Cap Juluca Resort
[email protected]
.
We are hoping that the dredging would be completed by next week, weather permitting. They estimated that we only need 3 more days of dredging. Also, all the beach steps are finished and painted, better than they were before.Pimms, is being re-painted completely right now, we expect it to be open some time in April.
The villas are all completed and looking better than ever.
Continuing my series on The Menus of Anguilla, here is a glimpse of Serenity:
[email protected]
.
Rolf the manager says they are new to the net, but
already some of their customers have started making
reservations via email. Other news:
The Mayoumba Folkloric Theater is once again singing every Thurdsay night at La Sirena.Sandy Island is still a great place for snorkeling. The vegeation has hard competition with the sea and therefore it really can be called only "Sandy Island". However whoever loves an unspoiled island with nearly no tourists should take a chance to go there for some hours. But be careful with your skin, there is still no shade available. It will take nature probably some years to restore the 17 coconut trees we had grown to love so much.
Get Married in Paradise. More and more couples want to make their special day really special. And what would be more exciting than to say "I do" on a catamaran cruise or on a deserted beach on Anguilla. Heres how it works: You can get married in Anguilla under a special license. It can be obtained from the Magistrate's Court in The Valley and takes two days to process. Both parties must present proof of citizenship and if divorced, a decree must be presented. If one or both of the partners has resided in Anguilla for at least 15 days, the cost of a license is US$ 40.00. If your stay is shorter the cost is US$ 284.00. Two witnesses are required for the ceremony. [Note: the hotel can arrange everything, including the minister.]
Steve Donahue has
updated his homepage
with some recent photos of his house
under construction on Anguilla, as well as some "before and
after" photos of Luis. Go to
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/STEVE_DONAHUE/
.
Steve is building a house behind Cap Juluca and recording
the entire process on the Web.
Leroy Hill has created a
personal home page at
http://www.candw.com.ai/~truckingp/
.
Leroy recently
returned to Anguilla from college and is studying the HTML
language of Web pages.
The Anguilla Amateur Radio Society has a
home page
at http://www.candw.com.ai/~stottl/aars.html
. These
are the fine folks who did so much to help maintain
communications with the Caribbean (not just Anguilla)
during the recent hurricane season.
For others in Anguilla who might want to put up a page
for their organization or themselves, I have written
a short
document explaining some of the nuts and bolts details of
creating and installing your page. Go to
http://www.candw.com.ai/~greenr/howto.html
Mariners Hotel has
email
at [email protected]
and
accepts reservation inquiries that way!
I went by to get a quote for a small annual
conference of computer programmers
and had a tour of the facilities. They have rebuilt the hurricane
damage, repainted everything, reopened the restaurant,
and started work on their web page. Looks good. Unfortunately,
the programmers voted to go to Lake Tahoe in 97 (can you
believe that), but Anguilla came in second. I will just have
to do a better job of lobbying for the next year. 264-497-2671.
ALHCS College Fair. On Friday, May 10th from 9 AM to 4 PM will be held the first ALHCS College Fair. The location is the new Public Library Conference Room. Representatives from colleges and universities will be there so that 4th-6th form students can find out about going on to college.
ALHCS Annual Careers Fair. The high school is also holding a careers fair, Friday 17th April, from 9 AM to 3 PM for students in 3rd through 6th form at ALCHS.
For more information on either event, contact the Guidance Counseler, Anita Martin-Ruan, 264-497-2416, 2417, fax 2908.
Picture Anguilla with only two guest houses, no tourists, and no electricity. Post Hurricane Luis Anguilla? No, Anguilla as it was 27 years ago...Dr. Simmons and his wife Patsy, remember an Anguilla that had no paved roads, no current, very few cars, and no water system. They saw only small wooden houses, instead of the larger concrete ones common tody. One of the greatest differences they observed was that there were very few able bodied men on Anguilla in 1969 because there was no economy - no tourism, and no commercial fishing or farming. The men were in St. Thomas, St. Kitts, or Santo Domingo working to support their families here.The only power on the island was that supplied to the British Army by a generator 2 hours every night. The Simmons remember heating buckets and buckets of water to bathe and using mosquito nets so that they could sleep comfortably at night. The roads to the beaches were close to impassible. Their typical Anguillian diet was much as it is today - fresh bread, chicken, cabbage, and rice.
