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Destinations / Ambergris Caye

Ambergris Caye

Overview

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Afforable Paradise in the Caribbean
Belize isn't an island - but it should be. When visitors first started coming in numbers to this country just south of Mexico on the Caribbean a decade or so ago, they usually made a quick bead to its offshore islands. The largest of them, Ambergris Caye (pronounce it KEY, as in Key West), has a scattering of mostly low-key resorts popular with divers and fishermen and a town (San Pedro) with sand streets and a lively nightlife of dance clubs. Sound a bit like Margaritaville?


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Well, Margaritaville should have diving this good. The barrier reef that stretches the length of Belize (and continues south into Honduran waters) is the Caribbean's equivalent of Australia's Great Barrier Reef. It makes for incredible diving, sailing, kayaking, and fishing, and a good place to start exploring it underwater is the Hol Chan Marine Reserve near San Pedro. With Ambergris as a base, it's easy to make dive trips to the famed Blue Hole at Lighthouse Reef and to the Turneffe Islands.

And it's also an easy day trip to the nearby mainland, where the jungles are home to jaguars, birds beyond belief, and marvelous Mayan ruins - and you can still be back on the island to watch the sunset from your favorite bar.

Ambergris Caye is on our list of the Best Islands to Live On

Plan your trip

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DIVING

The spectacular Blue Hole at Lighthouse Reef (about 60 miles from Ambergris Caye) is the most famous dive in Belize, but the most popular with visitors are a pair of sites near San Pedro. Fish populations (particularly barracudas, groupers, and jacks) have boomed in the Hol Chan Marine Reserve, a passage through the barrier reef, where shallow waters alongside the "cut" make for easy snorkeling. Just to the south, nurse sharks and stingrays accustomed to leftovers from local fisherman have become the star attractions at Shark-Ray Alley.

FISHING

Tarpon and white-sand tidal flats are a magical combination on Ambergris. Tarpon - some topping 100 pounds - are caught year-round (May through November are peak months) on flats that can stretch for more than 50 miles. And purists take note: the tarpon here will hit a well-presented fly.

Where to stay