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American Airlines: Latin America, Caribbean Traffic Decline Continues

 

American Airlines Group is continuing to show a traffic decline in Latin America and the Caribbean.

The carrier reported 2.574 billion revenue passenger miles in March, a 4.8 percent decline compared to the same month in 2016.

Available seat miles to the region saw a 2.5 percent reduction to 3.43 billion, while load factor declined by 1.9 percentage points to 75.1 percent last month.

For the year to date, revenue passenger miles to Latin America and the Caribbean have declined by 7 percent compared to the first quarter of 2016, while available seat miles saw a 6.7 percent decline in the first quarter.

— Caribbean Journal Staff

The post American Airlines: Latin America, Caribbean Traffic Decline Continues appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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The Cooper Island Beach Club Is Even Greener

 

One of the Caribbean’s greenest hotels is even greener.

The British Virgin Islands’ Cooper Island Beach Club boutique hotel now has more than 270 photovoltaic solar panels powering the resort.

That has saved over 875,000 lbs of carbon emissions to date.

Even better, the green energy powers the Caribbean’s only solar-powered microbrewery, producing five different varieties of draft beer that change seasonally.

The Beach Club also has a bio-reactor that turns waste water into irrigation water, allowing the property to grow more of its own organic produce.

Of course, the property’s rum bar is reason alone to visit.

— CJ

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Caribbean Photo of the Week: Iguana Island

 

The latest Caribbean Photo comes from Caribbean Journal reader Peter Klein, who sent in this lovely shot of the beach on Little Water Cay, also known as Iguana Island, in the Turks and Caicos Islands.

Have you taken a great photo in the Caribbean?

Send it to news@caribjournal.com with CPOTW in the subject line. It could be the next one!

— CJ

The post Caribbean Photo of the Week: Iguana Island appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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VIDEO: The Most Mystical Place in the Bahamas

 

Perched atop the highest point of land in the entire Bahamas sits one of the most amazing and curious structures you will ever see in the Caribbean.

This is The Hermitage on Cat Island Bahamas; a church, a place of refuge and a monument constructed by a most inspiring man.

The Hermitage was built in 1939 by Father Jerome, an architect-turned-priest known for building churches in England and Western Australia.

The Hermitage is built on Mount Alvernia, so named by Father Jerome as it was known as Como Hill prior to 1939.

Father Jerome also built 5 other churches in the Bahamas including several others on Cat Island and St Pauls Church in Clarence Town, Long Island.

He lived in the Hermitage for 17 years until his death in 1956, and at his request  was  buried  in a cave at the base of The Hermitage with no coffin and no shoes.

Local residents  who still remember him recall him as a small and almost mystical figure.

Before he “retired” to the Bahamas, Father Jerome was known as the Right Reverend Monsignor John Cyril Hawes.

Jerome was a priest in the Church of England before converting to Roman Catholicism and receiving his ordination as a Catholic priest, and Pope Pius XI named him a Monsignor.

He was an architect and builder before and after he was ordained as a priest and he combined his passions for buildings and God.

It’s fitting that that the Hermitage, his creation, devotion and final resting place lives on beyond him in complete deference to the world around it.

A stone spot in a sea of green brush on Cat Island, the site was both a residence and a place for meditation and prayer.

There are a series of rooms connected by small passageways; bedroom, cooking room, chapel, bell tower and guest room.

It’s very quiet here and if you have the correct senses you can feel a palpable presence and a mystical energy in the air.

If your imagination is not conjuring up a presence, you’ll still know what Father Jerome was trying to communicate just by looking around — this place is no luxury villa!

Earlier in his life, when he was Monsignor Hawes he wrote ;  “a proper church is no mere  assembly hall, theater, or  auditorium for preaching and community singing but it is in the first place of all a place of sacrifice. A church should breathe forth an atmosphere of  prayer, of religious awe and supernatural mystery.”

Here, he truly succeeded.

The Hermitage is open to the public 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.

While it’s not too far from Nassau, it’s a million miles away.

And at 207 feet above sea level, it’s the closest you can get to heaven in the Bahamas.

— Guy Britton

The post VIDEO: The Most Mystical Place in the Bahamas appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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VIDEO: Watch This Dog Swim in the Bahamas

 

It’s not just swimming pigs.

While the Bahamas is famous for its maritime pigs in the Exumas archipelago, they aren’t the only animals that take to the sea.

The Bahamas even has swimming dogs.

Watch Dolly, the most popular dog on Great Harbour Cay in the Berry Islands of the Bahamas, go swimming near Cistern Cay, in the video above.

— CJ

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