Part I.
Check my gallery soon for pictures from the trip!! Enjoy.
St. Lucia Trip Report
Friday, April 22nd.
My wife and I had always wanted to visit St. Lucia, and we finally made it happen. The trip started out highly stressful and as aggravating as any trip planning can get. Air Jamaica cancelled their flights into St. Lucia but rebooked us with American Airlines. The flight times were similar (actually getting us to St. Lucia 1.5 hours earlier), but instead of arriving into Hewanorra Airport in the south, we were now landing at George F. L. Charles Airport in Castries, north and farther from where we were staying in Soufriere. The couple we were meeting, who were flying in at the same time and picking up a rental jeep (from Cool Breeze Jeep Rental ~$400.00/week) so that we could all ride to Soufriere together, were flying into Hewanorra Airport. The airport change nixed this plan and we had to make arrangements for airport transfers from Castries at a cost of a $160.00, plus we were still pitching in for the jeep that we couldnt use that first day.
We were supposed to be flying out of Baltimore-Washington International Airport on Saturday morning at 7:10 am. The tickets hadnt been issued yet and we were supposed to go to the Air Jamaica counter early Saturday morning so that they could be issued to us. Friday morning around 10 am I decided to call Air Jamaica and see if I could go to BWI airport that evening (about a 2 hour trip up to the airport) and get them issued instead of having to worry about it in the morning. They informed me that their hours are only from 9 am to 1 pm EVERY DAY! That means that they wouldnt have been open Saturday morning before our flight, and that left me with less then 3 hours to get up there before they closed for the day. I was infuriated at this! I called my wife and told her to finish packing and get everything in the car, that we had to get to the airport before 1 pm if we still wanted to go on this vacation.
Well, we flew up to the airport and made it to the AJ counter with 15 minutes to spare and got our tickets issued. We decided to stay near the airport that night at the Embassy Suites (free parking while we are gone and a free booze happy hour from 5:30 to 7:30 pm). I told my wife that it can only get better from here, and that our run of bad luck is over. Boy, was I RIGHT!!
Saturday, April 23rd.
The flight down to St. Lucia on AA was comfortable and uneventful. We were a little worried after we caught our transfer flight in San Juan and flew past the Virgin Islands and the clouds moved in very thick over the Caribbean, but by the time we were passing Martinique it was clearing up nicely. We landed in a sunny and warm Castries and were through emigration and customs in less than 30 minutes. The airport in Castries is very small and antiquated, but not crowded. Our luggage all arrived intact and was met by our driver that was taking us to our accommodations in Soufriere. His name was Chester and he was a bit reserved and quiet, by island standards. He did ask if either of us got carsick, when we said no he hit the gas pedal a little more. All places on the island list their prices in Eastern Caribbean dollars (ECs), the exchange rate is about 2.6-2.7 ECs per U.S. dollar. So I will give prices in U.S. dollars for convenience.
The road from Castries to Soufriere is a very mountainous, winding affair to say the least. Hairpin turns up and down the mountains the entire way; the 45-mile trip took about one hour and 15 minutes. We passed through the small fishing villages of Anse La Ray (where they have the Friday fish fry) and Canaries. The people are your typical Caribbean populace, friendly and colorful, relaxing on a hot Saturday afternoon with neighbors, watching the cars go by. The houses range from shacks to beautiful villas, but all are colorfully painted and well tended.
We received our first view of the twin Pitons as we crested a mountain and began dropping into the valley that nestles the fishing town of Soufriere. These beautiful lush twin peaks are what St. Lucia is famous for and remind me of the island of Bora Bora in the South Pacific. They are absolutely breathtaking.
Soufriere is a bustling fishing port with crowded narrow streets, lined with pastel colored residences and businesses. There is no cruise ship facilities at this port, which keeps this end of the island more laid back and non-commercialized then up north at Castries. We would explore this town later.
Our accommodations were at the Stonefield Estate Villa Resort. This was at one time an active cocoa plantation and the property is hundreds of years old, very lush and beautiful. It sits on the backside of a hill from Soufriere and overlooks the Caribbean and the Petit Piton, an absolutely beautiful place with an exotic view.
