Edmonton Journal

UNPLUGGED CULEBRA

ime ticks more slowly on small island off the eastern coast of Puerto Rico

- ERIN WILLIAMS

CULEBRA, PUERTO RICO The fourfoot-tall yellow sign on the chainlink gate didn’t just say “Danger: No trespassin­g” in block letters. It also had a black-and-red image of a bomb and the warning “Explosives — unexploded ordnance” in English and Spanish. Neverthele­ss, I squeezed though the gate’s opening. My husband, Andrew, followed me down the path to Carlos Rosario Beach.

We didn’t necessaril­y need to take such measures to find solitude on Culebra, part of a 23-island archipelag­o o the eastern coast of Puerto Rico. About one-quarter of the archipelag­o is a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service-administer­ed national wildlife refuge. Until the mid-1970s, the U.S. military used some of the islands for gunnery and bombing practice.

Today, most of Culebra’s refuge areas are o -limits because of their delicate ecosystems — or unexploded ordnance.

Beautiful and relatively undevelope­d, the island provided a welcome respite from crowded Washington for a long weekend. And because we were willing to take the trails less travelled (we checked with a park ranger before ducking past that warning sign), we were able to go from one serene setting to another, achieving an almost completely disconnect­ed experience.

Two days earlier, Andrew and I had left San Juan for Culebra on an eight-seater plane. As we bobbed up and down on the bumpy 35-minute flight, I watched mainland Puerto Rico’s suburbs disappear and our shadow glide over islets 760 metres below.

We’d rented a one-bedroom hilltop home in southweste­rn Culebra, attracted by the property listing noting that the villa was entirely o -grid. Indeed it was: three tanks collected rainwater, and solar panels provided electricit­y. Because we had only sporadic mobile access, I abandoned my phone in a drawer.

We accessed our little villa by a driveway so steep that our Jeep seemed ready to tumble into sailboat-flecked Fulladoza Bay below. It was far enough away from Dewey, Culebra’s one small town, that peeping coqui frogs provided the only nighttime sounds.

The first night, I turned off the lights and sat on the deck to watch the expansive sky. Two bats swooped under the roof, hunting mosquitoes. I admired my noctur- nal companions and the moonlit boats floating in the bay, so involved in my surroundin­gs and the present moment, I didn’t need to be plugged into anything else.

The next morning, we headed down the precarious driveway and through Dewey to the northweste­rn corner of the island, where a nearly empty parking lot and a ramshackle concession greeted visitors to Culebra’s most famous landmark: Flamenco Beach.

Flamenco is undeniably gorgeous. It regularly appears on topglobal-beaches lists; in February, TripAdviso­r rated it the world’s eighth best. Its mile-long white crescent hugs a clear, calm bay. Only the concession and a small hotel interrupt the palm trees flanking the sand. Pelicans and boobies dive into the water.

Even when busloads of weekend day-trippers unload onto Flamenco, there’s room for everyone. During our weekday visit, perhaps a hundred people spread across the sand.

At Flamenco’s western end, two old tanks, relics of the military exercises, rest on the beach. One sits on a grassy mound near the sand; another, in breakers under palm trees.

Algae adhering to the latter undulates in the waves, and the decaying machinery stands out in absurd contrast against the sky and sand. Graffiti has turned these once-lethal hulks into surreal art installati­ons, a colourful reminder of the island’s controvers­ial past.

Guidebooks mention the trail to Carlos Rosario Beach, but most visitors don’t notice the gate tucked into a shady corner of Flamenco’s parking lot. In my clumsy Spanish, I asked a nearby ranger whether I should be worried about the “Danger” sign. Although some rangers recommend a longer shoreline route that is definitely free of explosives, he responded (in smiling English): “Go right ahead — you will be the first ones at the beach today! It will be hot, so make sure you have plenty of water.”

Beyond the gate, the walk to Carlos Rosario was an easy 20 minutes. As we neared the beach, yellowflow­ered trees offered peekaboo panoramas of the sea. I watched the ground, careful not to step on red and purple hermit crabs scuttling across the path. The grass thinned, and we emerged sweaty and muddy from the trees.

We were the only people on the paradisiac­al shoreline. In both directions, white sand sparkled in the sun. We walked along the water’s edge, along piles of sun-bleached coral and black rocks, until we found the perfect shade tree. Later, a dozen other visitors would join us but, for now, we had our own little piece of the Caribbean.

The next morning, we headed across the island, driving past a wildlife refuge and houses scattered among the hills. At the Zoni Beach entrance, hand-painted signs warned nighttime visitors away from the nesting areas of leatherbac­k and hawksbill sea turtles.

We were alone at Culebra’s eastern edge, but I had already arranged for a getaway to an even less-frequented spot. A local outfitter had dropped off a two-person kayak for a self-powered day trip to Culebrita, a one-square-mile island, less than two miles off Culebra, that’s part of the national wildlife refuge. Culebrita Lighthouse, one of the Caribbean’s oldest, crowns its top in decrepit glory.

As we paddled out from Zoni, a salt breeze rippled the water. A magenta jellyfish pulsed at its surface. Fish darted under the boat. We glided over reefs, watching corals and sea fans pass beneath the kayak like the islets underneath the plane.

Only a handful of people visit Culebrita each day, and today was no exception. We pulled our boat onto an unclaimed beach fringed with dense trees that climbed the slope to the lighthouse a few hundred feet above, hidden by the foliage. It was an ideal hideaway for a mid-morning siesta. Not another soul was in sight.

 ??  ERIN WILLIAMS WASHINGTON POST ?? A beach on Culebrita, off the coast of Culebra, that is part of the national wildlife reserve. Its lighthouse is one of the Caribbean’s oldest.
ERIN WILLIAMS WASHINGTON POST A beach on Culebrita, off the coast of Culebra, that is part of the national wildlife reserve. Its lighthouse is one of the Caribbean’s oldest.
 ?? PHOTOS: ERIN WILLIAMS/WASHINGTON POST ?? A rocky trail winds along a beach on Culebra’s western shore.
PHOTOS: ERIN WILLIAMS/WASHINGTON POST A rocky trail winds along a beach on Culebra’s western shore.
 ??  ?? An off-the-grid villa in Culebra has roof-mounted solar panels to provide electricit­y, and water tanks that store rainwater. The only sounds at night are the insects in the surroundin­g vegetation.
An off-the-grid villa in Culebra has roof-mounted solar panels to provide electricit­y, and water tanks that store rainwater. The only sounds at night are the insects in the surroundin­g vegetation.

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