (one of my favorite songs ever), “Just Another Song,” “Closin’ the Bars,” “Wild-Eyed Willie,” “Memorial,” “Most I Miss the Music,” “She’s Gotta Butt” and “Just Came Down for the Weekend” (which Jimmy Buffett has reportedly bought the rights to), among many others.
We first caught McCloud’s act back in the late 1980s. I believe he was performing at Sloppy Joe’s Bar at the time. I later heard that he had a falling out with Sloppy Joe’s management, which didn’t appreciate him hawking his cassettes. McCloud started referring to Sloppy’s as a “T-shirt shop that sells beer” or something to that effect. Then he moved on to Bull & Whistle, another great dive on Duval Street where he could sell all of his merchandise without any hassle. However, McCloud found his true home at the Schooner Wharf Bar (billed as “A Last Little Piece of Old Key West”), where he currently holds court Thursday through Sunday from noon to five (on Friday, Saturday and Sunday afternoons he is joined by talented musicians Captain Carl “Guitar” Peachey and “Professor” Pete Peterson on keyboards). So, if you’re ever down in Key West, take a little stroll off Duval Street and drop by the Schooner Wharf. Order some Tuna Nachos, which are simply amazing! Prepare to get a good buzz (I recommend the Rum Runner topped with a dark rum float!) and watch all your troubles slowly drift away …