
WEIGHT: 59 kg
Bust: 3
One HOUR:90$
NIGHT: +30$
Services: Mistress, Massage, Lapdancing, 'A' Levels, 'A' Levels
We're pleased that you are considering visiting us. To insure you stay is a pleasant one, we have listed some attractions you might be interested in seeing while you are with us. Ford Winter Home - After stepping back in time at the Edison Home, visitors can step next door to the winter home of automobile industrialist Henry Ford. The three acre estate was purchased by Ford in to spend the winter months visiting his friend, Thomas Edison. The two properties are separated by a fence, which both families named "The Friendship Gate".
Ford's home, known as "Mangoes", has undergone extensive renovation to bring it back to the period when he and his wife Clara lived there. You may stay in either one of our luxurious hotel rooms or in a spacious condominium. During your stay you will be pampered at our world-class Spa, take tennis lessons with one of our tennis professionals, rent a waverunner or motorboat, or just relax at one of our three swimming pools.
But be sure to experience one of our spectacular sunsets. Fort Myers Historical Museum - Housed appropriately in the restored ACL Peck Street Depot, which discontinued rail passenger service in after 67 years, displays and exhibits document history of the area from BC through the present. Displays include graphic depictions of Calusa, Spanish explorers and Seminole Indian civilizations, ancient artifacts gathered from the region, and a significant collection of Ethel Cooper Glass.
A favorite acquisition is a private rail car, The Esperanza, circa , presented to the museum by the Fort Myers Centennial Committee in The research center, widely used by local residents, includes an extensive photo collection, oral history tapes, maps and other materials about the Fort Myers area.
Local history books and gift items are sold in the gift shop. The museum presents educational programs, traveling exhibits and oral history programs on a continuing basis. Burroughs Home - Fort Myers' first luxury home, actually credited with starting the area's building boom at the turn of the century by cattleman John Murphy, has been restored and is open to the public.