 I want to tell you about one of the strangest places I've ever been. There's this small town about an hour south of Orlando called Lake Wales, and there is a lake there. It's beautiful. Look at it. It's the highest elevated township in Florida. It's only about 200 feet above sea level, but that's the highest point in the peninsula of Florida. Just a little bit north of the lake, there's a tall hill that's above 300 feet above sea level. They call it a mountain down there. And at the peak, there's this. It's called Bach Tower. I was able to see it from miles away down the highway, maybe five miles, eight miles? The video you're seeing here, I was already on the grounds, but I still wasn't that close to it. And the video doesn't do the color justice. It was a striking pink. The facility is at the heart of 50 or 70 acres of privately owned orange groves. And you take a road that winds through them. The whole area is very heavily manicured. There's so much vegetation everywhere. The visitor center is very large, but you can hardly see it from the parking lot for the vegetation. Speaking of the parking lot, look at this. It's gigantic. It goes on forever. I was there in the middle of the day on a weekday, so it was almost empty. But gosh, the size. This is inside the visitor center. A cutaway model of the tower itself, because visitors are not allowed inside the tower. Unless you become a dues-paying member of their foundation, and it's expensive. Here I'm riding a golf cart to the base of the tower itself. And there it is. This thing is strange. It is really strange. It's completely covered with these... What I can only describe is pagan superstitious slash scientific carvings. They're all over it. Very Art Deco, very 1920s. And it does say 1929 right there. The day I was there, the sky looked like a cartoon, bright blue with puffy white cotton ball clouds. This is the view from top of the mountain, as they call it. I've lived in Florida for the better part of 10 years. And I have to tell you, there's no view like this in Florida. This isn't the kind of view that you see in Florida. It was very strange. Everywhere you looked, there were little shrines and little dedication plaques tucked away everywhere. Everything here was man-made, even these swamps and lakes. Were we supposed to sit in that bench? Here's another one of these shrines. These large plaques here will tell you more about the tower. The highest point of land yet measured in Peninsula, Florida. By the government of the United States. There's that view again. It ain't right, I tell ya. There's this little visitor log book in the middle of the woods. You can't see the tower from here, but you can hear the carolons. You can hear them from everywhere. It's like the Queen of Hearts croquet lawn. Everything was so beautifully maintained and manicured. This is not a state park or a Federal Reserve or anything. This is all private foundation. They grow native edible plants in these large gardens on the grounds that they actually serve. They cook up and serve in the kitchen. The kitchen itself was under construction, so I couldn't visit. Everything at the visitor center is an art installation. Even the sidewalks. There are bits of art tucked away in every corner, on every wall, everywhere you look. That's it for now. I'm definitely going to get back there someday. And try to get into that tower.