guıde DECEMBER 2013
Christmas in Bermuda You’ll love our boat parade
Shopping, sightseeing, dining, culture
FREE FREE
DISCOVER THE UNIVERSAL FRAGRANCE
F R E SH ,
C R I SP,
C I T RU S
BE AU T Y
contents
PHOTO BY KAGEAKI SMITH
Christmas carols at City Hall, Hamilton. See our Christmas calendar of events, pages 42-47
n Arts
n Religion
overview 12 & 13 shows 47 local products 33–35
our abundant churches 16–17
n Business
flex the plastic 26-35
our economic ‘miracle’ 18–19
n Events
n Shopping n Sightseeing tours 20–21
Christmas in Bermuda 5&8 n Sports & activities calendar 42-47 golf, tennis, etc 22
n Food & drink best places to eat 36-39
n Transportation
National Parks 10–11 our harmless critters 14
airlines 23 buses 23 ferries 24 taxis 25
n People
n Weather
Minister’s welcome 4
what to expect 25
n Nature
n Practicalities health, customs etc 23-25
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Co-publisher & advertising manager: Lisa Beauchamp, lbeauchamp@bermudasun.bm Tel: 278-1850 Co-publisher & editor-in-chief: Tony McWilliam, tmcwilliam@ bermudasun.bm Tel: 278-1860 Design & Layout: Creative Circle Media Solutions Accounts: Donna Vesely Tel: 278-1831 Delivery: Lloyd Somner Cover photo: The Christmas Boat Parade on Hamilton Harbour, by Tony McWilliam Contributors: Amanda Dale, Lisa Greene, Simon Jones, Sarah Lagan, Nicola Muirhead, Alison Outerbridge, Kageaki Smith, www.moongateproductions.com bermuda.com guide Published by The Bermuda Sun a subsidiary of MediaHouse © Bermuda.com Ltd. Printed by Island Press Ltd. Web: www.bermuda.com Information and services contained in the guide are believed to be correct at the time of printing; however, prices and times may be subject to change without notice. The Bermuda Sun Limited makes every effort to ensure accuracy but accepts no liability for errors or omissions. Reproduction in whole or in part by permission of the publisher only.
© d. yurman 2013
FOR EVERY SPECIAL OCCASION
55 FRONT STREET aNd 16 QUEEN STREET, HaMILTON CLOCKTOWER MaLL, dOCKYaRd aLL MaJOR HOTELS • TEL (441) 295 2351
welcome to bermuda
ON BEHALF OF the Government and the people of Bermuda, welcome to our island home. Known around the world for our beautiful beaches, stunning turquoise water, world-class golf and warm, friendly people, Bermuda has been a favourite vacation destination for generations of travellers. Let us show you that Bermuda is so much more. We invite you to enjoy unexpected treasures, such as boutique shopping, island-inspired cuisine, vibrant arts and cultural activities and our rich history. During your stay, I hope you have an opportunity to explore some of our finest features, such as the 17th century Town of St. George, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, the City of Hamilton and the Royal Naval Dockyard. However you choose to enjoy your Bermuda vacation, I am certain you will have a memorable experience. Once again, welcome and I hope you have a wonderful stay. We look forward to welcoming you back to our shores very soon. Sincerely, The Hon. Shawn G. Crockwell JP, MP Minister of Tourism Development and Transport
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cover story
PHOTO BY KAGEAKI SMITH
Christmas glow: Lights and decorations transform Front Street into a fairyland.
A great time to be here BERMUDA DOES Christmas well, and if you love the holidays, you will love December in Bermuda. Options are plentiful and the moderate temperature makes the Island an ideal destination for indoor and outdoor activities. The calendar is filled with special events, unique traditions, music, entertainment, great food and healthy exercise. Most importantly, Bermuda affords the perfect backdrop for celebrating quality time with loved ones. The holiday season kicks off on the first Friday of December with the Bermuda National Trust’s Christmas Walkabout in St George’s. The entire town is alight with Christmas cheer, open shops and historic properties, with mulled wine flowing and carolling and music playing at picturesque locations around the town. Look for Sea Cadets strolling through the streets with the evening’s schedule of activities. This is just the first of many special events of the season — see our Calendar,
pages 42-47. Here are some highlights: The Bermuda Musical and Dramatic Society (BMDS) puts on a traditional English ‘Pantomime’ at Daylesford Theatre, Hamilton, complete with fairytale characters, true love, a cross-dressing Dame, slapstick antics and plenty of audience participation. Don’t be surprised if the entire audience starts booing loudly at the “evil baddy” and shouting for the hero to “look behind you!” Brilliant sets, extraordinary costumes, song Continued on page 8
bermuda.com guide 5
city sights
P
O X
Y
6 bermuda.com guide
V
W
U
A
C
B
D
E
T
S
R
H
Q
N
F
M
I
G
L
J
K
To F ort Hamilton
Bermuda’s capital city, Hamilton, is
J Historical Residential Buildings Corner of Dundonald and King Streets K A detour may be
C Cedar Avenue
D St Theresa’s Cathedral Corner Cedar Avenue and Angle Street
Elliott and Princess Streets
outside staircases and verandahs Corner of
and rare G Attractive 1800’s built buildings,
F Alaska Hall Corner of Angle and Court Streets
E The Centre Junction of North and Angle Streets
R The Sessions House and Magistrates Court Corner of Parliament and Reid Streets S Freemasons Hall Corner of Reid Street and Chancery Lane
Q Cenotaph and Cabinet Building, Front Street opposite Cenotaph
P Custom House Warehouse, 1794 Corner Court and Front Streets
Court Street between Church & Reid Streets
the oldest functioning Friendly Society Lodge
N The 1937 Recorder Building Court Street between Victoria and Church Streets O Alexandria Lodge,
KEY
Points A - Y on Map
Recommended route
Return to City Hall.
Y The Anglican Cathedral of the Most Holy Trinity Corner of Burnaby and Church Streets
Corner of Queen and Reid Streets X The Arcade Corner of Reid and Burnaby Streets
National Library and the Bermuda Historical Society Museum
V Corner of Front and Queen Streets, a detour may be taken westward to Albouy’s Point & Barr’s Bay Park W The Bermuda
U Old Yacht Club Steps on Front Street
Commercial Buildings best viewed from south side South side of Front St. opposite Chancery Ln.
T Prominent Historical
A SELF GUIDED TOUR OF SOME HISTORIC SITES OF HAMILTON
For a full description of the historical locations identified visit www.cityhall.bm/hamilton-route-map
M St Paul AME Church Corner of Victoria and Court Streets
Corner of King and Victoria Streets L Manchester Unity Hall Victoria Street at Joell’s Alley
taken at this point to Fort Hamilton
I Dr E.F. Gordon Square on Dundonald Street
B Eastern gate of Victoria Park on Cedar Avenue
Begin at City Hall.
H Corner of Dundonald and Court Streets
A The City Hall Church Street in front of City Hall
City of Hamilton Walkway of History
antipode to Perth, Western Australia
city sights
bermuda.com guide 7
cover story
Some stores give you free eggnog
Continued from page 5
and dance. This year the production is Sleeping Beauty (Dec 5-14) – you may find the evil queen has a deep voice and five o’clock shadow. The spectacular Christmas Boat Parade on December 7 will have up to 100 boats decorated to the hilt and twinkling in Hamilton Harbour with Christmas music blaring for all the onlookers at every vantage point imaginable. Make a reservation early at a location with a view of the harbour. Markets appear on the weekends leading up to Christmas and provide a tempting array of local produce, crafts, baked goods and one-of-a-kind gifts. Get up early on Saturday morning and head to Pier 6 on Front Street in Hamilton for the City Market where you will find farmers’ produce, locally made jewellery and all things home-grown and homemade. On Sunday afternoons the Olde Towne Market springs up on Water Street, St George’s, and vendors display an eclectic variety of goods, from hand crafted cedar to Moroccan leather, clothing, bags and shoes plus fresh baked rum cakes and bread. On Christmas Eve, most churches have a carolling or candlelight service to greet the midnight hour, and services on Christmas Day. If you are in the east end of the island the 11pm candlelight service at historic St Peter’s, Their Majesties Chappell, is truly magical. You will discover that Bermuda celebrates ‘Boxing Day’ on December 26. Why is it called Boxing Day? You may hear several explanations, but the traditional one is that it’s when servants were given their presents, or perhaps it’s the day you box up the presents you 8 bermuda.com guide
don’t want! Whatever the reason, it is another official holiday – but you will find a number of retail stores open to do a bit of après Christmas sale shopping. Attractions such as the Aquarium, Museum and Zoo, Bermuda National Museum and Bermuda Underwater Exploration Institute will also be open. The weather is mild and perfect for outdoor activities — tennis, golf and walking, and even swimming for the intrepid. You won’t find many locals swimming but there are a hearty few who swim every day of the year no matter the temperature. The Walking Club of Bermuda walks every Sunday rain or shine – good to walk off those holiday pounds and enjoy seeing the beauty of the island with some of the locals. There are also numerous free tours to enjoy as part of our Rendezvous Activities – pick up the brochure at your concierge desk or the Visitor Information Centres. Visitors to Bermuda will find every hotel has Christmas menus and special events — or maybe best of all, a quiet week to spend time with your family. Whatever you do — enjoy the Christmas spirit and long tradition of great hospitality in Bermuda. n
PHOTO BY KAGEAKI SMITH
Tradition: Christmas carols at City Hall.
parks
PHOTO BY NICOLA MUIRHEAD
Get back to nature on lush and lovely Cooper’s Island in the east end.
Cooper’s Island a real gem Cooper’s Island, located at the north-eastern tip of Bermuda, features a Nature Reserve and Wilderness Area and stands as a striking example of the restoration and protection of our precious public land. As one of the island’s few remaining open spaces, it acts as an important buffer zone for the critically important offshore Nature Reserves, protecting indigenous species of plants, animals and marine life. This historical and biologically rich open space of approximately 12 acres was handed back to the Bermuda Government by NASA (who ran a tracking station at the site) in September, 2001. The site has a colourful history. Cooper’s Island was first mentioned when Governor Moore was faced with 10 bermuda.com guide
the problem of famine in 1612, caused by the accidental introduction of rats from a captured Spanish grain ship. The rats destroyed all crops and stored food. The Nature Reserve is heavily wooded and supports a variety of habitats including salt-water marsh, beach, dunes, rocky coastline, sea grass beds, upland coastal and uplands hillside. You might see turtles, cahows, queen conch and tropicbirds (our emblematic longtails). Healthy sea grass beds found here are critical to fish Continued on next page
Endemic plants include Bermuda moss
parks
Grab a picnic, take a stroll
is the 32-acre Hog Bay Park, one of our best birding locations. Walking paths skirt agricultural fields and meander through woodlands and hillsides before By LISA GREENE | Our National Parks, arriving at a secluded shoreline with spread over 108 sites and 1,609 acres, spectacular views. range from tiny, secluded gardens to Spittal Pond, a 64-acre reserve, on long, beautiful beaches with pink sand. the south shore in Smith’s Parish, is Some favourites of mine include the our best birding spot. Here the rugged 16-mile long Railway Trail, Hog Bay Park, shoreline and woodland surrounding a Spittal Pond Nature Reserve and Ferry brackish pond support a large variety Point Park. of migratory and resident Many sections of the species. Clamber over the Trail provide an ‘off the rocks and look for Sally beaten track’ experilightfoot crabs at the ence for walkers, joggers water’s edge or parrotfish or those on bicycles. feeding in surging water, A paved stretch runs and watch waves ‘boiling’ for nearly two miles over reefs. Along this from Somerset Village shore you can also find to Somerset Bridge, with ‘Portuguese Rock’, bearglimpses into backyards ing a carved inscription and views of bays and from visiting sailors dated the Great Sound. Paths 1543. off the trail lead to Out east is Ferry Point PHOTO BY KAGEAKI SMITH Gilbert Nature Reserve, Park, a scenic 64 acres Verdant: Ferry Point Park the large Heydon Trust perfect for walking, jogEstate (with its exquisite little chapel), ging or cycling, with historic features panoramic Scaur Hill Fort, and down to such as the Martello Tower, Ferry Island the water’s edge. Rock cuts from the Fort and an old lime kiln. original railway, and thick vegetation, These are just a few of the many create welcome shady areas. locations maintained by our GovernLess than a mile further south along ment’s Department of Parks; it’s your the Middle Road from Somerset Bridge turn now to discover your favourite. n
Continued from previous page
populations as they produce oxygen for fish and animals. There are five picturesque beaches within the reserve; Turtle Bay, Long Bay, Well Bay, Fort Hill Bay and Soldiers Bay. The entrance to Cooper’s Island is gated and fenced and controlled ve-
hicular access allows only wheelchairs, emergency and service vehicles. Take a walk into this uniquely preserved site — it’s truly worth every step. • Information supplied by the Department of Parks. Please assist them by adhering to Nature Reserve etiquette. bermuda.com guide 11
arts
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE MASTERWORKS COLLECTION
A Masterworks treasure: Front Street, Hamilton, by American painter Frederick James (1915-1985).
Immerse yourself in the arts By SARAH LAGAN | Our small island is packed with art galleries, studios and museums. Our art hot spots include: n Bermuda National Gallery
n BNG East
A repository for important works of art, The Bermuda National Gallery addresses social issues through its exhibitions, too. Current shows are Eyes on the World (photojournalism about human rights) in partnership with the Alexia Foundation; Women Artists in the Bermuda National Gallery Collection; Impressions of Bermuda: The David L. White Gift to the BNG; and Meredith Andrews: Portraits of Power. City Hall & Arts Centre, Hamilton. Tel. 295-9428. www.bng.bm
The Bermuda National Gallery’s new satellite location, BNG East, is located in a characterful National Trust property in St George’s. It showcases local artists both past and present, plus international artists. BNG East, 1 Bridge Street, St George’s. Tel. 297-9428. www.bng.bm
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n Bermuda Society of Arts Known affectionately as ‘the people’s gallery’, BSoA’s contributors range from pro artists to schoolchildren and prisoners. Four separate galleries, hosts 50 shows a
arts
Georgia O’Keefe painted in Bermuda year. City Hall & Arts Centre, Hamilton. Tel. 292-3824. www.bsoa.bm
n National Museum of Bermuda Exhibitions and displays range from Bermuda’s Defence Heritage, The Slave Trade and The Royal Navy Collections. ShipwreckIsland: Sunken Clues to Bermuda’s Past celebrates Bermuda as the shipwreck capital of the Atlantic. Local artist Graham Foster’s epic historical mural is a must see. Dockyard. Tel. 234-1418. www.bmm.bm
n Bermuda Arts Centre at Dockyard Here you might meet Bermuda’s artists who are residents, including Jonah Jones, Christopher Marson, Christopher Grimes and Chesley Trott. Also enjoy the everchanging collections by the Plein Air Painters of Bermuda. Dockyard. Tel. 234-2809. www.artbermuda.bm
Masterworks The Masterworks Museum of Bermuda Art is home to an impressive collection of over 1,400 pieces of Bermuda inspired art. Some by such famous names as Georgia O’Keefe, Marsden Hartley, Winslow Homer and Albert Gleizes are part of the Permanent Collection. There is a constantly evolving showcase of local artists, and visiting artists in residence who paint Bermuda’s dynamic landscapes. Prints and original local art are on sale in the Arrowroot Gift Shop. Homer’s Café serves baked goods, soups, paninis, gluten free products and afternoon tea. Location: Botanical Gardens, Paget. Wheelchair accessible with ramps and elevator. Open Mon-Sat, 10am-4pm & Sun 11am-4:30pm. Admission $5, free for members and under 12s. Closed public holidays. Tel. 299-4000. www. bermudamasterworks.com
Sunday 11:00am - 4:30pm
The Masterworks Museum of Bermuda Art is home to an impressive collection of over 1,200 pieces of Bermuda inspired art; some by such famous names as Georgia O’Keeffe, Winslow Homer and Albert Gleizes. The museum shop sells prints and original local art; a perfect keepsake to take home! To learn about cultu and history there is no Bermuda’s culture better stop on your vacation itinerary.
