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Art and Architectural Travel Beach and Water Sports Uncategorized

Backpacking Through India

A few years back, I had the opportunity to travel to India to go to my good friend’s wedding. It was a chance to get a glimpse of the culture that I just couldn’t pass up. At the time, I was a university student who had scraped together some savings from working as a babysitter. Perhaps it wasn’t enough to enjoy a luxurious trip in resort hotels, but I could definitely support a backpacking trip and that’s exactly what I did. 

Getting hitched in Bhubaneswar, Orissa 

After an overnight pitstop in the energetic and bustling capital city, New Delhi, I hopped on a plane to go to Bhubaneswar. This city was a little off the tourist trail and my friend’s childhood home was in a small town outside of the metropolis. My friend’s family met me at the airport and welcomed me into their house. I then enjoyed a week filled with incredible food, warm hospitality, and fascinating rituals, creating memories that stay with me to this day.

The wedding was a joyous and celebratory affair that lasted into the early hours of the morning. One of the most interesting parts of the wedding was that the reception was open to the public. The idea behind this is that the more people who attend the wedding, the luckier you will be in your marriage. So there were thousands of locals eating the delicious food; it was almost like a festival. Some of the guests even followed behind the bride and groom’s car and danced to the music coming out of the speakers on the way to the more private ceremony. 

Following this once in a lifetime experience, I headed out on my own for the next three weeks in India. 

Swimming in Goa

My next stop was in the stunning state of Goa. The beaches here are famous and the coastline runs right along the glistening Arabian Sea. This was a fascinating place to explore, as the small coastal towns were dotted with Portuguese churches and sacred cows relaxing on the beach. 

There are many beautiful spots to visit in Goa and a wide variety of accommodation options to suit different budgets. I ended up staying in a nice hostel and rented a Vespa to get around and explore. I also met some wonderful people here who I continued to travel with throughout the remainder of my trip.

Relaxing in Kerala

After Goa, I headed to Kerala on a train with some of the friends I met in the hostel. The best part about catching a train in India is the sweet and steamy chai you can purchase in the morning from the chai vendor. There’s nothing more heartwarming and invigorating that you can have first thing in the morning. 

This new state couldn’t be more different than the last two. The forests were lush and thriving and the winding canals seemed like they were taken straight from a postcard. In Kerala, I met two Swedish travelers and we stayed overnight on a houseboat, traveling down the canals and rivers. It was the perfect way to soak in the picturesque rice fields and get a break from the hustle and bustle of the cities. 

house-boat-Kerala-India

I also got the chance to head to Fort Kochi and check out the Kochi-Musiris Biennale festival, which I would highly recommend to anyone who loves art! The ticket is inexpensive and there is an overwhelming number of galleries and exhibitions from artists from all over the world. If you’re lucky, you might even stumble across a religious street festival that will feature decorated elephants walking through the street. 

Fort Kochi was one of my favorite stops on my trip as there was stunning Portuguese and British architecture, historical fishing nets that were still in use in the port, and some boutique stores to get your shopping fix. 

After this, I visited Chennai, which is an enormous city and a haven for foodies.

The wonders of Rajasthan 

I was now coming to the end of my backpacking journey throughout India. My last stop was in Rajasthan, a state that is filled with stunning historical cities and breathtaking desert landscapes. I was lucky enough to visit three different cities, each more distinctive, unusual, and interesting than the last. They were Jaipur, Jodhpur, and Jaisalmer. For me, this was one of the highlights of the trip as these ancient cities were fascinating just to simply wander through. 

The Amber Fort
The Amber Fort

Jaipur, also known as the Pink City, had so many places to visit where you can just soak in the history. The Amber Fort, Hawa Mahal, Jal Mahal, Jaigarh Fort, and Jaipur Palace each had something unique and special about them. The Hawa Mahal in particular was a striking palace, with a very interesting background. This building is in the heart of the city, and it has a tall wall with tiny windows so that the female members of the royal family could watch the people on the street without being seen. This is just one example of the mysterious and interesting customs of this ancient civilization that you can experience in every building and historical site. 

Hawa Mahal
Hawa Mahal

After seeing the Pink City I traveled over to the Blue City, officially known as Jodhpur. One of the most memorable parts of Jodhpur was the food. If you’re a food lover, check out the Shri Mishrilal Hotel in the ancient Sandar market for a mouth-watering lassi (a delicious yogurt drink). Don’t leave the market before trying the famous Omelette Shop for lunch just outside of the market walls. You can also pick up some nice scarves, souvenirs, or fresh produce inside the busy market. 

The final stop was Jaisalmer, a desert city that almost blends in with the vibrant orange sand that surrounds it. The Fort of Jaisalmer is a vast and grand building that overlooks the city and it’s definitely worth a visit. In Jaisalmer, you can enjoy a camel ride through the desert and even sleep overnight under the stars! It’s the perfect way to end a vibrant and exciting trip. 

rajasthan-Camel-ride

COVID travel changes

Now, because of the COVID pandemic, it’s essential to keep updated on local laws and regulations before traveling through India. At the moment, it’s compulsory to wear a mask and to quarantine for two weeks upon arrival. On top of this, you may need to take a COVID test before travel to prove that you’re not positive. Just keep in mind that the regulations are always changing, so before planning any trips make sure to do your research so that you’re updated on everything you need to know. 

