Category: Island Life

Belize Now Planning to Reopen for Tourism in October

 

A few weeks after postponing its tourism reopening, Belize has announced a new planned reopening date of Oct. 1, Caribbean Journal has learned. 

The country on the Caribbean coast of Central America will be reopening its Philip Goldson International Airport on that date, as part of Belize’s five-phase tourism reopening strategy. 

Travelers will only be permitted to stay in approved hotels, the Belize Tourism Board said. 

They will also have to download the new Belize Health App and show proof of a negative COVID-19 PCR test within 72 hours of arrival. 

On arrival, travelers will also undergo a health and temperature screening that may include a random secondary COVID test, officials said. 

Belize will be offering a limited array of excursions, subject to the same “Gold Standard” health and safety protocols. 

Belize is also creating a series of “Safe Corridors” for visitors, aiming to ensure both the safety of travelers and the local population. 

Travelers who test positive on one of the random tests will have to undergo a minimum 14-day quarantine art an approved quarantine hotel at their own expense. 

It’s not yet clear which hotels have been approved for visitors, but many of the country’s hotels and resorts were already planning on reopening in August. 

You can find more on Belize’s tourism entry protocols here

— CJ

The post Belize Now Planning to Reopen for Tourism in October appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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The Ultimate Foodie Getaway to St Barth

 

The greatest food in the world and the greatest rum in the world, all one one island for one week. 

That’s the case each November when the Caribbean Rum Awards and the St Barth Gourmet Festival come together for a week of sheer gastronomic bliss. 

The Caribbean Rum Awards is the ultimate rum experience in the Caribbean, a week-long gala of outdoor parties, master classes and a collection of the greatest rums from across the region, all centered around the world’s leading rum bar, the Rhum Room in Gustavia

st barth caribbean rumd
The Rhum Room in Gustavia.

And the St Barth Gourmet Festival is a series of culinary fetes featuring some of the top Michelin-starred chefs from France. 

In other words, it’s the ultimate foodie getaway. 

And now Caribbean Journal has partnered with WIMCO Villas and Tradewind Aviation to give travelers a chance at winning a “St Barth Foodie Dream Giveaway,” which will include round-trip tickets for two on private airline Tradewind Aviation; a seven-night stay for two in St Barth’s Villa King Gustav and a tasting dinner for two at one of the participating Gourmet Week restaurants. 

It also includes two VIP tickets to the Caribbean Rum Awards. 

All travelers need to do is upload a photo from their favorite vacation.

For more, visit the St Barth Foodie Dream giveaway here

— CJ

The post The Ultimate Foodie Getaway to St Barth appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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Brothers’ nonprofit feeds hungry in native Puerto Rico

… 23, headed home to Puerto Rico in March after the COVID … nonprofit organization, A Comer Puerto Rico, has helped feed more … have drained resources for the Puerto Rican people,” Héctor said. “ … . We are alive.’
Puerto Ricans are an incredibly resilient people …

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CJI Conversation: Jason Erickson of TSG Water Resources

 

It’s the most essential part of any hotel or resort project in the Caribbean: the water plant. 

Plainly, hotels and resorts can’t exist without the necessary water infrastructure — and developing it can be particularly challenging in island environments. 

For years, TSG Water has been at the forefront of the industry, either designing, building or upgrading more than 90 water treatment and wastewater treatment facilities across the wider region. 

To learn more, Caribbean Journal Invest talked to Jason Erickson, Senior VP and COO of TSG Water. 

caribbean water treatment
Jason Erickson, SVP and COO at TSG Water Resources.

Tell us a little about the history of your company and what you do.

TSG is a private water and wastewater utility company serving primarily resorts and private residential developments in the Caribbean and Latin America. TSG has been designing, building and operating desalination and wastewater treatment plants since 1998 and currently has operations in eight countries, with our Home Office in Gainesville, FL.

TSG began as a design build company that was primarily providing water treatment equipment to resorts and governments in the Caribbean. In the islands and coastal regions in which we operate, governmental water supplies and wastewater treatment systems tend to be either unavailable or unreliable, and so having one’s own treatment systems is often necessary. But what we began to realize after a few years is that most resorts and private residential developments are ill-equipped to operate and maintain this kind of equipment reliably and effectively. What these developments need is the same kind of water and wastewater treatment service they would have from a municipality in the United States or other developed country. TSG seeks to replicate this kind of utility service in its latest service offering through TSG Water Partners

You mentioned your private water utility service. Can you tell us how TSG Water Partners works?