Located in the beautiful Botanical Gardens, five minutes from Hamilton, the museum is on three major bus rou tes (1,2,&7) and is clearly sign posted from all entrances.
Sunday 11:00am - 4:30pm Sandwiches, paninis, salads, quiche, soup, hot lunches, baked goods, specialty coffees, afternoon tea and even picnic baskets to go! We also offer a range of bakery products that are gluten free
04 299.4000 bermuda.com guide 13
wildlife
Birds aplenty — and no snakes! By ANDREW DOBSON | Like most other things in Bermuda — groceries,
cars, shipwrecked settlers — our wildlife was largely imported, either accidentally or on purpose. There are hundreds of feral cats and thousands of feral chickens island-wide — but no feral dogs.
PHOTOS BY TONY MCWILLIAM
Above: The ubiquitous Great Kisakadee is a tyrant flycatcher while the Mourning Dove, below, is named for its plaintive call.
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We have a few rats, of course, but no snakes. Spiders are abundant but generally harmless. The occasional poisonous spider arrives on imported lumber but they rarely bother people. Mosquitoes aren’t a problem and there are few bugs to worry about. To find the mildly venomous nine-inch centipede, you would have to turn over a lot of rocks in St. David’s Parish. Try to avoid the Portuguese man-owar, a purple jellyfish that sports long tentacles and causes a painful sting. Sharks are rare in Bermuda waters and there are no records of shark attacks. One of our most intriguing creatures is the common whistling frog. Their ‘gleepgleep’ chorus is particularly vigorous after rainfall on warm evenings and you’ll be amazed that a frog little bigger than your thumbnail can be so audible. Easier to spot on wet evenings are enormous cane toads, introduced to control cockroaches. Birds are plentiful; about 375 species have been recorded in Bermuda and 20 are resident. Many migrate through the island and more than 100 species are present during the winter, including a variety of ducks, herons and egrets. For more, visit www.audubon.bm n
DISCOVER A PART OF BERMUDA
THAT’S OVER
30
MILLION YEARS OLD
AND STILL GROWING Visit www.caves.bm for more details. The Crystal Caves are a world of delicate splendour with magnificent crystal stalactites and stalagmites, each surrounding a clear lake. Come see the Crystal & Fantasy Caves, an exquisite world that Mother Nature began over 30 million years ago. HOW TO FIND US: BUS ROUTES 1/3/10/11 | JUST OFF WILKINSON AVE 8 Crystal Cave Road, Hamilton Parish CR 04, Bermuda | 441-293-0640 | info@caves.bm
faith
PHOTO BY WWW.MOONGATEPRODUCTIONS.COM
The elegant St Mark’s Church is set in lovely grounds in Smith’s Parish
Our abundant churches TO REALLY GET A FEEL for Bermuda, take a look at the island’s churches, or better still attend a service or a social event organised by a church. With such a high concentration of churches, and the wide range of beliefs catered for, visitors should have little trouble finding a church that suits them. Within this diversity of faith, Anglicanism has a strong presence, along 16 bermuda.com guide
faith
52% of worshippers here are Protestant with the African Methodist Episcopal Church, Roman Catholicism, Seventh-day Adventists, Jehovah’s Witness’s, Methodists, Brethren Churches, and the Salvation Army. Church organizations often come together to help deal with social problems and are also active in relief aid abroad, with the Cornerstone Foundation one of the first to offer assistance in Haiti. Many of Bermuda’s older churches are like mini museums. Visit the 400 year-old St Peter’s Church in St George’s, the oldest Anglican church in continuous use outside the British Isles, and marvel at its elegant simplicity. In Pembroke is St John’s Church built in the 1620s; overlooking Harrington Sound is Holy Trinity Church, with a nave built around 1670; and St Anne’s Church in Southampton, one of the oldest parish churches in Bermuda, was started by our early settlers and rebuilt in 1717. Visit the neo-Gothic Bermuda Cathedral that dominates Hamilton and climb its tower to get panoramic views of the city and adjoining parishes. Also in Hamilton
is St Theresa’s Cathedral: this Catholic church, built in the 1930s, has one of the largest weekly attendances on the island; and tiny Heydon Chapel, located in Sandys and set in a 44-acre park, is perfect for quiet reflection. There are so many charming churches set in the unique Bermuda landscape. Among them, overlooking the ocean, is the beautiful St James Church in Sandys Parish. The island’s legacy of slavery is represented by The Cobbs Hill Methodist Church in Warwick — built in 1827 by slaves and free blacks as a place for them to worship and is on Bermuda’s African Diaspora Heritage Trail. It is people who really make a church, and the religious community here welcomes visitors. It is a good way to feel part of the community and to experience Bermuda on a level you never thought possible. Contact churches for opening times and for a complete list of places of worship visit bermuda.com. n
PHOTO BY NICOLA MUIRHEAD
Road to salvation? Bethel AME Church in Hamilton Parish.
bermuda.com guide 17
business brief
PHOTOS BY NICOLA MUIRHEAD
A mix of talented locals and international high fliers run our international business sector.
How tiny Bermuda became a hub of international business BERMUDA, CONTRARY TO the famous song, is not another world: it is two other worlds. Along with the joys of the ‘sun, sea and sand’, the island is one of the world’s leading financial services economies, deriving much of its income from insurance, banking, fund and trust services. How on earth did that happen? The seeds were sown in the 1930s, with the world in a Great Depression. A local banker (Jack Tucker) and a lawyer (Reginald Conyers) invented a type of company that enabled foreigners to do business from Bermuda while simultaneously protecting local interests. It took a while for the idea to catch on. That’s no surprise. Who would equate an island with few natural resources, 800 miles from anywhere, with economic opportunity? 18 bermuda.com guide
1973: Bermuda Stock Exchange opened. In the early 1960s, an American called Fred Reiss did exactly that. He spotted that Bermuda suited his plan to offer international companies the chance to insure themselves and cut out the middle men, taking advantage of the island’s lack of income or corporation taxes. Today, ‘captive’ insurance companies, as Reiss called them, number more than 5,000 around the world. Bermuda remains their number one home. Banking for the super-wealthy had been a Bermuda specialty since the 1920s. As more people around the world became rich in the 1960s and 70s, Bermuda’s banks expanded — a little. We have only four banks. At its core, what Bermuda sells to business is its crystalclean reputation. Having really been a secret for the few, Bermuda made international headlines late in 1992, following Hurricane Andrew, the world’s costliest catastrophe. Andrew bankrupted a number of the big global insurance companies and caused others to close their doors. A crisis arose. Without insurance, banks won’t lend. That kills world trade, as we’ve seen in the past couple of years. Enter the ‘big cats’. Soon after Andrew, eight catastrophe reinsurance companies — reinsurance is coverage that insurance companies buy to spread their risk — were formed in Bermuda, with $4 billion in capital. The business world went back to normal, but Bermuda would never be the same again. Following disasters in 2001 (the events of 9/11) and 2005 (Hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Wilma), waves of new giant insurance
business brief
and reinsurance companies formed in Bermuda. More than 30 companies with $1 to $10 billion in capital now call the island home. In the process, Hamilton gradually became an important world centre of finance. One tall building (by our standards) followed another. Executive homes were built. All the trappings of the big city were added to the island experience. Gradually, business replaced tourism as Bermuda’s bread and butter. GDP soared. Incomes soared. Prices soared. Accurately described as a “fishing village” as late as the mid-1950s, Bermuda became a hotbed of creative financial thinking and a repository of wealth. Today, more than $1 trillion calls the island home. Bermuda is to insurance what Silicon Valley is to computers, except that we still have the sun, sea and sand that make the island such a lovely place to do business. n
‘Bermuda is to insurance what Silicon Valley is to computers.’ bermuda.com guide 19
tours
Lemongrass is boiled and taken by
Let locals guide you By ALISON OUTERBRIDGE | The cooler months in Bermuda bring opportunities to explore cultural, historic and natural attracO F
B E R M U D A
L T D
tions islandwide with charismatic locals who love to share the unique
ALL-INCLUSIVE INTERACTIVE ISLAND ECO-TOURS Visit Bermuda’s One and Only Jungle Snorkel with Tropical Fish Experience Cave Swimming Stroll Along Secluded Beaches SUMMER EXCURSIONS Summer all-inclusive trips include Tom Moore’s Jungle & cave exploring, St. David’s Head, St. David’s Lighthouse, & snorkelling at Cooper’s Island.
charm of their island. The Department of Community and Cultural Affairs hosts Rendezvous Activities, a programme of daily events. This includes a guided walking tour in the City of Hamilton and a tour of the UNESCO World Heritage Site Town of St George’s, with a greeting from the town’s mayor. In the west end there is a south shore eco-walk at Warwick Long Bay and a tour of the Royal Naval Dockyard. There is also a tour of the Paget Railway Trail with a focus on plants and herbal remedies used by the first settlers. See
WINTER EXCURSIONS Winter all-inclusive trips include Tom Moore’s Jungle, Fort Hamilton, and The Vines in Southlands. Should be physically fit for walking rough terrain.
TELEPHONE: 704-0999 bermyreefexplorer@gmail.com MAKE RESERVATIONS ONLINE AT: www.bermudahiddengems.com 20
bermuda.com guide
PHOTO BY NICOLA MUIRHEAD
Byways Tours visit historic Gibb’s Hill Lighthouse.
tours
Bermudians to reduce fevers
PHOTO BY NICOLA MUIRHEAD
Hidden Gems includes the lush Southlands property on its tour itinerary.
pages 42 & 43 for the Rendezvous Activities schedule. Heidi Cowen, a sixth generation Bermudian, runs Byways Tours and shares her passion for nature and history in 5 to 6 hour tours that include a visit to Gibb’s Hill Lighthouse, where her grandfather was the keeper. Heidi uses an eight-seater van and tours include a picnic lunch. She also caters to families, offering a shorter tour with stops to feed fish, climb forts, look for caves and visit turtles. Tel. 535-9169 or visit www. bywaysbermuda.bm. The adventurous visitor will enjoy a day out with Ashley Harris in her brightly painted Hidden Gems of Bermuda Ltd tour van. Ashley translates her love of nature into a 5-hour tour with stops at nature reserves and a fort; it includes a packed lunch, snacks and water. Flashlights are provided for the visit to Tom Moore’s Jungle, a lush reserve with underground caves and natural fish ponds. Fort Hamilton above the capital offers panoramic views and a moat filled with exotic plants. Last stop is at Southlands, a unique
property filled with pristine woodland and a banyan grove. Tel. 704-0999 or visit www.bermudahiddengems.com n
bermuda.com guide 21
sports
It’s a sporty island THIS TIME OF YEAR is ideal for tennis and golf — the humidity is low and though you might see the odd shower, the climate is conducive to outdoor fun. Our golf courses: Belmont Hills, Warwick, tel. 236-6400 Turtle Hill Golf Club, tel. 239-6952 Mid-Ocean, Hamilton Parish, tel. 293-0330 Ocean View (9 holes), Devonshire, tel. 295-9092 Port Royal, Southampton, tel. 234-0974 Riddell’s Bay, Warwick, tel. 238-1060 Rosewood Tucker’s Point, Hamilton Parish, tel. 298-6970 For kids, Bermuda Fun Golf is a terrific new facility for all ages at Dockyard while on Middle Road, Southampton, you’ll find the equally enjoyable Bermuda Golf Academy (open seven days a week, 9am-
22 bermuda.com guide
10pm. Sun & Mon close at 9pm). It’s a 300-yard driving range with 30 bays, 25 covered. PGA pros are available for lessons, and an Adventure Mini Golf course meanders around ponds and waterfalls. There’s a bar, café and restaurant, too. Tel. 2388800. Other sporting activities include deep sea fishing, cycling and bowling. See www.bermuda.com for details.
practicalities
PHOTO BY TONY MCWILLIAM
Our taxi cabs are comfortable, safe — and often colourful.
The Bermuda essentials INFORMATION PROVIDED HERE is subject to change. For the latest, visit our website: www.bermuda.com. The Bermuda Sun newspaper is also a good resource: www.bermudasun.bm
n Airlines Air Canada Reservations: Tel: 1-888-247-2262. Flight Info: Tel: 293-1777. American Airlines Tel: 1-800-433-7300. Flight Info: Tel: 293-1420 AirTran 1-800-AIR-TRAN (247-8726) or 678-254-7999. British Airways Reservations: Tel: 1-800-247-9297. Airport customer service: Tel: 293-1944. Continental Airlines Reservations: Tel: 1-800-231-0856. Flight Info: Tel: 293-3092. Delta Airlines Reservations: Tel: 1-800-221-1212. Flight Info: Tel: 1-800-325-1999.
JETBLUE Tel: 1-800-JETBLUE (538-2583). Flight Info: Tel: 293-3608. U.S. Airways Reservations: Tel: 1-800-622-1015. Flight Info: Tel: 293-3073. WestJet Tel: 1-888-WESTJET (937-8538).
n Airport L.F. Wade International Airport (tel: 2932470) is located in St. George’s at the east end of the island. Allow 30 minutes from the city of Hamilton by taxi. Check-in two hours before departure.
n Banks Normally open from 9am to 4pm, Mon-Fri. There are many ATMs across the island. ATMs dispense Bermuda dollars which are on a par with US dollars.
n Buses All routes serving Hamilton arrive and leave the Bus Terminal on Washington Street, next to City Hall. Fares are reasonable and passes are available for up to three
bermuda.com guide 23
practicalities
Use pink bus stops for travel into Hamilton
months. Tokens, tickets and passes can be used on buses or ferries and can be bought at Hamilton Ferry Terminal, Hamilton Bus Terminal, hotels, post offices and the Dockyard Visitor Information Centre. Cash fares require exact change as dollar bills are not accepted. Tel: 292-3851 • www. bermudabuses.bm
n Business Hours Stores normally open from 9am to 5pm Monday to Saturday. Many grocery stores open 1-5pm on Sunday, most other stores are closed on Sundays.
n Cars No car rentals are available in Bermuda but you can rent scooters and pedal bikes.
n Communications
n Currency & Credit Cards The Bermuda dollar is equal in value to the U.S. dollar; both are legal tender. Traveller’s cheques and credit cards are accepted at most shops, restaurants and hotels.
n Dress Code The dress code in Bermuda is conservative. Bathing suits and bare chests are not acceptable, except (for men) at beaches and pools. Casual wear is acceptable in restaurants at lunchtime. Some upscale restaurants require men to wear a jacket in the evening. Check the dress requirements when making reservations.
n Emergency Call 911 and specify whether you need police, the fire service or an ambulance.
Bermuda’s well-developed telecommunications infrastructure provides modern telephone, fax, Internet, cellular and cellularroaming services.
n Etiquette
n Consulate
n Ferries
It is customary to greet islanders with a ‘good morning’, ‘good afternoon’ or ‘good evening’ — Bermuda prides herself on civility.
The U.S. Consulate is located on Crown Hill, 16 Middle Road, Devonshire, tel: 295-1342. Open Mon to Fri 8am - 4:30pm. Consular services are provided on an appointment basis only. For details, visit the Consulate’s website: http://hamilton. usconsulate.gov or contact HMLUSCitizenQuery@state.gov. For after-hours life or death emergencies for American citizens only, contact the duty officer at (441) 3353828. • Honorary Consuls for other countries are also represented in Bermuda — see the telephone directory for listings.
All ferries depart from the Hamilton Ferry Terminal on Front Street. Regular ferries cross Hamilton Harbour and faster catamarans visit Dockyard. A route between Dockyard and St. George’s operates in the summer months. Transportation tickets, tokens and passes valid for buses and ferries are available at the Hamilton Ferry Terminal, Hamilton Bus Terminal, hotels, post offices and the Dockyard Visitor Information Centre. Cash fares require exact change as dollar bills are not accepted. Scooters are allowed on some routes. Tel: 295-4506 • www.marineandports.bm
n Country Code
n Health
U.S. & Canada — dial 1 plus area code plus no. U.K. — dial 011 plus 44 plus area code plus no. Caribbean — dial 1 plus area code plus seven digits. International — dial 011 plus country code plus area code plus no.