Overall, India is a fascinating country to visit and no matter how long you’re there it always seems like there is so much more to see and do. One thing is for sure, you’ll definitely leave the country with more places you want to visit than when you started out. 

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Adventure and Outdoor Travel Beach and Water Sports North America Uncategorized

Seeing the Grand Canyon from different angles

The Grand Canyon National Park is a location that just the name alone sends feelings of awe through any traveler.

Grand Canyon
Photo:  Tonya Fitzpatrick

It is one of the premiere visited tourist destinations within the United States and with good reason. It’s immense size has left many in awe of this world wonder, with rock formations of all kinds and designs, that no one person could possibly see them all in even a hundred visits.

You can choose to come in from the South or North Rim. If your choice is the South, Grand Canyon Village is your best bet for lodging and is open all year round. Twenty-four miles east of Grand Canyon Village is the South Rim Desert View, which is also open all year. Note though that there is no lodging there, but you can use the campground, though it does not have hook-ups. The North Rim is open for a short season—May 15 – October 15, and you can also lodge at Phantom Ranch at the bottom of the Canyon, which is open year-round.

Don’t worry about shopping for food, or souvenirs either, as you can get all these things inside and outside the South and North Rim parks, and at Phantom Ranch.

You might choose to camp out instead, and there are various options for those who do. However, with all the beauty of the world literally right in front of you, you must be wondering what activities you can get up to while at the Canyon.

Of course hiking is a popular way to not only reach the Canyon, but explore. However, for those who want to up their adventure ante, how about spending some time on the Colorado River, white water rafting as you do? Be sure you know which rapids you’re taking on though, as with over 150 named rapids within the Canyon—some rated as class IV or V, you have to be sure that you are aware of your skill level and don’t take on a class that’s above your experience. Consider hiring an experienced guide from one of the sixteen river rafting companies offering various rafting ‘packages’ for your convenience.

Whatever your choice, this is an adventure that everyone should experience. The wildlife, communing with nature, seeing one of the great wonders of the world up-close…hook, line, and sinker for why you should add The Grand Canyon to your travel bucket list!

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Adventure and Outdoor Travel Australia and South Pacific Beach and Water Sports Uncategorized

Swimming with dolphins in New Zealand

Swimming with the dolphins is a magical activity that may seem like a dream, but it is within your reach and you can do this is a socially responsible manner–enjoying these animals in their natural habitat, not captivity.

Travel to New Zealand’s Kaikoura, where you can do this and more in one of the best locations in the world for close encounters with these amazing creatures.  Huge pods of dolphins gather by the hundreds, making a visit to Kaikoura a unique and exciting experience.

Dolphins with swimmersFound within the Maori region, you can choose from two options to enjoy your dolphin encounter. You can swim with the dolphins and experience the thrill of being among the mammals in their environment. With this choice only thirteen swimmers are allowed in at a time, armed with strict instructions given beforehand, meant to protect both swimmers and the mammals. The other option is to watch from a safe distance, which is just as fun especially when the dolphins are in the mood for showcasing their tricks and jumps. While dolphins are usually rather amiable and docile, swimmers are reminded that they are wild animals and as such, “touching opportunities” shouldn’t be expected.

If diving with dolphins in the crystal clear seas of Kaikoura isn’t up your alley, there are many other activities to take part in. The tiny coastal village is near to a mountain range where visitors can experience adventures on land. Scenic mountain flights, hiking, walking, skiing, and horse trekking are among these and the gorgeous landscapes are amazing to see when taking part in any. Golf is another activity that’s popular among visitors, and you’ll be the envy of your friends as you take a swing or many with backdrops of beautiful, clear seas, and breathtaking mountains.

Back on the water you can choose a fishing trip, as there are many opportunities for this activity. Not to mention dolphins aren’t the only marine life to see while there, as divers soon discover with the wide variety of colorful species below the surface.

Kaikoura has something for everyone—dolphins, land and sea adventures, and sporting activities in a great location. Even if you choose to spend your time just relaxing, it’s a great place to unwind too.

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Adventure and Outdoor Travel Australia and South Pacific Beach and Water Sports Hotels and Accomodations International Travel Uncategorized

Rarotonga: The jewel of the Cook Islands

The Cook Islands are made up of 15 islands, and is home to some of the most beautiful lagoons. With the population just under 20,000, the Cook Islands make for a great getaway.  However, most travelers make their first stop in the region on the most populated island—Rarotonga.  Rarotonga has a population just under 14,000 and it offers some of the regions best resorts, palm-studded beaches, restaurants, nightlife and adventure activities.  This island has received lots of media attention over the years including the CBS show Survivor which set one of it’s reality-based seasons there.  The musical group, The Finn Brothers, featured the island in their hit song “Kiss the Road of Rarotonga” on their 1995 album.