We had booked in their least expensive one bedroom cottage for the first night. It did not have a view of the ocean or the piton. For the rest of our stay, when our friends were to join us, we were going to move into their least expensive 2-bedroom unit. When we arrived at Stonefield, we were met at reception by Denalia, who I had communicated with previously when booking our stay. She had one of the Estate drivers load our bags (6 total due to all of our dive gear) into a van along with another couple that had just arrived and they drove us down a short steep road to the villas, where the first couple was unloaded. Denalia informed us that she needed to put us into another villa than the one I had booked, one of the nicer units with a view. The villa is called Flambouyant, and sits low on the hill overlooking the Caribbean Sea below and the Petit Piton to the left, the view absolutely took our breath away. It had a very airy floor plan with one bedroom, an open-air (garden) shower, a kitchen and living room and a huge porch/patio with hammock and lounge chairs. It was absolutely fantastic! The free upgrade was a perfect start to what would be a perfect vacation.
After hanging out and absorbing the view for a while we decided to walk down to the local beach. Malgretoute beach runs along the base of the Petit Piton and is a pebble and black sand beach. It is a walk down a very steep macadam and cement road (the steepest straightest road going down a hill I have ever seen, and I am from West Virginia, so Ive seen them steep). The beach is nice with a local restaurant on each end. The climb back up to the Villas was very taxing in the heat.
Later we left our villa for dinner and walked the short distance up to the Mango Tree restaurant and bar that is part of Stonefield. The Mango Tree sits on the side of the hill with the same view as our villa, except it includes a large pool right at the lip of the patio that makes you feel as if you are hanging above the Caribbean. The food was local and very tasty; we had Calamari (Lambi) salad and baked tuna, along with several tropical drinks. The bill was about $84.00 U.S. for the both of us. The oranges, reds, purples and greens of the multihued sunset over the Caribbean took our breath away. A local celebrity singer, Claudette, played guitar and sang in her unique voice a collection of folk and contemporary music with her own little twist. She was very good, and is at the Mango every Saturday night.
We retired back to our villa after dinner to swing in the hammock and stare at the exorbitantly abundant stars in the deep black of the Caribbean sky. It had been a decidedly decadent start to our stay; we were tired from the long day and retired early.
cont....
Check my gallery soon for pictures from the trip!! Enjoy.
St. Lucia Trip Report
Friday, April 22nd.
My wife and I had always wanted to visit St. Lucia, and we finally made it happen. The trip started out highly stressful and as aggravating as any trip planning can get. Air Jamaica cancelled their flights into St. Lucia but rebooked us with American Airlines. The flight times were similar (actually getting us to St. Lucia 1.5 hours earlier), but instead of arriving into Hewanorra Airport in the south, we were now landing at George F. L. Charles Airport in Castries, north and farther from where we were staying in Soufriere. The couple we were meeting, who were flying in at the same time and picking up a rental jeep (from Cool Breeze Jeep Rental ~$400.00/week) so that we could all ride to Soufriere together, were flying into Hewanorra Airport. The airport change nixed this plan and we had to make arrangements for airport transfers from Castries at a cost of a $160.00, plus we were still pitching in for the jeep that we couldnt use that first day.
We were supposed to be flying out of Baltimore-Washington International Airport on Saturday morning at 7:10 am. The tickets hadnt been issued yet and we were supposed to go to the Air Jamaica counter early Saturday morning so that they could be issued to us. Friday morning around 10 am I decided to call Air Jamaica and see if I could go to BWI airport that evening (about a 2 hour trip up to the airport) and get them issued instead of having to worry about it in the morning. They informed me that their hours are only from 9 am to 1 pm EVERY DAY! That means that they wouldnt have been open Saturday morning before our flight, and that left me with less then 3 hours to get up there before they closed for the day. I was infuriated at this! I called my wife and told her to finish packing and get everything in the car, that we had to get to the airport before 1 pm if we still wanted to go on this vacation.
Well, we flew up to the airport and made it to the AJ counter with 15 minutes to spare and got our tickets issued. We decided to stay near the airport that night at the Embassy Suites (free parking while we are gone and a free booze happy hour from 5:30 to 7:30 pm). I told my wife that it can only get better from here, and that our run of bad luck is over. Boy, was I RIGHT!!
Saturday, April 23rd.
