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There are a few islands accessible from Tortola that are
worth a visit. Peter Island, three miles across the
Francis Drake Channel from Tortola, is home to the luxurious
Peter Island Resort and Yacht Harbor (phone
284/495-2000 or 1-800/346-4457, fax 284/495-2500; US$250
+), which offers sea-view rooms, an all-inclusive range of watersports, tennis, bikes, hiking and sailing
activities,
and extremely elegant dining at its Tradewinds Restaurant
(also open to non-guests).
Non-guests can visit the island
and use the secluded, palm-fringed beaches - the Peter
Island Ferry (phone 284/494-9647) connects the island with
Road Town on Tortola (US$14 one-way; free if you have a
reservation at Tradewinds). There's more casual fare
- wood-oven pizzas and salads - available at Deadman's
Beach Bar and Grill. Peaceful, unpretentious and good
value, Cooper Island, four miles east of Peter
Island, has a lone hotel and a few vacation homes. The
Cooper Island Beach Club (phone 413/863-3162 or
1-800/542-4624, fax 413/863-3662, ) offers twelve doubles
(US$160-200) and two beach houses (phone 513/232-4126; US$250
+) set on beautiful Manchioneel Bay with its long
beach and fantastic snorkeling - the thick, sea grass
attracts a dazzling assortment of green turtles, eagle rays
and huge queen conch. There are no roads and no cars on the
island - the ferry (phone 284/494-3311) that carts guests and
non-guests (US$10) back and forth from the Prospect Reef
Resort on Tortola is the only access.
Eight-acre Marina Cay, which offers great
snorkeling, was made famous by author Robb White and his
wife, Rodie, who moved here in 1936, built a home and lied
without running water or electricity. His book about the
experience, Two on an Isle, was made into a movie in
the 1950s, starring Sidney Poitier.
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The only place to stay on the island is Marina Cay Resort (phone 284/494-2174,
fax 494-4775, US$160-200), connected to Trellis Bay by a
short ferry ride (8 daily; free), which has basic rooms or
two-bedroom villas.
The old White residence is still here, recently restored by Pusser's (owners of the resort) into
The Hilltop Bar; it hosts barbecues, and has lie music.
A more extensive menu is available at the Pusser's
beachside restaurant, whose bar has a happy hour daily from
4pm to 7pm.
Uninhabited and largely untamed Norman Island, the
westernmost British Virgin Islands, is only accessible by hired boat and there
are no places to stay, yet thousands of people in high
season flock here every day to snorkel and soak up the party
atmosphere - and look for gold. Rumors are that there is
hidden treasure all over the island - three chests of
gold have reportedly been discovered since the mid-1700s,
and its stories such as these that have led some to suggest
that Norman Island was the model for Robert Louis
Stevenson's Treasure Island.
The party scene revolves around two bars (both of
which also sere food). Billy Bones (phone
284/494-4770,), with its own private stretch of beach, draws
crowds with its strong drinks and loud music. The other hot
spot, the bar/restaurant The Willy T (phone
284/494-0183), is a converted schooner permanently moored
in the Bight, a large bay and a popular anchorage for
yachters. It's one of the most raucous and unusual drinking
spots in the British Virgin Islands and the top deck often sees inebriated
patrons removing their clothes and diving into the water.
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British Virgin
Islands
travel guide
British Virgin Islands
Best of British Virgin Islands
Getting around
Virgin Islands restaurants
& bars
Anegada
Anegada
diving, fishing, windsurfing
Jost an Dyke
Jost an Dyke
Taxis
Jost an Dyke food & parties
Islands accessible from
Tortola that are
worth a visit:
Peter Island, Cooper Island,
Marina Cay, Norman Island
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