Once the gang finished eating, they hopped back into Frank. Frank went back onto the Tamiami Trail from where he left off. He traveled past the Wildlife Park and entered Lee County. He went onto another US 41 business to continue on the Tamiami Trail off Cleveland Avenue.

He went over the Edison Bridge and into Fort Myers. "Thomas Edison spent his winters here in Fort Myers," said Summer. Right before passing Edison's winter house, Frank continued south onto Cleveland Avenue to continue along the Tamiami Trail.

"There's the Edison Mall," said Frankie. Frank crossed Corkscrew Road. Leonard said, "Frankie, Corkscrew Road was a very frequent road we drove on before." Frank went past Coconut Point at Coconut Road and continued into Bonita Springs. "There's Tokyo Bay, which is like Benihana," said Summer. As they passed Bonita Bay, Marta said "I had grandparents over there before." "Cool," said Alicia.

"There's the route to the beach," said Marta as Frank passed Bonita Beach Road. "And there's what used to be Anthony's Trattoria," she said. As they passed Woods Edge Parkway, they saw Mel's Diner. "We used to eat lunch there," said Marta. Frank entered Collier County and passed Caribbean Gardens and into downtown Naples. "The north-south part of the Tamiami Trail ends here," Frank told everyone as he made it to Fifth Street East. "Now I've got to turn left to continue on US 41." He turned onto Fifth Street East and then continued east on the Tamiami Trail. They passed through Eagle Lakes and went into the scenic route with alligators. "Alligators are a common sight on this part," Frank told everyone. They passed State Route 29 and through the Everglades and looked for alligators. "We went on air boat rides here," Marta said.

"There's an alligator!" said Summer. "They can eat you if you don't watch out for them." Frank continued to ride through the park and entered Miami-Dade County. "Now we're in Miami-Dade County," Frank said. "The Tamiami Trail in this county becomes Southwest Eighth Street."

Frank entered out of the scenice route and onto the grid. He passed Krome Avenue or Southwest 177th Avenue. The kids saw street signs with a name and a number. "These signs look unique," said Summer. "I've never seen a street with two names on one street sign. I'll call the streets by their names, not their numbers."

"They must have kept the street names in history as they were numbering the streets," said Zack. They drove through Tamiami and under the Ronald Reagan Turnpike. "There's Florida International University," said Katie before they reached the Avenue of the Americas. They passed Galloway Road, Ludlam Road, and Red Road and entered Coral Gables.

"The signs in Coral Gables are in cinder block on the ground and they don't have the street numbers," said Michelle. "Oh, so that's easy, when there are two names for a street, a name and a number," said Eleni.

As Frank passed Le Jeune Road, Douglas Road, and Unity Boulevard, they entered the Little Havana section of Miami. "In here, the Tamiami Trail is famous as Calle Ocho and only goes one way," said Frank. "Calle Ocho is Spanish for Eighth Street."

On one side, Tomika, Alicia and Marta saw a path of dominoes. "A domino path," said Alicia. "How cool?" As they passed I-95, they saw the Brickell City Centre. At Miami Avenue, Frank stopped at the red light and explained, "Miami Avenue is the y-axis of the city grid. All avenues east will carry an "East" designation and all avenues west will carry a "West" designation."

Frank continued and reached the end of the Tamiami Trail at Brickell Avenue. "Here's Brickell, where the Tamiami Trail ends," he told everyone. He turned onto Brickell Avenue and drove them to their beachfront hotel.

Frank drove on Brickell Avenue over the Miami River and the road became Biscayne Boulevard. When he reached Flagler Street, he explained, "Flagler Street is the city's x-axis. All streets north will carry a "North" designation and all streets south will carry a "South" designation." He turned onto the MacArthur Causeway and across the Biscayne Bay. He merged onto Fifth Street and turned onto Ocean Drive and reached the hotel.

"Here's your hotel," Frank told them. Everyone hopped out of him and grabbed their things and walked to the entrance. "Hello, we're sixteen," Dewey told the hotel manager. "We'll put four of you in four rooms next to each other," said the manager.

Dewey and the gang walked to the elevator and hopped in and moved up to level three. As they got out, they walked into their rooms. Dewey, Summer, Zack, and Freddy were in room 305. Katie, Lawrence, Tomika, and Billy were in room 307. Alicia, Marta, Gordon, and Marco were in room 309. Frankie, Leonard, Michelle, and Eleni were in room 311. Everybody rested in their rooms and headed off to bed that night.