Business Traveller (Middle East)

CALM WATERS

As destructiv­e as they were, the Caribbean hurricanes of 2017 have provided a chance for the islands to rebuild and renew

- WORDS NIGEL TISDALL

The ‘rebuilt’ Caribbean is drawing tourists in droves

A t first it seems like just another convivial ferry crossing in the Caribbean. Tourists are lapping up the sunshine, a cheery crew dispenses beers and rum punches, Bob Marley’s singing

Coming in from the Cold. Yet as we sail out of Simpson Bay Lagoon in St Maarten, bound for the paradise beaches of Anguilla, I sense things aren’t quite right. Why don’t those yachts have masts? What’s that shipping container doing in the water? How does a car get so mangled?

This is the grotesque debris that lingers from the onslaught of Irma, the Category Five hurricane that stormed across the northern Caribbean on September 6, 2017, causing more than 40 fatalities and US$14.8 billion worth of damage. Some 12 days later, the equally strong Hurricane Maria brought a similar misery to the south, pounding Dominica, the US Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico, where just under 3,000 people died.

It was a devastatin­g double tragedy for the region, but as the Caribbean Tourism Organisati­on pointed out, more than 70 per cent of it remained open for business, including destinatio­ns such as Barbados, Jamaica, Grenada and St Lucia. Down the centuries, however, every island here has felt the sour kiss of malevolent weather, and it says everything that the word “hurricane” was born in these tropical climes – derived from

hurakan, meaning “god of the storm” in the language of the indigenous Taino people.

No one doubts there are more 185mph winds and terrifying storm surges to come, and climate change seems to be making things worse. “The warmer the upper ocean, the more powerful a hurricane can become,” a study by the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory concluded in May last year.

“Irma was so powerful,” sighs Kenroy Herbert, an Anguillian who runs a lifestyle management company on this tiny British Overseas Territory. “No one could prepare for something as strong as that.” Every islander here has a tale to tell and it’s a grim montage – children huddled under proppedup mattresses, villagers forming human chains, 4x4s flying through the air.

Tim Foy, governor of Anguilla, had taken up his post only a few weeks before Irma hit. He is proud of the UK government’s response. “We paid for 40 Canadian linesmen to help restore power, and we’ve put close to £70 million into the island’s recovery,” he says.

Foy explains to me how a hurricane is not just about the physical damage that dominates the news reports – there’s the economic loss, too. For a high-end holiday island with a short season such as Anguilla, it was essential to reopen the airport quickly to welcome the private jets that traditiona­lly flock here over Christmas and New Year. A makeshift control tower was ingeniousl­y fashioned out of upended shipping containers, and within a month the vital flights were coming in.

OPEN FOR BUSINESS

Strange as it seems, such hard blows can have their positive side. Once calm descends, you are left with an unschedule­d opportunit­y to rebuild and improve. This was the case for Cuisinart Golf Resort and Spa on Anguilla’s south-west coast. “We had to close for a year of reconstruc­tion,” says managing director Stephane Zaharia, as he proudly shows me a dazzling all-white beach resort with a host of “new bells and whistles”. These include 91 suites and a state-ofthe-art children’s “Splash Pad” playground.

It’s a similar story on the miniscule French playground of St Barths, where Irma’s blasts were so strong that they broke all of the machines for recording wind speed. “I felt I was being suffocated,” recalls Gary Monteremar­d, a cheery valet working at Hotel Le Toiny. He admits that the ensuing days were “very scary” because of the shortage of food and water.

Some 20 months on, visitors today will see little sign of damage here. Most hotels have reopened, with only a few, such as Eden Rock and Le Guanahani, taking longer to get back to the superlativ­e standards demanded by their well-heeled customers.

Ironically, while tourism figures on the hurricane-hit islands inevitably took a dent for the 2017-18 winter season, some now boast the most stylish and attractive escapes in the Caribbean. Belmond La Samanna on St Martin, Auberge Resorts’ Malliouhan­a on Anguilla and Secret Bay on Dominica are some starry examples.

JOINT EFFORT

Another positive legacy is the sense of community that is born when islanders come together to face a crisis. Within hours, fishermen from Guadeloupe had launched their boats to speed essential supplies to St Barths, while Anguillian­s proudly relate how they didn’t wait for outside help but just got straight on with the clearing up.

Nature seemed to offer support, too. On Dominica, where Maria stripped the trees as bare as the bristles on a toothbrush, islanders were amazed at how quickly the rainforest burst back into life, and there was joy when the endangered sisserou, an endemic parrot that forms the centrepiec­e of their national flag, was finally sighted 13 hours after the storms had passed.

Today, tourism is booming in many parts of the Caribbean. In February the Anguilla Tourist Board announced that visitor numbers had hit a 26-year high, while Antigua, Jamaica and Grenada have also reported record growth.

Some of the islands affected now boast the most stylish and attractive escapes in the Caribbean

It was a great blessing when the 2018 hurricane season passed without further catastroph­e, and the likelihood of further natural disasters has done little to stop the cranes swinging over new developmen­ts such as Kempinski’s 160-room Cabrits Resort in Dominica, which is due to open late this year, or to deter major carriers such as American Airlines and Delta Air Lines from launching new flights.

CONTINGENC­Y PLANNING

Is the Caribbean ready for the next big one? I witness preparatio­ns at many levels, from back-up power supplies being installed for Anguilla’s critical services to a hotel in St Kitts conducting a practice drill for tsunami evacuation. Three months ago, Jamaica’s tourism minister, Edmund Bartlett, opened a new Global Tourism Resilience and Crisis Management Centre in Kingston that will face up to region-wide challenges such as climate change, disaster management and cybersecur­ity. It is a recognitio­n that no island can cope with such issues in isolation, for while those that are wealthy or have long-standing ties with other countries have been able to rebuild fast, elsewhere the road to full recovery is looking long and hard.

Puerto Rico is still struggling, while Barbuda, Antigua’s sister isle, was caught in the eye of Irma, resulting in the complete evacuation of its 1,800 residents. It was a year before they could return, and even now its settlement­s are a jumble of decapitate­d buildings and yards festooned with tents and tarps bearing tell-tale names like USAID, World Food Programme and Samaritan’s Purse.

All of this could be depressing, yet I’m struck by the warmth and resilience of its islanders, their lifestyle still rich with the music, colour and charisma that makes so many of us visit the Caribbean time and again.

“It took us eight months to get it back in shape,” says Barbara Petit, the French co-owner of Barbuda Belle, a barefoot luxury escape on the north coast. After 27 years here and with 14 local staff to support, even a mighty puff like Irma wasn’t going to make her give up.

As we stroll along the blissfully deserted beach, she sees me staring with astonishme­nt at a strange, rosy glow beneath our feet. “We didn’t have pink sand here before the hurricane,” Petit explains, and it’s impossible not to see this enchanting blush, which is created from millions of shell fragments, as just another form of rainbow. Irma was a beast, for sure, but she also left a little beauty.

 ??  ?? PICTURED: Auberge Resorts’ Malliouhan­a on Anguilla
PICTURED: Auberge Resorts’ Malliouhan­a on Anguilla
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Belmond La Samanna, St Martin; damage caused on St John, US Virgin Islands; Cuisinart Golf Resort and Spa on Anguilla
FROM TOP: Belmond La Samanna, St Martin; damage caused on St John, US Virgin Islands; Cuisinart Golf Resort and Spa on Anguilla
 ??  ?? FROM TOP: Hurricane Irma arriving in Barbuda; Secret Bay, Dominica
FROM TOP: Hurricane Irma arriving in Barbuda; Secret Bay, Dominica

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