Tag Archives: Plan

Oahu Sunset

Hawaiian Snapshots: Ala Moana Park, Oahu

 

Midway between downtown Honolulu and the resort districts of Waikiki Beach, Ala Moana Beach Park offers a quiet waterfront oasis amidst the bustle of Hawaii’s capital.

The green lawns of this 100-acre park are a favorite with locals, who come to picnic in the shade of banyan and palm trees, walk the waterfront pathways, swim or paddleboard. The park is family-friendly, with restrooms, showers and lifeguards, and its expansive grounds include public tennis courts, concession stands and a music pavilion.

The beach is sheltered by an offshore reef, providing consistently calm waters along the shoreline. When the swell is up out on the reefs, surfers flock to offshore breaks with names like Big Rights, Bomboras and Courts, providing beach goers with a show of wave-riding prowess.

Miami Skyline

Florida Snapshots: Miami Skyline

 

The mention of Miami usually conjures visions of sand, sun and tanned bodies. But just to the west of the beaches, across the sparkling waters of Biscayne Bay, the skyline of downtown Miami gives notice that this tropical metropolis is more than a beach town.

As a vibrant international hub of commerce with strong ties to the Caribbean and South America, the city is a melting pot of cultures, cuisines and lifestyles. The waterfront district centered around Brickell Avenue and Biscayne Boulevard is a focal point for cultural events and festivals, ranging from highbrow events such as the Annual Art Basel exhibition to family friendly music and seafood festivals.

Costa Rica Coast

Costa Rica Snapshot: Costa Ballena

 

The 20-mile section of coastline known as Costa Ballena, aka “the whale coast,” boasts some of the most pristine beaches in Costa Rica. Once remote, it is now linked to the resort town of Quepos by a paved highway.

Hidden among the green coastal hillsides that rise from the sea are a smattering of eco lodges and boutique hotels. The area is a favorite with surfers, hikers and bird watchers, and it is home to Marino Ballena National Park. This marine reserve provides sanctuary for turtles, dolphins and the migratory whales that give the area its name.

A favorite destination within the reserve is Punta Uvita, a sandbar which local’s have named the whale tail based on its shape. At low tide, beachgoers can explore the rocks and tide pools, and may catch a glimpse of the namesake marine mammals broaching in the blue Pacific waters.

Inland, miles of hiking trails lead into the mountains, and a trio of beachside towns—Ojochal, Uvita and Dominical— provide a range of eclectic shops and eateries. Costa Ballena is a three-hour drive from the capital of San Jose, or a half-hour from the Quepos airport.

Hawaii North Shore

Hawaii Snapshots: Waimea Bay, Oahu

 

Surfers know the name. Waimea Bay is one of the planet’s premier big-wave destinations. When winter swells roll in, the best riders in the world converge on the beach to challenge swells that rise up and break in 30-foot walls of cascading whitewater. It’s not for the fainthearted.

Summer reveals a very different side of this site, as when seasonal weather patterns shift, the waves subside and waters become calm, clear and inviting. Waimea Bay Beach Park offers wide expanses of sand for sunbathing, with parking and restrooms nearby.

Rock formations at the southern end of the beach attract snorkelers with the promise of colorful tropical fish, turtle sightings and the possibility of a visit from a pod of spinner dolphin. The parking lot fills up quickly on weekends, so it’s a good idea to arrive early. For a break from sun and sand, visitors can explore the nearby botanical gardens at Waimea Valley.

Sarasota Sunset Siesta Key

Florida Snapshots: Point of Rocks, Siesta Key

 

Siesta Key is famous for it’s powder-fine white sand beaches. But there’s another, lesser-known feature of this Gulf barrier island that attracts locals and vacationers alike. Just south of popular Crescent Beach, a series of limestone ledges known as Point of Rocks provides one of the only beachside snorkeling sites on Florida’s west coast.

Unlike the featureless sand bottoms swimmers find when wading off most Gulf beaches, these submerged rocks provide habitat for corals, sponges, and a variety of fish, crustaceans and possibly even a pod of dolphin. Depths are shallow, making this an ideal location for youngsters and novices, but it’s best to check the weather before packing the gear, as the water becomes cloudy when wind and waves are up.

The rocks are more secluded than the beaches to the north and south, as there is no direct access from shore. Getting there will involve a walk of several hundred yards from beachfront hotels, or from a small public parking area. Shell collectors also enjoy this area, which has yielded many rare and colorful specimens. Late afternoon is also a great time to plan a stroll to the rocks, as there is a good chance you will have sunset views all to yourself.