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No inoculations are required for Bermuda. There are no poisonous insects or mammals.
n Hospital King Edward VII Memorial Hospital (tel. 2362345) is a first-rate facility located on Point Finger Road in Paget Parish. An associate of the American Hospital Association. Airlifts can be arranged to the U.S. or Canada.
practicalities
and blue for heading away from the city n Internet Most hotels and many guest houses provide Internet access. In the city of Hamilton, access is free at the Bermuda Library on Queen Street and the Main Post Office on Parliament Street. Public Internet access is also available in Hamilton, Dockyard and St. George’s by purchasing a TBI Wi-fi Zone coupon. Some cafes provide wi-fi access to customers.
n Mail The General Post Office is located at 56 Church Street Hamilton (tel: 297-7893), with eight sub-offices islandwide.
n Religion Churches are ubiquitous here. Anglican, Catholic, African Methodist Episcopal and Seventh Day Adventist are among the major faiths. See pages 16 & 17 — and the church listings in Friday’s Bermuda Sun newspaper.
n Scooters You can rent scooters by the day or week, if you are 18 or older. Helmets, provided by the rental companies, are mandatory.
n Smoking Smoking is banned from all enclosed public spaces including restaurants, bars, shops, theatres or any enclosed workspaces.
n Taxis Cabs are safe and comfortable. Rates are relatively high but controlled by law. Taxis may be hired for sightseeing tours.
n Time Differences New York — one hour behind Bermuda Los Angeles — four hours behind London — four hours ahead Toronto — one hour behind Daylight Savings Time comes into effect from the second Sunday in March through to the first Sunday in November.
n Tipping In most cases, a service charge or gratuity has been added to the bill. Where the gratuity has not been added, 15% is about right.
PHOTO BY NICOLA MUIRHEAD
Our white roofs capture rainwater that we store in tanks and use to drink.
n TV/Radio/Media Three main local channels screen a nightly news bulletin — VSB (channel 11), ZBM (9) and ZFB (7). A government station, CITV, is on channel 2 and there’s a handful of local radio stations. The quality of local programming varies considerably. The Bermuda Sun, which publishes this guide, provides news seven days a week on its website www.bermudasun.bm and publishes a newspaper on Wednesdays and Fridays.
n Water Tap water is safe to drink, unless you are instructed otherwise. Bermuda has no rivers, streams or reservoirs; all our water comes from rain or wells. Roofs are painted with a limestone wash that purifies rainwater.
n Weather Bermuda’s sub-tropical climate is generally mild and humid, but summer and winter temperatures vary considerably. The average annual temperature is 76ºF. Monthly averages: January 65ºF, water 66ºF; April 67ºF, water 68ºF; July 80ºF, water 81ºF; October 75ºF, water 76ºF. In an average year we see rain on 171 days and sunshine on 200 days.
n Wildlife See page 14 n
bermuda.com guide 25
go shopping
FILE PHOTO
Need gifts to take home? The Dockyard Craft Market has plenty of genuine, local souvenirs.
Take home quality items that will last You’ve already proved you have good taste by choosing to visit Bermuda so it’s fitting that our stores exude quality. There are bargains to be had — you’ll find hefty price differentials with the U.S. on jewellery, watches, perfume, silverware, porcelain and crystal. And you’ll enjoy additional relief at the cash register — there’s no sales tax. Many stores are in the City of Hamilton, but the Clocktower Mall at Dockyard, on the western tip of the island, boasts quality gift stores and boutiques. And the historic town of St. George’s — at the east end of Bermuda — also has a lively shopping scene. Goods made here or produced exclusively for local stores include pottery, jewellery, paintings and prints, pottery, rum, honey, condiments, cedar ware, Bermuda shorts, scarves, fragrances and pillows. Browse the following listings for details. n 26 bermuda.com guide
U.S. dollars can be used in Bermuda The Bermuda Perfumery The Bermuda Perfumery is located at historical Stewart Hall in the heart of St. George’s, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Since 1928, The Bermuda Perfumery has crafted fine fragrances for men and women under the brand Lili Bermuda. All the perfumes represent Bermuda’s natural beauty and are made on premises at Stewart Hall. The Perfumery welcomes visitors for a free tour of its operations and to sample its unique fragrances. Lili Bermuda loves creating new and original fragrances, but always stays true to the essence of Bermuda. Its latest creation, “Calypso” is a great unisex fragrance, which captures the lively rhythms of the Island’s music and lifestyle. Calypso is a fresh blend of sparkling neroli and bergamot. Its heart reveals fruity notes of Bermuda loquats, aromatic notes of the south shore seagrass and white musk. Calypso is part of the “Water Collection”, which is a collection of
go shopping
fun and easy unisex fragrances. The Perfumery’s internationally acclaimed line also includes exclusive creations inspired by our beautiful Island’s botanicals. Modern women will love Coral, Pink, and Lily, and men will not want to leave Bermuda without a bottle of our famous fragrances 32° North and 64° West. The Perfumery is passionate about the art of perfume making and continues to innovate by using both traditional and modern techniques to produce exceptional perfumes. You are welcome to come to Stewart Hall and experience Lili Bermuda for yourself. The Bermuda Perfumery, Stewart Hall, 5 Queen Street, St. George’s GE 05 Tel: 293-0627. Fax: 293-8810 1-800-527-8213 (toll free in US/Canada) info@bermuda-perfumery.com www.lilibermuda.com. Winter hours 10am to 4pm. Closed Sundays and Public Holidays.
PHOTO BY NICOLA MUIRHEAD
Warm and welcoming: The staff at The Perfumery will help you find that perfect gift.
bermuda.com guide 27
go shopping
Locally made products are ‘Bermudiana’ The Island Shop
PHOTO BY KAGEAKI SMITH
Unusual gifts will catch your eye at The Island Shop.
28 bermuda.com guide
The Island Shop features exclusive and original hand-painted ceramics by Barbara Finsness that capture the colourful architectural and natural features of Bermuda. There are fine linens that feature her original embroidered designs and a huge array of different gift items. The Island Shop is a ‘must visit’ during your stay for gift selections found nowhere else in the world! They will gift-wrap or mail your purchases if desired. Check out their online store at www.islandexports.com. Winner of ‘The Best in Bermuda’ in retail giftware by The Bermudian magazine. Barbara features her original and printed artwork in the upper gallery of her Front Street store, and some can also be seen in her Southampton and St. George’s locations. Queen Street, Hamilton, tel: 292-5292. Somers Wharf, St. George’s, tel: 297-1514 Fairmont Hotel, Southampton, tel: 238-5999
go shopping
Bermuda’s capital city, Hamilton, is Bermuda Fragrance Collection Bermuda Blue, Bermuda Breeze & Bermuda Heat fragrances are designed to capture the essence of this beautiful island paradise. Each embrace much that is uniquely Bermuda….reflecting our beautiful ocean, clean air and the aroma of natural fruits & flowers. The latest of our dynamic collection is Bermuda Heat — celebrating the richness of Bermuda days into nights with sweet scents of bergamot, pear, sea lily & sandalwood. Bermuda Blue — a fresh citrus, with jasmine, lotus, and a nuance of crisp sea spray. Bermuda Breeze — a fruity floral, hinting of wild berries & mandarin, with a touch of jasmine. Take home a piece of Bermuda. Take home Bermuda Blue, Breeze & HEAT. Available through select stores across the Island and on-line including: Gibbons Company, Reid St., Hamilton www.gibbons.bm Peniston Brown, St. George Perfume Shop, Dockyard Carole Holding Shops – The Fairmont hotels & Dockyard Brown & Co., Front St., Hamilton www. brownandco.bm A.S. Cooper, Front St., Hamilton, branch and hotel stores www.ascooper.bm Distributed by P.D.L. Limited Tel: (441) 292-1710 infobb@pdl.bm
Bermuda Post Office
PHOTO BY KAGEAKI SMITH
Ah… the sweet scent of Bermuda! The Bermuda Blue & Bermuda Breeze fragrances capture the essence of our island.
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Every year the Bermuda Philatelic Bureau compiles a collection of commemoratives and arranges them into an attractive presentation package. This collection continues the Bermuda Post Office’s efforts to portray all facets of Bermuda’s heritage, culture and history. Continued on page 30
antipode to Perth, Western Australia
jewellery
PHOTO BY NICOLA MUIRHEAD
As well as its flagship stores in the city, Crissons has a beautiful outlet in the Clocktower Mall, Dockyard.
Crisson Jewellers The biggest Jeweller in Bermuda, the Crisson name stands for quality and value. The fabulous array of jewellery and watches reflect the style, sophistication and taste of our discerning customers. When you explore our exciting collections, we are sure you will agree that a visit to Crisson is the crowning moment of your Bermuda shopping experience. Along with the wonderfully eclectic collection of hand-selected pieces from all parts of the world, Crisson are Bermuda’s exclusive source for famous designers including David Yurman, Roberto Coin, Marco Bicego, John Hardy, Kabana, Nanis, Pandora, Marah Lago Larimar, and Rebecca . As for diamonds of distinction, Crisson has Bermuda’s largest collection of spectacular cuts from Cento, Memoire, A. Jaffe and Endless Diamonds. When it comes to timepieces, Crisson is definitely the place! Crisson are the officially authorised Rolex retailers
in Bermuda. You will also find Tag Heuer, Ebel, Raymond Weil, Movado, Tudor, Philip Stein, Christian Dior, Frederique Constant and Fendi. There are also collections from Seiko, Rue du Rhone, Swiss Army, Citizen, Casio, Luminox, Fruitz, Rotary, Guess, Bering, WeWood and Michael Kors. Our main store is on Front Street in Hamilton, with another on Queen Street. There’s also a store in the Clocktower Mall at Dockyard. If you are staying in one of Bermuda’s major Hotels, you’ll find a Crisson store there as well. Each of these boutique-style stores features pieces selected from our main collections in Hamilton. The shopping experience is relaxed and intimate, and the quality, value and prices are the same whichever store you choose to visit. Crisson Jewellers, 55 Front Street & 16 Queen Street, Hamilton; Clocktower Mall, Dockyard, and all major hotels. Tel: 295-2351 • www.facebook.com/ crissons • www.crisson.com
bermuda.com guide 31
shopping
There is no sales tax in Bermuda
Find stylish, quality clothes for the discerning shopper at HERA Boutique. PHOTO BY KAGEAKI SMITH
HERA BOUTIQUE
Bermuda’s newest Boutique for Ladies featuring classic and stylish European and American-made clothing and accessories. Tel. 441.232 .4372 Address The Old Cellar Walker Arcade
47 Front Street Hamilton, Bermuda HM 11 Open Tuesday through Saturday 10am -5:00pm Sunday 1pm -5pm (Seasonal) or by appointment outside of store hours
32 bermuda.com guide
Continued from page 30
The Bermuda Philatelic Bureau also services orders for current issues of Bermuda’s commemorative and definitive stamps and, for the convenience of collectors, provides a standing order account service with a minimum deposit of thirty dollars. In addition, they maintain a mailing list to provide details of new stamp releases to customers. 56 Church Street, Hamilton. Tel: 297-7807
HERA Boutique Bermuda’s latest boutique features classic, but stylish, quality merchandise for the Ladies (sizes 6 to 18) Our collections speak to women of all ages with their updated yet understated appeal. Additionally, selections from Europe and North America are chosen for their versatility and timeless practicality. Visit Hera Boutique today, you’ll be glad you did! Old Cellar, 47 Front Street, Hamilton Open Tues-Sat, 10am – 5pm, Wed 10am 4pm. Tel: 232-4372.
made in bermuda Artist draws from nature to craft unique jewellery BERMUDIAN ARTIST Alexandra Mosher draws from the island’s natural beauty to create extraordinary and unique pieces of jewellery. She incorporates our pink coral sand, sterling sliver and gold into her handcrafted designs. “I developed a love for craft at a very young age,” she told us, “often creating sculptures out of found objects.” Alexandra studied
jewellery design at The Fashion Institute of Technology in New York and launched her line in 2005. Her work is elegant, highly collectible and available at the Alexandra Mosher Studio Gallery in the Washington Mall, Hamilton. Tel: 236-9009. Email studio@ alexandramosher.com. Alexandra also ships internationally: see www. alexandramosher.com n
B E R M U D A
Bermuda Reef Collection
Hand crafted in Sterling silver & pink Bermuda sand
Available at Fine Bermuda Retailers and Galleries | www.alexandramosher.com Resident artist at the April Branco Gallery, Washington Mall, Reid Street
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made in bermuda Bermuda an inspiration for handcrafted designs By LYNN MORRELL | As an artist I try to capture the beauty of what delights me. My lovely little island is a constant source of inspiration for my jewellery: Longtails swooping over the south shore, the tiny whistling frog outside my kitchen door, my grandmother’s cottage. I trained in a fine jewellery workshop with several master goldsmiths, one of
34 bermuda.com guide
whom is now my husband. I work mainly in sterling silver as I love to wear it myself and the stones I choose are mostly semi-precious and cabochon cut. My jewellery is simple, cleanlined and very easy to wear. It can be found at The Craft Market in Dockyard, Brown and Co. Front Street, Hamilton and Seaglass, Water Street, St. Georges. n
made in bermuda My passion shines through in every handcrafted item By JENNIFER RODRIGUES | Making jewellery has been a passion of mine for many years. Initially it was way of relaxing and creating beautiful things to add to my own jewellery box. In recent years I have moved in the direction of wire wrapping and sculpting. Having attended the William Holland School of Lapidary Arts, my work now encompasses
silversmithing, hammered cold forging and the cutting, shaping and polishing of beautiful gemstones. I wrap them in either sterling silver or 14KT gold filled wire. For many of my pieces I use the beautiful pink sand of Bermuda and handcraft it into works of art. Locations: Bermuda Craft Market in Dockyard & My-Sereni-Tea, Reid St, Hamilton. n
bermuda.com guide 35
EMAIL: CHATHAMHOUSE@LOGIC.BM
food & drink Eating out here is a treat Our island is small but it offers many dining options. Casual dress is acceptable at most restaurants, though some upscale Restaurant price ranges eateries require a jacket and tie. And per person $ Under $20 it’s best to make $$ $20-$40 reservations. The $$$ $40-$50 dollar signs (see key $$$$ Over $50 at left) offer a rough guide to prices. Visit www.bermuda. com for updated information.