The flight down to St. Lucia on AA was comfortable and uneventful. We were a little worried after we caught our transfer flight in San Juan and flew past the Virgin Islands and the clouds moved in very thick over the Caribbean, but by the time we were passing Martinique it was clearing up nicely. We landed in a sunny and warm Castries and were through emigration and customs in less than 30 minutes. The airport in Castries is very small and antiquated, but not crowded. Our luggage all arrived intact and was met by our driver that was taking us to our accommodations in Soufriere. His name was Chester and he was a bit reserved and quiet, by island standards. He did ask if either of us got carsick, when we said no he hit the gas pedal a little more. All places on the island list their prices in Eastern Caribbean dollars (ECs), the exchange rate is about 2.6-2.7 ECs per U.S. dollar. So I will give prices in U.S. dollars for convenience.
The road from Castries to Soufriere is a very mountainous, winding affair to say the least. Hairpin turns up and down the mountains the entire way; the 45-mile trip took about one hour and 15 minutes. We passed through the small fishing villages of Anse La Ray (where they have the Friday fish fry) and Canaries. The people are your typical Caribbean populace, friendly and colorful, relaxing on a hot Saturday afternoon with neighbors, watching the cars go by. The houses range from shacks to beautiful villas, but all are colorfully painted and well tended.
We received our first view of the twin Pitons as we crested a mountain and began dropping into the valley that nestles the fishing town of Soufriere. These beautiful lush twin peaks are what St. Lucia is famous for and remind me of the island of Bora Bora in the South Pacific. They are absolutely breathtaking.
Soufriere is a bustling fishing port with crowded narrow streets, lined with pastel colored residences and businesses. There is no cruise ship facilities at this port, which keeps this end of the island more laid back and non-commercialized then up north at Castries. We would explore this town later.
Our accommodations were at the Stonefield Estate Villa Resort. This was at one time an active cocoa plantation and the property is hundreds of years old, very lush and beautiful. It sits on the backside of a hill from Soufriere and overlooks the Caribbean and the Petit Piton, an absolutely beautiful place with an exotic view.
We had booked in their least expensive one bedroom cottage for the first night. It did not have a view of the ocean or the piton. For the rest of our stay, when our friends were to join us, we were going to move into their least expensive 2-bedroom unit. When we arrived at Stonefield, we were met at reception by Denalia, who I had communicated with previously when booking our stay. She had one of the Estate drivers load our bags (6 total due to all of our dive gear) into a van along with another couple that had just arrived and they drove us down a short steep road to the villas, where the first couple was unloaded. Denalia informed us that she needed to put us into another villa than the one I had booked, one of the nicer units with a view. The villa is called Flambouyant, and sits low on the hill overlooking the Caribbean Sea below and the Petit Piton to the left, the view absolutely took our breath away. It had a very airy floor plan with one bedroom, an open-air (garden) shower, a kitchen and living room and a huge porch/patio with hammock and lounge chairs. It was absolutely fantastic! The free upgrade was a perfect start to what would be a perfect vacation.
After hanging out and absorbing the view for a while we decided to walk down to the local beach. Malgretoute beach runs along the base of the Petit Piton and is a pebble and black sand beach. It is a walk down a very steep macadam and cement road (the steepest straightest road going down a hill I have ever seen, and I am from West Virginia, so Ive seen them steep). The beach is nice with a local restaurant on each end. The climb back up to the Villas was very taxing in the heat.
Later we left our villa for dinner and walked the short distance up to the Mango Tree restaurant and bar that is part of Stonefield. The Mango Tree sits on the side of the hill with the same view as our villa, except it includes a large pool right at the lip of the patio that makes you feel as if you are hanging above the Caribbean. The food was local and very tasty; we had Calamari (Lambi) salad and baked tuna, along with several tropical drinks. The bill was about $84.00 U.S. for the both of us. The oranges, reds, purples and greens of the multihued sunset over the Caribbean took our breath away. A local celebrity singer, Claudette, played guitar and sang in her unique voice a collection of folk and contemporary music with her own little twist. She was very good, and is at the Mango every Saturday night.
We retired back to our villa after dinner to swing in the hammock and stare at the exorbitantly abundant stars in the deep black of the Caribbean sky. It had been a decidedly decadent start to our stay; we were tired from the long day and retired early.
cont....