Where to stay

No matter how much you’re looking to spend for accommodations, location is the key to your wallet.  There are a number of pricing options for all budgets on Rarotonga but the challenge is finding a stretch of beach that isn’t too crowded.  One of the more pricier resorts on the island is Te Vakaroa Villas. The small gated property is perched right on Muri Lagoon and has tastefully furnished one-bedroom villas for $530/night. Two-bedroom villas are also available but this is definitely not a family destination (kids under 12 aren’t invited to the party).  The largest resort on the island, The Edwater Resort & Spa, welcomes families with a number of villa and hotel rates and special events.  At Edgewater a one-bed studio starts at $160/night while the VIP deluxe suite will run $320/night.  With 280 rooms The Edgewater is not the most intimate accommodation on the island, but it is conveniently close to some great diving sites for scuba enthusiasts.  If all you need in life is a place to rest your head then make a beeline for Town House Backpackers. It may not be flash but it’s a lot more comfortable than sleeping under the stars in a tropical climate. Beds in shared accommodation rooms start from $25/night and family cottages can house four people for $105/night.

What to do

Diving Black Rock in Rarotongo. Photo:  Ron Caswell

Swimming, snorkelling and kayaking are almost mandatory for the tropical island scene. Of course, the ocean provides unlimited activities from sports fishing to scuba diving.  There are also plenty of zip-lining and adventure tour operators to keep you busy.   Feeling extra adventurous?  Many laid-back locals get a thrill from gathering at the sea wall that skirts the end of the airport’s runway to experience being “jetblasted” by incoming planes.  Talk about a unique local activity. If jetblasting is not up your alley, don’t worry because Raratonga is not lacking for things to do.

Cultural tours

There are a number of cultural centers throughout the Cook Islands but the Te Vara Nui Village on Rarotongo is most prominent.  The local Maori people greet guests and share their stories, knowledge and heritage during a Cultural Village Tour.  Following a delicious Umu buffet, Rarotonga’s finest dancers and musicians perform by flaming torchlight on a floating stage of the waterfall garden.  The stunning show reflects the experience of the village and delivers an authentic cultural performance.

Another cultural experience can be found at the “Drums of our Forefathers” show at Highland Paradise Cultural Center.  Sometimes known as “the lost village”, Highland Paradise is a mountain village refuge that lay forgotten for 150 years.  Today, Highland Paradise boasts 25 developed acres of magnificent gardens and views where the echo of drumming , singing, dancing , story telling and umu feasts are experienced as they were more than 600 years ago.  Performances on Wednesday and Friday nights include transport, dinner and a show that is priced around $60 per adult and $38 for kids under 12.

Alternately, a taste of modern Cooks’ culture can be enjoyed in a Sunday Mass at the Cook Islands Christian Church. The service is an acappella version of the gospel church ceremonies popular in parts of the United States, with fabulous harmonising and devout droning. A sight to behold and experience in a respectful manner.

Shopping

Punangani Market.  Photo:  Christina Spicuzza

Shopping can be roughly divided into two categories: souvenirs and black pearls. If holiday souvenirs are on the shopping list then the Punanganui Markets on Saturday mornings in Avarua are a must visit place. A strong tourist population is mixed with locals who are out taking care of their weekly grocery shop.  The mix offers a great vibe but tourists should expect to enjoy great bargains but also be on the look out for dishonest vendors.  ATMs and credit facilities are scarce so it is important to have plenty of cash before going on a shopping spree.  Also, haggling is frowned upon and the “shopping sport” is considered rude behavior.

The coveted black pearl comes mainly from Manihiki in the northern group of the Cook Islands.  The black pearls is the second largest contributor to the Cook Islands economy behind tourism so there are a number of reputable vendors.  Nonetheless, it pays to be careful so the following tips can help ensure an enjoyable purchase of the gem:

  • Pearls are graded based on shape, size, imperfections and lustre
  • Fakes are very common; always ask for certification
  • Don’t buy pearls after 5pm or on cloudy days (you need the sunlight to see the lustre properly)
  • If a deal seems too good to be true, it probably is. $5 pearls should have your alarm bells ringing

The outer islands

Traveling between islands can be expensive (one-way inter-island flights on Air Rarotonga are anywhere from $76 to $187 depending on the day of departure), but the outer islands hold some of the Cooks’ greatest treasures and are definitely worth a visit.

