Tag Archives: St. Thomas

St. Thomas Iggies at Dusk

Five of the Caribbean’s Best Beach Bars for Live Music

 

No island experience is complete without at least one night of we-be-jamming. And the best nights happen when you find just the right mix of atmosphere, energy, potent cocktails and bands so lively that you can’t sit down. We traveled, listened in and danced all night to find the best Caribbean joints delivering colorful atmosphere, good crowds and, of course, live music that keeps you in the party spirit until the wee hours. Read on to rock on.

Dune Preserve on Anguilla

Ladies, watch out: Bankie Banx is the famous founder of this open-air reggae joint on Anguilla, but it’s his son, Omari, who’s the main act now—and his looks are every bit as luscious as his voice. The wooden boat-like venue at Rendezvous Bay is cozy. Every seat is a good seat for watching the acts and the impromptu dancing happening in the aisles and in front of the stage. During the day, the beachside bar crowd is mostly tourists— many straight off cruise ships—but at night, it’s a mix of locals and visitors of all ages.

MooMba Beach Bar on Aruba

Dance with your feet in the sand at Aruba’s Palm Beach hot spot. The lineup of local acts playing Friday and Sunday nights constantly changes, but it’s within a category the bartenders jokingly call tropical rock. The scene here starts early, typically around 7 p.m., so you’ll find a more family friendly crowd. But that doesn’t mean the party is tame. Two bars—one big one under the restaurant’s large thatched roof and one out in the sand— make sure you always have a cold one to keep you in the mood to shake it.

Fort Christian Brew Pub on St. Croix

This dockside, open-air venue sees the biggest crowds on St. Patrick’s Day when they bring in five bands to keep the crowd boogieing all day. During high season, they offer live music four nights a week, including Friday and Saturday. Their regular acts include the one-man band of Kurt Schindler, whose music is a blend of calypso and reggae, and DJ Cypha, who spins his own mix of reggae and rap. Expect high energy from the crowd that’s mostly twenty-somethings off duty from the tourism industry. Earlier in the night, you’ll see a wider range of folks who come in for the five beers crafted on site.

Iggies Beach Bar on St. Thomas

Every night of the year, this restaurant, part of Bolongo Bay Beach Resort, serves up live music right at the water’s edge. Wednesday is carnival night with steel-pan calypso music and moko jumbies—masked dancers on stilts traditionally believed to ward away spirits. Sunday sees the all-you-can-eat barbecue buffet, and any night is a good night to try the VooDoo Juice. Iggies is popular with visiting families thanks to the quick delivery of conch fritters, sliders and other island-y pub grub. Find the twenty-something set at the joint’s sand volleyball courts.

Mr. X’s Shiggidy Shack, St. Kitts

Frigate Bay on St. Kitts is the place to be Friday night. Pretty much everyone looking to party—the expat community, locals and college kids—flocks to this beachside joint with live music. You’ll hear what’s known as soca music: a mix of calypso, soul and funk. Also, on Thursday, the beachside joint hosts bonfires, and Saturday, it’s karaoke night.

Cap Juluca Beach Villas, Anguilla

Beachfront Rooms Just Steps from the Water

 

There’s nothing like waking up- or falling asleep – to the soothing sound of waves. Whether the roar of the Atlantic or the soft swish of the Caribbean Sea, the rhythm signals the presence of water and a beach. Imagine that early morning walk along the shore or gazing at the moon in total darkness as waves lap at your feet. Here are five hotels that couldn’t get any closer to the shore if they tried.

Moorings Village, Islamorada, Florida

The Moorings Village & Spa, Rooms just steps from the beach

Enjoy your morning coffee with a view of the Atlantic from the porch of the Maroni House. Photo: the Moorings Village & Spa

Think of a coconut plantation, where 18 cottages are tucked in among a variety of palm trees and blooming hibiscus and bougainvillea add splashes of color to the greenscape. This is the Moorings Village & Spa. A top spot to book is the white Maroni House, with its lush green front yard that meets the sandy shoreline and faces the Atlantic Ocean. Sit on the big wrap-around porch with a cup of Joe and watch the sunrise. (Florida Keys’ sunrises are just as spectacular as the famed sunsets.) With just a few steps you’re on the water’s edge taking a stroll, followed by a swim or some paddleboarding. The bedroom has a king-size bed and French doors that open onto the porch, providing a dreamy view of feathery palms, beach and water. Go ahead, open the doors and feel the island breezes. The cottage’s oak-wood floors and crisp decor complement the tropical environment. Bonus: A midday siesta in one of the hammocks draped between the beach’s many palm trees is total bliss. 

