Winter on the Beach: Barbados
Sunday, December 20, 2009
It's our favourite Caribbean destination for good reason – there's more to this island than sun, sea and sand. Kate Simon offers a guide.
The accommodation
The hot news from the east coast is the reopening of the Atlantis Hotel (atlantishotelbarbados.com). The venerable seaside lodgings have been turned into a stylish 10-room property by the team behind Little Good Harbour.
Further south on this coast, The Crane (thecrane.com) has expanded from the original 18-room hotel into a veritable village of 180 luxury suites. On the south coast at St Lawrence Gap, the all-inclusive Almond Casuarina Beach Resort (almondresorts.com) has had a revamp, adding 95 sea-facing rooms and a shorefront pool.
The activities
Any self-respecting surfer should try their luck in the Soup Bowl off the east coast at Bathsheba. This world-class break, which hosts international championships, can be surfed year round. But Barbados isn't all about the beach or the sea. Go inland to find more thrills at the Barbados Aerial Trek Zipline Adventures (00 246 433 8966) at Walkes Spring Plantation, which whizzes across 100ft-deep Jack-in-the-Box Gully. And, of course, Barbados is well supplied with polo fields, a sport first played here by British cavalry officers. The most famous ground is Holders, but others under construction include a new one at Apes Hill Club (apeshillclub.com), the latest addition to the island's portfolio of private estates.
The urban scene
The lively capital, Bridgetown, with its busy shops and harbour full of leisure craft, reveals the well-heeled nature of this island. This is also home to the third oldest parliament in the world and National Heroes Square, with its statue of Nelson that predates the one in London's Trafalgar Square. Also call by Holetown, where the British first settled, and see the once neglected Speightstown, the first major port, which is now being given a makeover.
The beaches
This island's exclusive image is largely down to its "Platinum Coast" on the Caribbean side of the island. Here, you'll find the rich and famous enjoying barefoot luxury on white sands lined with sunloungers set out by the five-star hotels that sit cheek by jowl along this coast. Further south, on the more blustery seafront of St Lawrence Gap, the resort hotels spill out on to golden beaches. This is charter-holiday territory, where families mingle on the sands with a procession of brides and grooms searching for that ultimate Caribbean wedding photo. Over on the east coast, the Atlantic waves keep the atmosphere bracing. It's a joy for surfers, but dangerous for swimmers who should ask a local to show them the safe spots for bathing.
The restaurants
Still the island's top spot for a special meal, The Cliff (thecliffbarbados.com) serves a starry clientele exquisite food in a sublime clifftop setting. At the new Marketfive by John Hazzard (00 246 436 1485), the eponymous chef is creating exciting, contemporary Caribbean dishes in a stylish dining room in the unlikely location of the new Sanjay Bridgetown Centre in the capital. Meanwhile, the Fish Pot (littlegoodharbour barbados.com) at the northern reach of the west coast and Cafe Luna (littlearches.com) at the southern end, both continue to delight with fine food and romantic settings. But for dinner with a touch of fun, join the locals and tourists at Fish Friday in Oistins.
The sights
Don't miss St Nicholas Abbey (stnicholasabbey.com) in St Peter, one of just three Jacobean houses remaining in the Americas. Take a tour of Harrison's Cave (harrisonscave.com) and the extraordinary limestone caverns at Allen View. Look out for the Emancipation Statue – aka Bussa, after the slave leader – which shows a black man breaking his chains. It sits on a roundabout east of Bridgetown.
Compact Facts
How to get there
Kate Simon travelled to Barbados with the Barbados Tourism Authority (visitbarbados.org). Thomas Cook Signature (0844 879 8015; tcsignature.com) offers seven nights' at Tamarind Cove from £1,299 per person, based on two sharing, including return flights with Virgin Atlantic, resort transfers, and B&B.
From http://www.independent.co.uk/travel/americas/winter-on-the-beach-barbados-1845578.html
Labels: Atlantic, Barbados, Bridgetown, Caribbean, Harrison's Cave, Holetown, Jack-in-the-Box Gully, National Heroes Square, Speightstown, St. Lawrence Gap, St. Nicholas Abbey, St. Peter, The Crane
Bridge Town: A Famous Tourist Places For Barbados Holidays Traveler
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
By David
Bridge Town is the largest and capital city of Barbados and it is famous worldwide for its tourism purpose. It was once known as the Town of Saint Michael and it is located within the township of Saint Michael. It is a famous West Indies tourist destination and the city offers a wide range of attractions for its every visitor. If you are looking for an outstanding place to enjoy your holidays in an exceptional way, the city is the perfect match that will be a dream land for you.
There are plenty of attractions in Bridge Town that will please you in every possible way. All of these famous locations add more charm to your journey. The major attractions of the city are National Heroes Square and Fountain Garden, Independence Square and The Independence Arch, The Montefiore Fountain, Parliament Buildings, The Cathedral Church of Saint Michaels and All Angles and The St.Mary’s Anglican Church and many more. The harbor of the city is also a famous attraction point where you can go to enjoy boat tours in Barbados.