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Adventure and Outdoor Travel Beach and Water Sports Caribbean and Atlantic Conservation Environment and Nature Culture and Heritage Uncategorized

The Cayman Islands: Fifty Shades of Bay

This is part 1 of Richard Bang’s 4-part travelogue

Over the years I’ve caressed many of the Caribbean gems, but never a set like the Cayman Islands. An accident of geography and geology, the three coral islands, cursed with terrible soil, minimal terrestrial relief, no rivers or lakes, but a bask of crocodiles, was not settled by the Caribs, Arawaks, Tainos, or any other autochthons, by the time Christopher Columbus sailed by in 1503. The sharp, black dolomite outcroppings in some places evoked Hades rather than any sort of haven. The first recorded English visitor was Sir Francis Drake in 1586, who reported that the crocs, or caymanas, were edible, as well as the many turtles, but that note didn’t persuade immigration until around 1700, when the first recorded permanent inhabitant of the Cayman Islands, Isaac Bodden, of Welsh descent, was born on Grand Cayman. After him came pirates, refugees from the Spanish Inquisition, shipwrecked sailors, and slaves, but not many as the barren land couldn’t really support plantations or communities of consequence, as nearby Jamaica and Cuba could. So, it grew up a place with few people. Instead the world came to Cayman, into its coves, sounds, channels, runs and bays.  And that diversity of settlers may have saved it from the worn-out, overtaxed fate other islands have suffered. It became a place where everyone was from somewhere else—over 100 different nationalities are represented today— and that ripened into an ethos that invites strangers into the conversation.

Aerial of Cayman Islands.  Photo by Didrik Johnck
Aerial of Cayman Islands. Photo: Didrik Johnck

The Caymans Islands float at a magical inflection point influenced by three continents, and a radiance of nearby islands. Buccaneers prowled about in search of provisions, safe harbors, and remote spots to bury doubloons. The anchored ships were in a way like bees pollinating flowers in gardens far from where they started, spreading ideas, arts and cultures over this trinity of islands. They brought different music, dance, foods, customs, crafts, beliefs, and new human constructs….the travelers and adventures found shelter and social interaction, and the seeds of multiculturalism were sown. I take the Bird of Paradise, Cayman Airways, from Miami, a Boeing 737-300, and am delighted to find the carrier allows two free checked bags, the exception these days. It is also the only carrier I’ve ever flown that offers rum punch on the service tray. Turns out the punch is supplied by the Tortuga Rum Cake factory, started by a former pilot, Robert Hamaty, whose son, Basil, is our captain. As we pull to the gate at Owen Roberts Airport there is a giant green iguana on the tarmac. No ordinary airport, this. No ordinary airline. There have been dozens of airlines in the Caribbean that launched and then fell into the ocean of bankruptcies. But Cayman Airways has been around since 1968, and now serves half a dozen cities in the U.S., as well as Cuba, Jamaica, Panama and Honduras.

On the taxi ride to the Westin Casuarina, the driver, almost to the point of overprize, crows about how safe Cayman is…. “You can walk anywhere, anytime, mon. The beaches have no litter, no vendors, no hassles, no homeless, just pure sugar sand.” I live in Venice Beach, near the Google offices, and despite the home prices and wealth, there is a large indigent population, and a crime rate not to be envied. How do they do it here? In 1966 legislation passed enabling the banking industry in the Cayman Islands, and that changed everything. The British Overseas Territory went from a sleepy backwater with scarce resources to the fifth-largest banking center in the world with trillions on deposit. Today it has branches of 40 of the world’s 50 largest banks. One five-story building in the capital George Town, The Ugland House, no bigger than a boutique hotel, houses over 18,000 corporations.  Business and financial services contribute 30% of the GDP, and employ more than 20% of the labor force. The Cayman Islands has the highest per capital income in the Caribbean, no taxes, and almost no unemployment. And it has evolved into a matchlessly clean, pristine and pleasing destination for travelers.

A couple strolling along 7-Mile Beach.  Photo: Didrik Johnck
A couple strolling along 7-Mile Beach. Photo: Didrik Johnck

At the northern end of Seven-Mile Beach (it clocks in at five miles and a few minutes long, but that’s the nature of Cayman….everything is a little bigger than reality), I check into the hotel and take a room where I can see the powdery sweep of sand, the tufted tops of palms soughing in the breeze, and the tourmaline waters that will somewhere to the west brush the shores of Central America. The tumbling sun bathes the remnants of the day in gold, the norm here I’m told, and radiates romance. Barefoot couples stroll the seam between sand and water, hand-in-hand, while others sip champagne on lounge chairs as the tropic air seduces. By the reckonings of a number of sand experts, this is the most romantic beach in the Caribbean.  It’s as close to living brochureware, or a set for a diamond commercial, as I’ve seen in real life. Later I chat with Joanne Brown, CEO & Creative Director of a company called Celebrations, a wedding planning company, and she says business is booming. Many folks come here, she says, and are bewitched by the beaches, the diving, the sunsets, the food and wine, and decide to return to tie the knot. Shuttles of birdsong nudge me awake the morning next. After a tropical fruit breakfast I drive east to Queen Elizabeth II Botanic Park to see first-hand one of the most remarkable species comeback stories in modern history: the back-from-the-brink saga of the blue iguana. Just a decade ago, the Grand Cayman blue iguana teetered on the cliff of oblivion, with only 10 to 25 left in the wild, all on this one island. Unaccustomed to predation, it fell victim to an invasion of stray dogs, feral cats and rats. Many ended up as road kill as they sunbathed on increasingly busy streets. But as of my visit the turquoise-colored reptile has returned to promising numbers, and is no longer listed as a critically endangered species. It dodged the bullet of extinction. With a switchblade strut that telegraphs sense of purpose, John Marotta, head warden of the Blue Iguana Recovery Program, shows me around the captive breeding facility. He says the blue iguana now has a population of about 750, and is on the path to achieving the goal of restoring 1,000 blue iguanas to Grand Cayman’s shrub lands. “If I’m successful, I’ll work myself out of a job,” John volunteers. “And I’m happy with that.”

