Romar Beach is a gorgeous white sand beach in Gulf State Park, Orange Beach, Alabama. Learn more about parking, beach ac
It’s quite a sight in south Alabama: palm trees blowing in the wind, with snow down below. Alabama’s beaches have transformed into a winter wonderland as the white stuff touched down Tuesday in Gulf Shores,
The Gulf Coast is digging out from a once-in-a-lifetime snowstorm that struck from Texas to Florida, closing airports and crippling roadways.
Due to its location on the Gulf of Mexico, Gulf Shores plays host to ... most of which leave from nearby Orange Beach. Fun Boats Dolphin Cruises earns routine praise from recent visitors not ...
The scene was a highlight of a weekend gathering on the Alabama Gulf Coast of ... gathered outside the Hampton Inn in Orange Beach and ran into the Gulf of Mexico. Other weekend highlights ...
The National Weather Service's Lake Charles, Louisiana, office issued its first-ever blizzard warning Tuesday. The NWS' Mobile office reposted video on X of two people having a snowball fight in Orange Beach,
Situated in nearby Orange Beach, Alabama, The Wharf offers a family-friendly ... The complex is situated about 7 miles northeast of Gulf Shores Public Beach and is free to visit, though ...
WASHINGTON, D.C. (WSFA) - An Alabama congressman is throwing his support behind President-elect Donald Trump’s plans to rename the Gulf of Mexico. On Thursday, Republican Rep. Barry Moore ...
Florida lawmakers and DeSantis could have a way to update state laws to change references from the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America. The Legislature regularly passes what are known as "reviser's bills" that do such things as change terms in laws.
After President Donald Trump issued an executive order to change the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis quickly jumped on the idea. But actually making
Part of a legal description of a boundary line of Dixie County, for instance, says it goes “southerly down the thread of the main stream of said Suwannee River to the Gulf of Mexico; thence along said Gulf of Mexico, including the waters of said gulf within the jurisdiction of the State of Florida, to the mouth of the Steinhatchee River.”
A computer search of Florida laws shows at least 55 statutes include references to the Gulf of Mexico, while local-government ordinances also are tied to the traditional name.