Saturday Star

Five new stand-out resorts in the Caribbean

- CHRISTIAN L WRIGHT

WHEN hurricanes Irma and Maria tore through the Caribbean in 2017, the damage was devastatin­g. Some islands are still recovering. Others, like Puerto Rico, are reeling again from recent disasters.

The 2017 storms forced hoteliers to regroup and rebuild – which has, according to leading travel advisers, ushered in a new age of hospitalit­y.

In March, Half Moon, the iconic Jamaican resort, will add the 57-room Eclipse to its 161-hectaresco­mpound in Montego Bay. The Central American nation of Belize is experienci­ng something of a hotel boom let: never mind Leonardo Dicaprio’s long-delayed Blackadore Caye; the stylish and carbon-friendly Itz’ana Resort and Residences opened last month in Placencia, and developmen­t is under way on Caye Chapel, a 113ha private island that will open as a

Four Seasons Resort and Residences in 2021. This tropical region – rich in history, a riot of flora and fauna and lousy with cruise ships – promises the good life.

Here are five notable places to seek it:

Virgin Gorda, British Virgin Islands: Rosewood Little Dix Bay

Founded in 1964 by financier and conservati­onist Laurance Rockefelle­r, this storied place in the British Virgin Islands closed in 2016 to undergo some updates.

Just before reopening in 2017, hurricanes Irma and Maria hit, devastatin­g the entire resort. This month, it’s back in business – the ultra-deluxe business – after a complete renovation led by New

York design boutique Meyer Davis.

There are 42 rooms, 35 suites, two beach houses and one hillside villa, all of which face the sea, many of which feature a locally sourced Pietra Cardosa stone wall, and almost none of which has a TV. Freedom from devices is encouraged, from the moment guests board the fancy catamaran in Tortola for the 20-minute sail to the resort’s secluded bay on Virgin Gorda.

Priced around $1 500 (R21 981), including butler service.

St Lucia: Boucan by Hotel Chocolat

When co-founders Angus Thirlwell and Peter Harris wanted to get closer to the source of Hotel Chocolat, their British chocolate company with retail shops from London to New York, they stumbled upon a centuries-old 56ha cocoa plantation on St Lucia and bought it in 2006.

By now, they have turned it into a “tree-to-bar” operation that has changed the fortunes of 220 St Lucian growers, from whom they buy every bean harvested.

The property also doubles as a 14-room luxury hotel and makes agricultur­e seem almost sexy. (Project Cocoa, a 2.4ha campus where visitors can learn, up-close and hands-on, how fine chocolate is made, will open this summer.)

The rooms, called lodges or luxe lodges, have a modern colonial air, with dark wood floors, four-poster beds clad in mosquito netting, and chaises lounges on decks overlookin­g lush vegetation and the pointy peak of Petit Piton in the distance. At 305m above sea level, it’s a 10-minute shuttle ride to the water’s edge, then another 10-minute boat ride to the beach du jour (according to conditions).

And for bragging rights: you can plant a seedling and return someday to find your own cocoa tree.

Priced around $450 including breakfast and chocolates.

Mexico: Palmaia, The House of AÏA

At the tail end of Playa del Carmen on the Riviera Maya, this spanking-new $100 million resort was imagined by entreprene­ur Alex Ferri to preserve the landscape

– there are no plastic bottles, for example – yet spare no creature comfort. Each room, for instance, gets a “Nomadic Guide,” aka a butler.

There are 314 suites facing the ocean, some with bunk or trundle beds, done up in a spare, but tropical style that extends to the ample bathrooms. There’s a spa, an openair gym, a full-time shaman who oversees all manner of yoga, four restaurant­s and a food truck (all with plant-based options), four infinity pools overlookin­g the resort’s halfmile of Caribbean beach, two pool bars, sun loungers with integrated shade systems, and a children’s centre with Waldorf-trained staff. No baby-sitting fees required.

Priced from about $600, allinclusi­ve.

Bequia, St Vincent and the Grenadines: The Liming

The 18km² island of Bequia – that’s Bek-way, and meaning “islands of the clouds” in the ancient language of Arawakan – has only a handful of hotels, a sleepy languor, and a beach named after Princess Margaret, who once visited from nearby Mustique. Opened in 2018, this tiny 11-villa resort is part of the Scottish ICMI Luxury Collection, which includes Greywalls Hotel in Edinburgh and Cromlix, the tennis star Andy Murray’s redoubt, in Perthshire. The vibe is understate­d grandeur: French doors opening onto plunge pools with views of the private marina, deep sofas and enormous pillows, ceiling fans and marble bathrooms (some of which open to the outdoors), and a thatchroof­ed restaurant with panoramic views of the vivid blue ocean.

There’s a new tennis court, advantage, Murray, and picnics can be arranged for island hopping. Mustique, Canouan and Tobago Cays are all an easy boat trip away.

Priced from $550, including breakfast.

Dominica: Cabrits Resort and Spa Kempinski Dominica

Four years in the making, this 151-room resort on the volcanic island of Dominica opened in October. It’s on a northern peninsula alongside the rich green wilds of Cabrits National Park, one of three preserves in the West Indies.

Rooms spread across the property in low buildings take advantage of natural light, with a subtle colour scheme designed to reflect the surroundin­gs. Some have direct pool access and double rainforest showers.

There’s a 1 672m² spa, two floodlit tennis courts, three restaurant­s (that source from the resort’s gardens and local partners, such as Northern Aquacultur­e, a sustainabl­e freshwater shrimp farm in nearby Portsmouth) and no fewer than 30 Dominican bush rums served by the fire pit at the beachside Rumfire Bar.

Priced from $545, including breakfast. | The New York Times

 ??  ?? ROSEWOOD Little Dix Bay in Virgin Gorda, British Virgin Islands. In the aftermath of hurricanes Irma and Maria, many hoteliers in the Caribbean have regrouped and rebuilt and are ushering in a new age of hospitalit­y. | The New York Times
ROSEWOOD Little Dix Bay in Virgin Gorda, British Virgin Islands. In the aftermath of hurricanes Irma and Maria, many hoteliers in the Caribbean have regrouped and rebuilt and are ushering in a new age of hospitalit­y. | The New York Times
 ??  ?? PALMAIA, the House of AÏA in Playa del Carmen, Mexico. | The New York Times
PALMAIA, the House of AÏA in Playa del Carmen, Mexico. | The New York Times
 ??  ?? THE Liming hotel in Bequia, St Vincent and the Grenadines. | The New York Times
THE Liming hotel in Bequia, St Vincent and the Grenadines. | The New York Times
 ??  ?? CABRITS Resort and Spa Kempinski Dominica in Douglas Bay-portsmouth, Dominica. | The New York Times
CABRITS Resort and Spa Kempinski Dominica in Douglas Bay-portsmouth, Dominica. | The New York Times
 ??  ?? BOUCAN by Hotel Chocolat in Soufriere, St Lucia. | The New York Times
BOUCAN by Hotel Chocolat in Soufriere, St Lucia. | The New York Times

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