Blue Iguana. Photo: Didrik Johnck
Blue Iguana. Photo: Didrik Johnck

The blue iguana is the largest native species on Grand Cayman, up to five feet in length and weighing in at more than 25 pounds (the native crocodiles were bigger, but they are all gone.) The Blue Iguana once ranged over most of the island’s coastal areas and interior dry lands, but without anyone paying attention, they almost vanished. Blue Iguanas are beautiful, with a pimpy fashion sense, but they also have that red-eyed Godzilla look that evokes menace, and they are in fact dangerous. John has 37 stitches from various bites over the seven years he’s worked to help the coldblooded critters, as well as a dislocated thumb. But one friendly fella, Methuselah, 27-years-young, lets John hold and pet him, and even allows me to rub his spikes and scratch the back of his head. John says the charismatic nature of the blue iguanas has helped raise the monies needed to bring them back, but also has helped habitat protection, as the unglamorous scrubland that few value, but which is important from an ecological standpoint,  is now being set aside and protected. John explains the program helps give juvenile iguanas a head start by protecting them for their first two vulnerable years of life, when they are still small enough to be easy snack food. Then, with radio monitors attached, they are released into the wild. After an hour of barely containing his feral enthusiasm for saving the blue iguanas, John excuses himself, as a school group is approaching, and he wants to direct energies to them. A dozen years ago I did a stint as president of Outward Bound, and one initiative under my watch was “expeditionary learning,” in which students participate in outdoor, hands-on education, rather than from books or lectures.  “This is the way to get them involved in life-long conservation,” John echoes, and bolts off to his outdoor classroom, where the future is being written with lightning.

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Adventure and Outdoor Travel Beach and Water Sports Historical Travel North America Uncategorized

Exploring Ohio’s Lake Erie Shores from Cedar Point to beyond

 

Cedar Point from Lake Erie. Photo: Tonya Fitzpatrick

Mixing the exquisite location on the shores of Lake Erie–its pleasant beaches and unforgettable sunsets–with the thrill of exciting family oriented theme parks and a touch of fascinating American history, Sandusky, Ohio is one of the best places to visit in the United States. Established at the beginning of the 19th century, the small town of Sandusky had an important role in the history of the United States—a history that the area keeps alive.  Today, Sandusky is considered one of the best places to visit and live in the country. Beyond the famous Cedar Point amusement park, Sandusky offers a rich history experience.

The city played a key role in protecting fugitive slaves traveling through the Underground Railroad when slaves traveled by ship and ferry across Lake Erie into Canada.  Throughout Sandusky visitors can still experience a glimpse of that history.  The historical downtown area also contains several interesting landmarks, including original buildings from the 19th century, made from locally produced limestone. Visitors can also pay a visit to the Aviation Museum and Maritime Museum that features

Master Commander Oliver Perry’s Victory and International Peace Memorial on Put-in-Bay. Photo: Tonya Fitzpatrick

collections about the rich marine history behind Sandusky Bay.  Sandusky also boasts the Merry-Go Round Museum which presents exhibits about the charming history of carousels.

Sandusky is best known for the famous Cedar Point Amusement Park, one of the biggest in the world and known as the “rollercoaster capital” (and a personal favorite of the World Footprints family).  Cedar Point features some of the fastest, tallest and most innovative coasters in the world, but the park also has rides for everyone, even the kiddies. There are also other leisure theme and water parks in and around Sandusky, including African Safari Wildlife Safari, Ghostly Manor, Soak City Water Park and more.

World’s Longest Bar on Put-in-Bay. Photo: Tonya Fitzpatrick

Apart from all these, travelers can also explore the nearby area of Sandusky, with a large range of possible activities, from boating and fishing on Lake Erie to visiting the nearby islands and see places like the Marblehead Lighthouse, the Civil War Cemetery, Kelleys Island or Put-In-Bay, the area’s party island that boasts the BEST lobster bisque in the world.  (Really!  People come from all over the world just for the lobster bisque.) we’ve ever had.   For people that just need to relax, the nicest beaches on the Lake Erie shores are located in the Sandusky area and the sunset rivals what you’d see on the West Coast or elsewhere.

Photos (c) Tonya Fitzpatrick, World Footprints Media.  All rights reserved.

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Adventure and Outdoor Travel Asia Beach and Water Sports Conservation Environment and Nature Sports Tourism Uncategorized

The Raja Ampat Islands – A Marine Paradise

“Under the sea” are three words that were made even more famous by a singing Jamaican crab.

