Author: arroyolarue@gmail.com

New Rooms at Beaches Negril

 

By the Caribbean Journal staff

The all-inclusive Beaches Negril in Jamaica has announced the launch of a new range of both rooms and suites.

The family-friendly resort on Seven Mile Beach has added a total of eight new room and suite categories, ranging from the Negril Luxury Double to the spectacular Tropical Beachfront Two Bedroom Grand Butler Family Suite.

A Negril Luxury Double room at Beaches Negril.

The latter comes with two bedrooms, three full bathrooms, a private balcony, a spacious living room and a fully-stocked in room bar. (It also comes with private VIP in-room check-in and 24-hour room service, among other amenities).

A tropical beachfront concierge family suite.

As part of the new launch, Beaches announced it had terminated its Honeymoon Luxury units; guests booked in those categories will be upgraded to luxury king or luxury double rooms.

— CJ

The post New Rooms at Beaches Negril appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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Mayor McCarthy talks about his trip to Puerto Rico

… of traffic, McCarthy said the Puerto Rican city was facing a different … , McCarthy said he gave the Puerto Rican officials pins from Schenectady, while … introduce the Puerto Rican contingent to General Electric.
Most of Puerto Rico is powered …

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VIDEO: Discovering the New Dominica

 

By Alexander Britell and Guy Britton

DOMINICA – It’s the brightest hour of the late afternoon and everyone is in the water, looking out at stunning green mountains and blue sea.

We’re all at the new infinity pool at the Fort Young Hotel in Roseau, some under the water, some in the corner hot tub, all admiring what has quietly — and suddenly — become one of the most spectacular settings in the Caribbean.

Sitting here, sipping rum, looking out at the almost intimidating natural beauty, you don’t even think about what happened here an autumn ago, about how an island changed forever.

Dominica has not forgotten the storms – and it never will. But here, almost a year later, it is beginning to be reborn.

The market in Roseau.

The heartbeat of Dominica’s recovery is here in Roseau, where, walking the bustling streets, you’d have to squint to see signs of Irma. The market is full, the sidewalks jammed, the coffee cups clacking at Le Petit Paris, an abundant ambience of industry and purpose all over the city. The bars are back, from the spiced rums of the Ruins Rock to the local drinks of the Hi-Rise Beach Bar.

A world of local spiced rum at the Ruins Rock.

But everything seems to come back to that pool.

This isn’t what you think of when you think of Dominica. At least it didn’t used to be.

It’s ultra-modern, hip, chic. It’s got a different energy.

The Fort Young, long the largest hotel in Dominica, was the first to reopen this year, itself reborn, led by the pool, a redone seafront restaurant, a new dive shop and a waterside check-in.

The hotel is in the midst of a dramatic re-imagination, one that will conclude with a totally re-conceived and expanded hotel that will be unlike anything the island has seen before.

But if the already-present changes look familiar, they should.

The natural beauty hasn’t changed.

They’re the brainchild of Fort Young managing director Gregor Nassief, best known as the owner of Dominica’s now-world-renowned Secret Bay luxury eco resort, which closed last year and will reopen with its own new look in November.

And Nassief has taken the kinds of forward-thinking design touches from Secret Bay, blending local construction and international, contemporary looks, and begun to bring them to the Fort Young.

It’s the kind of hotel that could be a game-changer for the island, shifting tourism energy to the capital and even bringing new kinds of travelers to an island that needs them.

The hotel’s terrific Palisades restaurant has become the place to eat on the island — including a weekly Friday dinner that’s extremely popular with locals.

Nobody knows better than Nassief about the transformational power of a hotel for the island.

And just as Secret Bay redefined Dominica as a luxury destination, the new Fort Young could in its own way redefine Dominica as a destination, period. At least that’s how it feels.

It feels fresh, it feels different, and it feels like the beginning of a new Dominica.

Because while Dominica has changed in some ways, its natural beauty hasn’t — and it’s ready for travelers looking for the beauty, for the wonder, for the adventure that always made Dominica such a bucket-list destination.

Yes, you can still snorkel at Champagne Reef, and hike to Trafalgar Falls, and go whale watching. You can still find undiscovered black-sand beaches and meet some of the friendliest people you’ll ever encounter.

It is a new Dominica. But it is still very much Dominica.

Almost one year later, the island is as spectacularly beautiful and as enjoyable as it has ever been,” Nassief tells Caribbean Journal. “There is no denying that it has been a hard year for many, and the recovery continues, but the spirit of the people and their progress is astounding.  The rebirth and regrowth of our forests is unbelievable, the fact that our world-renown dive sites are for the most part untouched is a blessing, and our unique, secluded black-and-white sand beaches and exotic nature trails are yearning for foot prints.  Most of all, our friendly and sincere people, grateful for life after Maria, want and need tourism to return.  Our island is longing to be rediscovered.”

See more in the latest CJ Video.

— CJ

The post VIDEO: Discovering the New Dominica appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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Saint Lucia Has a New Solar Farm

 

By Dana Niland
CJ Contributor

Former U.S. President Bill Clinton, Saint Lucia Prime Minister Allen Chastanet, former President Figueres of Costa Rica and the Rocky Mountain Institute have officially opened a major new three-megawatt solar farm in Saint Lucia.

The Vieux Fort-area renewable energy project, the first of its kind in Saint Lucia, was made possible through technical assistance from RMI and the Clinton Climate Initiative.

“We live in an interdependent world. No one caused climate change alone. No one caused the sea levels to rise alone—and no one will fix it alone,” Clinton said. “This is the beginning of a comprehensive, determined, unrelenting effort to make Saint Lucia, and all island nations of the Caribbean, stronger, safer and more sustainable.”

The solar farm builds on the work LUCELEC has been doing since 2009 with grid-tied rooftop solar photovoltaic systems.

It is expected to provide the impetus for more renewable energy initiatives and help change Saint Lucia’s energy landscape.

Saint Lucia Electricity Services Limited’s solar farm is the product of collaborative international cooperation from the business, government, and nonprofit sectors.

“I know that this renewable energy project will be a great success and it represents a new promise and a new model that I hope to see replicated in the future,” Chastanet said. “We remain very optimistic about the future of the development of the electricity sector and as a Government we are committed to projects such as these which are the key to facing the climate challenge that small islands like ours face.”

The $20 million project is set just north of Saint Lucia’s Hewanorra International Airport.

It is expected to generate around 7 million kWhs of electricity every year, or about five percent of Saint Lucia’s annual electricity demand.

The post Saint Lucia Has a New Solar Farm appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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Kids are back in school in Puerto Rico. But Hurricane Maria’s effects still linger

Puerto Rico almost a year ago.
PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiherald.com
Across Puerto Rico … the semester, the Association of Puerto Rican Teachers criticized what it characterized … , Puerto Rico. It’s been almost a year since Hurricane Maria hit Puerto Rico

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