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- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!wupost!travel!paul.graveline
- From: paul.graveline@travel.com (Paul Graveline)
- Newsgroups: rec.travel
- Subject: CARIBBEAN TRAVEL ROUNDUP9
- Message-ID: <10109.89.uupcb@travel.com>
- Date: 31 Dec 92 01:03:00 GMT
- Distribution: world
- Organization: Travel Online / St. Louis Online - St. Louis, MO
- Reply-To: paul.graveline@travel.com (Paul Graveline)
- Lines: 97
-
- (continued)
- so good, had I been there another week, they just might have had me
- swinging out on the 70-foot-high trapeze, doing a leg-up and hanging
- head down, then dropping into the net below at the end of the swing,
- with maybe even a mid-air somersault thrown in. And, although a
- pilot, I've always had a fear of heights. They made it look so easy.
- Who knows...I just might have grabbed that trapeze...and with a big
- shove from one of the GO's...have tried to outdo Tarzan. And then
- again, maybe not. It's very easy to be brave 4000 miles and two
- weeks later.
-
- Before we leave the beach, let it be noted it's got to be one of the
- best in the world from the standpoint of water, sandy bottom,
- surroundings, etc. let's consider a CM dilemma: it is it better to
- upgrade one's room (getting perhaps a balcony and better location
- along with a 10 percent surcharge and an increased chance one would
- not get a room mate because of the extra cost or to take the
- standard room because one is not in the room much anyway and why pay
- the premium. Going in, I thought former point made a lot of sense.
- And I paid the 10 percent...got a reservation on a balcony room.
-
- However fate was to intervene and deliver a result far better than I
- could have planned at the outset. About a week before departure, CM
- called and said that there had been a gigantic booking error. The
- reservations for a group from Paris made last January had somehow
- 'fallen through the cracks.' They were going to have to bump me from
- my balcony room and give me a standard room, albeit with a 30
- percent discount for my inconvenience. Since I really seemed to have
- little choice, I said "fine." Turns out I had a room mate for only
- the first two nights and I was there four without so I picked up
- almost a $390 credit in the bargain. I was going to have to give up
- 5000 frequent flyer miles to get a 20 percent discount on a standard
- room. Here I got 30 percent and saved the 5000 miles. Ah, the
- serendipitous blessings of blind luck.
-
- One tip is take your own beach towels to CM. At least I was glad I
- did. They were bigger than those at CM and I didn't have to sweat
- the $10 charge per towel if I could not have found them at checkout.
- Electricity is 220 in most of Guadeloupe so take your own converter.
- I plugged my 110 hair dryer briefly into a 220 outlet in Gosier and
- it really glowed and took off. I quickly pulled it out of the socket
- and apparently did no damage to the windings or coil. Could have
- fried it quite easily.
-
- Anyway, let's talk about the food now. It was FANTASTIC! Any one who
- leaves there at the same weight at which they arrived is a 'better
- man than I am , Gunga Din.' Beginning with le petit dejeuner, the
- little lunch there are all sorts of pastries, fresh fruits (mangoes,
- guavas, pineapple, strawberries, etc., etc.) and juices. There is
- coffee and tea and I usually have a couple of big cups of coffee in
- the morning. French coffee is so strong one cup is ALL I wanted.
- But, with a freshly baked croissant or brioche, mesdames and
- messieurs, this is about as good as it gets. Quel magnifique! And,
- of course, for HEARTY breakfast eaters, there were always the French
- pancakes, or scrambled eggs (or cooked to order), all sorts of
- sausages, ham, other meats. Breakfast was from 7-9:30 a.m. If that
- was too early because you had discoed until 3 a.m., you could walk
- down the beach about 300 yards to La Biguine, the sit-down
- restaurant. (More about La Biguine later).
-
- Lunch was from 12:30 to 2. Except for the fact that the sun was high
- during lunch, it was difficult to tell the difference between lunch
- and dinner. Virtually the same panoply of entrees, the same
- extensive array of salads, scads of tempting desserts. At dinner,
- there did tend to be a theme more often than not: Italian, German,
- etc.
-
- Dinner was served from 7:30 and tended to be a 2-3 hour event. Some
- of the most enjoyable conversations I have in recent memory were
- around the candle lit tables, fresh flowers in abundance, and the
- soft hit of a cool breeze tempering the evening. The guests were
- quite diverse. Probably a lot of the guests were bi-lingual but were
- more comfortable with their primary language, as most of us are. If
- I return to Guadeloupe, I plan to definitely be more fluent in
- French. It would add so much to the experience, for example, being
- able to understand the actors in the various shows that presented,
- one each evening, by the GO's.
-
- Jamaica Couples Trip Report from Dan Kirkhoff
- ---------------------------------------------
- My wife and I just got back today from a stay at Couples in Ocho
- Rios, Jamaica. It was an incredible vacation. Here's a couple of the
- highlights.
-
- Couples has a free charter bus meet you at the airport to take you
- on the 1:40 min ride. The bus was air-conditioned and they generally
- give you free Red Stripe Beer for the trip. The roads are narrow,
- winding, loaded with people, goats, vehicles, etc. Yet the driver
- will make the entire trip at breakneck speeds. Everyone seems to
- have the same story about the ride and there were no reported
- incidents, but your life will flash in front of you a few times. The
- rooms are all air-conditioned with king beds, hair dryers,
- AM/FM/CD/Cassette players (bring some music), and fairly large
- patios. The furniture was not exquisite but was in good condition
- and more than acceptable.
- (continued)
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-