Ponte Vedra Inn & Club, Ponte Vedra, Florida

Ponte Vedra Inn & Club

Miles of the Atlantic shoreline greet you when you wake up at the Ponte Vedra Inn & Club. Photo: Ponte Vedra Inn & Club

 A real Florida classic, the Ponte Vedra Inn & Club in Northeast Florida has beachfront rooms that allow you to step out the door and right onto a wide stretch of the Atlantic shore. The rooms are exquisitely furnished with heavy wooden beds, complete with carved headboards and posts, and dressed in comforters and pillows in rich seascape tones and floral and stripe patterns. Wide moldings define the walls and ceilings and add a regal touch to the decor. The ocean rooms are so close to the Atlantic that the sound of waves will lull you to sleep. 

Bolongo Bay Beach Resort, St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands

Bolongo Bay, St. Thomas

Bolongo Bay Beach Resort is a water-sports playground, but at night it takes on a romantic aura. Photo: Bolongo Bay Beach Resort

 A low-key property on Bolongo Bay, this smaller resort is a water-sports playground. First-floor rooms open their doors onto the sand, and with a few steps you’re at the shoreline. Move between your room, the sand, the Caribbean waters and the toys—kayaks, paddleboards, aqua bikes and paddle boats. Nestled against hillside tropical foliage, Bolongo Bay Beach Resort is a cool little hideaway. Rooms are decorated in sunny oranges and yellows with bamboo-inspired furniture. Bonus: At the weekly Snorkel Booze Hunt, snorkelers search for a bottle of rum staff members hid under the sea. 

Four Seasons Resort Hualalai at Historic Kapulehu, Island of Hawaii

Four Seasons Resort Hualalai, Hawaii

From the outdoor area of this Four Seasons suite, Hawaii’s shore is just steps away. Photo: Four Seasons

Go for an oceanfront Superior Suite on the lower level so you can walk out through the patio and onto the beach at this Four Seasons gem. Hawaiian art and nature-inspired furnishings are well executed to create a luxurious décor reminiscent of Hawaii’s golden age (the boom years from 1893 to 1941). The beach’s fine white sand blends with black lava landscapes and Pacific blues to dazzle the eye. 

Cap Juluca, Anguilla

Photo: Cap Juluca

Having the beach just outside your door makes a stay at the impeccably designed Cap Juluca perfect. Photo: Cap Juluca

From your perch on the patio of these Moorish-style beachfront villas, the architecture’s stark white arches frame the intense blues and greens of the beach just outside your door. Strikingly romantic and as close as you can get to the brightest sands in the Caribbean, Cap Juluca’s rooms and suites boast white walls and floors that connect with the alabaster sands just beyond. Columns, domes and more arches give this resort its intriguing aura. 

 

Tranquility Bay Beach House Resort, Marathon, Florida

Tranquility Bay Beach House Resort

Sand, palm trees and water creates an amazing tropical vibe at Tranquility Bay Beach House Resort. Photo: Tranquility Bay Beach House Resort

In the Florida Keys, you really have to search to find a sweeping beach, which is why a stay at the Tranquility Bay Beach House Resort is such a treat. Walk out the French doors of a two- or three-bedroom beachfront house onto the porch and savor the expansive view of sparkling white sand that leads to the Gulf of Mexico. Palm trees, lounges, a swimmer’s beach and even TJ’s Tiki Bar are right there. And the two-story beach house couldn’t be prettier. Its white walls and linens serve as a canvas for brightly colored furniture, bed accessories and accent walls boasting playful floral and sea coral patterned wallcoverings. The full kitchen allows you to brew your own coffee—or mix your own cocktails—to enjoy curled up in an Adirondack chair on the porch or the second-floor balcony. 

 

Ritz-Carlton, St. Thomas, USVI

Tropical Vacation Resorts with the Coolest Swimming Pools

 

No doubt, every vacation to the tropics includes at least one day at the pool. Whether you jump in and splash around, peacefully float on your back or hang out poolside with a good book, the pool is important. So make sure you find the swimming pool that works for you. From lazy-river styles to infinity-edge designs to even works of art, these pools all have what it takes to make your time in the sun the best.