St Augustine Sunrise

Florida Snapshots: St. Augustine Sunrise

 

The view to the east hasn’t changed in more than 400 years. That’s how long residents of the city of St. Augustine have been enjoying sunrise views across the waters of the Matanzas River. This natural deep-water inlet became the site of the first permanent Spanish settlement in North America.

For more than 200 years, the city remained the center of government for Spanish Florida, and later became the first capital of the Florida territory. Flagler’s railroad ushered in an era of lavish winter resorts, which then sprang into cities farther to the south.

Today, St. Augustine is a favorite weekend getaway destination, combining beach time with eclectic shopping, picturesque B&Bs and a lively dining scene. It is also recognized as the oldest continually occupied city in the nation, and iconic landmarks such as the Castillo de San Marcos and the Old City Gates stand as reminders to a colorful past.

 

Guatemala Tikal Vista

Guatemala’s Best Mayan Ruins

 

Long before Europeans came to the Americas, the Mayan people lived in grand cities spread across Central America. Lying hidden under jungle growth for centuries, a growing number of these sites have become the focus of ongoing archeological reclamation. Guatemala is home to dozens of ancient cities, including some of the most significant edifices ever erected by the Mayan people. Here are three of the best.

Tikal

Tikal

The Temple of the Grand Jaguar rises above the Grand Plaza at Tikal. This site is Guatemala’s most popular attraction. Photo: Simon Dannhauer/iStock

Once the capital city of a powerful Mayan kingdom, Tikal is now one of the largest and most significant archeological sites in Central America. It is also the region’s most popular tourism destination. The site, which is the centerpiece of a 220-square-mile national park, currently includes more than 3,000 structures from the Classic Mayan period, and excavation is ongoing. Signature landmarks of the site include the Grand Plaza, which is overlooked at opposite ends by the towering Temple of the Grand Jaguar and the Temple of the Masks. Those up to the challenge can tackle the steep stone steps of the pyramids to discover panoramic views from 150 feet above the jungle floor. This vista may evoke a faint sense of deja vu, as it was featured briefly in a wide shot of the rebel base in the original Star Wars. A number of tour companies offer one-day and overnight excursions to Tikal from the nearby lakeside towns of Flores San Andrés, as well as Belize City, Antigua and Guatemala City.

Yaxha

Yaxha

Climbers who negotiate the steep steps of Yaxha’s pyramids are rewarded with a view of the nearby lake of the same name. Photo: iStock

The ruins at Yaxha don’t receive as many visitors as Tikal, but have as much or more to offer in terms of both historic interest and scenic beauty. Rising from the greenery of the Petén jungle, the city’s ceremonial pyramids provide sweeping views of nearby Lake Yaxha. At the height of the Mayan Classical period, this city was a center of both commerce and religion, and its more than 500 remaining structures include palaces, ball courts, temples and a celestial observatory. Fans of the reality show Survivor may recognize this site, as it was the featured setting for the show’s 2005 season. Visits to Yaxha can be staged from many of the same starting points as excursion to Tikal. Some operators bundle visits to both sites into a one-day or multiple- day itinerary, and another favorite add-on is a side trip to the ruins of Topoxte, which lies on an island at the western end of Lake Yaxha.

El Mirador

El Mirador

Earth and jungle still cover much of the ancient city of El Mirador, home to one of the largest pyramids in North America. Photo: Gerad Coles/iStock

Guatemala’s second-largest ancient city is reserved for those with a true sense of adventure—and sturdy walking shoes. Hidden in the rainforest near the Mexican border, El Mirador is one of the earliest known Mayan cities, with pre-Classic ruins dating back as far as 2,000 B.C. Much of this ancient metropolis remains covered in vegetation, but archeologists have reclaimed a number of impressive structures from the enveloping grasp of the jungle, including the 180-foot El Tigre Pyramid and the massive La Danta Pyramid, which at 230 feet is considered one of the largest man-made structures of the ancient world. There are no roads to El Mirador, and therefore no tour buses. Those willing to channel their inner Indian Jones can arrange for four- to seven-day expedition-style tours that begin with a four-wheel-drive ride, followed by a day of hiking or horseback riding through the jungle. An easier though pricier alternative is to charter a helicopter, which will whisk you to the site from the town of Flores in 45 minutes for a private guided tour of the site.

Aruba Beach

Fall Getaways in the Caribbean

 

The Caribbean hurricane season is winding down, but why chance it. In the ABC islands there’s never a concern for tropical storms. This trio of Dutch islands—Aruba, Bonaire and Curacao—lie well south of the hurricane belt. Here, arid landscapes guarantee plenty of sunshine and warm, clear waters, and the culture is an inquiring mixture of Dutch, Spanish and African influences. By mid winter, beachfront hotel rooms will be at a premium, but in the days before thanksgiving, there are bargains to be had.