Chatham House Bermuda’s leading specialty tobacco shop, established in 1895. Offering a marvellous selection of fine tobaccos and gifts for
visitors, satisfaction is guaranteed. Our extensive range includes English Briar pipes, and a selection of Havanas such as Punch, Partagas, Romeo y Julieta, Upmann, Montecristo, Cohiba and Bolivar — all at good savings over U.S. prices. Corner of Front and Burnaby Streets, Hamilton. Tel: 292-8422
Somerset Country Squire Enjoy lunch or dinner at Somerset Country Squire, overlooking Mangrove Bay, in Sandys Parish, while you chat with the locals about Bermuda. Local cuisine includes fish chowder, seafood, locally caught lobster when in season. Our Sunday Bermuda traditional “codfish and potato breakfast” has all the trimmings, banana, boiled egg with avocado pear (when in season). Whether
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F O U R
R E S T A U R A N T S
O N E
M O U T H W A T E R I N G
S T A N D A R D
Lunch: Monday - Friday Dinner: 7 days a week 87 Front Street, Hamilton Tel: 295-5373 www.portocall.bm Private Dining Room
Contemporary
Lunch: Monday - Friday Dinner: Monday - Saturday Closed: Sundays 87 Front Street, Hamilton (upstairs above Port O Call) Tel: 295-9150 www.pearl.bm Take Out Available
Sushi
Lunch: Monday - Friday Dinner: Monday - Saturday Closed: Sundays Chancery Lane, Hamilton Tel: 296-8546 www.bistroj.bm
Casual
Open: Monday - Saturday, 7:00am - Late Closed: Sundays 10 Dundonald Street, Hamilton Tel: 295-0857 www.ten.bm Take Out Available
CafĂŠ
Have you tried conch stew yet? you’re a party of one or a group, you’ll enjoy our service and food. Serving Monday through Wednesday from 3pm to 10pm, and Thursday through Sunday from noon to 9pm. 10 Mangrove Bay Rd., Somerset. Tel: 234-0105. Lunch $$ Dinner $$
Port O Call Amid the hustle and bustle of front Street, Port O Call is an oasis of fine cuisine. This intimate restaurant is one of the most popular spots for lunch or dinner in Bermuda. The innovative award winning contemporary menu features fresh local fish, homemade pastas and the best Bermuda produce - all at pleasantly modest prices. Experience a comfortable casual atmosphere with professional service whilst you enjoy our signature dishes. Combine with our extensive Wine Spectator award winning wine list featuring over 40 fabulous wines by the glass, and you are sure to have a meal to remember. Dine inside or on our al fresco harbour
food & drink
view terrace - either way you are sure to love the experience of superb service and a masterful menu in an elegant setting. 87 Front Street, Hamilton, Bermuda. Tel: 295 5373. Lunch and Dinner $$-$$$
Portofino For over 35 years we’ve been Bermuda’s favorite Italian restaurant. From a quick, delicious pizza, to homemade pastas and exotic dishes, all will delight in our bustling Italian atmosphere. Prices are right and we offer al fresco dining. Winner of the ‘City of Hamilton Food Festival 2012’ — People’s Choice Award for Best Restaurant. Trip Adviser Certificate of Excellence for 2012. Lunch is served weekdays 11:30am to 2pm. Dinner is served 7 days a week 6pm to 11pm. Reservations recommended. Our take-out service is available Monday through Friday from 11am to 10pm, and Saturday and Sunday from 4pm to 10pm. Bermudiana Road, just off Front Street, Hamilton. Tel: 292-2375. Takeout: 296-0606. Lunch $, Dinner $$
bermuda.com guide 39
BERMUDA RENDEZVOUS ACTIVITIES lots to see and do
November 1, 2013 until March 31, 2014 While visiting Bermuda, experience our wonderful culture through our daily Rendezvous Activities. Most activities listed are FREE, unless otherwise indicated. See the Rendezvous Activities brochure for full details of all activities, and prices where applicable.
MON DAY VISITOR GOLF TOURNAMENT * Port Royal Golf Course, Southampton CITY OF HAMILTON GUIDED WALKING TOUR 10:00 a.m. SESSIONS HOUSE TOUR City of Hamilton 11:00 a.m. SKIRLING CEREMONY Fort Hamilton, City of Hamilton 12 noon BERMUDA COOKERY DEMONSTRATION Fort Hamilton, City of Hamilton 1:00 – 2:30 p.m.
T U E SDAY BOTANICAL GARDENS TOUR Paget 10:30 a.m. Berry Hill entrance 12 noon Visit ‘Camden’
HISTORICAL HOUSE TOURS * ‘Verdmont’ 10:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. ‘The Globe Hotel’ 10:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. ‘Tucker House’ 11:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. HISTORICAL RE-ENACTMENT & TOUR IN THE UNESCO TOWN OF ST. GEORGE 10:30 a.m. Guided tour 11:45 a.m. Mayor greets visitors 12 noon Ducking of the ‘town gossip’ BOTANICAL GARDENS TOUR Paget 10:30 a.m. Berry Hill entrance
T H U R SDAY VISITOR GOLF TOURNAMENT * Port Royal Golf Course, Southampton SOMERSET BOAT TOUR & SLIDE SHOW Mangrove Bay, Somerset 10:00 a.m.
SOUTH SHORE ECO WALKING TOUR Warwick Long Bay, South Road, Warwick 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 noon
BERMUDA NATIONAL GALLERY TOURS City Hall & Arts Centre, City of Hamilton 10:30 a.m.
BERMUDA GOMBEY REVUE City Hall & Arts Centre, City of Hamilton 4:00 p.m. On the lawn in front of City Hall
CHIT CHAT* Dolphin Quest, Royal Naval Dockyard 12:00 noon
W E DN E SDAY
HANDS ON CRAFT Bermuda Craft Market, Royal Naval Dockyard 1:00 – 4:00 p.m.
VISITOR GOLF TOURNAMENT * Ocean View Golf Course, Devonshire FORT ST. CATHERINE* Coot Pond Road, St. George’s 9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. ~ Reduced admission on Wednesdays THE BERMUDA INSTITUTE OF OCEAN SCIENCES TOUR Ferry Road, St. George’s 10:00 a.m.
DISCOVERING THE ROYAL NAVAL DOCKYARD 2:00 – 3:15 p.m. Meet in front of Cooperage 3:20 – 4:00 p.m. Meet in Victualling Yard
F R I DAY HISTORICAL HOUSE TOUR * ‘Verdmont’, Smith’s 10:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. BOTANICAL GARDENS TOUR Paget 10:30 a.m. Berry Hill entrance 12 noon Visit ‘Camden’
TOM MOORE’S JUNGLE ECO TOUR Blue Hole Hill Park, Hamilton Parish 2:00 – 3:30 p.m.
DA I LY
SAT U R DAY
BERMUDA NATIONAL GALLERY City Hall & Arts Centre, City of Hamilton
THE CITY MARKET Bulls Head Car Park, City of Hamilton 8:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon HISTORICAL HOUSE TOURS * ‘The Globe Hotel’ 10:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. ‘Tucker House’ 11:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. HISTORICAL RE-ENACTMENT & TOUR IN THE UNESCO TOWN OF ST. GEORGE 10:30 a.m. Guided tour 11:45 a.m. Mayor greets visitors 12 noon Ducking of the ‘town gossip’ DOLPHIN SHOW* Dolphin Quest, Royal Naval Dockyard 1:00 p.m.
SU N DAY ROYAL NAVAL DOCKYARD TOUR 10:30 – 11:30 a.m. Meet at the Anchor Fountain DOLPHIN DEMONSTRATION* Dolphin Quest, Royal Naval Dockyard 1:00 p.m. HANDS ON CRAFT Bermuda Craft Market, Royal Naval Dockyard 1:00 – 4:00 p.m. TASTE OF BERMUDA CALYPSO SUNDAYS Bermuda Craft Market, Royal Naval Dockyard 1:30 – 3:30 p.m. A WALK ON THE RAILWAY TRAIL TO THE HERBAL GARDENS Paget 2:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
BERMUDA AQUARIUM, MUSEUM & ZOO* North Shore Road, Hamilton Parish
DOCKYARD GLASSWORKS & THE BERMUDA RUM CAKE COMPANY Royal Naval Dockyard FORT ST. CATHERINE & MUSEUM* Coot Pond Road, St. George’s See Wednesday for reduced admission day MASTERWORKS MUSEUM OF BERMUDA ART Botanical Gardens, Paget
TALKING ABOUT BERMUDA A free lecture series featuring a variety of topics, each one held in a cultural venue and on weekdays during November 1, 2013 March 31, 2014. All lectures are held from 11:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Full schedule included in the Bermuda Rendezvous Activities brochure. RESOURCES FOR ENQUIRIES: • Dept of Community & Cultural Affairs, 292-1681 • Department of Tourism, 292-0023 • www.GoToBermuda.com NOTE: Some activities are weather dependent and may not be available on public holidays. Refer to the brochure for full details. * Indicates a fee or admission is required. Information correct at press time, October 2013 and is subject to change without notice.
what’s on
PHOTO BY KAGEAKI SMITH
Hundreds of people will turn out for the Santa Parade on Sunday, December 1.
Christmas in paradise events n Santa Parade December 1 Christmas floats, majorettes, music and entertainment, plus Santa Claus himself, take to the streets of Hamilton. 5pm. Free. Tel. 292-3163.
n Olde Towne Market Dec 1, 8, 15 and 22 Street market featuring Bermudian arts and crafts, toys, clothing, jewellery, gifts, Bermuda cedar and baked goods. Water Street, St George’s. 2-6pm. Free. Tel. 296-6185.
n Harness racing Dec 1, 7, 16, 26, 29 Watch a Bermudian tradition at the Driving Horse & Pony Club race at the National Equestrian Centre, Vesey Street, Devonshire. 6pm. Admission $8 adults, $6 seniors, and children under-12 free. Tel. 536-3301 or 234-0485. www.bef.bm
n Chewstick Neo-Griot Lounge Dec 1, 8, 15, 22 Open-mic jam session with Bermuda’s best musical and spoken word talent. 8pm-1am. Free before 9pm, $10 after. Chewstick Neo-Griot Lounge & Café, corner of Court
Compiled by Amanda Dale. Listings are subject to change. For the latest, contact the numbers provided/websites or visit www.bermuda.com. To submit a listing, e-mail adale@bermudasun.bm or call 278-1854.
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what’s on
Best view of Boat Parade is Front Street and Elliott Streets, Hamilton. Tel. 2922439. http://chewstick.org
n Wine tasting Dec 5 ‘Holiday Decadence’ celebrates 60 years of the Bermuda Society of Arts. Champagne, wines and handmade chocolates. 5:30pm. Members $70, non-members $75. BSoA gallery, City Hall, Hamilton. Tel. 2923824.
n Christmas market Dec 5, 12, 19 Local arts and crafts, music, entertainment and food in the Jack King Building, Botanical Gardens, Paget. 6-9pm. Free. Tel. 236-5902.
n Pantomime Dec 5-14 The Bermuda Musical and Dramatic Society presents Sleeping Beauty at the Daylesford Theatre. 6:30pm and 8:30pm. December 7, 8, and 14 have matinees at
2pm and 4pm, but no 8:30pm performance. Tickets $40 from www.bmds.bm or www.express.bm
n Christmas Walkabout Dec 6 Annual Bermuda National Trust Christmas Walkabout through the historic streets and homes of St George’s. Music and entertainment, festive food and drinks. Regimental Musical Display in King’s Square at 8:30pm. 6:30-8:30pm. Free. See www. bnt.bm
n City Market Dec 7, 14, 21, 28 Fresh produce, flowers, baked goods, crafts and handmade gifts. 8am-1pm. Free. Pier Six terminal, Front Street, Hamilton. Tel. 292-1234.
n Christmas Boat Parade Dec 7 Boats decorated with colourful Christmas
GOMBEYS
BERMUDA 35
BERMUDA 125
GOMBEYS
GOMBEYS
The Bermuda Post Office is pleased to offer “Bermuda’s Folklife Part I Arts of Celebration: Gombeys”, a series of four stamps. This commemorative features Bermuda’s iconic gombey troupes. These stamps will be released on 18 July 2013. First Day Cover $7.00, cost per set $4.75. Available at the Bermuda Philatelic Bureau.
Gombeys
GOVER NMENT OF BER MUDA Minis tr y of Finance Bermuda Post Office
BERMUDA 150
BERMUDA 165
For more information please e-mail philatelic@gov.bm bermuda.com guide 43
what’s on
Our Parliament mirrors the UK system
lights parade around Hamilton Harbour. 6:30pm. Free. Tel. 295-0530. www.bermudaboatparade.bm
n Goodwill Golf Tournament Dec 9-13 The oldest Pro-Am tournament in the world. Teams from the US, Canada and the UK compete in a 72-hole Stroke Play contest. • Port Royal Golf Course • Riddell’s Bay Golf & Country Club • Mid Ocean Club/Tucker’s Point Club. Spectators free. For information tel. 2959972 or e-mail goodwill@bermudagolf. org. www.bermudagoodwill.bm
Gallery are invited to a Winter Masquerade Ball. 5:30-7pm. Student members free, non-members $10. Bermuda National Gallery, City Hall, Hamilton. Tel. 295-9428.
n Ballet Dec 13-14 In Motion School of Dance presents The Nutcracker Holiday Spectacular. 7pm plus matinee at 2pm, December 14. Ruth Seaton James Centre, CedarBridge Academy, Devonshire. Tickets $40 from www.ptix.bm
n Christmas Day
Dec 13 Christmas concert at Queen Elizabeth Park (Par-la-Ville), Hamilton. 5:30-6:30pm. Free. Tel. 292-1681.
Dec 25 Join islanders in Santa hats drinking champagne on Elbow Beach. See the Bermuda Sun for information on Christmas services and sporting activities on Boxing Day.
n Masquerade ball
n New Year’s Eve
Dec 13 Young members of the Bermuda National
Dec 31 Check the Bermuda Sun’s Calendar list-
n North Village Band Concert
PHOTO BY TONY MCWILLIAM
Champagne on the beach has become a Christmas Day tradition for many expatriates.
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what’s on
Our first film festival was in 1997 ings for NYE parties and events across the island.
n Golf Mondays and Thursdays Bi-weekly visitors’ golf tournament at Port Royal Golf Course, Southampton. $110 per person including cart (18 holes). Prizes. 8:30am-12noon. Book at 234-0974. Wednesdays (Closed Christmas Day) Ocean View Golf Course, Devonshire, hosts a weekly tournament with prizes. $50 for 18 holes, including cart. Book at 295-9093.
n Afternoon High Tea Wednesdays and Saturdays Sweet P hosts afternoon tea featuring local produce at The Bermuda Perfumery, Stewart Hall, 5 Queen Street, St George’s. 1-5pm, $28. For reservations call 7052390 or e-mail sweetpbermuda@hotmail. com
tours
PHOTO BY KAGEAKI SMITH
n Walking Club of Bermuda
All aglow: Albuoy’s Point in Hamilton.
Sundays Dec 1: Gibb’s Hill lighthouse, Southampton (reverse route) Dec 8: A-1 grocery store, Valley Road, Paget (across from St Paul’s Church) Dec 15: Admiralty House, Pembroke Dec 22: Bridge Club, Paget Close, Pomander Road, Paget Dec 29: John Smith’s Bay, Smith’s Parish All walks free, average distance six miles. Meet at 7am. Tel. 737-0437 or see www.walk.free.bm
n St Peter’s Church tours
n St George’s Wednesdays and Saturdays Learn key moments in the island’s history on this walking tour. Meet at the Town Hall, King’s Square, 10:30am. Free.
n St George’s Historical Re-enactments Wednesdays and Saturdays 12noon in King’s Square. Free.
Mondays to Saturdays Built from Bermuda Cedar in 1612, St Peter’s Church is the oldest Anglican church in continuous use outside Britain. The graveyard also reveals the impact of slavery. 10am-4pm, free. Sunday Worship 11:15am. St Peter’s Church, York Street, St George’s.
n Fort St Catherine Mondays to Fridays Stone artillery fort and museum, at St Catherine’s Beach, St George’s. The early settlers built the first wooden fort here in 1612 and it was renovated and in use until the late 19th century. 10am-4pm. Admission $7, seniors $5 and children $3. Tel. 297-1920.
n Carter House Wednesdays and Saturdays 17th century house detailing the history
bermuda.com guide 45
what’s on
Spend an afternoon on the beach
of the early settlers and St David’s Island. Southside Road, St David’s. 10am-4pm. Free, donations welcome. Call first. Tel. 293-5960.
n National Museum of Bermuda Open daily 10am-4pm, last admission 3pm. Adults $10, seniors $8, children under-13 free. Royal Naval Dockyard. Tel. 2341418, e-mail marmuse@logic.bm. www. bmm.bm
n Bermuda Historical Society Museum Mondays to Fridays 400 years of Bermuda history at the Library building on Queen Street, Hamilton, 10am-1pm. Free. Tel. 295-2487
n Verdmont Museum Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays Antiques including cedar furniture and portraits. Adults $5, children $2, open 10am-4pm. Verdmont Lane, Smith’s. Tel. 236-7369. www.bnt.bm
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n Tucker House Museum Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays 18th century merchant’s house, St George’s. Adults $5, children $2. Open 11am-3pm. St. George’s. Tel. 297-0545. www.bnt.bm
n Bermuda National Trust Museum at Globe Hotel Mondays to Saturdays Bermuda’s role in the American Civil War. Adults $5, children $2. Open 10am-4pm. St. George’s. Tel. 297-1423. www.bnt.bm
n Camden House Fridays The official residence of the Premier in the Botanical Gardens, Paget. 12-2pm. Free. Tel. 236-5902.
n Bermuda National Gallery Fine Arts Tour Thursdays Take a guided tour of the national art
what’s on
that adjoins Fort St Catherine collection. 10:30-11:30am. Free. At City Hall, Hamilton. Tel. 295-9428. www.bng.bm
n Bermuda Underwater Exploration Institute Tuesdays This 2pm guided tour takes you through the wonders of the ocean. Adults $12.50, seniors $10, children aged 6-17 $6.50, children under-five go free. For more information go to www.buei.org
n Bermuda Institute of Ocean Sciences Tour Wednesdays Hour-long tour of this marine research centre, 10am. Free. Biological Lane, Ferry Reach, St. George’s. Tel. 297-1880. E-mail info@bios.edu. www.bios.edu
arts n Bermuda National Gallery Artwork by renowned local and international artists. Free. Monday to Friday, 10am-4pm, and Saturday, 10am-2pm. City Hall, Church Street, Hamilton. Tel. 295-9428. ww.bng.bm
n Bermuda Society of Arts
PHOTO BY WWW.MOONGATEPRODUCTIONS.COM
A Christmas tree graces Hamilton’s City Hall.
