Island hopping in the Caribbean

| Recently I spent almost 2 months island hopping in the Caribbean, mostly in the smaller Leeward Antilles. My route was: Puerto Rico - Dominica - Guadeloupe - Curaçao - Trinidad & Tobago - Barbados - St. Vincent and the Grenadines - Grenada. It wasn't my first time there. I visited almost all the Greater Antilles (Dominican Republic, Cuba, Jamaica) plus some smaller islands: Aruba, Saint Lucia. This year I wanted to see more of the Leeward Islands, but it wasn't the most efficient route. My initial plan was to go to Venezuela and from there I had a flight to Curaçao, continuing the trip up to Grenada. Then January came, my flight to Caracas was canceled and I decided to visit some more islands. Lessons:
Most of my flights were with Caribbean Airlines - not by choice, it was usually the cheapest option. San Juan → Roseau ($163) · Roseau → Pointe-à-Pitre ($92) · Pointe-à-Pitre → Willemstad ($316) · Willemstad → Port of Spain ($128) · Port of Spain → Bridgetown ($127) · Bridgetown → Kingstown ($140) · Kingstown → St. George's ($137). Not all are direct flights or the best options. Accommodation: Airbnb, staying with locals. The most expensive accommodation was in Dominica, 1 week $244. In Puerto Rico I stayed at a hostel. My favourite islands (well, all of them, but some were more of a surprise):
Types of visitors there: most visitors arrive on cruise ships - they have a day on each island and you see them running to get a glimpse of it in a few hours. Cruisers - people who have a boat and stay on the islands for months; now it is basically the beginning of the high season for this kind of visit. Some islands like Barbados and Curaçao see a lot of resort tourists on vacation. A smaller number of people do island hopping independently, like I did. I met some French who were visiting Dominica, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Saint Lucia; others explore more - I met the same faces on some flights, as the options between islands are not that many. The trickier part is finding the best route for flights, as sometimes you have to backtrack because an island is like a dead end. Some islands have small airports, like Dominica, that closes in the evening. Port of Spain and Bridgetown are the airports where you can have layovers. Other than that, you don't have to be rich to stay longer in the Caribbean, if you don't mind living like the locals and among them. They will definitely welcome you :) France, Guadeloupe, Les Saintes: France, Guadeloupe, Les Saintes Kingdom of the Netherlands, Curaçao, island Klein Curaçao: Kingdom of the Netherlands, Curaçao, island Klein Curaçao United States, Puerto Rico, Culebra island: [link] [comments] |
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