Aruba

If sun and sand are your number one priority, you can’t do much better than Aruba. Long expanses of beach and secluded coves ring the island, but the action centers on the island’s northwest coast and the two-mile expanse that includes Palm Beach. This stretch of powder-fine white sand caters to everyone from laid- back sun seekers to adrenaline junkies on overdrive. Here, you’ll find every kind of water sports from mild to wild. Take a paddleboard yoga class, play on a water bike or go for a tow in an inflatable. The steady trade winds that blow across the island are ideal for sailing, kite boarding and windsurfing. Colorful wrecks and reefs await divers just offshore, and there’s even an underwater submarine for those who want to stay dry. After a day on the water, Aruba serves up one of the most vibrant nightlife scenes in the Caribbean, from casinos to dance clubs and island-style beach parties. The island is also known for its diverse cuisine, with influences from more than 90 nations adding to the culinary melting pot.

Oranjestad Aruba

Dutch influences are evident in the architecture of Aruba’s capital, Oranjestad. The island’s culture is the result of a mixing of European, Caribbean and South American influences. Photo: iStock

Bonaire

With a nickname like “Diver’s Paradise,” you’d expect Bonaire to attract the scuba set. The island is ringed by coral slopes that start shallow and close to shore, and are protected within the Caribbean’s oldest estabished marine park. At points all along the sheltered western shore, yellow-painted rocks mark entry points for dive and snorkel sites, where exploring the reef is as easy as wading in. A number of waterfront resorts centered near the town of Kralendijk also offer short boat rides to the reefs of uninhabited Kline Bonaire. If you’d rather keep your head above water, there’s sailing charters, windsurfing, kiteboarding, kayak trips and deep sea fishing, and the entire northern end of the island is a National Park. Visitors can spend a day at remote coves on the windward side of the island, or hike the rugged hillsides for panoramic island views. To promote off- season business, a number of hotels and dive shops are participating in the Fall Festival promotion, with incentives such as dine and dive packages, as well as a number of special events.

Bonaire Diving

Bonaire was the first island in the Caribbean to establish marine sanctuaries along its coasts. Today, the coral reefs are among the healthiest and most vibrant in the region. Photo: iStock

Curacao

If you are looking to add a bit of international culture to your vacation, look no farther than Curacao. The island is home to a vibrant art scene, with galleries that attract both local and international talents. The narrow streets of downtown Willemstad are lined with Dutch Colonial buildings from the 17th and 18th century, all painted in bright island colors. A 130-year-old floating bridge connects a pair of historic districts, and the waterfront of St. Anna’s Bay hosts a floating market where fruits and vegetable are sold from boats arriving from nearby Venezuela. Treat yourself to Dutch waffles, Gouda cheese and a game of darts at one of the Dutch bars. If city life isn’t your thing, head to the cunucu—the rocky cactus-and-scrub interior— for a jeep safari tour, mountain biking excursion or hiking expedition to the top of Mt. Christoffel, the tallest peak on the island.

Curacao

Though there are several popular beaches along Curacao’s southern coast, the remainder of the island’s coastline consists of rocky, cactus-covered cliffs punctuated by small coves. Photo: iStock

British Virgin Islands Anegada

Off the Beaten Path Caribbean

 

One of the great things about going to the Caribbean is discovering those quiet places where you can disconnect and turn off the outside world. Not an easy thing to do in busy cruise ship ports or when staying at a mega resort. But fortunately, there are islands that hold on to their past, have a respect for nature and the environment and provide all the ingredients for an ideal escape. Here are five of my personal favorites.

Saba

Saba

Saba’s coastline rises precipitously from the sea. Instead of sandy beaches and waving palms, this island offers picturesque villages and hiking trails that lead to cloud forests. Photo: Debbie Snow

Saba is a Caribbean island unlike any other. There are no palm- lined beaches, no casinos or nightclubs, no cruise ships, and never, ever a crowd of tourists. Rising steeply from the sea, Saba’s green-clad slopes are dotted with a collection of storybook villages, where white-walled cottages sport green shutters and red roofs, and stonewalls are layered in flowering vines. A single highway carves a serpentine path along the slopes to connect these settlements; hiking trails fan outward and upward to elfin- like cloud forests that thrive in the highlands of the long-extinct volcanic summit. Surrounding waters, which lie within a marine reserve, provide divers with unique underwater geological formations and fish-laden reefs. The island is so small that everyone knows everyone. It’s friendly and whimsical at the same time. Though connected to the world by both island ferry and small planes, Saba maintains a sense of otherworldly isolation that’s increasingly hard to find in the modern world.

