Round St Kitts with Neville and Eileen

Irie
Mon 28 Jan 2008 03:15
Sunday 27th January
 
Well, believe it or not Liat excelled themselves on Saturday evening, delivering Neville and Eileen into Robert Bradshaw airport smack on time, and complete with luggage. We'd spent the best part of the morning tracking down the various officials necessary to clear Irie into the islands. It's not expensive, but involves firstly seeing customs, then immigration and finally the port pilot. Unfortunately none of them were there all at the same time, or in the right order, thus ensuring frustrating hanging about. This done, we had a quick tour of Basseterre, and topped up a few supplies before our visitors were delivered at 7.45. A very welcome drink and light snack later, we all turned in, only to find that the soft night air was to be pierced by the heavy rap and boom beat of a visiting rocker from Jamaica. This went on till 7am, briefly interjected by the heavy roar of the early morning ferry, and then several booming blasts to anounce the docking of Queen Mary 2.
Today commenced with a short wander round the sights of the town. It's full of churches, full in turn of happy, noisy worshippers. There are plenty of green spaces with palms and flowers, and several streets of pretty 'skirt and blouse' buildings - stone bottoms with balconied wooden second stories adorned with gingerbread fretwork. We then climb into Trevon Rodgers taxi for a selective trip of the island. First stop is Brimstone Fort, an eighteenth century marvel of British military engineering. It's a World Heritage Site atop a commanding volcanic plug, and with the most wonderful views of St Kitts, Nevis and on to St Eustatia and Saba. It changed hands a couple of times, was destroyed, then rebuilt into an impregnable citadel known at the time as the 'Gibralter of the Caribbean'. The fort then fell into disuse in the early nineteenth century, but has been carefully restored. It's an iconic place and not to be missed on any tour of the islands. Onwards then to Rawlins Plantation, an excellent venue for lunch in an old Sugar plantation estate house, with a great Caribbean buffet and stunning views to the sea and even distant St Martin. Trevon had vanished for some unspecified appointment, leaving time after lunch for a couple of rounds of very intensely competitive croquet in the beautiful tropical gardens. The return trip took us down the rugged Atlantic coast before arriving back at the boat in the early evening, in time to watch the huge liner blast 3 times once more, edge slowly away from the dock, turn through 180 degrees and head into the evening gloom 
 
The dominance of Brimstone, Neville and Eileen in relaxed Caribbean mode