Boca Raton Beachs & Parks | Red Reef Park 1400 N State Rd A1A, Boca Raton 561-393-7374 Open 8am-10pm 7 days per week. Gumbo Limbo facilities are open Monday thru Saturday 9am-4pm Sunday noon to 4pm. Spanish River Park 3100 N State Rd A1A 561-393-7815 Opens 8am to dark Monday thru Friday South Beach 400 N State Rd A1A Park opens 8am to sundown 7 days per week Although most beach visitors enjoy swimming and sunbathing, provisions are available for volleyball games as well as recommended launch areas for canoes and kayaks, and areas for surfing and snorkeling. For physically challenged beachgoers, beach wheelchairs is also available. | Boca Raton... is a city of beautiful landscaping, parks and beaches. Residents are proud of the city's efforts to maintain and constantly improve the streets, natural areas and its beaches: Red Reef Park (a 67-acre oceanfront park which includes Gumbo Limbo Environmental Education Center on over 20 acres), South Beach Park and its fishing pier, South Inlet Park, and Spanish River Park. Boca Raton is a city in Palm Beach County Fl, incorporated in May 1925. The city had a total population of 74,764; the 2006 population recorded by the U.S. Census Bureau was 86,396. However, the majority of the people under the postal address of Boca Raton, about 200,000 in total, are not actually within the City of Boca Raton's municipal boundaries. It is estimated that on any given day, there are roughly 350,000 people in the city itself. The meaning of the name Boca Raton has always aroused curiosity. Many people wrongly assume the name is simply Rat’s Mouth. The Spanish word boca, or mouth, often describes an inlet, while raton means literally, mouse. The term Boca de Ratones or Boca Ratones, was a navigational referring to a rocky or jagged inlet, but the original location of Boca de Ratones was Biscayne Bay near present day Miami Beach, according to eighteenth century maps. By the beginning of the nineteenth century, the term was mistakenly applied to the current Lake Boca Raton, whose inlet was closed throughout most of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The “s” and later the “e” were dropped from this title by the 1920s, yet the correct pronunciation remains Rah-tone.
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