Zoetry Agua, Punta Cana, Dominican Republic

Zoetry Agua, Punta Cana, Dominican Republic, tropical vacation resorts

At dusk a tropical sky casts a romantic aura over the pool at the Zoetry Agua resort. Photo: Debbie Snow

So well designed is the swimming pool at the Zoetry Agua in Punta Cana that you’ll feel as if you’re surrounded by the rainforest. Soft sensual curves make the pool inviting, and tiny islands home to tall lean palm trees rise up from the water. The pool shaped like a serpent weaves its way through the lush grounds, past hut-like buildings with cane-thatched roofs. 

Raleigh Hotel, South Beach

Photo: The Raleigh

Its art-deco design from the 1940s makes the Raleigh Pool a South Beach icon. Photo: Raleigh Hotel

They don’t make swimming pools like the art-deco pool at the Raleigh Hotel on South Beach anymore. Its iconic curves, now accentuated in black, date back to 1941 when architect L. Murray Dixon designed the hotel. Everything about it screams elegant, sexy and cool. From its high dive-turned-waterfall to its funky lifeguard stand-inspired tower, it retains its bygone-era style. After several facelifts and booms and busts Miami-style, this hotel swimming pool still ranks as one of the top places to swim, hang out and, most importantly, be seen. 

 

Viceroy, Anguilla

Viceroy, Anguilla

The Viceroy’s modern architectural forms carry through to the infinity pool area. Photo: Viceroy

One of the swankiest swimming pools ever, the infinity-edge pool at the Viceroy Hotel in Anguilla is surreal in its design. Perched on a small promontory, the hotel’s modern architectural elements interact with the natural surroundings, making way for a pool with the illusionary effect of shimmering water that meets the Caribbean Sea and extends to the horizon. 

Parrot Cay by COMO, Turks and Caicos

Parrot Cay by COMO, Turks and Caicos

A serene sheet of water, the Parrot Cay by COMO’s infinity pool is the ultimate place to de-stress. Photo: Parrot Cay Resort

Situated on a private island, the beautifully understated infinity pool at the Parrot Cay by COMO is set against scrub-covered sand dunes and the Atlantic Ocean. From your perch on a chaise lounge, the vast pool is so cleverly crafted it visually becomes one with the beach. Bonus: Poolside tiki huts transform into private dining rooms for a romantic evening. You’ll feel like you’re having dinner on the beach. 

Halekulani, Waikiki, Hawaii

Photo: Halekulani

Besides being a work of art, the Halekulani pool offers tantalizing views of Hawaii’s coastline. Photo: Halekulani

Like an artist’s canvas, the bottom of the swimming pool at Waikiki’s Halekulani resort has been turned into a stunning piece of artwork. Using 1.2 million glass tiles, an eye-popping blue mosaic of a Cattleya orchid was created. Whether you swim above the flower with eyes open or view it from the pool’s deck, the design is breathtakingly beautiful. 

Ritz-Carlton, St. Thomas

Photo: Ritz Carlton

The infinity pool at the Ritz-Carlton St. Thomas blends beautifully with its tropical surroundings. Photo: Ritz-Carlton, St. Thomas

From your chaise lounge on the deck of the infinity pool at the Ritz-Carlton St. Thomas, you can watch the feathery shadows of palm trees dance on the water. As your eye moves with the ripples, the pool water seems to extend into the Caribbean Sea, where fishing boats bob against the soft peaks of the island’s green mountains in the distance. Who would ever imagine a swimming pool could create such a picturesque panorama? 

 

 

tropical getaways

Easy Caribbean Getaways

 

You’ve had it with the day-to-day. It’s time to fly to St. Somewhere and wiggle your toes in the sand. But what if your time is in short supply? Relax, with a bit of planning, you can still reach the beach for a long weekend without spending the majority of your getaway in transit lounges or taxi cabs. It’s all about picking a destination that’s a reasonable nonstop away, and a resort that’s not too far from where you land. To inspire you, we’ve created some sample arrivals, based on currently available nonstop flights and average transit times from arrival gateway to resort. Each of these properties was chosen not only for convenience to the airport, but also because they provide the Caribbean vacation experience you crave.

Atlanta to St. Lucia (ATL-UVF)

St Lucia Coconut Bay waterslide, caribbean getaways

St. Lucia’s Coconut Bay Resort has an adults-only wing, but grownups are free to cut loose as well. Photo: Richard Hallman/Coconut Bay Resort

 Depart at 9:51 a.m. / 4 hr. 24 min. flight time / 5 min. shuttle to Coconut Bay Resort / Check in at 3:25 p.m.

