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Posted on 02/14/2025

The Road Less Sailed: 6 Top Caribbean Destinations You Should Discover 

Written by David Swanson - January 29, 2025 

 

When the season’s first blizzard lands, it’s easy to lump the entire Caribbean into one tantalizing stew: sun, sea, sand. Who needs anything more? Leave it to the former editor of Caribbean Travel & Life magazine to put us straight when it comes to choosing top Caribbean destinations. “To reduce the Caribbean to a bunch of islands that all have the same beaches and palm trees does such a disservice,” sighs Sarah Greaves-Gabbadon, self-described “Carivangelist” who blogs today under the name JetSetSarah. “From the food, the culture, the topography, the people, the language — it’s a vast and beautifully diverse patchwork.” 

I’ve had the pleasure of discovering various corners of this paradise during more than three decades of in-person research while on Caribbean trips for JetSetSarah and others. With all due respect to the bustling, larger islands, full of zip lines and shopping and swim-up pool bars, it’s the lesser-known bantam destinations I revel in — islands that never see big cruise ships calling on their ports, nor jets landing on their tiny air strips, if they have one. 

On the other hand, Silversea Cruises specializes in carefully curated itineraries to the back of beyond, including the Caribbean. Here are six of my favorite islands to visit and all of these are included on select Silversea Caribbean voyages. 

 

Bequia 

Why Bequia? Other top Caribbean destinations offer longer beaches, flashier resorts and more productive shopping sprees, but none have the backwater appeal of sweet little Bequia (pronounced beck-way), the first of the Grenadines unfurling south of St. Vincent like the tail on a kite. The six-square-mile outpost is blessed by a spindly shape scalloped with sandy coves and favored yachting harbors. It feels a bit like the Caribbean that yachties might have encountered in the 1960s — catnip to repeat visitors who endure a long haul to get here, but cherish the island’s simple and distinctly uncommercialized ambiance. 

 

Dominica 

Not to be confused with the Dominican Republic, the Commonwealth of Dominica is the Caribbean’s steepest island — “tall is her body,” the indigenous Caribs called it. It might be the one outpost Columbus would recognize today, still robed magnificently in dozens of shades of green. You’ll trade white-sand beaches for black, and ascend through dense rainforest to smoldering volcanic vistas in Morne Trois Pitons National Park. It’s a World Heritage Site sheltering the region’s richest biodiversity, with mist-shrouded elfin woodlands, bountiful waterfalls, two species of endemic parrots and crater lakes — cold or boiling, take your pick. The natural attractions extend offshore to a rich marine landscape favored by humpbacks and other whales. 

 

Jost Van Dyke 

 The British Virgin Islands encompass 50-some idyllic outposts, sliced by the Sir Francis Drake Channel, a fine sailing passage. There are fancier landings, but find me on Jost Van Dyke, a backwater with a population of maybe 300. The number of beach bars: 14 or so. These numbers add up nicely. There is no golf course, no casino, almost no cars — instead, three-square-mile Jost Van Dyke reveals the Caribbean distilled down to its essentials. There’s also no airport, and the usual route from a neighboring island is aboard a dilapidated ferry named When (the appellation makes sense more often than not) or private tours. Dolphins often chase vessels into Great Harbour, where a couple dozen simple structures line the beach on either side of the pier, but you’ll want to set out on foot to explore. At the very least, on an island of bartenders, you can count on the Painkiller — said to have been invented here — to be flawlessly prepared. 

 

Guadeloupe’s Les Saintes 

Why Les Saintes? A tiny, less tony take on what St. Barth was like half-a-century ago, this diminutive cluster of islets eight miles off Guadeloupe offers a full-on dose of French charm spiced with hard-scrabble fishermen. Terre-de-Haut, the main island, is perfectly sized for a day trip, and the port town is chockfull of options for accras de morue (fish fritters), ice cream and beer. Gaze up from the port and you’ll spot Fort Napoléon sitting atop the hill overlooking the harbor. Locals call it the Gibraltar of the Caribbean, which is a bit of an exaggeration, but it is large enough to have never seen a major battle, and the museum is worth a gander; the view spills for miles in all directions. Shopping won’t weigh you down, but save room for a local find: delicious punch coco, sold out the back door of many island homes in unlabeled bottles. 

 

Montserrat 

Why Montserrat? In its glorious heyday, Elton John and Paul McCartney once recorded albums here, but most of us are more familiar with a more recent tragedy: In 1995 volcanic Soufriere Hills awoke after 300 years of slumber, burying the island’s (evacuated) capital of Plymouth. The Emerald Isle, as it was once called, is now the Volcano Isle, and Montserrat is slowly rebuilding. Although no new lava has been coughed up for more than a decade now, the southern two-thirds of the island remains an “exclusion zone” — suitable only for supervised day tours and providing a fascinating glimpse into Mother Nature’s kitchen. The northern third is inhabited by roughly 5,000 residents, and sideshows of birdwatching, diving and hiking have made a rebound. 

 

Nevis 

Why Nevis? One half of a twin-island nation (with neighboring St. Kitts), Nevis is infused with romance, history, hammocks strung across creaking balconies and troops of green vervet monkeys scampering across forested slopes. Lord Nelson married Fannie Nisbet here, and the island is the birthplace of Alexander Hamilton, of Broadway (and other) fame. Rustic plantation inns drape the shoulders of statuesque Nevis Peak, a near-perfectly shaped volcanic cone often seen wearing a fluffy white scarf of clouds. One of the 300-year-old inns, The Hermitage, may be the oldest wooden plantation home in the Caribbean, its sherbet-colored gingerbread cottages set amid lush gardens. Be careful: this bucolic but upscale lifestyle is highly seductive. 

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