Monday, September 22, 2014

REPOST: Caribbean holidays: the best lesser-known islands

The Caribbean boasts of its many beautiful tropical islands. This article from The Telegraph enumerates some of the lesser-known but equally stunning Caribbean destinations.
Unknown Caribbean | Image Source: telegraph.co.uk

This low-lying and arid British Overseas Territory has arguably the Caribbean’s finest beaches. There are 33, many with white sand so powder-soft you sink up to your ankles – and even the most popular, such as Rendezvous Bay and Shoal Bay East, are uncrowded. Other draws include high-end restaurants, several of the best luxury beachfront hotels – Cap Juluca, Viceroy Anguilla and, shortly to reopen after an overhaul, Malliouhana – and eye-popping villas (see wimco.com). Celebrities flock here in the winter, but the atmosphere is unshowy and there are affordable places to stay: see charmingescapescollection.com for options.
Getting there: British Airways or Virgin to Antigua, then Liat to Anguilla.
Sample package: with Carrier (0161 492 1354; carrier.co.uk), £2,425 b&b at Cap Juluca, which unfurls along the mile-long, secluded sands of Maundays Bay. 
More information: ivisitanguilla.com
Bequia | Image Source: telegraph.co.uk

For an easy-going, character-rich little getaway, this Grenadines island (seven square miles, population 5,000) excels in virtually every way. Verdant and hilly, Bequia is exceptionally pretty – Admiralty Bay, dotted with yachts, is one of the Caribbean’s most pleasing-on-the-eye natural harbours. At its rear, the villagey capital of Port Elizabeth is a friendly, hassle-free place, and, enlivened by regular ferries from St Vincent and the other Grenadines, has just the right amount of bustle. The island has a decent choice of enticing, laid-back bars and restaurants. Some back on to the waterfront Belmont Walkway on the edge of Port Elizabeth – a great place to gather in the evening. Around the island are several lovely, long golden-sand beaches, a handful of high-quality, small hotels and self-catering to suit all budgets, from lavish villas to simple apartments.
Getting there: BA or Virgin to Barbados, then SVG Air or Mustique Airways to Bequia. 
Sample package: with Just Bequia (01373 814244; justbequia.co.uk), £1,295 b&b in the smart Bequia Beach Hotel, on the peaceful Friendship Bay beach. 
More information: bequiatourism.com
Nevis
Little green Nevis has a slow-paced, old-fashioned charm to it. This is evident in Charlestown, the pretty, diminutive capital, with its “skirt and shirt” buildings (stone ground floors, wooden first floors), and in the elegant and utterly relaxing plantation-house hotels that date from the island’s sugar-cane-producing era in the 17th and 18th centuries. The classiest is Montpelier Plantation, while Nisbet Plantation Beach Club is by a beach – unusual for a plantation hotel; the rural, antique-filled Hermitage, dating from 1680, is the most atmospheric and homely. These hotels are what make Nevis most memorable, though the island does have a lovely long sandy beach (Pinney’s) and a dormant volcano (Nevis Peak) if you fancy a challenging climb.
Getting there: BA to St Kitts, then a 45-minute ferry or quicker water taxi to Nevis. 
Sample package: with Kenwood Travel (020 7749 9220;kenwoodtravel.co.uk), £1,295 b&b at The Hermitage. 
More information: nevisisland.com.
Nevis | Image Source: telegraph.co.uk

Dominica
Come to dramatic, mountainous, rainforest-coated Dominica to be active. Hike along some of its 300 miles of trails – the most popular tough trek heads out to the Boiling Lake, a flooded fumarole. Bathe under towering waterfalls, tube down rivers, snorkel over geothermal springs at the Champagne Reef, and go whale watching – sightings of sperm whales off Dominica are common in the winter months. To rest up, there are a number of delightful, nature-oriented guest houses and small hotels. Big cruise ships include Dominica on their itineraries, but it is easy to escape from their crowds.
Getting there: British Airways or Virgin to Antigua, then Liat to Dominica.
Sample package: with MotMot Travel (01327 359622;motmottravel.com), £1,250 b&b at Rosalie Bay, a riverside and beachfront hotel with lovely gardens, good food and a wide programme of hikes and tours.
More information: discoverdominica.com
Bonaire
Dry, cactus-covered Bonaire is the sleepiest and least populated of the Dutch Caribbean’s so-called ABC islands that lie outside the hurricane belt off Venezuela (the others being Aruba and Curaçao). Its biggest draw is diving and snorkelling. The entire coastline is protected by the Bonaire National Marine Park – hence the rich diversity of underwater life – and the majority of the 80 plus sites are accessible from the shore, so excellent for beginners. Windsurfing is also first rate for all ages and abilities at shallow, reef-protected Lac Bay, and for a change from watersports, there’s flamingo watching – thousands nest on the island’s lagoons and saltpans.
Getting there: KLM to Bonaire, changing planes in Amsterdam. 
Sample package: with Caribbean Fun Travel (01604 882929;caribbeanfuntravel.co.uk), £1,497 b&b at the Harbour Village Beach Club – on one of the island’s few white-sand beaches, and with an on-site dive centre. 
More information: tourismbonaire.com
Bonaire | Image Source: telegraph.co.uk