Disney’s “The Little Mermaid” aside, this is one of the tunes that will probably come to you when you travel to Raja Ampat. With numerous dive sites, underwater terrain that has not yet been fully explored, and an incredible sense of eco-diversity, Raja Ampat is a magical place.

Scuba divingDivers hit the jackpot when they go to Raja Ampat. Located at the tip of the Bird’s Head Peninsula, New Guinea, it comprises of 1,500 islands and islets, cays and shoals, which surround four of the largest islands—Misool, Salawati, Batanta, and Waigeo. This makes the name Raja Ampat even cooler, as it means “the Four Kings” which refer to the big islands.

Annually approximately 8,000 divers, photographers, scientists, and excited tourists make the trip there, enthralled by the natural phenomenon that makes it unlike any other destination offering similar experiences. Smack dab in a coral triangle, this is a place that nature blessed, and is the most bio-diverse marine region in the world.

While you’re getting diving gear ready to go, there’s so much more to learn about this incredible destination. Hundreds of coral and fish species, including dozens that are endemic, make this bio-jackpot home. It is a marine paradise in its truest form, with flora and fauna that leaves even the most experienced divers in awe.

Those that want to fill up their days with other activities, have a range of water-based options to choose from too. Kayaking, snorkeling, and more are available for tourists. With beaches that are not only clean but empty most of the time, it’s like having your personal marine getaway in a beautiful location.

While this is great for those who don’t like crowds, for Raja Ampat’s citizens it’s not so heartening. Easily accessible by plane from Bali or Jakarta, tourists still haven’t been taking advantage. The local community does not see much profit from fishing, timber, or minerals and a thriving marine tourism product could turn that around completely.

In the travel world, news spreads fast, so there’s no doubt that eventually The Four Kings—Raja Ampat, will see an influx of visitors who can’t wait to embrace it.

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Adventure and Outdoor Travel Beach and Water Sports Caribbean and Atlantic Uncategorized

Richard Bangs’ Cayman Adventure: The final leg

This is part 3 of Richard Bangs 4-part Cayman Islands aventure travelogue

The hours melt away as I snorkel the brilliant reefs, hike the filigreed interior, draw figures in the sand, collect lovely shells, even paddle around the island in a leaky plastic kayak. I finish reading my one book, Explorers of the Nile, and then stare at a palm tree. I come to admit I’m bored. All these studies about how continued connectedness leads to attention deficit disorder may be true. I’m restless, and anxious. I need a fix. It’s time to get back to civilization. So, I pull out my cell, and push the on-button. But nada. It’s out of juice. I panic. But then reach deeper into my pack, pull out an Energizer portable charger, plug it into the phone, and make the call. But it goes to a robot voice saying the mailbox is full; call again later. I’m castaway on a desert island.

So, I decide to swim for it. I stash my pack and sandals, towel, hat and sunglasses, and head into shark and jellyfish waters towards the shore of Little Cayman.

I make it, and after arranging for a pick-up of my left-behind gear and electronics, head to the Edward Bodden Airfield, and catch the first flight back to Grand Cayman, and then straight to Camana Bay, the new cosmopolitan development packed with so many high-end restaurants, glam shops and luxury labels some call it Brand Cayman.

I first stop at Books & Books, carrying the kind of collections the best Borders used to offer, and pick up several new titles, in case I’m stranded on a desert island again, or a hurricane hits. I step by the sports stadium, where the Rugby team “No Woman No Try” is practicing.  I stop for a delightful meal at Ortanique, a Nuevo Latina Carib-Asian eatery. And I run into Kenneth Hydes, the VP of Product and Experiences, who tells me the billion dollar development is the brain child of Kenneth Dart, heir to the Dart Container Corporation of Michigan, world’s largest manufacturer of foam cups. Kenneth gave up US Citizenship in 1994, moved to Cayman, becoming an investor, and a champion of recycling initiatives.  His refined taste is represented in Camana Bay, which is more Rodeo Boulevard than Caribbean sugar shack, more Waterford and Cartier than watermelon and giclée, and it gives Cayman, already the most sophisticated stop in the region, an extra lift.

The perfumed tropic air is Sunday’s, and at the crack of noon I head out for the contrast to Camana Bay, the Grape Tree Café on the beach in Bodden Town with its locally-famous Sunday Fish Fry. This is where the islanders come, and bask in deep-fried bliss. “It humbles the stomach,” says Alex Bodden, related to the first settler on Cayman back in 1700, and who owns, with his family, the adjacent Texaco gas station and liquor store. The perfect combination platter.

The café itself is the size of breadfruit basket, and sizzling away inside are chunks of snapper, mahi, wahoo, swai, chicharrón, as well as conch fritters, plantains, cassava, and sweet potatoes, all for a fraction the price of the fusion appetizers at the resort hotels and trendier west end eateries. And outside, around thatch-roofed tables, an array of well-nourished Caymanians sit and nosh, swap stories and jokes, and generally enjoy the island life and food.