Dec 1-11: Scott Stallard/Alex Allerdyce/ Charles Knights/Colour Explosion 3 by Karl Sternath December 13-31: Members’ Winter Show/ Rebecca Little/Josianne Tailhardat/Nahed Eid Free. Monday to Friday, 10am-4pm, and Saturday, 10am-2pm. City Hall, Church Street, Hamilton. Tel. 292-3824. www.bsoa.bm
Homer’s Cafe. December 13-24: Elliott Wilson — Artist in Residence. Masterworks is open Monday to Saturday, 10am-4pm, and Sunday 11am4:30pm, $5 admission, free for members and children under-12. Wheelchair accessible, with Homer’s Café for refreshments. Botanical Gardens, Paget. Tel. 299-4000. www.bermudamasterworks. com
n Masterworks Museum of Bermuda Art
n Bermuda Arts Centre at Dockyard
Dec 1-31: Art in Bermuda:Bermuda Art — the 6th Annual Charman Prize Exhibition 2013. December 1-24: Morning Walks, St George’s — photos by Gill Outerbridge,
Dec 1-31: Merry Christmas! Juried ‘Small Works Show’ with art for purchase. Daily, 10am-5pm. Free. Maritime Lane, Royal Naval Dockyard. Tel. 234-2809. www.artbermuda.bm
bermuda.com guide 47
historic treasures
One of the exquisite coins that has been fashioned into a keepsake by Walker Christopher Goldsmiths.
Every handcrafted piece bears the weight of history From the early sixteenthcentury, Spanish ships returning from their colonies in Central and South America embarked on the hazardous task of shipping their precious cargo from the New World back to the Old. They used Bermuda as a landmark, but some ended up stricken on our outer reefs. Many ships carried silver and gold, mined and minted into coinage in Mexico, Bolivia and Peru and 32 bermuda.com guide
Photos by Kageaki Smith
Master Jeweller Tim Palmer crafts coins into unique keepsakes.
Juan Bermudez found Bermuda in 1505 historic treasures destined for the Spanish treasuries of Cadiz and Seville. Surviving crewmen were sometimes able to salvage their cargo but storms and hurricanes took their toll on many ‘treasure ships’ well before they caught sight of Bermuda. Salvaging from wrecks was tough. But Richard Norwood, hired as a diver in a futile search for Bermuda pearls, invented the Bermuda Tub in 1612. This primitive diving bell, made from a weighted wine cask, could be lowered over a wreck site and enabled a diver to stay underwater for 45 minutes. In 1641, it was used to recover silver from The Concepción, which came to grief north of Hispaniola (Dominican Republic), carrying tons of silver and gold. In 1715, the Spanish Plate Fleet sank in a hurricane off Florida. While the Spanish were salvaging, their base camp was raided by privateer Henry Jennings, who fled with 120,000 pieces of eight. He retired to Bermuda to live the life of a gentleman. Sea salvaged coins still have strong appeal; the law forbids you from keeping anything found at a wreck but you can find pieces of eight and gold doubloons for sale on Hamilton’s Front Street. Master Jeweller Tim Palmer of Walker Christopher Goldsmiths sets gold and silver treasure coins into handcrafted jewellery. While silver coins or “cobs” tarnish and become encrusted in coral (they are often found in clusters), gold coins remain the same as the day they went to the bottom of the ocean. Owning a significant old coin puts you in touch with the past, as coins bear the weight of history. n bermuda.com guide 33
history
Photo by Kageaki Smith
Discover how our ancestors lived at the St George’s Historical Society Museum, Printery & Garden, located at the corner of Featherbed Alley and Duke of Kent Street, St George’s.
Step back in time By Lance Furbert | For an island of just 21 square miles, we pack in a lot of history. Bermuda’s superb historic sites and museums help tell our unique story but also help unravel the extraordinary saga of the development of English settlements in the New World. Here are some of our best historic sites. n National Museum of Bermuda The largest collection of artifacts and weapons in Bermuda. See slave artifacts, jewellery, silver coins, pottery, boats and large muzzle loading guns. Dockyard. Open daily 9:30am–5pm (last admission 4pm). Tel: 234-1418
n National Trust Museum The Globe Hotel on the northwest corner of King’s Square in St. George’s was built in 1700 by Governor Samuel Day. It houses the Bermuda National Trust Museum, which features the exhibit ‘Rogues & Runners —
34 bermuda.com guide
Bermuda and the American Civil War’. For opening times, tel: 236-6483
n Verdmont A delightful Georgian style historic home at the top of Collector’s Hill, Smith’s Parish. A superb collection of antique Bermuda cedar and mahogany furniture. For opening times, tel: 236-6483
n Bermuda Historical Society Museum Located in Par-la-Ville Park, Hamilton, it was the home of Bermuda’s famous
history
Bermuda is the oldest British colony. postmaster William Bennett Perot. Exhibits include model of ships plus early Bermudian coins and silver. For opening times, tel: 295-2487
presentation on our forts. Open Mon- Fri, 10am-4pm, tel: 297-1920
n Tucker House
The oldest Anglican Church site in continuous use outside of the British Isles. The first church on the site was built by Governor Richard Moore in 1612. Some headstones in the churchyard date back more than 300 years. Duke of York Street, St. George’s. Open Mon-Sat, 10am-4pm, Sunday service 11.15am, tel: 297-2459
Tucker House, on Water Street, St. George’s, was the home of Henry Tucker, President of the Governor’s Council. Artifacts and portraits of the famous Tucker family include Thomas Tudor Tucker, the longest serving treasurer of the U.S.. Joseph Hayne Rainey, the first African American elected member of the U.S. House of Representatives, once ran a barber’s shop here. For opening times, tel: 236-6483
n St. Peter’s Church, Their Majesties Chappell
n St. George’s Historical Society Museum, Printery & Garden
Located in Mitchell House, which dates from 1730 and is filled with original cedar furnishings, artwork and a working replica Overlooks Gate’s Bay, St. George’s, the of a Gutenberg printing press. The kitchen landing place of the Sea Venture castaways garden and above ground water tank demin 1609. Features dioramas that highlight onstrate features of 18th Century Bermuda our early history, a restored magazine, architecture. Open weapons of all types (from pistols to large Bermuda.com 1/2 ad:Layout 2 3/1/10 10:43 AM10am-4pm, Page 1 Mon-Thurs and Saturday. Tel. 297 0423. muzzle loading guns), and an audiovisual
n Fort St. Catherine
National Treasure Bermuda Maritime Museum is now the NATIONAL MUSEUM OF BERMUDA, home to 500 years of Island culture and history. Explore exciting exhibits in our historic military buildings— and watch for many more as we grow!
Royal Naval Dockyard, Sandys Tel. 441-234-1418 • www.bmm.bm Open every day 9:30am–5pm (last admission 4pm)
NATIONALMUSEUM BERMUDA OF
Incorporating BERMUDA MARITIME MUSEUM
bermuda.com guide 35
for children
Photo by Terri Mello
Don’t worry, he won’t bite: a toddler and a cow get acquainted at the border of Spittal Pond Nature Reserve in Smith’s Parish.
Our child-friendly island By TERRI MELLO | Sure, Bermuda is great for honeymooners and couples. Pink-sand beaches and turquoise water provide the perfect backdrop for a romantic getaway for two. And then there are the rest of us, the ones with whiny toddlers or easilybored grade-schoolers in tow. What can Bermuda offer us? The answer? Lots. Here are a few mom-tested suggestions. 36 bermuda.com guide
Our main beaches have lifeguards
for children
n Spittal Pond Nature Reserve Located on a spectacular stretch of shoreline in Smith’s Parish and kids love wandering along the winding trails, over the rocks and through the woods. You’ll see cows too, grazing at the entrance. Great picnic spot.
Photo by www.moongateproductions.com
Why not revive a fad and give your hula hoop a twirl on the beach?
n Bermuda Aquarium, Museum & Zoo (BAMZ) A must, whatever your age. Gaze at sharks and barracuda in the dramatic North Rock Tank, get close to giant tortoises and dip into the touch pool. Leave time for the playground before you go (it’s just past the alligator and yes, it’s real!) Tel: 293-2727
n Dockyard Take the fast ferry from Hamilton. At Snorkel Park, kids can swim, splash in the fountains or use the playground. Dolphin Quest (tel: 234-4464) is a short walk away.
n Botanical Gardens An ideal spot to burn energy, five minutes from Hamilton. Explore the gardens and greenhouses, palm groves and grassy hills. Kick a football, throw a Frisbee, bring a picnic.
bermuda.com guide 37
for children
Give the children a sweet treat at
n Beaches
n Playgrounds
Next to famous Horseshoe Bay Beach in Southampton is what’s locally known as Baby Beach. Turn right as you walk onto Horseshoe and you’ll find this beautiful cove, shallow and calm and perfect for little ones. Another kid-friendly beach is Tobacco Bay in the east end. Perfect for snorkelling and swimming with shallow water and protective rocks. Bathrooms and refreshments available.
No matter where you are, there’s a playground nearby. A few favourites include Shelly Bay (there’s also a kid-friendly beach here), Warwick Long Bay, Clearwater Beach (St. David’s) and Parson’s Road (Pembroke).
n Bermuda Underwater Exploration Institute (BUEI) Explore the ocean without getting wet! Stop in the seashell room and then take a simulated submarine dive to the lower level. Bring along a handful of American quarters for the little merry-go-round on the lower level. Tel: 292-7219
n Palm Grove Gardens This free attraction near Ariel Sands Resort in Devonshire is rarely busy and offers beautiful scenery as well as an aviary with parrots.
n Tiny Tots at Masterworks The Masterworks Museum of Bermuda Art (in the Botanical Gardens) offers art classes for tots on Wednesday from 9.45-10.30am & 10.45-11.30am. Bring along your baby, toddler or preschooler for some art fun, story
Gorgeous John Smith’s Bay in Smith’s Parish is big enough to give
38 bermuda.com guide
for children
Bailey’s Bay Ice Cream Parlour time and games. Members $7 / non-members $10. No sign up necessary, just drop in. Tel. 299-4000 for more details.
n At night… We have three movie theatres and they often play animated features and other child-friendly movies. The Speciality Cinema and Grill (tel: 292-2135) and Liberty Theatre (292-7296) are in the city of Hamilton, Neptune Cinema (also 292-7296) is in Dockyard and Southside Cinema (297-2821) is in St. David’s. See the Bermuda Sun newspaper for movie listings. If food’s the priority, kid-friendly eateries include LaTrattoria, Rosa’s Cantina (both on the city) and The Speciality Inn, 10 minutes outside the city in Smith’s Parish. n
Photo by Terri Mello
Right next to famous Horseshoe Bay Beach is ‘baby beach’ — a tiny cove ideal for toddlers who enjoy a paddle.
Photo by www.moongateproductions.com
your kids plenty of space but small enough to easily keep an eye on them.
bermuda.com guide 39
sports & activities
Photo supplied
Short and spectacular: the Fairmont Southampton Resort boasts 18, par-3 holes.
Lots to do for active visitors If you’re the sporty type, you’ll find plenty to do on the island. Here’s a guide to what’s out there. See Bermuda.com for detailed listings. n Golf Bermuda has more golf courses per square mile than any other country in the world. Some clubs are private, but many hotels can arrange tee times for their guests. From an enticing par-3 executive course to a championship-level course given the seal of approval by the PGA of America, Bermuda is a golfer’s paradise. All our courses are blessed with beautiful scenery. Be sure to toss a camera in your golf bag. If you want to get the kids involved, there is a mini golf course in Southampton for young families (tel. 238-8800) and a brand new mini golf course at Dockyard (see next page). Our golf courses: Belmont Hills, Warwick, tel. 236-6400 Fairmont Southampton, tel. 239-6952 Mid-Ocean, Hamilton Parish, tel. 293-0330
40 bermuda.com guide
Ocean View (9 holes), Devonshire, tel. 295-9092 Port Royal, Southampton, tel. 234-0974 Riddell’s Bay, Warwick, tel. 238-1060 Rosewood Tucker’s Point, Hamilton Parish, tel. 298-6970
n Tennis Most courts are attached to hotels. Another option is the government-run tennis stadium, which has clay and hard courts. It’s on Marsh Folly Road, a 10-minute walk from Hamilton centre. Open 8am-10pm Mon-Fri, 8am-7pm Sat-Sun. Courts are $10 an hour (double it under floodlights). Tel: 292-0105.
n Deep sea fishing With the deep ocean just offshore, Bermuda offers world class fishing. Lots of pros are ready to take you out — among them, Baxter’s Reef Fishing, tel: 234-2963.
sports
Babe Ruth golfed in Bermuda n Water sports You can rent everything from kayaks, Boston whalers and windsurfers to Hobie Cats and Jet Skis. Bermuda is the shipwreck capital of the Atlantic and a mecca for SCUBA divers. See Bermuda.com for full listings See pages 43 & 44 for snorkelling and pages 46 & 47 for shipwrecks.
n Cycling Our coastal roads and the route of the old railway trail are great for bikers. You can hire bicycles at Smatt’s Cycle Livery, tel: 295-1180 and Oleander Cycles tel. 2950919. Will cost you roughly $50 a day.
n Bowling For a rainy day or a family evening out, have fun at Warwick Lanes in Warwick, tel: 236-5290.
Hartley’s Reef Safari Having some advantages over scuba diving and many over snorkeling, helmet diving is the safest and easiest way to explore the marine environment. The undersea walk was started by Bronson Hartley in the 1930s. Off Somerset, his son Gregory continues the tradition of training and taming fish in the wild. Hold Leroy the snapper or Barack the grouper and see Diana the angelfish swim through a hoop. The helmet works like a glass turned upside down. Your head stays dry, and you can safely wear glasses or contact lenses. Just breathe, walk and have fun. Tel: 234-2861. www.hartleybermuda.com. hartley@logic.bm
Mini golf a big new attraction By Don Burgess | It’s nice to claim to be the best in the world, but not everyone can back it up. Hogan Lindgren designed a mini golf course in Denmark which drew international acclaim. But he says the one he designed right here on the island — Bermuda Fun Golf — is even better. “The world championship of mini golf was played there in Denmark,” he told us, “and they voted it the best mini golf course in the world — but this is best. Bermuda can be proud to say it has the best mini golf course in the world.” Owner John Burcher said opening up a fun golf course has been a dream of his for five years. The course features 18 holes; six are based on Mr Burcher’s favourite holes in Bermuda, six on famous holes in the US and the final six on holes in Scotland.
Photo by Kageaki Smith
Internationally renowned designer Hogan Lindgren said Bermuda Fun Golf is probably the best mini golf course in the world.
