If you have never been to this part of the world, you are in for a real treat! Cedar
Key has some of the most stunning sunrises and sunsets you have ever seen.
Cedar Key Airport, officially known as George T. Lewis Airport, is uniquely located on a
small island at Daughtry Bajou, on Florida’s North-Eastern Gulf Coast, and is
connected to the mainland via the main Airport Road bridge, popularly called the
Fishing Bridge.
KCDK, a county-owned public-use airport, is situated roughly
halfway between Tallahassee and Tampa, and about 1 nautical mile west of Cedar
Key’s central business district (CBD), in Levy County, Florida, United States.
The US military opened the airport in 1936, primarily as an air & sea rescue base
during and after World War II. Cedar Key Airport sits at an elevation of about 3 m
(11 ft) above sea level and covers an area of about 40 acres (16 ha). The airport
has one main 718 x 30 meter (2355 by 100 feet) paved asphalt runway designated
RWY 5 / RWY 23, with a displaced threshold on both sides, as well as one concrete
helipad that is used by EMS and other rotary-wing aircraft.
The Cedar Key Airport area is surrounded by part of a large protected bird
sanctuary, which is home to birds such as osprey, eagles, herons, egrets,
buzzards, pelicans, and seagulls. Apparently there are even several osprey nests
within the immediate area of the runway.