Miami
"Miami is what happens when the tropics decide to throw a party and never stop."
There is a specific quality of light in Miami that I have not found anywhere else — a brightness that feels almost confrontational, bouncing off the white and coral and seafoam facades of Ocean Drive until the whole street seems to generate its own glow. I arrived here expecting a beach city. What I found was something closer to a country.
Ocean Drive and the Art Deco District
Lia and I spent our first morning walking the length of Ocean Drive from 5th Street up to the Carlyle, nursing cafecitos we bought through a ventanita on Calle Ocho — tiny paper cups of espresso so dense and sweet they felt less like coffee and more like a declaration. The Art Deco buildings are absurdly photogenic in a way that somehow never gets old: the porthole windows, the racing stripes in pastel pink and mint, the neon signs that start humming to life around dusk. The Versace Mansion sits mid-block on Ocean Drive like it wandered in from another era entirely and decided to stay. I stood in front of it for longer than I care to admit.
Little Havana After Dark
The unexpected discovery came on our second night, when we drifted west of downtown and ended up at a domino table in Máximo Gómez Park — Domino Park, as everyone calls it — sometime around nine in the evening. We had not planned to be there. A man named Eduardo invited me to watch a game with a wave of his hand, and for the next hour I sat in the humid night air while four retirees slapped tiles down with the focused intensity of chess grandmasters. Miami’s Latin identity is not decorative. On SW 8th Street the signage switches to Spanish entirely, the music spilling from the botanicas and cafeterias is cumbia and son cubano, and the smell of slow-roasted pork from the Cuban restaurants drifts across the sidewalk all evening long.
The Water, Always the Water
No visit makes sense without the water. We crossed the MacArthur Causeway to South Beach twice, watching the bay flash beneath us — that impossible turquoise-green of Biscayne Bay that looks digitally enhanced until you realize it is simply real. The Atlantic side of South Beach is rougher and louder, but early morning, before ten, the beach is calm enough to hear the waves properly. That is Miami at its best: briefly quiet, enormous, still a little wild at the edges.
When to go: November through March offers the most bearable heat and humidity, with clear skies and temperatures in the mid-20s Celsius — ideal for walking the Art Deco District and spending long hours outside. Avoid August and September if humidity is a concern; hurricane season peaks then and the air sits heavy and close.