Travel Notes: After four hours on the plane, you’ll be ready to hit the beach, not spend another hour-plus on winding roads to reach one of the resorts on St. Lucia’s west-central coast. Coconut Bay is a well liked and reasonably-priced all-inclusive on the island’s southeastern corner, with separate wings for adults and families. It sits beachfront on the Atlantic, with a dedicated adult pool and spa, five restaurants, six bars, plenty of on-property water sports and short drive times to many of the island’s best day-trip adventures.

Boston to St. Thomas (BOS-STT)

St Thomas Ritz Carlton, Sailing Catamaran

The sailing catamaran Lady Lynsey cruises near the Ritz-Carlton on Great Bay, St. Thomas. Photo: Don Riddle/Ritz-Carlton

Depart at 8:57 a.m. / 4 hr. 2 min. flight time / 25-30 min. van ride to the Ritz-Carlton / Check in at 3:30 p.m.

Travel Notes: Getting to the majority of St. Thomas’ beachfront properties requires a run through downtown Charlotte Amalie. And once you are free of the traffic on Veteran’s Drive, it’s worth investing a few extra minutes of taxi time to go all the way to the island’s east end. The Ritz-Carlton sits on a quiet strand of beach known as Turtle Cove, overlooking Great Bay and St. John to the east. You’ll have plenty of time for a refreshing dip and a relaxing libation at the Coconut Cove bar before showering up for dinner. 

Charlotte to Barbados (CTL-BGI)

Coral reef club Barbados

The elegant Coral Reef Club commands prime beachfront real estate on Barbados’ calmer west coast. Photo: Mike Toy/Coral Reef Club

Depart at 10 a.m. / 4 hr. 32 min. flight time / 15 min. taxi ride to Ocean Two / Check in at 4:30 p.m.

Travel Notes: Located on calm Dover Beach, on the island’s south coast, Ocean Two offers easier access to the airport than resorts north of Bridgetown. Those willing to invest an additional 20 minutes of cab time to the west-central coast should consider the Coral Reef Club for a taste of gentile West Indies elegance.

Chicago to Jamaica (ORD-MBJ)

Jamaica Sandals Resort

Jamaica resorts such as Sandals at Montego Bay give couples a chance to enjoy private time together. Photo: Sandals Resort Montego Bay

Depart at 7:40 a.m. / 3 hr. 50 min. flight time / 10 min. shuttle to Sandals Royal Caribbean / Check in at 1:30 p.m.

Travel Notes: Arrival in Montego Bay couldn’t be easier. Once you clear customs, go right to a dedicated check-in desk for Sandals, then chill out in the on-site lounge while their staff takes care of your luggage transfers. From there, it’s a quick ride to the property, where a welcome drink awaits. To get the most out of a short stay, book a mid-afternoon return and enjoy a couple extra hours of morning beach time at the resort. The front desk will hold your bags after checkout, and there are facilities for a rinse and change before the flight. 

Cleveland to Puerto Rico (CLE-SJU)

La Concha Resort, Puerto Rico

The spectacular infinity pool at Puerto Rico’s La Concha resort overlooks blue ocean waters. Photo: La Concha

Depart at 8:45 a.m. / 4 hr. 15 min. flight time / 15 min. taxi to La Concha Resort / Check in at 2:30 p.m.

Travel Notes: There are no customs or immigration stops when flying to Puerto Rico, and once bags are in hand, you’ll have no problem flagging a taxi. Mid-day traffic should be reasonable, and the location of the La Concha couldn’t be better. The hotel sits smack in the middle of the upscale Condado district, overlooking an excellent stretch of beach that is right next door to the green spaces and lively activities of the Ventana del Mar square. Avenida Ashford is ideal for strolling and people watching, and just a mile away are the scenic streets of Old San Juan. 

New York to Bermuda (JFK-BDA)

Bermuda Hamilton Harbor

An intra-island ferry runs from Hamilton Harbour to destinations around the island nation of Bermuda. Photo: Verena Mathew/iStock

Depart at 7:30 a.m. / 2 hr. 10 min. flight / 25 min. taxi to Coco Reef Resort / Check in at 11:45 a.m.

Travel Notes: Bermuda is an easy hop from New York, but with the airport at the far north of the connected group of islands that comprise the nation of Bermuda, it can take an hour to reach the most distant resorts on the island’s southwest point. Split the distance by staying at Coco Reef Resort. It’s not the island’s fanciest or priciest, but it does sit on one of the most spectacular beaches, with direct ocean views from many rooms. 