Anegada

Anegada

Anegada’s beaches are never crowded. Some hardly see a human footprint, as most visitors congregate at one of several lively beach bars along the central coast. Photo: Christian Wheatley/iStock

Twenty miles of blue water separate the low-lying shores of Anegada from higher-profile islands of the British Virgins. And it’s not just geography that sets this less-visited outpost apart. Miles of near-deserted white-sand beaches overlook a barrier reef that has claimed hundreds of shipwrecks. A smattering of small guesthouses and fishermen’s camps line the western coast, and much of the interior remains an unsettled realm of tropical scrub and salt marsh. A handful of day-trippers make the crossing from the island of Virgin Gorda each day, settling in at one of the beach bars on the windward coast, and some linger for the island’s signature dinner of barbecue lobster. Come evening, things get really quiet, and the stars come out in a sky where no streetlights mar the view.

Montserrat

Montserrat

Clouds hover over the peak of Montserrat’s Soufriere Hills. Two decades after this volcano’s last major eruption, visitors are once again discovering this green gem of an island. Photo: Debbie Snow

Once known as the “Emerald of the Caribbean” Montserrat was a green and fertile island that attracted discriminating visitors who appreciated the bucolic lifestyle. In 1995, a volcano came to life, spewing lava, smoke and ash that forced more than half the island’s population to evacuate. Today the Soufriere Hills Volcano still spurts some steam and ash, but scientists predict the eruption cycle is waning and will soon die out. Today, the island’s southern coast is coated with hardened lava that reaches from the cone to the coast. Meanwhile, the northern part of the island has returned to green and eco-tourism has taken off. Hiking is a favorite activity. The northern hills are laced with a network of forest footpaths, while a trip to the south takes you into an otherworldly landscape that presents a fascinating glimpse at the aftermath of the eruption.

Bequia

Bequia

An island ferry departs the anchorage at Bequia’s Admiralty Bay. In centuries past, this harbor sheltered pirates, merchantmen and whalers. Today, it’s a favorite with cruising yachtsmen. Photo: iStock

Maritime traditions run deep in Bequia, and continue to this day. Native shipwrights still handcraft island-style boats using tools and traditions passed down through generations. Reminders of the island’s pirate past and whaling days linger, but the anchorage at Admiralty Bay is now filled by cruising yachtsmen, who include this favorite port of call on sails through the Grenadines. Bequia does receive visits by day-trippers from small cruise lines, but their temporary presence doesn’t overwhelm, and merely adds an extra dimension to the waterfront activity. The main street is for pedestrians only and an eclectic mix of bars and restaurants that hug the waterfront. Settle in and you’ll likely hear tales of voyages far and near, and maybe a few tales of the old days.

Iles des Saintes

Les Saintes

The largest of the trio of islands of Les Saintes, Terre-de-Haute delights with a scenic waterfront district where small cafe’s and restaurants deliver a taste of France. Photo: Oliver Hoffmann/iStock

On this trio of small islets off the southern coast of Guadeloupe, the best of France has been transported to the Caribbean. On Terre-de-Haut, the largest of the three, the town of Le Bourg provides a quintessential seaside setting, to which is added a Gallic touch. Think café au lait, crisp banquettes hot from the oven, and just-caught seafood simmering in white wine and savory herbs. Most visitors are French, which adds a refreshing European flavor to the scene. Many come from the main island of Guadeloupe for the day and are gone by sunset. Stay at one of the island’s small hotels and you can practically have the place to yourself after five o’clock.

 

 

La Amistad Park Waterfall Panama

Tropical Escapes: La Amistad International Park, Panama

 

Covering nearly a million acres, the Amistad International Park is Central America’s largest forest reserve. Straddling the border between Panama and Costa Rica, this World Heritage site includes more than a dozen distinct ecosystems ranging from lowland jungle to cloud forests. Towering over it all are the Talamanca Mountains, which rise to altitudes of more than 12,000 feet. Within the park, stands of both second growth and virgin forest are home to a wide range of indigenous species that includes jaguars, tapirs, anteaters, sloths, monkeys and hundreds of species of birds.

The land is home to native peoples such as the Naso, but also open to visitors, who come to explore by foot an extensive but largely unmarked network of trails. Due to the scope and nature of the park’s trail system, most hikers tour La Amistad in the company of local guides. Among the favorite walks are routes leading to waterfalls along the Canasta River, into the isolated Valley of Silence and up to panoramic views along the Sabanas Esperanzas trail. The park includes several camping sites, and there are a handful of jungle lodges in the area. A long-time favorite is Los Quetzales Ecolodge, which is located just outside the park.