These 5 Little Caribbean Islands Can Only Be Reached by Boat, With Hidden Hotels, Famous Beach Bars, and an Impossibly Chill Vibe

The ferry pulls away from the dock. The larger island begins to recede. Ahead, a narrow strip of green appears above the water, with a few rooftops, a harbor and perhaps a church steeple marking the destination. There is something distinct about arriving on an island by boat. You watch it become more detailed as […] The post These 5 Little Caribbean Islands Can Only Be Reached by Boat, With Hidden Hotels, Famous Beach Bars, and an Impossibly Chill Vibe appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

These 5 Little Caribbean Islands Can Only Be Reached by Boat, With Hidden Hotels, Famous Beach Bars, and an Impossibly Chill Vibe

The ferry pulls away from the dock. The larger island begins to recede. Ahead, a narrow strip of green appears above the water, with a few rooftops, a harbor and perhaps a church steeple marking the destination.

There is something distinct about arriving on an island by boat. You watch it become more detailed as you approach. You step onto a dock, not by walking through an airport. Your vacation begins with a crossing, a transition from somewhere busy to somewhere deliberately smaller.

Across the Caribbean, some of the region’s most lovable islands remain beyond the reach of commercial aviation. They have have no airport terminals and no flights. Every arrival requires a ferry, water taxi, private boat or charter.

Their remoteness shapes everything. Hotels are intimate, towns (if you can call them that) are compact. Beaches feel unusually personal. Restaurants tend to be independent, and many of the best-known bars began as simple gathering places for sailors and residents.

These five miniature islands prove how much can fit into a very small piece of the Caribbean.

green turtle cay caribbean islands
Green Turtle Cay from above.

Green Turtle Cay, The Bahamas

Green Turtle Cay appears slowly across the Sea of Abaco, its harbor framed by docks, boats and the pastel rooftops of New Plymouth. At roughly three miles long and half a mile wide, the island is small enough to explore by golf cart, bicycle or on foot, yet varied enough to fill an entire vacation.

The trip usually begins with a flight to Marsh Harbour or Treasure Cay, followed by a drive to the ferry dock and a short crossing. The extra leg is part of Green Turtle Cay’s appeal. By the time you arrive, the traffic and commercial bustle of a larger destination feel distant.

New Plymouth is the island’s social and historic center, a compact Loyalist settlement with narrow streets, white picket fences, churches, small shops and traditional Bahamian houses. You can wander through the village, stop for cracked conch or a Goombay Smash and return to the harbor without ever needing a car.

The island’s two signature places to stay offer different versions of the Green Turtle Cay experience.

Bluff House Beach Resort and Marina occupies an elevated stretch of the island between the Sea of Abaco and the Atlantic. The property has its own marina, a private beach and broad water views, giving boaters a natural home base while preserving the quiet of a small Bahamian retreat.

Green Turtle Club Resort and Marina has long been one of the best-known addresses in the Abacos. The resort is centered around its harbor and marina, where fishing boats, cruising yachts and local skiffs create an ever-changing scene. Rooms, cottages, the restaurant and the bar all carry the character of a classic Out Island inn.

Green Turtle Cay’s remoteness does not translate into isolation. The island has a deeply social personality, particularly around the marinas and New Plymouth. Yet evenings remain gentle, with golf carts passing along quiet lanes and boats resting inside the harbor.

The absence of an airport protects the island from hurried visits. Green Turtle Cay asks you to make the crossing, unpack and stay awhile.

The post These 5 Little Caribbean Islands Can Only Be Reached by Boat, With Hidden Hotels, Famous Beach Bars, and an Impossibly Chill Vibe appeared first on Caribbean Journal.