Philadelphia to St. Martin (PHL-SXM)

St Maarten Philipsburg

St. Maarten’s capital, Philipsburg, sits beachside on a spit of land between a salt pond and Great Bay. Photo: iStock

Depart at 9:40 a.m. / 4 hr. flight time / 5 min. taxi to Azure Hotel / Check in at 3:15 p.m.

Travel Notes: You can reach most any part of the half-Dutch, half-French island of Sint Maarten/St. Marten in less than a half hour from the airport, so selecting a hotel is really about preferences: Dutch or French, leeward or windward, upscale or value-priced. One popular option that puts you within a few paces of the clear waters of Simpson Beach is the Azure Hotel. The decor is attractive, and kitchenettes allow you to dine in when you feel like it. You’ll be reminded of your proximity to the airport each time a plane takes off, but the immediate beach access can’t be beat. 

Washington, D.C. to Nassau (DCA-NAS)

Compass Point Resort, New Providence, Bahamas

Admiring the view of Love Beach from a balcony at Compass Point Resort, New Providence Island, Bahamas. Photo: Julian Bajzert/Bahamas Tourist Office

Depart at 8:40 a.m. / 2 hr. 50 min. flight time / 10 min. taxi to Compass Point Resort / Check in at 12:30 p.m.

Travel Notes: When you arrive at Lynden Pindling International Airport, you have choices. It’s about 15 minutes to the resorts on Cable Beach, which one day soon will include the ambitious Bahama Mar development, or a half hour ride through Nassau to Paradise Island. As an alternative, you could take a left on West Bay Street and arrive at one of the island’s favorite and most colorful getaways: Compass Point Beach Resort, where brightly-painted huts perch on the seawall overlooking turquoise waters. You may need to book well in advance, because this place has become one of the Bahama’s worst-kept secrets, but remains one of its best experiences. 

Snuba with turtles, st. thomas, USVI

3 Wild Water Sports on St. Thomas

 

St. Thomas is a water-sports paradise. You can fish for trophy marlin, dive wrecks, snorkel reefs, sail the trade winds, paddle a quiet cove or just relax on the beach. And in addition to these expected aquatic pleasures, you can also tap into some unique technologies that take you under—or over—the water in unusual and exciting ways. Here are three water adventures you have to try the next time you visit the island.

Ironman on the Water

Hovering on a flyboard, Lindberg Bay, ST. Thomas, Water sports on st. thomas

Hovering on a flyboard, Lindberg Bay, St. Thomas. Photo: St. Thomas Flyboarding

It’s the next best thing to Tony Stark’s flight suit. A couple of years ago, pro watercraft racer Franky Zapata routed the water-jet exhaust of his machine through a long hose to a stand-atop platform fitted with hand and foot nozzles. This launched an international craze now known as Flyboard®. Strap into one of these devices and you can soar and hover above the water like Ironman or redirect the water jets for a dive below the surface to race like a dolphin. To experience the rush for yourself, head to the Island Beachcomber Hotel, which is home base for St. Thomas Flyboarding.

Owners Tom Fields and Jeff Andrade were professional kiteboarders before discovering Flyboard®, and becoming early converts. They were certified as instructors for the new sport and started a part-time operation on the island of St. Kitts. In the summer of 2013, they relocated to St. Thomas and the Beachcomber. It’s an ideal location, Fields says, because they are close to town, but have direct access to Lindberg Bay, which has some of the calmest waters on the island’s south shore. Before taking to the air, neophyte fliers are given protective gear, such as helmets and life jackets, and introduced to the basics of flight control during a beachside orientation. Then it’s on to the water to practice hovering and controlling the board at low levels before gaining altitude.

“It’s easy to learn,” Fields says. “Our oldest customer so far was a 67-year-old lady, and she got the hang of it in five minutes. We start things off low and like to keep people in their comfort zone. But if you want to go for it, you can get as high as 30 feet.”

St. Thomas Flyboarding is currently launching just one guest at a time, and can handle about 20 participants a day. Reservations are suggested, and a morning flight gives you a jump on the cruise-ship traffic. Pricing runs $130 for 30 minutes or $200 for a full hour. stthomasflyboarding.com

Diving, No Tanks

Virgin Islands SNUBA Excursions operated for more than 20 years, putting thousands underwater. Photo: VI SNUBA Excursions

Virgin Islands SNUBA Excursions operated for more than 20 years, putting thousands underwater. Photo: VI SNUBA Excursions

Most everyone who has snorkeled a reef has felt the urge to go a bit deeper. Doing so usually requires you to take a SCUBA diving course, don heavy equipment and learn the rules of decompression and air management. Or, you could sign up for a SNUBA experience. This underwater breathing system leaves the tank on the surface in a small flotation raft and supplies air to the diver by way of a long air hose attached to a compact mouthpiece.