Bridge Town enjoys a warm and humid climate all year around and thus, it offers plenty of water sports and other amenities for its travelers. The tourists can go to the city as per their suitability as it welcomes them throughout the year in the same manner.
Being a famous tourist destination, the city of Bridgetown takes care of your staying problems in a better way. You can find good accommodation facilities here. The most famous hotels in the city include Hilton Barbados, Island Inn, Kings, Beach Hotel, and Shells Guesthouse Bed and Breakfast. The lovely beaches of the city will let you relax there and forget your tensions and worries in just a few minutes.
Bridgetown is famous for shopping and tourist take pleasure in shopping here. Don’t miss shopping here that helps you buy something different and cheap goods here. Your visit to the city of Bridgetown will be the best of your tours ever enjoyed!
Labels: Barbados, beach, boat, Bridgetown, National Heroes Square, St. Michael
Thursday, week one: Bridgetown
Thursday, August 28, 2008
Ever since I posted the article I'd found on Nidhe Israel Museum, I knew I wanted to visit. I've always known that one of the earliest-ever synagogues in the western hemisphere was here but I didn't know where it was in Bridgetown, or how to get there.
Then I found out that a local department store had a shuttle to Bridgetown for shopping and I figured we could take that, shop a little, then find the museum and synagogue. I am not a big fan of Bridgetown. The very first year we were here a drunks/doped up man put his arm around our son and started talking to him. Ever since that situation, I've been uncomfortable there. The parking is also a nightmare as are the narrow one-way streets. So, when we've wanted something, we've always shopped at a mall on the coast.
We got on the bus at 8:45 am and headed to Bridgetown. As is usual with these shuttles, we picked up people at 2 or 3 other hotels in Worthing and Hastings before we landed in front of National Heroes Square. This square used to be called Trafalgar Square until 1999 and has a statue of Lord Horatio Nelson in it. This statue was erected 30 years before the one in London. Nelson had sailed to Barbados in 1805. The new memorial, for which the National Heroes Square was named, commemorates Barbadians killed in the two World Wars.
We headed over to Cave Shepherd and bought a few items. The, off to the synagogue and museum. Along the way, I was accosted by someone, presumably not the same person who was interested in our son. He asked for money for "soup" before he was sent on his way.
The Bridgetown Synagogue was just lovely. It dates back to 1654. At that time there was a Jewish population of 300 here. They had left South America and were allowed to settle here. The synagogue was destroyed by a hurricane in 1831 and rebuilt in 1837. Today, the original sand floor has been replaced with tiles but the rest has been kept as it was.
The parking lot is being dug up as part of an archeological project of the University of the West Indies. There were three men working today and we talked extensively with one of them. (pictures to be posted later!) So far, they have uncovered the foundation of a rabbi's house, the foundations of other buildings, pottery and artifacts from the Arawak and Carib Indians. Many of the artifacts are located now in the museum.
The Nidhe Israel (Scattered of Israel) Museum is located in the middle of the synagogue's cemetery. Many of the inscriptions from the tombs are along the walls along with translations. We got a partial, very helpful tour from Celso Brewster, the museum's manager. He explained a lot of the history of the Jewish people before and after they got to Barbados. We learned a little about the Jewish Diaspora; exodus from Spain and Portugal during the inquisition in 1492.
The Dutch were a major naval power then and were colonizing Brazil. Many Jews volunteered to settle in Reclife, Brazil, and they learned about sugar there. Harvesting, marketing, building sugar mills. They brought all these skills to Barbados when they fled Reclife in 1591.
By 1948 there were only 70 Jewish people still on Barbados and by 1925 only one. The Nidhe Israel Synagogue was deconsecrated and sold. In 1931, Askenazi Jews migrated to Barbados from Poland. Moses Altman and his son, Paul, were among these and they rescued the synagogue from demolition in 1989.
Restoration is still going on and I'm sure much about Barbados will be learned from the archeological findings.
The museum shows the sugar trail, and how spices were traded, the history of the Jewish people before and after they arrived in Barbados and much more. Embedded in sand and covered with glass are many of the artifacts dug up outside. These make up much of the floor and it feels a little weird to walk over them.
There were spice exhibits where we got to smell them and guess what they were. There was an interactive display that showed how much time you'd have to work for various products. 30 days for a pound of saffron! Wow!
We went back to our bus meeting place and Tom ran into that same guy from this morning. He actually apologized for hassling us!
Back home and naptime!
Labels: Arawak, archeological, Barbadian, Bridgetown, Carib, Cave Shepherd, Christ Church, Hastings, hurricane, Jewish, Lord Horatio Nelson, National Heroes Square, Nidhe Israel Museum, spices, sugar, synagogue, Trafalgar Square, University of the West Indies, World War, Worthing