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The Sunday Telegraph
Treasured island
Bequia has no big hotels or
golf courses, just empty beaches,
lush rainforest and a laid-back approach
to life. It's the Caribbean idyll
many of us look for but rarely find,
says Nigel Tisdall.
I've found it! My perfect Caribbean
island! It's friendly, sunny, barely
developed, with fresh fish, peaceful
beaches, gorgeous scenery - and the
local Sunset rum is a whopping 84.5
per cent proof! You can leave London
after breakfast and be there for cocktails,
and the island's called . . .
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The Sunday Times
Five tiny islands in a connoisseur’s
Caribbean
Beautiful things come in small
packages: so, this winter, skip the
big islands and go petite, says David
Wickers
THE LUSHEST of the 30-odd islands
that make up the Grenadines, Bequia
offers something rare in the Caribbean:
you can plug into local life rather
than remain cocooned in your hotel.
Whether you're sipping punch in its
bars, eating rotis on the Belmont
waterfront or simply lazing and limin’
under the big almond tree (known as
the “Houses of Parliament”)
in the middle of Port Elizabeth, the
tiny main town, you’ll be as
likely to meet fishermen, seafarers
and boat-builders as other tourists.
The laid-back experience has more
in common with life on a Greek island
than it does with many of its neighbours.
For what it’s worth, sleepy,
titchy Bequia is one of my all-time
favourite islands.
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The Sunday Herald
Paradise heights
Untainted by tourists and dancing
to its , own tune, Bequia is just
the ticket if you're looking for your
own island oasis, says Sophie Cooke
THREE thousand miles west of Senegal
lies an island called Bequia. Its
seven square miles of hills are thick
with tropical blossoms and cacti,
alive with yellow birds and khaki
lizards. It harbours overgrown sugar
mills and cattle grazing under palm
trees, shady old bars and telegraph
wires wreathed in creepers.
It also happens to be Mustique's next-door
neighbour: the hippy chick little
sister of a glittering prom queen....
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Orlando Sentinal
Another visit to paradise
in the Grenadines
Known for a volcano, eco-tourism
sites and turquoise waters, these
spakling gems are the best of the
Caribbean -- simple, sweet and unpretentious
- by John Yearwood
TOBAGO CAYS, St. Vincent -- It happens
on virtually every visit to St. Vincent
and the Grenadines, these sparkling
gems in the southeastern Caribbean:
I lean back, close my eyes and savor
paradise...
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The Guardian
A splash of Grenadines
I am a Caribbean tenderfoot. I've
been there a thousand times with Caribbean
aristocracy like King Tubby, Prince
Buster and Lord Short Shirt, but I've
never dipped my toe in the perfect
waters or been caressed by the constant
breezes. Now I've tasted nature Caribbean
style at her five-star best, all I
can tell you is GO. Now. Jump on the
next flight to Barbados and take it
from there...
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Paradise islands
Which are the best islands in the
Caribbean? Jill Hartley, who visits
the region three or four times a year,
chooses her top ten.
Anguilla
Barbados
Bequia...
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Sailing away
from the crowds
The storm clouds off Bequia
looked menacing to Con Coughlin,
but out at sea, aboard the yacht
Imagine, he discovered a Caribbean
beyond the clichés...
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New York Times
Under Sail Through the Grenadines
Happily, wondrously, Bequia and the
rest of the Grenadines are still a
little lost. At Spring on Bequia,
an inland hotel, a 200-year-old plantation
and still a working farm, we got a
Flintstonesque, fieldstone-and-wood
room with a drop-dead view of hill
and sky and sea for $200 a night.
You could look around and see virtually
nothing that you wouldn't have seen
a century ago. The white curtains
flapped aggressively into the room
with the strong breeze; there was
no air-conditioning but none was needed,
and there was no phone or television,
but that was just as well, no?
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The Spells of a Bright
Bequia Morning
By BARBARA LAZEAR ASCHER
MOUNTAINS DENSE WITH CEDARS' GREEN
GROWTH RISE out of an indigo sea and
stretch toward a sky that is more
brightness than color. Beaches, fine
grained and golden, lean into black
cliffs festooned with vines and determined
orchids. Bequia, the largest (seven
square miles) of the Grenadine Islands,
is a natural beauty, afloat in a time
warp nine miles south of bustling
St. Vincent.
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