Other news: Unity Reunion 1997 is a reunion on Anguilla of all nationals residing abroad, organized by the newly formed Anguillian Cultural Society of Canada (contact Leah Phillips 416-949-2376 if you are interested in participating).
The Light welcomes overseas subscribers. For 26 issues, including post and handling, send your name and address plus US$ 39 or UK 22.5 to Box 1373, The Valley, Anguilla. 264-497-5641.
"Frigate to Visit During Weekend" (HMS Brave, the West Indian guardship, with a complement of 278 officers and men, accompanied by the RFA Oakleaf supply ship with 36 men),
"Softball Tournament Off To A Good Start" (The Annual Female Softball tournament started with some exciting matches.. In the second game on Sunday, defending champions Malliouhana Royals played Cable and Wireless and won with an outstanding score of 17-7),
"Old House Saved by Archaeological Society" (On Saturday a unique moving operating took place on Anguilla, when an old house was moved from The Quarter to Sile Bay. The house, which belongs to Danielle Rogers, was damaged during Hurricane Luis and was due to be demolished this week and replaced with a new building, funded by the National Hurricane Relief Committee),
"Questions Aruban PPA On Anguilla Project (The opposition party PPA has asked Minister of Economic Affairs Tico Croes a series of questions on the airport project of Anguilla. The PPA wants to know whether the minister puts exterior projects above the interests of Aruba. They also want Croes to give clarity on the financial arguments to invest 105 million Aruban guilders in Anguilla and Venezuela. The letter to Croes continues to name projects in Aruba which are in need of a financial impulse, such as Queen Beatrix Airport, the roads, education and sports facilities)
"British Frigate Assists Coast Guard in Drug Bust" (HMS Brave, visiting Anguilla this weekend, was involved in a drug bust on Thursday which led to an arrest and the seizure of half a tonne of cocaine...they were altered by the US Coast Guard to a likely drug drop in an area south of the Saba Bank, 120 miles southwest of Anguilla)
To subscribe to The Daily Herald call 25253 or 25597 in St. Maarten and ask for Julie.
[email protected]
Rumor has it that Coccoloba Resort on Barnes Bay has found new owners, who plan to finish the refurbishing after Hurricane Luis, expand, and reopen in September as a health spa. 264-497-6771.
The new owners of Mariners on Sandy Ground plan to invest in upgrading and improving the resort, if the deal ever goes through to completion. One planned idea is to enclose the terrace bar and make a conference/dining room for up to 125 people. The existing conference room is adequate, but is strained at 50 people.
We chatted with veteran tourists who were staying at the reopened Shoal Bay Villas. They report that the condo units have been completely refurbished and have new appliances, paint, and furniture inside. The outside is very tastefully repainted, but the restaurant is still under construction. [Ed: reopened Dec96 as LeBeach.] This couple have been staying at the Villas for ten years and found them just as good as before Luis. They first heard about Anguilla and Shoal Bay Villas from a disgruntled friend who was complaining about his vacation: When you step out of the condo you can't avoid the talcum-powder smooth sand that gets into your feet and everything, the management doesn't allow any noise, and the three-mile long beach has nobody on it. Their friend hated it, but they begged him for the name of this "terrible" place. 264-497-2051.
Goat. Mrs. B.L.M. reported that a goat was stuck and in trouble. The police managed to free the animal. Because of the number of complaints about loose animals, it was decided in consultation with the Lt. Governor to reinstate the stall next to the police station. The animals will be kept there eight days. If their owners do not show up within that time, they will be either slaughtered or sold.
