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December 12th, 2012
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Photo by: Courtesy Jamison Witbeck
Jamison Witbeck on St. John, USVI

Jamison Witbeck didn’t intend to move his family to St. John. Not again. He’d run a boat charter business in Maho Bay, only to move to South Carolina to pursue a conventional life. While there, he sold a catamaran he’d built to a buyer in the Virgin Islands. Well, he tried to sell it. "The story from there takes a few turns," the 38-year-old says in the kitchen of his Fish Bay home. His wife, Claire, flips blueberry pancakes for their three kids while Jamison pours a little maple syrup into his Caribbean coffee. Read his interview and find out more about how to live in the USVI.

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Tags: Islands to Live On

December 10th, 2012

Throughout our recent trip to the Bahamas, we posted photos from The Cove Atlantis, Graycliff and One&Only Ocean Club. All spectacular. Take a look on ISLANDS on InstagramWe've got more trips coming up, so we'll be snapping quick pics of our travels to share with you. Plus we include some of our classic photos, like the greatest overwater bungalows in Bora Bora, the have-to-see-them-to-believe-them stingrays of Stingray City in Grand Cayman, and empty beach chairs everywhere.

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Tags: travel photography tips

November 28th, 2012
Two-Wheeling on Cozumel

Here, all rental cars are two-wheel-drive. Shop owners disengage the four-wheel-drive switches on Jeeps, and then tear the switches out. “People kept going off road on the northeast corner of the island and getting stuck,” says the expat who owns the rental shop where I’m sign- ing papers. I listen sympathetically. Then three friends and I load up our water and snacks, hop in the Jeep and drive northeast.

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Tags: Blogs

November 26th, 2012
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Photo by: Jad Davenport
Lonesome George

Lonesome George, the famous tortoise from the Galapagos Islands, may be dead, but scientists now say he may not be the last of his species. Researchers from Yale are planning to resurrect the species through cross-breeding with 17 other turtles found in the islands with similar genetic material to George. If this can be accomplished, it will be the first time a species has been recovered after being declared extinct. The process won't happen overnight. Researches expect the process to take 100 to 150 years to isolate the right genes through controlled breeding alone. 

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Tags: Blogs

November 26th, 2012
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Photo by: Google, DigitalGlobe
Sandy Island

It never existed. Sandy Island has been shown on weather maps, Google Earth and in scientific publications going back to 2000 as sitting between the Australian mainland and the French island of New Caledonia in the eastern Coral Sea. When scientists from the University of Australia went to visit the island, there was nothing there. Had it mysteriously disapeared or simply eroded away? 

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Tags: Blogs

November 14th, 2012
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Photo by: Google, DigitalGlobe
St. Martin

“Take the Dutch-side ferry to the French-side beach, back to the Dutch-side airport.” I’m reading my directions, trying not to take sides. This is one island (only 34 square miles) with two names (Dutch Sint Maarten and French Saint Martin). It has two languages, two currencies and a vague border bisecting it all. Nobody can make sense of it, so they all make the most of it. Taxi driver Fevry from Haiti passes Dutch-side Grand Marché and drops me at French-side Friar’s Bay. “To get back,” he advises, “call a Dutch-side taxi.” French-side taxis charge in more-expensive euros...

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Tags: Blogs

November 14th, 2012
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Photo by: Zach Stovall
Blue Water

Captain Jimmy gazes silently from the helm of our catamaran. The first time I saw him do this, two days ago, I thought he'd dropped his house keys overboard. Now I've learned not to ask him what he's looking at. His answer is always the same. "Jus' the water, I guess." Neuroscience studies show that when we watch the color blue and calm seascapes, we produce the same stress-relieving alpha brain waves as seen in meditating monks. After musing on the topic, I turn and ask Jimmy if he wants anything to drink. Hello?  Cap'n?

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Tags: Blogs

November 12th, 2012
Do Real Travelers Do This?
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Photo by: Lori Barbely
Atlantis

Travel is going solo. Travel is forging your own path. Travel is taking leaps of faith. So claim my travel-writing colleagues, though Atlantis’ 60-foot Leap of Faith in the Bahamas isn’t what they had in mind. Visitors drip and shake with giddiness. And here I am, shuffling forward with them. Sharks circle the pools below. ∏he experience oozes manufactured fun,inauthenticity, yet my heart races. “You’re up.” An attendant motions for me to move into the slide’s entrance. It leads nowhere. A blind drop. I adjust my shorts. “Don’t bother,” chuckles the attendant. I smile. Travel is waiting in line for a wedgie.

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Tags: Blogs

November 7th, 2012
Caving New Caledonia
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Photo by: Amanda Jones
Caving on Lifou Island

I’ve become a cave dweller. So far I’ve been able to resist the urge to hiss creepy Gollum quotes into the darkness, but I know I’ll give in soon. I’m bringing up the rear of a three-person spelunking group, following behind writer Amanda Jones and our local guide, Jeanne, as she leads us through the tribal cave of her ancestors on Lifou Island, New Caledonia.

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Tags: Blogs

November 5th, 2012
A Stand-Up Guy
image-screen shot 2012-11-05 at 5
Photo by: Lauren Garceau
Bart de Zwart

He wanted to see Hawaii like few others have. So Dutch expat Bart de Zwart, 41, embarked on a 350-mile cruise from Big Island to Kauai. OK, maybe cruise isn’t the best word to describe Bart’s island-hopping experience. “It took five days,” the surf-shop owner says. “I lost 12 pounds, and the blisters on my hands didn’t heal for two weeks.” Oh, yeah, did we mention that he took the entire trip on a paddle board?

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Tags: Blogs

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