Sunday Mirror

Cruise news

- BY NIGEL THOMPSON

Eco-friendly special effects for Britain’s theme parks will

be showcased at a global attraction­s industry exhibition at

London’s ExCel from September 13-15, including sustainabl­e flame, smoke, fragrance and fog effects with a wow factor. back-stage-tech

nologies.co.uk

Get in pole position this autumn with an ultra-luxe voyage to the world’s greatest and wildest frontier.

Silversea Cruises’ 200-passenger boutique ship Silver Endeavour – one of the world’s most advanced and upscale expedition vessels – will sail 12 voyages, including her maiden, to

Antarctica from November 21 with bookings now open. Itinerarie­s during the southern hemisphere’s summer season range from five to 20 days and offer ‘’immersive personalis­ed experience­s’’ with expedition experts including marine biologists, historians, naturalist­s and archaeolog­ists in the White Continent’s icy wilderness.

Passengers will also be able to fly to the South Shetland Islands, 75 miles off the coast of Antarctica, to embark, avoiding the usual 500-mile crossing of the turbulent Drake Passage from the southern tip of South America.

Silversea chief executive Roberto Martinoli said: “Silver Endeavour will unlock some of the planet’s most remote and extreme destinatio­ns, welcoming guests in Silversea’s trademark level of comfort.”

Five-star trips to the ends of the earth don’t come cheap of course.

Prices start from £11,100 per person with flights and transfers.

silversea.com

Ryanair is adding a million seats from 20 airports such as Birmingham, Bristol,

Gatwick, Manchester and Stansted this winter in reaction to BA axing 8% of its Heathrow flights

then. From £29.99 one-way to Spain, Italy, Portugal, Morocco, Greece and France.

ryanair.com

the indigenous Arawak Indians. Everyone speaks Spanish and English and a third of the island’s population live in and around the capital San Juan, which looks more like a mini Miami with its modernist architectu­re, hotel strip, bars and casinos – just with more rum and no guns.

Not only does Puerto Rico have the usual tropical fare of azure blue seas, white sand beaches and year-round sunshine, it also has a cool Europeanst­yle cocktail bar and foodie scene, a rich history and beautiful Spanish colonial architectu­re to explore.

The island also used to supply a fifth of the world’s coffee, and while that figure has dwindled to just 8%, there are enough single-estate coffee bars and micro breweries here to keep even the hippest millennial­s happy.

If you like making love at midnight…

The action didn’t kick off till gone midnight at La Concha hotel where our stay happily coincided with one of the island’s biggest festivals, Noche de San Juan – one of 16 annual knees-ups which give Puerto Ricans yet another excuse to get glammed up in sequins and salsa.

Traditiona­lly people dance on the beaches, then at midnight, everyone gets in the water and does a backward plunge to get rid of bad luck.

If you like piña coladas…

The Spartacus of cocktails, practicall­y every bar on the island claims to have invented the piña colada, but it’s generally acknowledg­ed that a bartender at the Caribe Hilton first served it in 1954.

There’s no denying Puerto Rico is the home of rum, and even though Bacarrrrrr­di (you must rrrroll your Rs like the locals) was originally Cuban, its distillery on the island is the biggest in the world.

Doing a tour of Casa Bacardi is a bit like going to a boozy Disneyland – you feel like a big kid on an articulate­d trolley ride while swigging cocktails. However, I’d like to confess now that if anyone was missing vital ingredient­s from one of the prep areas in the cocktail-making class, me and my buddy nicked the rums and added them to our drinks. Which might explain why the trolley train was so much more fun on the way back. Choo-choo! (Bacardi mixology group class from £62 per person. bacardi. com/casa-bacardi).

I’m not much into health food…

The east-to-west trade winds and lots of shade from clever Spanish colonial architectu­re make walking around historic Old San Juan in the heat of the day quite comfortabl­e, especially if you

stop off at several cafes, cocktail bars and ice cream parlours.

Every cobbled street of this perfectly preserved 500-year-old neighbourh­ood, with its tropical pastel-painted colonial buildings and El Morro Fort, is a photograph­er’s dream.

With its long history of Spanish cooking and Latin American flavours, Puerto Rico’s capital is also a food-lover’s paradise.

Cool designer boutiques and micro breweries vie for space in the shady plazas with street food-style pork, rice and beans joints, tapas bars and stunning 1930s Art Deco banks that make you feel like you’ve walked on to a set of Citizen Kane (Spoons Old San Juan Walk & Taste Tour from £108 per person. thespoonex­perience.com).

If you’re not into yoga…

The island is so fertile that founder of the Casa Alternavid­a retreat, Yancy Wright, says that anything he throws in the compost ends up growing in the lush grounds of his beautifull­y restored hacienda on the edge of the El Yunque rainforest outside San Juan.

It’s also a metaphor for his brand of personal growth, which saved him from his burnt-out New York lifestyle, and he now shares with paying guests.

Yancy’s eclectical­ly furnished and individual­ly decorated rooms, themed on the island’s flora and fauna, make this a delightful place to escape the stresses of modern life (Casa Alternavid­a retreat from £415 per person per night. casaalter navida.com).

And the feel of the ocean…

The Atlantic side of Caribbean islands can be a bit rough for nervous swimmers like me. I like to be able to see my feet at all times. Puerto Rico is the largest in an archipelag­o of 143 small islands, many with white sands, palm trees and calm turquoise waters, so it only took a 30-minute bus ride out of San Juan to the east coast to board a catamaran to Culebra island and its Bounty-style beach, Playa Flamenco.

Saying that, all eyes were firmly fixed on the horizon as the bumpy, 45-minute crossing played havoc with our breakfasts.

Jumping off the boat into the crystal clear waters and swimming to the beach sorted the sea sickness right out, before doggy-paddling back for cocktails and lunch on the boat.

Everyone happily risked heat-stroke by partying the afternoon away under the baking sun (Culebra Island Day Trip with East Island Excursions from £128 per person. eastisland­pr.com).

And gettin’ caught in the rain…

It’s hard to believe that by the 1930s, Puerto Rico’s El Yunque tropical rainforest had suffered 95% deforestat­ion from hurricanes and colonial plantation­s.

The island takes its eco credential­s very seriously these days and is reforestin­g, and even built a £2million cathedral-sized visitor’s centre as a monument to the island’s diverse ecosystem. Which also means you’ll hear the sound of the forest’s native tree frog, the coqui, alongside the loud clacking of the incongruou­s giant bamboo that have been planted to help with soil erosion.

But at least the carefully monitored visitor numbers now means there are never too many tourists

(El Yunque Rainforest tour from £138 per person. bespokecon­cierge.com/ tours).

Write to me and escape…

Jumping off the boat and swimming to the beach sorted the sea sickness

My group stayed at two very different styles of hotel. Party animals will love La Concha Renaissanc­e San Juan Resort right in the middle of the busy Condado area. Although it was built in 1958 in the concrete modernist style, it has the luxury and charm of a small boutique hotel.

After exploring the mini bar, I then stayed at the Caribe Hilton, which is slightly out of town and is more of a resort. I totally get why some people prefer this but, to me, it could have been anywhere in the world, rather than this rum-filled Caribbean island with a twist of European lime.

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 ?? ?? MINI MIAMI San Juan
MINI MIAMI San Juan
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Idyllic coastline
CRYSTAL CLEAR Idyllic coastline
 ?? ?? LUSH Tropical flora
LUSH Tropical flora

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