Country Life

Island hopping in the Caribbean

Antigua & Barbuda

Claim to fame Cricketers. Despite its diminutive size, the country has produced a large number of great players, including Sir Andy Roberts, Sir Viv Richards and Sir Richie Richardson.

Don’t miss The annual mango festival, held in July and packed with fruit, but also mango jams, candles, ice creams and even wine.

Residents past or present Almost too many to count, from local writer Jamaica Kincaid to Italian designer Giorgio Armani and, among the British, Ken Follett, Timothy Dalton and Eric Clapton. Boxer Maurice Hope came from Antigua to London—and on to the 1972 Olympics.

The Bahamas

Claim to fame The world’s largest underwater sculpture (Jason deCaires Taylor’s 18ft-tall Ocean Atlas, off the coast of New Providence), plus a sequence of almost records, from the the second-deepest sea-water sinkhole (the 663ft Dean’s Blue Hole, off Long Island), to the third-largest barrier reef (around Andros Island) and even the third-largest wine cellar: part of the Graycliff Hotel in Nassau, it had originally been built as a jail. The islands are also ‘almost’ part of the Caribbean: although they belong to the Caribbean Community organisation, they are not in the Caribbean Sea.

Big Major Cay, a beach in the Exuma

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Country Life

Country Life4 min read
Letters To The Editor
I WAS fascinated to read about the tiny painting of Goldsborough Hall by Owen Bowen, commissioned for Queen Mary’s Dolls’ House (Letters, March 27). Owen Bowen (1873–1967) was a very accomplished artist. He established the Leeds School of Art, now kn
Country Life5 min read
Escape To The Hills
THE expansive hills of England’s most wooded county have long attracted those who want to live in the countryside, yet be within a taxi ride of the capital, which is possible to do from these four Surrey houses currently on the market. Anyone heading
Country Life3 min read
Parsley of Macedon
FROM late winter through spring, one plant boorishly dominates the grass verges of Britain’s coastal roads: alexanders (Smyrnium olusatrum). At a little under 5ft tall, it is a statuesque plant with bright yellow-green leaves. It grows among roadside

Related Books & Audiobooks