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$29 for an Everglades Airboat Tour for Two Adults from Coopertown Airboat Tours (Up to $44 Value)

Coopertown Airboat Tours
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Takes ReservationsTakes Reservations

Airboats travel nine miles through the Everglades, gliding past stretches of sawgrass, alligator holes, and wetland wildlife

Like smashing a snow globe against your forehead, tours can open up a fascinating new world right before your eyes. Go beyond the surface with this Groupon.

The Deal

Guides pilot airboats through the Everglades for a nature and wildlife tour, pointing out alligators, herons, and endangered waterfowl. The tour concludes at the Coopertown Restaurant and gift shop. Children aged 7–11 regularly ride for $11 each, and kids under age 7 are free.

Need To Know Info

Promotional value expires Dec 20, 2013. Amount paid never expires. Limit 1 per person, may buy 1 additional as a gift. Limit 1 per visit. No reservations required. Call ahead of time to check availability. Boats range in size and can hold between 12 and up to 30 people each. Boats run every 20 minutes or so. Not valid with any other discounts or promotions. Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services. Learn about Strike-Through Pricing and Savings

About Coopertown Airboat Tours

Back in 1945, Coopertown Airboat Tours was founded on frog legs. When John Cooper would take his airboat out frogging in the Everglades, observers often asked for rides in the unique machine. The demand became so great that he built a passenger airboat—and today, the company has a fleet of seven. Coopertown itself has a population of only 8, and is a largely wild slice of land on the edge of the Everglades, making the popular airboat tours a main source of traffic. That's been fueled partly by attention from sources such as the Miami Herald, which has recommended it as a top winter attraction.

The airboats that depart from Coopertown head deep into the wetlands, where sawgrass covers the water and gators are plentiful. Guides point out a wide variety of wildlife, ranging from herons and turtles to endangered species such as the snail kite. For a more intimate encounter with nature, they also run private tours, voyaging into areas that are only accessible by smaller airboats. Tours typically culminate by the Coopertown restaurant and gift shop. There, guests can snack on the frog legs that started it all, or sample other swampland delights including gator-tail nuggets and catfish.

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