Mr Lindgren said each hole is an homage to the original hole rather than an exact miniature: “But if you play the hole, you can recognize it from the original,” he says. Bermuda Fun Golf: www.fungolf.bm. E-mail: info@fungolf.bm. Tel: 400-PUTT bermuda.com guide 41
beaches
Photo by www.moongateproductions.com
Small but idyllic: John Smith’s Bay, in Smith’s Parish, is a perfect family beach.
Our glorious Top Ten Breathtaking beaches are Bermuda’s most enduring attraction, from aquamarine pools and sandy bays to the famous pink sand of the south shore. Pack your sunscreen, hats, towels and and use our guide to hit one or more of the island’s top ten beaches. 10 John Smith’s Bay: Off the beaten track in Smith’s parish, this popular locals’ beach is a little less crowded than the south shore destinations but still boasts soft sand and great swimming and snorkelling. The Harrington Hundreds grocery store is just a few minutes away by moped if you want to make your own picnic. L, B 9 Cooper’s Island Nature Reserve: A tiny peninsula on the eastern edge of the island, only recently opened to the
public, Cooper’s Island is actually a series of small coves connected by almost a mile of walking trails. The larger but less picturesque (it’s all relative) Clearwater Beach is right next door. B 8 West Whale Bay: Named for the humpback whales that migrate past Bermuda in April and May each year, this is as good a place for whale watching as anywhere on the island. The grassy cliff-top that borders this Southampton beach is a great spot for a picnic.
KEY: Bathrooms - B Rentals - R Café - C Lifeguard - L 42 bermuda.com guide
beaches
Sand glimmers pink at twilight 7 Snorkel Park: A great beach for families, out west in vibrant Dockyard. There are inflatables for the kids to rent, great snorkelling for dad and beach loungers for mum. L, B, C, R 6 Warwick Long Bay: To truly grasp the beauty of Bermuda’s south shore, walk the length of Warwick Long Bay and clamber across the rocks, or take a detour over the sand dunes to Jobson’s Cove and Chaplin Bay. On a quiet day you will see more Longtails than fellow tourists. B, R (seasonal) 5 Shelly Bay: A parents’ dream beach, Shelly Bay boasts warm, shallow water, a soft sandy bottom and backs on to a playground and sports field. A favourite for kids and novice swimmers — and close to the bus stop. C, B 4 Church Bay: Swim with shoals of brightly coloured parrot fish among the pristine coral reef that pierces the water just yards from shore at this small south shore bay, widely revered as Bermuda’s
best beach for snorkellers. R, B 3 Elbow Beach: A half-mile of white sand boasting stunning views of the Atlantic, Elbow Beach, in Paget, is a playground for joggers, kiteboarders, beach volleyball players and SCUBA divers. There’s even a shipwreck within swimming distance of shore. You can join in the fun or just hire a deckchair and sit back and watch. C, B, R 2 Tobacco Bay: Famous for its stunning volcanic rock formations — natural sculptures that emerge from the glassy water — this picturesque, sheltered cove is also a snorkellers’ dream. A short walk from the old town of St. George. C, B, R 1 Horseshoe Bay: A crescent of soft, pink sand, lapped by clear blue water, fringed by sand dunes and bordered by sandstone cliffs, garnished with swaying palms — Horseshoe, in Southampton Parish, is the a must for every Bermuda visitor. C, B, R, L n
Photo by www.moongateproductions.com
Ranked No.6, Warwick Long Bay on the south shore is stunningly beautiful.
bermuda.com guide 43
snorkel
File photo
Snorkellers don’t have to go deep to enjoy our beautiful coral reefs.
Grab some fins! By Amanda Dale | Bermuda is a chain of more than 150 islands, islets and rocks, the coralline limestone peaks of an ancient volcano. Here lie some of the most pristine coral reefs in the world, setting the stage for world class snorkelling. The beautiful but shallow reefs are responsible for more than 400 shipwrecks, spanning five centuries. You can expect to swim in waters of 24-30 degrees Celsius with a visibility of 25 metres in the summer months (May to October). You will find superb snorkelling all the way around this 21 square mile island, but here are some of the best spots.
n Church Bay, Southampton It can be a little tricky wading in across the rocks, so wait until you are almost waist-
44 bermuda.com guide
deep in the water before you put your fins on. You will be rewarded by the variety of fish in and around the boiler reefs.
n Pompano Beach Club, Southampton Most South Shore beaches offer excellent snorkelling just a short hop from the water’s edge. But if you are feeling adventurous, hire a kayak at Pompano Beach Club and paddle out to the outer raft across the sandbar. Tie up and swim out to the adjacent reef to experience some beautiful snorkelling.
n Tobacco Bay, St George’s This sheltered, sandy bay is ideal for families. Its rocky outcrops and ancient coral formations are buzzing with marine life.
n Snorkel Park, Royal Naval Dockyard The park has a sheltered bay and is ideal for families. Under the walls of the fort you will find hard and soft corals, juvenile fish and maritime relics. There are musket balls
You might see a spotted eagle ray dating to the nineteenth century and cast iron cannons, dating from 1550 to 1800.
n The Constellation Snorkelling and dive operators can take you to Western Blue Cut to see two of our most famous shipwrecks. The Constellation was the inspiration for Peter Benchley’s novel The Deep, which was made into a film in 1977. This 192 ft four-masted schooner (built in 1918) served as a cargo vessel in World War II and was en route from New York to Venezuela in 1943 when she was swept onto the reefs and sank, in ten metres of water. Her cargo included bags of cement, cases of Scotch whisky and thousands of drug ampoules, many containing opium and morphine. The ampoules have all been removed but you can still see other relics such as china cups, ceramic tiles and bottles.
n The Montana Just 15 metres from the Constellation lies the Montana, built to run the Union blockade
snorkel
of the Confederate states in the US Civil war. The 236ft paddle wheel steamer sank in 1863 and now sits in three pieces with her bow relatively intact and her paddle wheels and forward boiler still discernable.
n The Vixen HMS Vixen was a Royal Navy gunboat, scuttled in 1896 to block a narrow channel off Daniels’s Head, Somerset, to prevent possible torpedo attacks. She sits in eight metres of water with a protruding bow and is home to many different species of fish. This popular site is accessible only by boat. Fed by the waters of the Gulf Stream, Bermuda has many of the fish species found in the western Atlantic and Caribbean, including parrotfish (stoplight, blue and midnight varieties), yellowtail snapper, coneys, bluehead and creole wrasse, rock beauties, the puddingwife, squirrelfish, foureye butterflyfish, damselfish, sergeant majors, trumpetfish and spiny lobster. If you’re lucky, you’ll spot a turtle. n
bermuda.com guide 45
shipwrecks
Gibb’s Hill Lighthouse was only the 37
33
34 39
35
40
41
36
38
42
Atlantic Ocean
43 44 1
45
2
Royal Naval Dockyard
Somerset Long Bay Mangrove
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t in Po lty ish an rk mira p Spanish S Pa Ad se u Point Hoark P
Bay ’
4
GREAT SOUND
48
Hawkins Island
50
h
ac Be
25. Beaumaris Castle 26. Collector 27. Iristo 28. Elda 29. Taunton 30. Eagle 31. Manilla Wreck 32. Cristobal Colon 33. Curlew
10
y Ba
ow
Both the old and more recent wrecks, scattered throughout the 200-squaremile reef system that surrounds the island, are protected by law against any unauthorized interference. The more popular dive sites are easily accessed from the island by boat, with an average depth of between 30 17. Katherine 18. Pelinaion 19. Zovetto or Rita Zovetto 20. Sea Venture 21. Wychwood 22. Colonel William G. Ball 23. Richard P. Buck 24. Avenger
ry
ng ay eB
46 bermuda.com guide
Elb
10. Minnie Breslauer 11. Pollockshields 12. Apollo 13. Kate 14. Grotto Bay Barges 15. Warwick 16. H.M.S. Cerberus
g
Drydock Ramona H.M.S. Vixen Minerva Hunters Galley Mary Celeste Virginia Merchant 8. King 9. Hermes
n Lo
There are some four hundred wrecks to be found off Bermuda. The earliest date from the first quarter of the 16th century when the island became a landmark for Spanish ships sailing back to Spain from the New World.
ck
Elbow Beach Coral Beach 7 6 Surfside Beach 9 8 Marley Beach oe
Bermuda’s shipwrecks
DEVONSHIR PARISH
Hungry Bay ap Gr
WARWICK PARISH sh rse Hoy Ba
53
Chu
ay rch B
i rw Wa y Ba
5
PAGET PARISH
Hu
Rockaway LITTLE SOUND
SOUTHAMPTON PARISH
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
CITY OF HAMILTON HAMILTON HARBOUR
Belmont
ey Whitnay B hale W t s We Bay
52
PEMBROKE PARISH
SANDYS PARISH
49
E
S
3
51
N
W
second cast iron lighthouse ever built. 31
Stories of the sea
27
28
Five must-visit Bermuda wrecks: 26
29
25 24 22 Toba cco B Achilles’ Bay ay Fort St. Catherine ST GEORGE’S 23 PARISH Martello Tower Coney Island Airport
Bailey's Bay
Crystal Caves
15
Castle Island Tucker's Town
Smiths Parish 16 Sm hn Jo ay B
18
17
13
11
and 50 feet. Listed here are some of the better known wrecks, highlighted in the map above. Note that some wrecks are known by two, three or even four different names. For further information, visit the scuba diving pages on our website: www.bermuda.com. 34. Madiana 35. Alert 36. San Pedro 37. Caraquet 38. Mark Antonio 39. Montana 40. Lartington 41. Constellation 42. Santa Ana 43. L’Herminie
n The Pelinaion (18) – This Greek steamer became a victim of WWII. The British had blacked out St. David’s lighthouse to stop the Germans from spying on Bermuda. But the ship crashed on the reef, where it still lies scattered. n The Cristobel Colon (32) — This Spanish luxury liner is the biggest of Bermuda’s wrecks at 499ft long. Its remains are spread across the North Shore reef. n The Hermes (9) – Extremely popular among divers as it is one of the few wrecks in Bermuda that remains fully intact. It lies in 80 foot of water off the South Shore. n The Constellation (41) – Jaws author Peter Benchley based his follow-up novel ‘The Deep’ around this wreck, which sank on the South Shore carrying a cargo of morphine and whisky to Venezuela during WWII.
's ith
12
Fort Popple rwate r Bea ch Turt 19 le Ba y
Clea
CASTLE HARBOUR Nonsuch Island
Shell y HARRINGTON B Beaacy SOUND h Flatts Bridge Devil's Hole
SMITH’S PARISH
Gate s’ Ba y Town of St. Georges Gates 21 Fort Smith’s 20 Island Fort Cunningham
14
HAMILTON PARISH
HIRE H
y
30
32
shipwrecks
44. Frenchman 45. Lord Amherst 46. Darlington 47. Mussel 48. San Antonio 49. Blanch King 50. Caesar 51. Airplane 52. North Carolina 53. Triton Ferry
n The H.M.S. Vixen (3) – If you don’t want to take on the challenge of scuba diving, the Vixen lies half submerged in shallow waters off Daniel’s Head, Somerset, and is easily accessible by snorkellers.
Local dive operators Triangle Diving, Grotto Bay, near the airport, Tel: 293-7319 www.trianglediving.com Fantasea Bermuda, Albuoy’s Point, Hamilton, Tel: 236-1300 info@fantasea.bm Blue Water Divers, Robinson’s Marina, Somerset, Tel: 234-1034 & Elbow Beach Hotel 232-2909 www.divebermuda.com
Don’t want to get wet? Visit the Bermuda Underwater Exploration Institute in Hamilton, the National Museum of Bermuda in Dockyard and the replica of the Deliverance in St. George’s.
bermuda.com guide 47
fishing
iStock photo
Whether you’re a novice or a veteran, our expert fisherman will maximize your chances of scoring a spectacular catch.
You can land a beauty! For novice fishermen looking for an exciting family day out or experienced anglers hoping to hook a monster marlin, the deep ocean surrounding Bermuda is a fertile hunting ground. More than 20 charter firms offer day-trippers the chance to try their luck. Two volcanic sea-mounts, Challenger and Argus Banks, several miles offshore, are the focus of attention for the small fleets of boats that idle out of pretty harbours every morning. Here, the powerful Atlantic currents push baitfish over steepling banks, attracting swarms of big-game fish. Schools of tuna and wahoo offer rich pickings for anglers of all abilities. Other fish often caught on deep sea trips include amberjack, mahi mahi, bonito, little tunny and rainbow runner. Local fishermen know their turf and will guide you to the best spots. Some will let you keep your catch, but they are not obliged to do so. Boats are equipped with rods, tackle, bait, life-saving gear and toilets. Typically you’ll supply your own refreshments. Charter prices for deep-sea outings, usually around $800 for a 48 bermuda.com guide
Many record gamefish are caught here. half-day or $1,000-$1,200 for the day (roughly $200 per person) cover gear, skipper and crew and if fish are biting, a couple of fresh tuna or wahoo steaks. Along with amateurs fishing for fun, our waters also attract big-time anglers hunting the biggest, baddest fish in the ocean – the wild blue marlin. Fierce, acrobatic and sometimes weighing in excess of 1,000lbs, marlin are the toughest fish to land — the Holy Grail for hardcore sports fishermen. Almost all marlin are released. For every fisherman that leaves with his Kodak moment there are more who travel home with nothing but memories and tall stories of the ones that got away. Either way — most leave firmly hooked on Bermuda. n For more on fishing charters visit: www.bermuda.com
fishing
Baxter’s Reef Fishing ‘Life on the ocean wave’ is guaranteed to be great fun with Capt. Baxter aboard his 32–foot Cape Islander ‘Ellen B’. Apply the catch and release method or take your catch home for supper! ‘Ellen B’ is well equipped to accommodate the whole family, complete with ample awning on hot days and complimentary sodas. The captain, with more than 20 years experience on the spectacular Barrier Reef, will display his expertise and show even the ‘amateurs’ how to catch a fish! You may enjoy a half-day or a full-day fishing. Parties of up to ten can be arranged. Capt. Baxter is always happy to oblige smaller parties by joining up with other small groups. Departing daily. Mangrove Bay public dock in Somerset. Tel: 234-2963 or 3349722. www.baxtersreeffishing.com
www.bermudareeffishing.com
bermuda.com guide 49
nature
Photo by Kageaki Smith
Explore the lush paths and wide vistas of Ferry Point Park near St George’s.