Samuel Rose with the Swanky Kitchen Band on the Cayman Islands
Musician Samuel Rose with the Swanky Kitchen Bank.  Photo:  Didrik Johnck

After lunch I’m hungering for some island music, so head over to Hopscotch Studios, where the Swanky Kitchen Band is in full practice mode for an upcoming wedding performance.

It’s an incredibly energized jam—it’s music that softens rock, and could bend the ironwood tree. Between takes I chat with the electric violinist Samuel Rose, the leader. He explains that “swanky” is a Cayman word for lemonade (made with brown cane sugar), and that Cayman kitchen music represents the melting pot that is Cayman, tracing influences back to Irish fiddling and Scottish jig traditions, mixed with African slave rhythms. Then it blends in ostinatos of calypso, reggae and jazz.

“In the old days the kitchen, or caboose as we call it, was the center of Caymanian homes, a detached room in the back where everyone gathered, and so it became a natural place to socialize, celebrate, dance and create music, using cassava graters and other kitchen utensils. We’ve picked up on that tradition, and are carrying it forward with our own signature.” But Samuel doesn’t want to jab too long; he wants to skank, and I’m not suffering from an overabundance of good sensations, so I step to the back of the room, pick up my feet in terpsichorean splendor, and surrender to the swank.

* * * * * *

A photobomb went viral recently, three women in midst of a vacation photo pose being hugged from behind by a pin-eyed stingray:

So, this final soft-blue morning I catch a fishing boat named Heavenly Hooker and head out to find the scene of the slime.  We cruise out to a shallow bank in the North Sound, drop anchor, and beneath crystalline waters see a dozen gray-hued underwater bats, the size of pterodactyls, gracefully circulating at our stern.  Captain Stacy leaps into the waist-deep brine with a bucket of smelly squid. Immediately the rays lap him, coddle him; cats to catnip. The captain motions me to join, but I’m a bit hesitant, remembering too well Steve Irwin’s untimely death by stingray barb in the Great Barrier Reef.

Sting "eagle" rayBut what good is travel without a little fear?  So, I take the leap, and though my mind is trembling on the edge of danger, the soft Portobello mushroom skin of the rays against my own is rather silky and sensuous. It is an agreeable kind of horror.

This interspecies dynamic came about some years ago when fishermen, to avoid the once mosquito infested coastlines (so bad it was, they say, the mosquitos could suck a cow to bloodless death), started cleaning their catch in this calm off-shore channel, and the Atlantic Southern stingrays gathered to nibble at the gut scraps. Soon the stingrays began to associate the sound of a boat motor with food. Now, it’s a daily ritual, and the wild rays have gone gentle, gliding about torsos, through splayed legs, planting hickies on exposed human skin while suckling for food, and wrapping wings around their guests in puppy-like hugs, all in symbiotic exchange for morsels of sea meat. “Oh, it feels good to be touched by a stingray,” beams Captain Stacey. It is undeniably, ahem, a “raydiant” experience.

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Adventure and Outdoor Travel Beach and Water Sports Culture and Heritage Uncategorized

The second part of my Cayman Islands adventure

This is part 2 of Richard Bang’s 4-part travelogue

From here I wind back to the western side of the island, to Lighthouse Point, to meet Nancy Easterbrook, the fire behind a critical ecological initiative in the Caribbean: Eat a fish; Save the fish.

Nancy, who is managing partner of Divetech, says in recent years the beautiful Indo-Pacific lionfish, studded with toxin-tipped spines, has found its way to the Caribbean, and is not only rapidly pro-creating (one female can produce 2 million eggs a year), but vigorously reducing the populations of native fish, insatiably gobbling up juveniles and hurting the reef habitat. It is an abundance that produces scarcity. Besides the threat of species elimination, there is a looming fiscal threat as well. Since diving the clear waters of the Cayman Islands, so vivid with their extraordinary array of marine life, is a key tourism draw, the loss of native tropical fish could send divers elsewhere, an economically devastating scenario.

How did this scourge get here? Some guess from ballast water released by freighters after passing through the Panama Canal; others believe from home aquariums in Florida, perhaps emptied during a hurricane. However they got here, they’re multiplying and devouring like zombies.

Throughout the world overfishing is a critical issue. But not here, at least when it comes to lionfish. In response to the invasion the Department of Environment offers culling courses and licenses special slings to capture and kill lionfish. Several dive companies set aside a day a week for hunting lionfish.  And restaurants are buying the fish

Nassau groupers have the big mouths needed to devour lionfish. They routinely follow divers and consume lionfish speared by divers. If the grouper can learn to attack and consume lionfish without the aid of divers, then natural controls will take effect. After all, in the western Pacific and Indian Ocean lionfish populations are maintained at equilibrium by local predators, such as large groupers and reef sharks.

