WEDNESDAY |JANUARY 30, 2008| PHILIPPINES

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Top 10 Caribbean islands
to unwind this year


NEW YORK—After a hectic end to 2007, what better way to start the new year than unwinding on a beach in the Caribbean with magazine Travel + Leisure coming up with a list of its 10 top Caribbean islands.

Reuters has not endorsed this list that appears in the December issue of Travel + Leisure, published monthly by American Express Publishing Corp:

1. St. John - Best for Unspoiled Nature. The least populated and least developed of the U.S. Virgin Islands sits just east of St. Thomas. Two-thirds of St. John is protected from development as part of the Virgin Islands National Park.

2. Virgin Gorda - Best for Peace and Quiet. The easternmost of the British Virgin Islands, scrubby Virgin Gorda is at once laid-back and empty; like St. John, much of the island is protected parkland.

3. Harbour Island - Best for Shopping. One of the oldest settlements in the Bahamas, this 3.5-mile-long spit is a five-minute water taxi ride from North Eleuthera.

4. Saba - Best for Adventure. A five-square-mile dormant volcano with a thin, winding road, Dutch-controlled Saba is one of the best-preserved islands in the Caribbean.

5. Nevis - Best for an authentic Caribbean experience. This island has a flat coastline that soars up to the rain forest enshrouded 3,200-foot Mount Nevis. It feels intimate, in part because it’s tiny (population 11,000), but also because development has been controlled with no high-rise hotels.

6. Anguilla - Best for Beaches. Almost in the shadow of nearby St. Martin, with St. Bart’s visible on clear days, Anguilla is flat and sandy and remains relatively undeveloped compared with its neighbors but it’s still home to some of the most luxurious resorts and villas.

7. Bermuda - Best for Golf. The British Crown colony sits in the middle of the Atlantic, some 645 miles off the Eastern seaboard, at roughly the same latitude as Savannah, Georgia.

8. Grenadines - Best for Sailing. More than 30 tiny isles (most uninhabited) stretch out like an unfurled sail for 45 miles in the southeastern Caribbean. Each has its own distinct flavor.

9. St. Bart’s - Best for the Scene. Glamorous, star-studded and ultra-exclusive, St. Bart’s manages to keep the masses away, despite the fact that it’s just 15 miles (a 10-minute flight) from touristy St. Martin.

10. Vieques - Best for Relaxation. When the U.S. Navy closed its base on Vieques, northeast of Puerto Rico, the cognoscenti predicted that this tranquil getaway would emerge as the next St. Bart’s. Significant upgrades are in the works but it’s still rustic and relaxed. —Reuters

 


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