Our splendid National Parks By Lisa Greene | Our National Parks, spread over 108 sites and 1,609 acres, range from tiny, secluded gardens to long, beautiful beaches with pink sand. Some favourites of mine include the 16-mile long Railway Trail, Hog Bay Park, Spittal Pond Nature Reserve and Ferry Point Park. Many sections of the Trail provide an ‘off the beaten track’ experience for walkers, joggers or those on bicycles. A paved stretch runs for nearly two miles from Somerset Village to Somerset Bridge, with glimpses into backyards and views of bays and the Great Sound. Paths off the trail lead to Gilbert Nature Reserve, the large Heydon Trust Estate (with its exquisite little chapel), panoramic Scaur Hill Fort, and down to the water’s edge. Rock cuts from the original railway, and thick vegetation, create welcome shady areas. Less than a mile further south along 50 bermuda.com guide
the Middle Road from Somerset Bridge is the 32-acre Hog Bay Park, one of our best birding locations. Walking paths skirt agricultural fields and meander through woodlands and hillsides before arriving at a secluded shoreline with spectacular views. Spittal Pond, a 64-acre reserve, on the south shore in Smith’s Parish, is our best birding spot. Here the rugged shoreline and woodland surrounding a brackish pond support a large variety of migratory and resident species. Clamber Continued on next page
Endemic plants include Bermuda moss
nature
Discover glorious Cooper’s Island Cooper’s Island, located at the The Nature Reserve is heavily north-eastern tip of Bermuda, features wooded and supports a variety of a Nature Reserve and Wilderness Area habitats including salt-water marsh, and stands as a striking example of beach, dunes, rocky coastline, sea the restoration and protection of our grass beds, upland coastal and precious public land. uplands hillside. You might see turtles, As one of the island’s few remaining cahows, queen conch and tropicbirds open spaces, it acts (our emblematic as an important longtails). Healthy buffer zone for the sea grass beds found critically important here are critical to offshore Nature fish populations as Reserves, protecting they produce oxygen indigenous species of for fish and animals. plants, animals and There are five Photo by Kageaki Smith marine life. picturesque beaches Spectacular ocean views abound on This historical within the reserve; Cooper’s Island and biologically Turtle Bay, Long Bay, rich open space of approximately Well Bay, Fort Hill Bay and Soldiers Bay. 12 acres was handed back to the The entrance to Cooper’s Island Bermuda Government by NASA (who is gated and fenced and controlled ran a tracking station at the site) in vehicular access allows only September, 2001. wheelchairs, emergency and service The site has a colourful history. vehicles. Take a walk into this uniquely Cooper’s Island was first mentioned preserved site — it’s truly worth every when Governor Moore was faced with step. the problem of famine in 1612, caused by the accidental introduction of rats • Information supplied by the from a captured Spanish grain ship. Department of Parks. Please assist The rats destroyed all crops and stored them by adhering to Nature Reserve food. etiquette. Continued from previous page
over the rocks and look for Sally lightfoot crabs at the water’s edge or parrotfish feeding in surging water, and watch waves ‘boiling’ over reefs. Along this shore you can also find ‘Portuguese Rock’, bearing a carved inscription from visiting sailors dated 1543. Out east is Ferry Point Park, a scenic
64 acres perfect for walking, jogging or cycling, with historic features such as the Martello Tower, Ferry Island Fort and an old lime kiln. These are just a few of the many locations maintained by our Government’s Department of Parks; it’s your turn now to discover your favourite. n bermuda.com guide 51
practicalities
Photo by Kageaki Smith
Our ferries are fast and comfortable.
You’ll find these facts useful during your stay Bermuda is unique in many ways and for those who have never visited before, it’s useful to have a little guidance on what makes our island tick. Here’s a handy list of things you might want to know. Information provided here is subject to change. For the latest, visit our website: www.bermuda.com. The Bermuda Sun newspaper is also a useful resource: www.bermudasun.bm n Airlines Air Canada Reservations: Tel: 1-888-247-2262. Flight Info: Tel: 293-1777. American Airlines Tel: 1-800-433-7300. Flight Info: Tel: 293-1420 AirTran 1-800-AIR-TRAN (247-8726) or 678-254-7999.
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British Airways Reservations: Tel: 1-800-247-9297. Airport customer service: Tel: 293-1944. Continental Airlines Reservations: Tel: 1-800-231-0856. Flight Info: Tel: 293-3092. Delta Airlines Reservations: Tel: 1-800-221-1212. Flight Info: Tel: 1-800-325-1999.
Shark oil barometers forecast weather JETBLUE Tel: 1-800-JETBLUE (538-2583). Flight Info: Tel: 293-3608. U.S. Airways Reservations: Tel: 1-800-622-1015. Flight Info: Tel: 293-3073. WestJet Tel: 1-888-WESTJET (937-8538).
n Airport L.F. Wade International Airport (tel: 2932470) is located in St. George’s at the east end of the island. Allow 30 minutes from the city of Hamilton by taxi. Check-in two hours before departure.
n Banks Normally open from 9am to 4pm, Mon-Fri. There are many ATMs across the island. ATMs dispense Bermuda dollars which are tied at par with US dollars.
n Buses All bus routes serving Hamilton arrive
practicalities
and leave the Bus Terminal on Washington Street. (Refer to number 48 on the Hamilton map on page 24. See page 57 for schedule). Cash fares require exact change. Dollar bills are not accepted. Adult cash fare is $3 up to 3 zones, $4.50 for longer journeys. Tokens are $2.50 for 3 zone trips and $4 for longer trips. Transportation passes are available: one-day pass $12, two days $20, three days $28, four days $35, seven days $45 or one month, $55. For children (aged 5-16) cash fare is $2 and transportation passes range from $6 per day up to $22.50 for seven days. Children under five ride free. Tokens, tickets and passes can be used on buses or ferries and can be bought at the ferry terminal, the central bus terminal, hotels, post offices and the Dockyard Visitor Information Centre. (The fares listed here, correct at press time, are subject to change). Tel: 292-3851 • info@ptb.bm
GOVER NMENT OF B ER M U DA Minis tr y of Finance Bermuda Post Office
The Bermuda Post Office is pleased to offer “The 60th Anniversary of Queen Elizabeth II’s Coronation”, a series of six stamps. These stamps will be released on 21 February 2013. First Day Cover sets $5.50, cost per set $3.10, FDC souvenir sheet $4.00, souvenir sheet $2.50. Available at the Bermuda Philatelic Bureau.
THE 60TH ANNIVERSARY OF
Queen Elizabeth II’s Coronation
For more information please e-mail philatelic@gov.bm bermuda.com guide 53
practicalities
Topless sunbathing is against the n Business Hours Stores normally open from 9am to 5pm Monday to Saturday. Many grocery stores open 1-5pm on Sunday, most other stores are closed on Sundays.
n Cars No car rentals are available in Bermuda but you can rent scooters and pedal bikes.
n Consulate The U.S. Consulate is located on Crown Hill, 16 Middle Road, Devonshire, tel: 295-1342. Open Mon to Fri 8am - 4:30pm. Consular services are provided on an appointment basis only. For details, visit the Consulate’s website: http://hamilton.usconsulate.gov or contact HMLUSCitizenQuery@state.gov. For after-hours life or death emergencies for American citizens only, contact the duty officer at (441) 335-3828. • Honorary Consuls for other countries are also represented in Bermuda — see the telephone directory for listings.
n Communications Bermuda’s well-developed telecommunications infrastructure provides modern telephone, fax, Internet, cellular and cellularroaming services.
n Country Code U.S. & Canada — dial 1 plus area code plus no. U.K. — dial 011 plus 44 plus area code plus no. Caribbean — dial 1 plus area code plus seven digits.
n Currency & Credit Cards The Bermuda dollar is equal in value to the U.S. dollar; both are legal tender. Traveller’s cheques and credit cards are accepted at most shops, restaurants and hotels.
n Dress Code The dress code in Bermuda is conservative. Bathing suits and bare chests are not acceptable, except (for men) at beaches and pools. Casual wear is acceptable in
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practicalities
law here in Bermuda restaurants at lunchtime. Some upscale restaurants require men to wear a jacket in the evening. Check the dress requirements when making reservations.
n Emergency Call 911 and specify whether you need police, the fire service or an ambulance.
n Etiquette It is customary to greet islanders with a ‘good morning’, ‘good afternoon’ or ‘good evening’ — Bermuda prides herself on civility.
n Ferries All ferries depart from the terminal on Front Street, Hamilton. Regular ferries cross Hamilton Harbour and faster catamarans visit Somerset, Dockyard and, and in the summer months, St. George’s. Transportation tickets, tokens and passes valid for buses and ferries are available at locations including the ferry terminal, bus terminal, post offices and hotels. Cash is not accepted on the ferries. Scooters are allowed on some routes.
n Health No inoculations are required for Bermuda. There are no poisonous insects or mammals but be wary of the Portuguese manof-war jellyfish that carries a painful sting. Guard against sunstroke and sunburn with hats, sunblock and plenty of water.
n Hospital King Edward VII Memorial Hospital (tel. 2362345) is a large, first-rate facility owned and operated by the Bermuda Government and located on Point Finger Road in Paget Parish. An associate of the American Hospital Association. Airlifts can be arranged to the U.S. or Canada.
n Internet Most hotels and many guest houses provide Internet access. Also, there are a handful of locations where you can go online in the city of Hamilton including the Bermuda
Stay in touch Going on holiday is more fun when you can share it with the ones you love! Send messages, post pictures, and talk to your friends and family back home while you perfect your tan on our pink sand beaches. If you are here for a short trip, roaming is your best option. Choose to roam with the network trusted by over 11 million people in 31 countries: Digicel. If your phone does not automatically connect to the Digicel network, you can set it up manually using your network options in a few short steps. If you are spending more than few days on our lovely island, you may consider purchasing a local prepaid SIM card to limit your roaming charges. Digicel prepaid SIM cards are available in both Digicel stores in Hamilton (Church Street and Court Street) and in over 100 dealer locations across the island. If you have a BlackBerry device, you may activate a temporary data plan on your Digicel prepaid SIM card. For more information, please visit www.digicelbermuda.com or call us at +1 441 500 5000. Library on Queen Street and the Main Post Office on Parliament Street, where access is free. Public Internet access is also available in St. George’s and Dockyard. Many cafes provide wi-fi access to customers.
n Mail The General Post Office is located at 56 Church Street Hamilton (tel: 297-7893), with 12 sub-offices islandwide. Airmail leaves and arrives daily. Rates for airmail postcards to North America are 70¢; Europe 80¢; Africa, Asia, Australia and New Zealand 90¢.
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practicalities
We have ample rainfall but no
Photo by Kageaki Smith
Renting a scooter is fun but can be tricky if bikes are new to you. Be sure you can handle it before you leave the rental shop. A road accident would ruin your trip.
n Nightlife See pages 81-83 and 94-95
spaces including restaurants, bars, shops, theatres or any enclosed workspaces.
n Public Holidays 2013
n Taxis
Bermuda Day | Friday, May 24 National Heroes’ Day | Monday, June 17 Emancipation Day (Cup Match, day one) | Thursday, August 1 Somers Day (Cup Match, day two) | Friday, August 2 Labour Day | Monday, September 2 Remembrance Day | Monday, November 11 Christmas Day | Wednesday, December 25 Boxing Day | Thursday, December 26
Cabs are safe and comfortable. Rates are controlled by law at $6.40 for the first mile and $2.25 for each additional mile for 1-4 passengers. Rates increase after midnight, Sundays and public holidays with a 25% surcharge for 1-4 passengers and a 50% surcharge for 5-6 passengers. Taxis may also be hired for sightseeing tours at $40 per hour with a minimum of 3 hours.
n Time Differences
Churches are ubiquitous here. Anglican, Catholic, African Methodist Episcopal and Seventh Day Adventist are among the major faiths. See the church listings in Friday’s Bermuda Sun newspaper.
New York — one hour behind Bermuda Los Angeles — four hours behind London — four hours ahead Toronto — one hour behind Daylight Savings Time comes into effect from the second Sunday in March through to the first Sunday in November.
n Scooters
n Tipping
You can rent scooters by the day or week, if you are 18 or older. Helmets, provided by the rental companies, are mandatory.
In most cases, a service charge or gratuity has been added to the bill. Where the gratuity has not been added, 15% is about right.
n Smoking
n TV/Radio/media
Smoking is banned from all enclosed public
Three main local channels screen a nightly
n Religion
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rivers or lakes news bulletin — VSB (channel 11), ZBM (9) and ZFB (7). A government station, CITV, is on channel 2 and there’s a small handful of local radio stations. The quality of local programming varies considerably. The Bermuda Sun, which publishes this guide, provides news seven days a week on its website www.bermudasun.bm and publishes a newspaper on Wednesdays and Fridays.
n Water Tap water is safe to drink, unless you are instructed otherwise. Bermuda has no rivers, streams or reservoirs; all our water comes from rain or wells. Bermuda roofs are painted with a limestone wash that purifies the water as it trickles down into underground tanks. Electric pumps send the water up to the tap.
n Weather Bermuda’s sub-tropical climate is generally mild and humid, but summer and winter temperatures vary considerably. The average annual temperature is 76ºF. Monthly averages: January 65ºF, water 66ºF; April 67ºF, water 68ºF; July 80ºF, water 81ºF; October 75ºF,
water 76ºF. In an average year we see rain on 171 days and sunshine on 200 days.
n Wildlife One of our most intriguing creatures is the common whistling frog. Their ‘gleep-gleep’ chorus is particularly vigorous after rainfall on warm evenings and you’ll be amazed that a frog little bigger than your thumbnail can be so audible. Easier to spot on wet evenings are enormous cane toads, introduced to control cockroaches. Birds are plentiful; about 375 species have been recorded in Bermuda and 20 are resident. There are hundreds of feral cats and feral chickens – but no feral dogs. We have a few rats, of course, but no snakes. Spiders are abundant but generally harmless. The occasional poisonous spider arrives on imported lumber but they rarely bother people. Mosquitoes aren’t a problem and there are few bugs to worry about. Try to avoid the Portuguese man-o-war, a purple jellyfish that sports long tentacles and causes a painful sting. Sharks are rare in Bermuda waters.
Route
Airport Aquarium Belmont Hotel Botanical Gardens Caves (Crystal and Leamington) Dockyard Elbow Beach Gibbs Hill Lighthouse Grotto Bay Hotel Horseshoe Bay Beach Hospital Mangrove Bay (Somerset) National Museum of Bermuda Bermuda Perfumery John Smith’s Bay Beach Fairmont Southampton Resort Town of St. George
1, 3, 10, 11 10 11 8 1, 2, 7 1, 3 7, 8 2, 7 7 1, 3, 10, 11 7 1, 2, 7 7, 8 7, 8 1, 3, 10, 11 1 7, 8 1, 3, 10, 11
Bus Schedule Number
Fare Leaving Hamilton’s Central Zone Bus Terminal (time past the hour) 14 00 3 00 3 00 3 00 14 14 00 3 00 3 00 14 00 3 00 3 00 14 00 14 00 14 00 3 3 00 14 00
15 30 15 30 15 30 15 30 15 15 30 15 30 15 30 15 30 15 30 15 30 15 30 15 30 15 30 15 15 30 15 30
45 45 45 45 45 45 45 45 45 45 45 45 45 45 45 45 45
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weddings
www.moongateproductions.com
Marry him in Bermuda By Amanda Dale | Whether you want to celebrate your wedding on a private beach, a yacht or in a spectacular cave, Bermuda has it all. Whatever the setting, the island is one of the most romantic places in the world in which to say ‘I do’. With stunning backdrops of pink sand beaches, a turquoise ocean and lush flora and fauna, you can be sure that your big day will be colourful, vibrant and memorable. More than half of all marriages in Bermuda involve couples from overseas. The island’s hotels can offer you a destination wedding with a difference, and most have packages which include the reception and honeymoon accommodation. If you are passionate about the environment, the Fairmont Southampton Resort offers Eco-Chic Weddings on a private beach with an organic wedding cake and the chance to plant your own Bermuda Cedar tree. 58 bermuda.com guide
Our Moon Gates originated in China You can tie the knot under a moongate overlooking the waterfront at the Fairmont Hamilton Princess. Alternatively, Cambridge Beaches Resort & Spa offers Magical Sunset Weddings on a private beach. If you want to declare your commitment overlooking the ocean, The Reefs Resort & Club has a wooden deck above the spectacular South Shore. Or for something completely different, why not hold your reception among the ancient limestone formations of Grotto Bay Beach & Tennis Club’s caves, in an Exotic Cave Wedding? ‘Bermuda’s celebration yacht’ — the UberVida catamaran, can also provide an exclusive setting amid the aquamarine waters of Paradise Lakes. On such a beautiful island as Bermuda, choosing your venue is probably going to be your toughest decision. Aside from stunning beaches, there are also scenic locations with commanding views, such as Gibbs Hill Lighthouse and the Commissioner’s House at Dockyard. The Bermuda National Trust can also provide historic houses and elegant gardens in which to hold your nuptials. When it comes to tradition,
weddings
Photo by Kelly Winfield
Bermudians usually have two wedding cakes. The bride has a fruit cake with silver icing, to symbolize a fruitful marriage, while the groom has a pound cake with gold icing, to bring prosperity. A Bermuda Cedar sapling is placed on top of the bride’s cake and the couple will plant this in a secret location, to symbolize the growth of their bond and love.
weddings portraits events 300-5005 / 536-9843 info@moongateproductions.com
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weddings
To marry here you will need two
Your ‘fairytale’ wedding car If you want a classic, timeless wedding, a vintage car will set the wheels in motion. In Bermuda you can hire the Branford Elite, an elegant touring car that captures the romance and style of the Jazz Age. Based on the classic Ford Model A (1928-31), the Branford Elite was custom-built in the UK and has been imported by ‘Bermudaful Moments’. Elizabeth Mayne and Roberta Pachai are the women behind the enterprise. “This car has that vintage, classic look,” Mrs Mayne told us, “and we will also have a chauffeur dressed for the occasion, in suit and cap.” Bermudaful Moments will also decorate the vehicle in ribbons and rosettes to reflect your bridal party’s colour scheme. The car’s cream leather seats take up to six passengers and the roof hood folds down to allow the bride and groom to be visible. Ms Pachai said: “This is a fairytale wedding car. It will look glamorous and beautiful on your wedding photos.” www.bermudafulmoments.com
It is also considered good luck for the couple to kiss under a moongate. Arranging a wedding in Bermuda is easier than you might think. You just need to complete a Notice of Intended Marriage and post this back to the Registrar General, with a $341 fee. The marriage license will be valid for three months and you just need two witnesses over-18 to attend the service. If you need help in organizing the wedding, the island has an abundance of talented wedding consultants, photographers, florists, caterers, jewellers and live entertainers. The Department of Tourism can also offer you a financial incentive. Its ‘So Much More Rewards’ programme provides cash rewards for each overseas visitor you bring to the island, for a party of 15 or more. The rewards range from $25-50 per person, depending on numbers. So,
www.moongateproductions.com
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witnesses who are over 18
weddings
www.moongateproductions.com
if 30 guests attended your wedding you could earn $900 towards your celebrations. For more information go to: www. somuchmorerewards.com.
