Five Events to Visit in St. Barth This Year

 

St. Barth is rolling out a lineup of events for this year featuring music, film, food, sailing and more.

Guests will arrive to find a host of festivals, regattas and cultural adventures all year round.

The St. Barth Bucket Regatta will take place from March 16-19, drawing 40 sailboats and yachts from around the world for three days of races around the island.

Now in its 26th year, the regatta maintains a spirit focusing on camaraderie between boat owners, designers and builders.

For guests of the island, the event provides an opportunity to admire the vessels anchored in the harbor and to attend one of the associated social events.

From April 10-15, over 1,000 sailors and at least 80 boats will travel to the island for Les Voiles de St. Barth, a week-long regatta.

The event, now in its eighth year, features racing, concerts and activities on the beach.

The 23rd Annual St. Barth Film Festival, which will take place from April 25-30, highlights Caribbean cinema and filmmaking.

The festival offers a series of screenings, as well as debates and meetings with film professionals– allowing guests to engage with notable producers, actors and directors.

From May 18-27, the St. Barth Theater Festival will feature performances by local companies and Côté Scène, in addition to visiting troupes from neighboring islands and France.

Taking place from November 2-5, the St. Barth Gourmet Festival celebrates the island’s cuisine and and tradition of culinary excellence.

The event includes some of the leading hotels hosting visiting chefs who prepare special menus with wine pairings, in addition to mixology and pastry competitions.

— Dana Niland, CJ Contributor

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How to Drive a Mini Around Jamaica

 

Jamaica-based tour company Island Routes Caribbean Adventures has announced a big new way to see the island. But, in fact, it’s pretty small.

On March 1, the company will debut MINI-Routes, two new tours that allow guests to drive themselves around the island in custom-branded MINI Cooper cars.

An expert guide will lead the convoy of curious visitors from Montego Bay to either Ocho Rios or Negril, stopping to see famous landmarks and attractions and to sample local eateries along the way.

Visitors will be able to choose from hardtop, convertible, two-door and four-door vehicles for their self-drive sightseeing excursion, which will include stops at waterfalls, coconut vendors, jerk stands and, in Negril, on the town’s famous beach.

Island Routes says its plans to eventually expand its “revolving routes” across the island, creating tours to suit both island newbies and seasoned visitors.

Prices for the Negril and Mo’Bay tours start at $450 per car.

— Sarah Greaves-Gabbadon, CJ Travel Editor

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The Rebirth of Downtown Nassau

 

It’s late afternoon in a cigar factory, as rollers methodically weave tobacco leaves into fresh-rolled puros.

Just a few steps away, chocolatiers are making a new batch of rum-filled truffles; down the street, a local is producing artisanal teas; a block further the Bahamas’ greatest living artist is pondering his next big masterpiece.

Just a few years ago, little of this existed, as, like in too many Caribbean downtowns, it was an area quiet by day and even quieter at night, with too many ruins and not enough rum.

But today downtown Nassau, Bahamas, long just a stop on a cruise voyage, has quietly undergone a renaissance into a full-fledged destination in its own right.

Like every renaissance, it hasn’t happened overnight.

“It’s been a gradual change,” says Fred Lounsberry, CEO of the Nassau Paradise Island Promotion Board. “If you’d taken a snapshot five years ago then looked at one today you’d say ‘wow.’”

The Drawbridge Cafe.

This one has been the fruit of years of vision, followed by years of planning and then deliberate execution and an emphasis on restoring the city’s centuries-old architecture.

And it’s not finished.

Today, Nassau’s colonial quarter still has its broad luxury shopping district, its pretty pink buildings and new additions from artist Antonius Roberts’ Hillside House to a microbrewery called the Pirate Republic Brewing Company, the first craft brewery in the Bahamas.

The artists’ colony in the Graycliff Historical Village on West Hill Street.

The aforementioned cigar factory is part of Graycliff’s wider complex, which includes its famous hotel and restaurant and its newest project: a historic village that includes a cafe, a gelateria, the cigar and chocolate factories, a Bahamian history museum, an artists’ colony and soon even more additions like a winery set in a convent. Yes — wine made right in the Bahamas.

It’s all in large part due to a collection of community leaders and organizations banded together almost four years ago to create Historic Charles Town, a drive — named after the city’s 17th-century name — to restore and revitalize the historic quarter.

Graycliff, set in a nearly three-hundred-year-old former pirate’s mansion.

More importantly, the effort helped improve security and gave the area something even more important: walkability.

“What we’re trying to drive is that authentic Bahamian experience,” says Graycliff’s Paolo Garzaroli. “We’re trying to make this into a destination.”

There are new hotels too, including a fresh Courtyard Marriott and a big renovation project at the Junkanoo Beach Resort which will likely debut under a major brand name in the near future.