Harbour Island, The Bahamas
The Bahamas offer two very different holiday faces. On the one hand, there are the enormous high-rise resorts, casinos, cruise-ship hordes and party-loving weekenders from Florida on main islands such as New Providence/Paradise Island. On the other hand, peace, space and pristine beaches set the tone on the Out Islands, the most fashionable of which is three-mile-long Harbour Island. Running along virtually its whole length is famous Pink Sands Beach, composed of powdered coral. Almost as photogenic is neat and chic Dunmore Town, with its colourful old clapboard houses and white picket fences, art galleries and enticing cafés. The preferred means of transport on the island are golf buggies.
Getting there: BA to Nassau, then an onward flight to North Eleuthera Airport, and a 10-minute water taxi to Harbour Island; also daily fast ferry Nassau-Harbour Island. 
Sample package: with Bahamas Flavour (0870 066 9975;bahamasflavour.co.uk), £1,550 b&b for six nights at the recently spruced-up Coral Sands Hotel, right on Pink Sands Beach and a short stroll in to Dunmore Town, with a one-night stopover on New Providence. 
More information: bahamas.co.uk
Montserrat
Another British Overseas Territory, Montserrat is dominated by the active Soufrière Hills Volcano. Its eruption in the 1990s blanketed Plymouth, the former capital, in debris, and resulted in the emigration of more than half of Montserrat’s 12,000 population. Two-thirds of Montserrat is still an exclusion zone, with life now focused in the north. You can take in the volcano from safe viewing points, including the Montserrat Volcano Observatory, and on boat trips. Other reasons to visit include birdwatching (twitchers revel in the chance to spot the island’s rare national bird, the Montserrat oriole), snorkelling and diving – and the island’s wonderfully unhurried pace.
Getting there: British Airways or Virgin to Antigua, then Fly Montserrat on to Montserrat. 
Sample package: with MotMot Travel (01327 359622;motmottravel.com), £1,645 room only staying six nights at Olveston House – set in tropical gardens, the former plantation home is owned by Beatles producer Sir George Martin – plus a one-night stopover on Antigua.
More information: visitmontserrat.com
Baracoa, Cuba
Away from its bland resorts, Cuba has many special places, but none more so than remote Baracoa near the far eastern end of the island. Dating from 1512, it’s Cuba’s oldest settlement, with ancient, brightly-painted clapboard houses on its streets, a casa del chocolate serving drinks made with local cocoa, and an atmospheric casa de la trova (live music venue). The surrounding countryside is Eden-like in its fertility, with banana, cocoa and coconut groves blanketing hillsides. There are quiet dark- and golden-sand beaches nearby, such as Maguana, and a striking flat-topped mountain – El Yunque – to ascend.
Getting there: Virgin to Havana, then on to Baracoa with a Cuban airline. Or drive (though it’s a long way): some Cuban airlines have dubious safety records. 
Sample package: with Esencia Experiences (01481 714898;esenciaexperiences.com), £1,378 b&b staying five nights at hilltop El Castillo, a characterful but simple hotel converted from a fort – plus two nights in Havana. 
More information: travel2cuba.co.uk
Northern Grenada
Tourism on Grenada concentrates in the south-west corner, with few visitors making it up to the lush, slow-paced north. Those that do are normally on day trips, heading for Belmont Estate (a good-quality agri-tourism attraction), River Antoine Rum Distillery (possibly the oldest still operating in the Caribbean) and Bathway Beach, a mile of windswept sands with natural rock pools for safe swimming. The only hotel up here is highly recommended Petite Anse. Set above a wild beach (swimming is often not safe), it’s run by a couple from Worcestershire, and has something of the atmosphere of a laid-back English country-house hotel. The owners can arrange guided hikes, and trips with a fisherman to a deserted offshore island.
Getting there: BA or Virgin to Grenada; transfers from the airport to Petite Anse take around 75 minutes. 
Sample package: with Just Grenada (01373 814214; justgrenada.co.uk), £1,125 b&b at Petite Anse. 
More information: grenadagrenadines.com.
Port Antonio, Jamaica
With jungle-coated hillsides descending to unspoiled beaches, Jamaica’s north-east corner is the most scenic. Port Antonio, its main town, was once a banana port, but is now a snoozy, dilapidated backwater. The most picturesque beach is river-fed Frenchman’s Cove; other attractions include waterfalls with pools in which to swim, gentle river rafting down the Rio Grande, and barbecued food from the roadside “jerk centres” at Boston Bay. A playground for Hollywood stars in the 1950s and 1960s, the Port Antonio area is undergoing a revival, notably with the recent re-opening of the very stylish Trident Hotel. Its sister property, Geejam, is a gorgeous hideaway with a professional recording studio.
Getting there: BA to Kingston, from where it is a two-hour drive up to Port Antonio. 
Sample package: with Caribtours (020 7751 0660; caribtours.co.uk), £2,245 b&b at the Trident Hotel. 
More information: visitjamaica.com.
A shop in Port Antonio, Jamaica | Image Source: telegraph.co.uk

East coast Barbados
Just 45 minutes’ drive from the busy and developed west and south coasts, Barbados’s eastern shore is a different world – palm-smothered slopes running down to little villages and empty beaches bashed by Atlantic breakers. Bathsheba, with its eroded, mushroom-shaped rocks, is a beautiful spot: swimming is unsafe, but the waves attract experienced surfers. At the fishing hamlet of Tent Bay are two excellent places to stay: the Atlantis, dating from the 19th century, and restored with a colonial-chic look; and rustic-casual Sea-U Guesthouse (seaubarbados.com; from £100 b&b a night per room), with hammocks strung up on bedroom verandahs. A walk up the hill brings you to the delightful Andromeda Botanic Gardens.
Getting there: BA or Virgin. 
Sample package: with Tropic Breeze (01752 880880;tropicbreeze.co.uk), £1,398 b&b at the Atlantis; packages possible combining stays at the hotel with its sister property Little Good Harbour on Barbados’ west coast. 
More information: visitbarbados.org.

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