TSG Water Partners is a joint venture between TSG, WaterMark Resource Development, LLC and Akira Partners, Inc. TSG Water Partners can provide a full, turnkey service in which the necessary equipment is designed, manufactured, installed and operated for the long term, and the results are guaranteed based on our 20 year track record. We supply not only the equipment but also the capital necessary both for the initial phase of development as well as subsequent phases. Our clients have what they need–water supply and wastewater treatment services–to sell real estate and hospitality services, which is their primary business, without having to take on the risk and responsibility of developing and operating these systems themselves.

Is this service available only to new resorts only, or are there ways that existing properties can take advantage of this service?

This service is available both to new resorts and to existing resorts. For existing resorts, we can acquire desalination and wastewater treatment systems of any manufacturer and provide any necessary repairs, upgrades or expansions. We can then operate these systems just as reliably and effectively as ones that we supply.

In fact, we have found a significant amount of interest in this solution currently because of the challenges most resort properties are facing with the coronavirus crisis. Many resorts are finding that this may be a good time to allow a professional third party firm to assume responsibility for these critical utilities and to realize an immediate financial benefit as well. By working with TSG Water Partners, they can also convert these utility services into a long-term, ongoing source of profitability.

How many projects has your company completed in the Caribbean and Latin America?

TSG has designed, built, upgraded or upgraded over 90 water treatment and wastewater treatment facilities in the Caribbean and Latin America.  The majority of or our projects have been in the Caribbean and the Bahamas with about 10% in Mexico. We also have long term operations and maintenance contracts in 7 countries.  These contracts consist of a mix of our various levels of service. 

Do you offer operation and maintenance services other than private water utilities?

TSG offers a wide range of service packages from Full Responsibility including all parts and labor to weekly, monthly, or quarterly visits to assist the owners’ operators in maintenance and repair. TSG also provides complete design and consulting services for any water and wastewater infrastructure projects.  This applies to new construction as well as upgrading and refurbishment of existing plants.

What is the largest Caribbean project you have ever completed?

We have completed a number of fairly large projects in the Caribbean and Latin America. The largest of these is a desalination plant of 2,000,000 gallons a day, which is about as large a plant as is needed for any resort or residential development.

We understand you built the water plant and utilities on Necker Island. Can you tell us about that project?

The desalination plant on Necker Island was in fact the first plant that TSG designed and built in the Caribbean in 1998. We continue to provide service to the plant on Necker Island as well as a plant TSG built on another island in the area owned by Richard Branson, Moskito Island.


What new technologies are on the horizon?

TSG continues to look at new water and wastewater treatment technologies in an effort to provide our clients with the most efficient and effective products.  Currently, we are focused on leveraging SCADA and edge of network IoT to help us collect, analyze and act upon near real time data from the plants we operate, regardless of how remote the geographic location.

This data allows us to gather a more complete picture of how our water and wastewater plants are operating.  Through the use of these modern operational intelligence tools combined with battle tested maintenance best practices, we are able to provide unparalleled world-class equipment reliability that translates into the most efficient and cost-effective operations in the region.

For more, visit TSG Water.

The post CJI Conversation: Jason Erickson of TSG Water Resources appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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Sandals Just Reopened Another Resort in Saint Lucia

 

Sandals Resorts International has reopened another of its resorts in Saint Lucia, Caribbean Journal has learned. 

This week, Sandals relaunched its Sandals Regency La Toc resort, a 331-room property on a 220-acre estate on the western coast of the island. 

“The travel industry was one of the hardest hit, but we vowed to our core to come back stronger than ever. That resilience now has us beaming with optimism as we continue to safely open more and more of our resorts with the strictest health protocols to give our guests peace of mind,”  Adam Stewart, Deputy Chairman of Sandals Resorts International, told Caribbean Journal in a statement. 

sandals saint lucia resort
Cabanas at the resort.

The company had already reopened the Sandals Grande St Lucian resort earlier this summer. 

Sandals’ third resort in Saint Lucia, the Sandals Halcyon Beach, is slated to reopen on Nov. 1, according to the company. 

Saint Lucia reopened for tourism in early June, and has been a model for safe tourism reopenings in the wider Caribbean, a sentiment echoed by Stewart.

sandals saint lucia resort

“Saint. Lucia has also had incredible success in welcoming visitors back to the island, speaking volumes to the efforts made to recover tourism,” Stewart said. “As we begin to turn the corner, we see this renaissance for the curiosity of travel and a demand that has only gotten stronger.”

You can find Saint Lucia’s health and safety protocols for visitors here

“We hear daily from our guests about their new-found appreciation and excitement for travel. And as the friction begins to relax more and more, we expect this to grow exponentially,” Stewart said. “People want to get back to doing the things they love, and travel experiences are topping the list. After so much time being pent-up, customers are longing for immersive culture, international cuisine, and the world’s best resorts to which we proudly and humbly rank at the top of the list.”

For more, visit Sandals

— CJ

The post Sandals Just Reopened Another Resort in Saint Lucia appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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