And the food scene has also heated up, with newer eateries like Dali Modernistic Tapas complementing traditional favorites like Cafe Matisse, above.

The centerpiece, though, is right on downtown’s main road, Bay Street, where a major China-funded project called The Pointe is in development.

A rendering of The Pointe.

The Pointe, adjacent to the historic British Colonial Hotel, is a mixed-use facility including a parking garage (which already opened last year) with ground-floor retail and a planned hotel and residential component with features like a marina and evening entertainment like a movie theater and a rooftop bar.

It will be a new kind of development for a Caribbean downtown, hip, fresh and right on the water, and one that Garzaroli said would likely reorient the area even further toward the Charles Town area.

And as you walk around Nassau today, you can see and feel the changes, with rebuilt buildings and shiny patterned streets and the palpable sense that this is a place with a new energy.

John Beadle’s ‘Row Yah Boat’ exhibition at the National Art Gallery of the Bahamas.

You also realize just how large a collection of beautiful architecture truly exists here.

It’s the kind of transformation that can revitalize a community and, more significantly, could be a model for the rest of the Caribbean.

The Nassau Public Library.

“Cities are definitely important — they are the heart and center of many islands,” says Denaye Hinds, an expert on sustainability at OBMI. “In the work we’ve done in sustainable tourism master planning, we always make sure that cities are at the forefront, especially waterfronts as they are often the most underutilized.”

The Pirate Republic Brewing Company.

The latter is crucial for this particular downtown area, with the Pointe planning on making the water an integral part of its plan, including a boardwalk that will likely extend all the way to the Paradise Island bridge.

“I’ve been to a lot of Caribbean countries, and this is as great of a downtown as I think there is,” Lounsberry says. “And it’s just getting better.”

IF YOU GO

Where to Stay: Graycliff Hotel and Restaurant, Courtyard Marriott, Courtyard Marriott

Where to Eat: The lovely Italian eatery Cafe Matisse that’s one of the most sought-after tables on the island; the restaurant at Graycliff; Dali Modernistic Tapas.

Where to Drink: Bullion Bar at the British Colonial Hilton Hotel; Pirate Republic Brewing Company; John Watling’s Distillery (a good place to buy rum, too).

What do Do: Visit the Graycliff Historic Village along with galleries like Hillside House, the National Art Gallery of the Bahamas and the D’Aguilar Art Foundation; walk the streets of Old Nassau; take a culinary tour with Tru Bahamian Food Tours

Alexander Britell

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St. Lucia’s Big Summer Plans

 

The typically quiet summer season in St. Lucia is about to heat up.

The Eastern Caribbean island has announced a new summer festival circuit called Soleil, including six festivals from May through October.

The new series was announced by St. Lucia Tourism Minister Dominic Fedee at the Caribbean Hotel and Tourism Association’s Caribbean Travel Marketplace conference in Nassau this week.

“With the new season of festivals, Saint Lucia aims to increase tourism arrivals while also creating opportunities for local artists and businesses that will enhance the visibility of the island as a vibrant and diverse cultural destination,” said St. Lucia Tourism Minister Dominic Fedee. “We look forward to not only celebrating Saint Lucian traditions, but also serving up a summer of fun and entertainment to visitors and locals alike.”

The series will kick off May 12-14 with Saint Lucia Jazz, followed by Roots & Soul June 16-18, dedicated to new trends in reggae and conscious hip-hop; Saint Lucia Carnival from mi-June through mid-July; the Saint Lucia Food and Rum Festival from Aug. 24-27; the Country and Blues Festival from Sept. 15-17 and the Arts & Heritage Festival in October, with the latter aimed at celebrating the island’s cultural, ethnic and artistic heritage with performances, seminars and art exhibitions.

— Alexander Britell in Nassau

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Southwest Airlines Adds More Caribbean Nonstop Flights

 

Southwest Airlines is continuing its rapid expansion push in the Caribbean in 2017.

The carrier has announced that it will add a new nonstop route between Chicago Midway International Airport and San Juan’s Luis Munoz Marin International Airport.

Southwest is also increasing the frequency of its flights from Baltimore, Fort Lauderdale, Houston, Tampa and Orlando to Puerto Rico.

The new route and expansion will take effect June 4, according to the company.

Southwest will now have two routes to Puerto Rico, from both Newark and Chicago.

“The addition of flights and frequencies in the air routes offered by Southwest Airlines will facilitate the increase of visitors to the Island,” said Jose Izquierdo II, executive director of the Puerto Rico Tourism Company. “This increase will result in a greater contribution of the tourism industry to the economic development of Puerto Rico.”

— Caribbean Journal Staff

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