Why Anguilla? Body, mind and spirit.
For Your Body
Gentle seas to swim, astoundingly beautiful beaches for relaxation, reflection, contemplation - and beach games, jogs and picnics. The pinnacle of gastronomic delights including over 70 dining experiences presented by a cadre of world renowned international and award-winning local chefs, and enlivened by drop-by, roadside barbecues and beachside bistros and grills. Resorts and independent spas offering the latest in spa and wellness facilities, services and treatments. Unhurried, uncomplicated and easy to explore Anguilla invites bike tours and hiking excursions; and provides you with a myriad of activity choices.
Antigua – Barbuda
All the signs pointed towards Antigua. The largest of the British Leeward Islands had warm, steady winds, a complex coastline of safe harbors, and a protective, nearly unbroken wall of coral reef. It would make a perfect place to hide a fleet. And so in 1784 the legendary Admiral Horatio Nelson sailed to Antigua and established Great Britain's most important Caribbean base. Little did he know that over 200 years later the same unique characteristics that attracted the Royal Navy would transform Antigua and Barbuda in one of the Caribbean's premier tourist destinations
British Virgin Islands
The British Virgin Islands are a paradise waiting to be discovered. The BVIs have a small native population and, typically, small resorts, inns and villas. Getting away from it all is easy in the islands, given the variety of lodging, from the elegant luxury resort to the affordable kitchenette. And beautiful villas. Great for families too!
Cayman Islands
The Cayman Islands are well known by fisherman the world over as a top destination for all types of sportfishing. From deep-water trolling for Blue Marlin, to casting for bonefish in the knee-deep waters of a lagoon, you'll find the action you're looking for Curacao. Spectacular natural beauty, a wealth of activities and points of interest, and all the modern conveniences to make your stay as comfortable as possible can be found here on the largest and most developed of the three Cayman Islands. Grand Cayman is the home of George Town, the capital city, which boasts some of the finest cuisine and shopping in the Caribbean. Whether you want to explore a sunken wreck, dance the night away, or simply go sightseeing, Grand Cayman is the place to start.
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Curaçao
Curaçao is a tangled plate of spaghetti western tossed down in the Caribbean Sea and garnished with a glob of Willemstad sophisti-sauce. More Caribbean in character than Aruba and more European than Bonaire, Curacao is the cosmopolitan centrer of the Dutch Leewards, and island that appreciates refined music, food and drink. The island's scrubby kunuku (countryside) is strewn with cacti, keening divi-divi trees and lizards looking glibly at diving weirdos with oxygen strapped to their backs. The capital, Willemstad, manages to be both dinky and grand while serving up the food, shopping and slickness of a town much less manageable, and architecturally is the most distinctive city in the Caribbean, it resembles a miniature Amsterdam.
Grenada
Grenada is a rolling, mountainous island, covered with fragrant spice trees and rare tropical flowers. Bordered by stunning beaches, and dotted with picturesque towns, this verdant island has long been a major source of nutmeg, cloves, ginger, cinnamon, and cocoa. The seductive drifts through the colourful Saturday markets and Grenada's dense forests. In the interior of this volcanic island are cascading rivers and waterfalls, lush rainforests, and one of the most breathtakingly beautiful mountain lakes imaginable. The capital, St. George's, is widely held to be the loveliest city in the Caribbean. Its horseshoe-shaped harbour is surrounded by a pastel rainbow of dockside warehouses and the red-tiled roofs of traditional shops and homes.
Jamaica
From the 7400 foot peaks of the Blue Mountains, where the famous coffee is grown, Jamacia’s terrain droips to foothills of banana groves and sugarcane fields and orchards of mango and limes. Brilliant flowers, vivid birds, exotic fruit, gentel people whose voices lilt as though they are singing – there are the charms with which this Caribbean beauty seduces her admirers. Jamaica, the land of reggae, is the quintessence of the Caribbean and offers diversity – in landscape and in lifestyle, culture and cuisine, sports and attractions – that few islands can match. There are waterfalls to climb, mountains to hike, trails to ride, golf, tennis, polo, diving, fishing, plus attractions that are unique to Jamaica. Jamaica was called Xaymaca, meaning land of wood and water, by the Arawaks who inhabited the island when Columbus arrived in 1494.
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Saint Barthelemy
Take one beach-fringed volcanic island, sweltering in the tropical sun for several million years.
Add a handful of French maritime adventurers in search of a new and better life.
Simmer for four hundred years. Turn up the heat, and add luxurious villas, elegant small hotels, and world class French restaurants. Baste with equal amounts of sophisticated relaxation and rustic charm.
Saint Croix
St. Croix boasts perhaps the broadest appeal of any of the U.S. Virgin Islands. The island offer more diversity and activity than Saint John without suffering from the overdevelopment and cruise ship commecialism that tarnishes St. Thomas. It bustles but stays beautiful. Christiansted, the main town, retains much of its Cruzan character and a number of historic buildings from the early period of Danish settlement. The countryside is scenic, roads are good, and getting around in a rental car is easy once you adjust to driving on the left side. The beaches are plentiful, if not uniformly enticing, and the diving and snorkelling can be terrific at such sites as Cane Bay and Buck Island, the latter an offshore park that is the only mostly submerged U.S. National Monument.
Saint John
Saint John has always been known as the pure virgin in the U.S. family, and is truly America the Beautiful. Almost three-quarters of the mountainous island is covered by the Virgin Islands National Park that remains unspoiled, and the natural grandeur can be stunning. Around its edges lovely little coves hide some of the most alluring porcelain white beaches and aquamarine waters in the Caribbean. Even though this is the smallest of the Virgins, 28 square miles in size, many say it is the loveliest. Two thirds of St. John is a U.S. National Park, and here you see what the world is like when nature takes care of itself. Spend day after day on beach after beach, each with its own panoramic view. The trail to Rams Head on the northeast side of the island contrasts with the normal soft white sand Beaches found elsewhere on St. John. |