Saturday, December 18, 2010
Grenada
The Spice Island
What these photos can’t convey of course is the wonderful aromas that they produce – many of the trails around the island are surfaced with crushed nutmeg shells that release a heavenly scent as you hike. And now cacao joins the produce, with its strange alien-like pods, Grenada is now producing chocolate to die for!
Plantations and Distilleries
Dougaldston Spice Estate offers both an education into how spices are processed and also a trip into the past. Set amidst glorious scenery above the west coast, the Estate continues to produce the finest spices and much more besides.
Belmont Estate offers an eco-friendly taste of Grenada, its history, culture, flavours and traditions. And I do mean ‘taste’: I enjoyed a gracious lunch here as the mists roiled around the surrounding hills, all capped off with nutmeg ice cream – delicious.
The River Antoine Rum Distillery has changed little over the last 200 years and is the oldest functioning water-propelled distillery in the Caribbean. It’s truly amazing that the age-old waterwheel and processes are still producing the local firewater.
Island Tour
The island is sufficiently diminutive that it is possible to tour it in a day – although there’s lots to see along the way. I started with what I suggest is the prettiest town in the whole of the Caribbean: the national capital of St.George’s. The market hums with life: colourful, loud, pungent and a great place to meet the locals.
Grenada is a land of waterfalls as the rainforest rivers cascade their way down the steep mountainsides. I spent some time at Concord Falls, which are just as you would envision a tropical waterfall, complete with lush vegetation and a pool at the base that is just made for a romantic shower under the cascade.
Dive Grenada
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I don’t often get a chance to flash my PADI dive card, so I jumped at the chance to experience the famous undersea world of Grenada. With the professional guidance of Grenada Dive (see http://www.divegrenada.com ), I got to explore one of the famous submarine sights of the island: the Underwater Sculpture Park.
This is a series of sculpted figures and faces that has been placed 20 feet down amidst the reefs and sands of a sheltered bay. It’s a magical, mysterious place to explore for a diver, as the sponge-encrusted faces peer out at you from the sandy sea bed and coral overhangs…like exploring Atlantis and an ancient, sunken world.
Hotels
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This is not an all-inclusive hotel destination. This is an island of small boutique-style accommodations that provide a personal accent to your stay in Grenada. It’s good to have an alternative to the mega, 1,000 room all-inclusive resorts that insulate the traveller from the place he has travelled to.
My two favourites were Mount Cinnamon (http://www.mountcinnamongrenadahotel.com ), a chic resort that whispers ‘barefoot luxury’. Its restaurant is superb and the view toward St. George’s over Grand Anse Beach is incomparable.
And True Blue Bay Resort (http://www.truebluebay.com ) is a colourful, funky collection of villas and pastel-painted rooms scattered on a slope overlooking True Blue Bay that lives up to its name: the turquoise coloured waters of the Caribbean lap at the dock built out in to the bay – even though the name really is derived from the former indigo plantation that was situated here. Friendly folk, two contrasting pools and a view over the Caribbean from every room. And there’s something very pleasant about broadcasting the radio shows back to a freezing Canada from the sun bathed dock beside the warm Caribbean…
You can check out all the accommodation options – as well as the other island attractions - on the excellent Tourist Board website at http://www.grenadagrenadines.com .