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Bermuda's Island Life
Destinations
· December 10,
1998
If you want an entire tropical
island to yourself at this time of year, skip the Caribbean.
Try Bermuda instead.
Balmy
but not oppressively humid, cultured but not pretentious, quaint without
being antiquated, Bermuda is practically abandoned between Thanksgiving
and Easter and, for all intents and purposes, visitor-free during the
two weeks leading up to Christmas.
It makes this the perfect time to spend a
long weekend on the former British colony, which is located 568 miles
east of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, and a relatively painless hour-and-a-half
flight from Washington.
The weddings for which Bermuda is legendary
are unheard of during winter. Big hotels like the Sonesta Beach Resort
Bermuda are nearly empty, making you feel as if you're staying at a bed
and breakfast. Smaller inns such as Cambridge Beaches in remote Somerset
are all but vacant.
At this nadir of the off-season, when temperatures
average a comfortable 70-something degrees, many locals throw lavish Christmas
parties for themselves, take long lunch breaks to go holiday shopping
in Hamilton and gather around the docks for the annual boat parade.
The pace seems slower than usual during this
end-of-year lull, but the natives are as polite as ever - even if there's
really no one to be polite to except each other.
When I checked into Cambridge Beaches last
Wednesday, the front-desk clerk couldn't stop apologizing that the kitchen
wouldn't be open for dinner because of the staff's holiday soiree. "I've
taken the liberty of making reservations at a restaurant in town,"
she said. "Or ... if, you'd like, you could join us at our party
tonight."
She looked slightly stunned when I accepted
the invitation. I think the hotel's president, Michael Winfield, was taken
aback, too, when I actually showed up at the get-together. "I've
got to warn you that our parties can sometimes get a little raucous,"
he cautioned.
But after ordering a Dark
and Stormy - a Bermudan favorite consisting of dark rum and ginger
beer - I slipped into an easy conversation with a couple of employees,
who were impeccably dressed and well-mannered. Winfield didn't have anything
to worry about.
It goes without saying that Cambridge Beaches'
cottages are every bit as pretty as cliffs and white sand surrounding
them. The trademark white staircase roofs, the coral-pink facades, the
antique furniture, all exude the sophistication that this island is known
for. But it's the people that make the place what it is, and that keep
some guests coming back twice or three times a year regardless of the
steep prices.
At the Sonesta
Beach Resort, where I stayed last
weekend, I discovered that Cambridge wasn't an isolated incident of island
hospitality. With no plans on Friday evening, I lingered in the dining
room after tea, watching the sun disappear into the cinnamon-colored clouds
and marveling at how the water on the Sonesta's enclosed beach gradually
went from teal to dark blue to black as daylight faded.
I struck up a conversation with one of the
hotel managers, who invited me to drop by an office holiday party in the
hotel ballroom that evening. Again, I didn't expect the reception I got.
The president of the company welcomed me and my companion as if we were
one of his own employees. Was it a setup? No, turns out he really didn't
know we were coming.
The next day we met up with the hotel's managing
director, Dennis Tucker, Bermuda's spa guru Michael Ternet, and a few
of their friends, to watch the boat parade in Hamilton. A string of jet
skis, dinghies and yachts, all decorated with lights and bows, floated
past us while we cheered them on with carols rendered slightly off-key
by the Spinnaker we were sipping. The event culminated in a burst of fireworks
that almost matched the pastel colors of the shops along Front Street.
Amid the spectacle I felt compelled to ask if all the hospitality I had
encountered was sincere - or show. "As a matter of fact," answered
Tucker, "we really
are like this. Even during the season."
The institutional politeness appears to be
infective. None of the therapists I met at Ternet's spas, where guests
escape during the rare rained-out day for facials, body wraps and massages,
was originally from Bermuda. But that didn't stop them from acting as
if they'd lived on the island their entire life, issuing the mandatory
"good morning" or "hello" to anyone they encountered.
When you travel somewhere on vacation, you
run into rudeness sooner or later. Maybe a disgruntled cab driver or a
mean store clerk that grows impatient when trying to separate you from
your money. It could be a conspiracy, or it could just be the time
of year that I visited the island, but I couldn't find anyone like that
on Bermuda.
Guess I'll just have to come back - and keep
looking.
This story was also published on ABCNews.com.
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