Saba is another neighboring Dutch island, this one even smaller (1100 people) and without a single beach (Saba comes straight up out of the ocean, a dead volcanic cone, a place where they said it would be impossible to build a road or an airport -- they were wrong). Here are a couple of items from the Saba Police report:
Theft. The owner of a liquor store in Windwardside on March 13 asked for police assistance. A man walked out of the store with a bottle of rum, refusing to pay for it. This man, who is well-known to police, was located, reprimanded about his behaviour and returned the bottle to the store. The owner of the store did not wish to file an official complaint.
Goat Nuisance. Police assistance was requested in The Bottom on March 15 because of goat nuisance. Goats a particular owner had damaged plants of a man living in The Bottom. Damage was estimated to be more than NAf. 400. After police mediation the owner of the goats promised to settle damages with the man. He was also informed of complaints police had received from people living in the Range about his goats. He promised to take care of this.
Sombrero Lighthouse, West Indies, lies at 18-35'49" N, 63-25'34" W and keeps its faithful vigil over the eastern edge of the Anegada Passage. Built on solid rock which rises 40' above sea leel, the tower stands 160' above sea level and flashes its beams of guiding light every 5 seconds within a radius of 19 miles across the Atlantic Ocean.As a result of the Spanish wars, the island passed into the hands of the British and in 1811 a British geologist surveyed Sombrero and found that it abounded in phosphate of lime. This was reported to the Government but it was not until 1824 when the Americans claimed the island and quarried 100,000 tons of phosphate to enrich their lowlands that the British intervened and demanded compensation.
Sombrero, lying in the route of shipping from England to South and Central America, was a great hazard and in 1848 the Admiralty was asked to install a light thereon. In 1859 the Royal Mail Steam Packet Company's ship "PARAMATTA" was wrecked with great loss of life which resulted in another request to the Admiralty.
The United States claim to the island was settled in England's favour in 1867 and Sombrero Lighthouse was built and exhibited its light on the evening of 1st January, 1868. In 1890 the phosphate works on the island were abandoned and in 1931 the old light system was changed and improved to 200,000 candle power and the tower received its first major repair as the basement was encased in concrete. On 20th July, 1962 the present lighthouse was put into operating and the old tower demolished on 28th July, 1962.
Sombrero still has lighthouse keepers, but no doubt the future will bring an automated system, as in the rest of world. We have friends who have visited Sombrero on the police launch, but we haven't heard of any scheduled outings open to the public.
http://www.infi.net/~slm/ag.html
For a much more personalized and
opinionated view of
Anguilla, with many pictures, check this
four-page report.
http://www.peli.com/Archive/aANGUILLA02.html
Allamanda Beach Club now has a
web page
for their resort on Shoal Bay.
Why not read their page and send them an
email message
at [email protected]
?
Neil Armstrong of my Canadian office stayed there for
two weeks recently while working on my computers here in
Anguilla.
http://www.offshore.com.ai/allamanda/
Keene Enterprises has a page for their rental
villas.
Check out their
Anguilla Dream House.
http://www.offshore.com.ai/keene/
IBM Anguilla has a very brief
Web page, pointing to Barbados and
St Kitts for customer service.
http://www.can.ibm.com/caribbean/anguilla.html
Do you want to move to Anguilla? There is a
luxury house
for sale in Anguilla at $1,295,000.
I recognize it as a large new mordern-looking house located on the North shore
about one mile west of Shoal Bay.
http://206.24.28.61/offshore/housead.html
Gilbert Fleming at Howard University has a web page for
Pineapple Beach Club with lots of pictures
and flashing graphics, last updated in November, but no
telephone number (it is 264-497-6061).
http://www.cldc.howard.edu/~gaf/pbcphoto.html
Gilbert also
has a page with Anguilla's flag.
http://www.cldc.howard.edu/~gaf/flag.html
. . . continue virtual vacation (preceding month)
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