Diving with a SNUBA rig feels more like swimming, as there is no body-hugging buoyancy compensator or tank to create drag. Even more important, the air hose keeps the diver from going too deep and getting into trouble. By staying at depths of 20 feet or less—which is also the part of the reef that has the most color—and by limiting dive times to a half hour, SNUBA users don’t have to monitor risk factors such as nitrogen loading and ascent rates, which are important when SCUBA divers go deeper or stay longer.

To enjoy a SNUBA dive, participants need only to master two of the most basic skills of diving: clearing their ears on the way down by swallowing, and exhaling as they ascend. As a result, no special certification is required, and persons as young as 8 years old can participate. In addition, the dives take place under the watchful eye of a guide who is a certified divemaster or instructor.

Frank and Tammy Cummings are not only the original SNUBA guides in the U.S. Virgin Islands, they are probably the most experienced providers in the world. Frank was the first licensee for the SNUBA program, and since moving from Northern California to open Virgin Islands SNUBA Excursions some 26 years ago, he and Tammy have lead tens of thousands of participants underwater to enjoy the reefs of St. Thomas and St. John.

For a number of years, the Cummings worked with Coral World to host tours in St. Thomas’ Coki Bay. They still provide tours in this location, but Frank says he prefers St. John, where he leads smaller groups on excursions to less-crowded Trunk Bay.

“I don’t like to run the big numbers,” he says. “I’d rather give people a longer and more personal experience, and St. John is perfect for that.” Trunk Bay is not only a scenic venue, it is part of the Virgin Islands National Park and has some of the island’s best coral formations.

A SNUBA Tour with the Cummings runs $74 for adults, four dollars less for kids under 12. Frank says he’s guided a number of divers who were in their 80s, and recalls one who may have been north of 90. The only requirements are basic swimming skills and a sense of adventure. visnuba.com

Head in a Bubble

water-sports adventures on st. thomas, BOSS

The BOSS keeps the pilot’s head in an air bubble. Photo: Aqua Adventures

They resemble bubble gum dispensers set atop a vintage Vespa motor and go by various acronyms. Whatever the name, these personal submersibles allow a passenger to explore the underwater world while keeping their head out of the water.

In St. Thomas, these little underwater motor scooters are known as the BOSS, as in Breathing Underwater Submersible Scooter. It’s not quite a submarine because the air you breathe becomes slightly pressurized as you descend, and it’s constantly refreshed from a hidden air tank that bubbles gently into the cowling. But at the shallow depths at which these vehicles operate, there’s no need to worry about decompression or pressure changes, and all you need to do is breathe normally and admire the view through the hemispherical face plate. The view is accentuated by the curvature of the bubble, which creates a wide-angle vista much like a camera’s fisheye lens. This panoramic perspective keeps most people from feeling claustrophobic—and you can even wear your spectacles or contacts while inside.

Boss tours are given by Aqua Adventures, which stages day trips to Buck Island National Wildlife Refuge (not to be confused with the Buck Island Reef National Monument in St. Croix). From the harbor in Charlotte Amalie, it’s a 15-minute run in open water to a sheltered cove on Buck Island aboard a 60-foot motorboat that’s been specially configured to transport and launch the BOSS submersibles.

Once in calm water, there’s an orientation briefing, then passengers take their turn in the BOSS and spend the remainder of their trip snorkeling or relaxing on deck. You climb aboard while the scooter is on the surface, which requires just a quick duck-under to get your head into the bubble. Once you are comfortable, the tour guide, who is a certified divemaster or SCUBA instructor, will drop your vehicle down to its cruising depth of eight feet. This may sound shallow, but when looking out, you have the illusion of cruising deeper below the waves, thanks to the bubble optics, while features along the bottom are seen in sharp relief.

Minimum age for the adventure is 10, and the only physical requirement is the ability to climb a short dive ladder when re-boarding the boat, with crew ready to assist if need be.

The three-hour BOSS and snorkel excursion to Buck Island currently runs $129. This tour is popular with the cruise-ship crowd, so if you want to work it into an island stay, you should reserve well in advance. bossusvi.com