Nancy hands me a flier called “Cayman Sea Sense,” which outlines restaurants that are certified ocean friendly, and says I should boycott eateries that serve grouper, and instead look for places offering up lionfish, such as The Greenhouse, a new café in the neighborhood. The cook and co-owner, Jennifer Skrinska, fries up, in coconut oil, some lightly-floured lionfish, a flash in the pan we hope not…and concocts a lionfish ceviche served with homemade flatbread, which, though small in portions, is terribly tasty….and, if enough folks eat lionfish, encouraging more fishermen to clip the weed fish of the Caribbean, then the other, native fish will remain in healthy numbers. So, eat a fish, save the fish.

After lunch I catch a Cayman Airways Express Twin Otter to Cayman Brac, 90 miles to the northeast. At 12-miles long and a mile wide, it is the second largest of the trine that make up the the Cayman Islands. I check into the Alexander Hotel, have a cold Caybrew at the bar, and head out to explore with local guide Keino Daley.

There are no inclusive resorts in Cayman Brac; no casinos; golf courses; little in the way of shopping, and just a few restaurants. But it has birds, trails, cliffs, reefs, and caves. Brac and its sister island, Little Cayman, move to the rhythms of the natural world, relics of what the Caribbean used to be.

As we slope uphill Keino says the island is named for the limestone bluff, or Brac in Scottish Gaelic, that looms at its peak at 141 feet above the sea, where sits a solar-powered lighthouse,  highest structure throughout the islands.

Then we climb down a cliff overlooking Spot Bay, Keino’s hometown, and crawl into Peter’s Cave, one of 170 littoral caves on the island.  Rumors persist this, and other grottoes, were used as lairs by pirates, even perhaps Captain Morgan and Blackbeard, using the dark recesses to hide their booty.

Cayman Island Brac holes
Brac holes.  Photo:  Michael Scicolone

I was an active spelunker in college, and back then used a carbide lamp attached to a helmet to negotiate the stygian passages. Other times throughout the years I’ve used flashlights, headlamps, even candles and torches. But none of these illuminating accessories are with me now, so instead I tap the flashlight app on my iPhone (which is in turn attached to an Energizer charger so as not to lose juice while deep in some defile), and the dark world is alight.

Though not a deep cave, Peter’s has its share of fairy tale beauty and spelean riches. The flowstones look like melting cake icing; the cave coral like popcorn; the draperies like strips of bacon; and the Aragonite crystals like frostwork, or frozen flowers. Though no treasure be found, the long-winged bat of imagination soars here.

Back at the Alexander Hotel the manager Karen Gascoigne wants to show off her latest toy, a two-seater Wheego LiFe, the first electric car on the island, and the first offered to hotel guests in the Caribbean, she says. As we tool to a vanilla-hued beach for sundown she says the car can travel about 100 miles on a single charge (more distance than all Brac roads combined), and can reach 80 miles per hour, though she has yet to test that claim.

Karen says it is the right kind of vehicle for an eco-destination such as Brac. And it is quiet, to match the mood of the place.

Not so that night. It’s Friday, but crawling around caves is exhausting, and so after a rum cocktail and some jerk chicken at the Captain’s Table, and I take to bed early. But down by the bar it’s Cowboy karaoke open mic, and even with earplugs, the party seems to be at the end of my bed. When I was president of Outward Bound I realized, after reading countless accounts of sunsets and rainbows in the journals submitted by participants, that the organization might just be responsible for more bad poetry than any other on earth. And about 2:00 this morning I realize that the Alexander Hotel could be responsible for more bad singing than any other, at least in the Caribbean.

A blue dawn at last swallows the ink of night. I take the twin otter on a 10-minute hop to Little Cayman, the smallest of the archipelago, shaped like a 10-mile-long coral cigar. Only about 160 folks live here year round, so it’s more like a family picnic than a municipality. Nobody locks their homes, and they keep the keys in their cars.

Blue iguanaThe first sign upon walking into the closet-sized airport: “Terminal A, Gate 1,” painted by the chortling baggage boy. The next sign is on the road, “Iguanas have the right of way.”  There are more iguanas than people here. More hermit crabs on the roads than people. More of almost any living native creature than people. This elongated spit hosts the largest bird sanctuary in the Caribbean, full of red-footed boobies, whistling ducks and frigates. Electricity didn’t make it here until 1990, and phone service until 1991. This is my kind of place.

I’ve decided to come here for a digital detox; to surrender to a sanctuary unplugged. But even Little Cayman seems too crowded and connected. There is even Wi-Fi.

So, I hire a little outboard boat to take me to Owen Island, a true desert island off the southern coast of Little Cayman. The isle has no lights; no electricity; no man-made structures; no men or women. Just talcum-soft white sand, driftwood, scrub and a lagoon.

But as the little boat is pulling away after dropping me off I yell to Jeremy, the driver, “When will you come back to pick me up?”

“Call me when you’re ready,” he shouts over the din.

“But I’m on a digital detox.” I protest as he disappears over the blue waves.

I dig into my pack, exhume my buried cell phone, and turn it on, against the self-imposed rules. There is, to my amazement, a signal. But the battery is low, so I turn the phone off and entomb it again.