For more details on getting married in Bermuda, see: www.gotobermuda. com/specialty-travel/weddings To contact the UberVida, e-mail ubercharters@gmail.com
Contact Liz: 333-5886 or Roberta: 505-1419 www.bermudafulmoments.com
bermuda.com guide 61
nostalgia
Postcards from the past These postcards from the 1930s and ‘40s paint a charming picture of the Bermuda of yesteryear. Writer Gill Outerbridge helps bring them to life by penning imaginary messages from a besotted visitor.
Postcards from
Dear Martha, at I am here in I cannot believe th a paradise! Bermuda! It is such a was ud rm The voyage to Be cked do ip sh r ou exciting and rked ba sem di we — y in the cit friends y M t! right on Front Stree my to ge ia rr ca conveyed me by use le op pe al loc e Th guesthouse. . rts ca ey nk bicycles and little do hel Et , ter sis g in Your liv
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the collection
ward of Stephen Hay
Dear Martha, e horseracing Can you believe they hav m Front Street to fro in tra the here? We took the Race Track. Shelly Bay and walked to locals cheering of There was a huge crowd white coral the d un aro and the horses tore shillings on one track. I won a bet of four carriage driver to of the races. I gave it to a in home! tra take us back to catch the
Dear Martha, There is a wonderful litt le train here that runs throug h the islands and makes 40 stops along the way. We alight ed near Devils Hole and the re were dozens of carriages waiting to collect us. Th ere you get to ‘fish’ with a line but no hook. The pool is full of giant fish and turtles and I tho ught for sure I could haul a hug e snapper right up but he let go and fell back with a splash !
Dear Martha, Today we set off at dawn for an expedi tion to St George’s. We tro tted along white co ral roads shaded with cedar trees with vistas of glorious blue and turquoise water in the little bays and coves. We crossed th e Causeway which had to be rebuilt after a hurr icane destroyed it. Before it was built you had to drive the carria ge onto a barge to be pulled across to St George’ s! Imagine! bermuda.com guide 63
shopping
Photo by Kageaki Smith
The Irish Linen Shop — which specializes in luxury goods from all over the world — is one of Front Street’s colourful, landmark stores.
Take home quality items that will last You’ve already proved you have good taste by choosing to visit Bermuda so it’s fitting that our stores exude quality. There are bargains to be had — you’ll find hefty price differentials with the U.S. on jewellery, watches, perfume, silverware, porcelain and crystal. And you’ll enjoy additional relief at the cash register — there’s no sales tax. Many stores are in the City of Hamilton, but the Clocktower Mall at Dockyard, on the western tip of the island, boasts quality gift stores and boutique shops. And the historic town of St. George’s — at the east end of Bermuda — also has a lively shopping scene. Goods made here or produced exclusively for local stores include pottery, jewellery, paintings and prints, pottery, rum, honey, condiments, cedar ware, Bermuda shorts, scarves, fragrances and pillows. Browse the following listings for details. 64 bermuda.com guide
Bermuda The Original
For over 30 years the Original Bermuda Collection has featured timeless designs based on the island’s unique flora, fauna, landmarks and traditions. This collection of locally made treasures will serve as a lovely remembrance of your “Bermuda Experience”. These original, 18 karat gold pieces are hand crafted in Bermuda and sold exclusively by Astwood Dickinson.
A DIVISION OF A.S. COOPER & SONS LTD.
83-85 Front Street, Hamilton, Bermuda 441.292.5805 www.astwooddickinson.com
go shopping
Bermuda Triangle: One of the world’s
Photo by Kageaki Smith
Attention to detail helps jewellers Astwood Dickinson to sustain en excellent reputation.
Astwood Dickinson Home of the Original Bermuda Collection 18 kt Gold Jewellery handmade in Bermuda. Since 1904, Astwood Dickinson has built an outstanding reputation as the finest
jewellery store in Bermuda. As exclusive agents for the world’s most prestigious jewellery collections and watches, Astwood Dickinson is the perfect place to find a lasting reminder of your Bermuda experience. In our on-site workshop we handcraft the Original Bermuda Collection. Here you will find beautiful 18 kt gold designs of the island’s unique flora, fauna, landmarks and traditions that make an everlasting remembrance of your Bermuda vacation. The Original Bermuda Collection is also available online at www.astwooddickinson.com . Astwood Dickinson also offers exclusive jewellery collections from Tiffany & Co., Hearts on Fire, Links of London and Baccarat. Our watch brands include Patek Philippe, Jaeger-LeCoultre, Cartier, OMEGA, TAG Heuer, Gucci, and Tissot. 83-85 Front Street, Hamilton. Tel: 292-5805 Walker Arcade Boutique, Front Street, Hamilton. Tel: 292-4247
HERA Boutique
HERA BOUTIQUE
Bermuda’s newest Boutique for Ladies featuring classic and stylish European and American-made clothing and accessories. Tel. 441.232 .4372 email heraboutique.bm@gmail.com Face Book heraboutiquebermuda WeB www.herabermuda.com address The Old Cellar Walker Arcade 47 Front Street Hamilton, Bermuda HM 11
sTore hours:
mon. ClOSEd | Tues. 10AM -5pM Wed. 10AM- 4pM | Thurs. 10AM- 5pM Fri. 10AM- 5pM | saT. 10 AM -5pM sunday - ClOSEd arrangemenTs may Be made For privaTe shopping evenTs. appoinTmenTs Welcomed ouTside oF sTore hours
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Bermuda’s latest boutique features classic, but stylish, quality merchandise for the Ladies (sizes 6 to 18). Our collections speak to women of all ages with their updated yet understated appeal. Additionally, selections from Europe and North America are chosen for their versatility and timeless practicality. Our European vendors hail from the UK, Portugal, Italy and Germany (Betty Barclay). Our North American labels, which are not available in department stores, include paperwhite, A’NUE LIGNE, J’Envie and Elliot Lauren, proudly Made In the USA! Visit Hera Boutique today, you’ll be glad you did! Old Cellar, 47 Front Street, Hamilton Tel: 232 4372 between 10am & 5pm. heraboutique.bm@gmail.com
most heavily-sailed shipping lanes
go shopping
Photo by Kageaki Smith
For true local fragrances such as Bermuda Blue & Bermuda Breeze, head to Gibbons Company on Reid Street, one of our best-loved department stores.
Bermuda Blue & Bermuda Breeze Take in the sea air, the aroma of natural fruits & flowers all around us......Bermuda Blue and Bermuda Breeze fragrances embrace much that is uniquely Bermuda. Bermuda Blue delicately captures the natural citrus, jasmine and lotus in the air with a nuance of crisp sea spray. Bermuda Breeze hints more of natural fruits, such as wild berries & mandarin, with a touch of jasmine – creating a lovely fruity floral. Packaging reflects the brilliant blues and greens of the local water, the immense blue sky, amid a pink sandy beach - capturing the essence of this beautiful island paradise. Take home a piece of Bermuda. Take home Bermuda Blue and Bermuda Breeze. Available through select stores across the Island and on-line including: Gibbons Company, Reid St., Hamilton www.gibbons.bm Peniston Brown, St. George
Perfume Shop, Dockyard Carole Holding Shops – Southampton Fairmont & Dockyard Brown & Co., Front St., Hamilton A.S. Cooper, Front St., Hamilton, branch and hotel stores www.ascooper.bm Distributed by P.D.L. Limited Tel: (441) 292-1710 infobb@pdl.bm
The Irish Linen Shop Step inside our historic cottage shop and be inspired! Luxury products from all over the world have been an Irish Linen Shop trademark for over 60 years. Our exquisite table linen collection from Le Jacquard Francais, Bodrum, Settings by Mona, and Karen Lee Ballard along with our amazing selection of table accessories from Deborah Rhodes and Dransfield and Ross will create an unforgettable table setting. Hand embroidered linen from Madeira and double damask from Ireland are still time-honoured traditions at The Irish Linen Shop.
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go shopping
Locally made products are ‘Bermudiana’
Photo by Kageaki Smith
For that exquisite and unique gift, visit the Bermuda Perfumery in St George’s.
Beautiful home fragrances from Antica Farmacista, Dayna Decker, Lafco and the oldest candle maker in France, Cire Trudon will delight your senses. Don’t stop until you experience our bath and body products from Baudelaire and Rain of South Africa. You deserve it! Wait: The world of Michael Aram and Mariposa are the perfect solution when searching for a gift that will delight the recipient for years. Our home décor selections from Zentique, Oomph, and Roost will transform your home and your outlook. You’ll love the children’s boutique at The Irish Linen Shop. It’s the place to find beautiful hand smocked dresses from Chantal and the classic styles of Papo d’Anjo from Portugal. Later, dream away on the finest Egyptian cotton bedding from Yves Delorme, Sferra, Matouk, Peter Reed and Dans Nos Maisons. It’s all here, waiting for you at The Irish Linen Shop, where fine living begins. 31 Front Street, Hamilton. Tel: 295-4089; Fax: 295-6552; e-mail: irishlinen@ibl.bm
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The Bermuda Perfumery The Bermuda Perfumery is located at historical Stewart Hall in the heart of St. George’s UNESCO World Heritage Site. Since 1928, The Bermuda Perfumery has been creating and manufacturing fine ladies and gentlemen’s fragrances under the brand Lili Bermuda. All the perfumes are made on premises at Stewart Hall. The Perfumery welcomes visitors for a free tour of its operations and to sample its unique fragrances. Lili Bermuda loves creating new and original fragrances. Its latest creation, “Alegria”, which means “Joy” in Portuguese, is celebration of the Bermudian woman: she is modern, international and elegant. Alegria is a white chypre fragrance with a heart of frangipani, Bermuda Cedar, tuberose, patchouli and magnolia. The Perfumery’s fragrance collection also includes exclusive creations inspired by our beautiful Island. Modern women will love Coral, Pink, and Lily, and men will not
…So much more than juSt LinenS!
Home Décor Fine GiFts LiFe’s Luxuries obviously you have great taste! 31 Front Street, Hamilton HM 11, Bermuda Hours: Monday-Saturday 10:00-6:00 P.M.
Tel: 441-295-4089
go shopping
Our city covers only 80 acres
Photo by Kageaki Smith
There’s an impressive range of quality, Bermuda themed gifts at The Island Shop on Queen Street.
want to leave Bermuda without a bottle of our famous fragrances 32° North and 64° West. The “Water Collection”, casual and unisex, will please the affluent and international traveler. The Perfumery is passionate about the art of perfume making and continues to innovate by using both traditional and modern techniques to produce exceptional perfumes. You are welcome to visit for a free tour of their operations and to sample their exclusive and rare perfumes. The Bermuda Perfumery, Stewart Hall, 5 Queen Street, St. George’s GE 05 Tel: 293-0627. Fax: 293-8810 1-800-527-8213 (toll free in US/Canada) info@bermuda-perfumery.com www.lilibermuda.com. Open Monday to Saturday 9:00am to 5:00pm
The Island Shop The Island Shop features exclusive and original hand-painted ceramics by Barbara
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Finsness that capture the colourful architectural and natural features of Bermuda. There are fine linens that feature her original embroidered designs and a huge array of different gift items. The Island Shop is a ‘must visit’ during your stay for gift selections found nowhere else in the world! They will gift-wrap or mail your purchases if desired. Check out their online store at www.islandexports.com. Winner of ‘The Best in Bermuda’ in retail giftware by The Bermudian magazine. Barbara features her original and printed artwork in the upper gallery of her Front Street store, and some can also be seen in her Southampton and St. George’s locations. Queen Street, Hamilton, tel: 292-5292. Somers Wharf, St. George’s, tel: 297-11514 Fairmont Hotel, Southampton, tel: 238-5999
go shopping
U.S. dollars can be used in Bermuda
Bermuda Post Office Every year the Bermuda Philatelic Bureau compiles a collection of commemoratives and arranges them into an attractive presentation package. This collection continues the Bermuda Post Office’s efforts to portray all facets of Bermuda’s heritage, culture and history. The Bermuda Philatelic Bureau also services orders for current issues of Bermuda’s commemorative and definitive stamps and, for the convenience of collectors, provides a standing order account service with a minimum deposit of thirty dollars. In addition, they maintain a mailing list to provide details of new stamp releases to customers. 56 Church Street, Hamilton. Tel: 297-7807
The Phoenix Stores With five full-service pharmacies, Phoenix
Stores have been caring for customers and assisting with their health care needs for more than 100 years. Should you need answers to health related questions whilst you are on vacation, visit one of their Phoenix pharmacists. Emergency prescriptions are dispensed while you wait and each store carries an extensive range of over-the-counter medications. The stores also carry a wide range of health and beauty products, local and foreign newspapers and magazines, phone cards and postcards, etc. Visit one of their locations: Woodbourne Chemist, Clarendon Pharmacy, Collector’s Hill Apothecary, Phoenix Centre, Paget Pharmacy and Dockyard Pharmacy for all your essentials. All stores are open Monday to Saturday; three stores are also open on Sundays and holidays. Tel: 295-3838
Photo by Kageaki Smith
Many of the main stores in Hamilton are within easy reach of one another by foot. Shoppers are seen here on Reid Street, which runs parallel to Front Street.
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Crissons is ‘guarded’ by two bronze lions
jewellery
Photo by Kageaki Smith
Impeccable personal service has been a hallmark of Crisson Jewellers for many years.
Crisson Jewellers Crisson Jewellers embodies Bermuda’s finest and most cherished traditions. A family business since 1922, the Crisson name is synonymous with quality and value. The fabulous array of jewellery and watches reflect the style, sophistication and taste of our discerning customers. When you explore our exciting collections, we are sure you will agree that a visit to Crisson is the crowning moment of your Bermuda shopping experience. Along with the wonderfully eclectic collection of hand-selected pieces from all parts of the world, Crisson are Bermuda’s exclusive source for famous designers including David Yurman, Roberto Coin, Marco Bicego, John Hardy, Kabana, Nanis, Pandora, Marah Largo Larimar, and Rebecca . As for diamonds of distinction, Crisson has Bermuda’s largest collection of spectacular cuts from Cento, Memoire, A. Jaffe and Endless Diamonds. When it comes to timepieces, Crisson
is definitely the place! Crisson are the officially authorised Rolex retailers in Bermuda. You will also find Tag Heuer, Ebel, Raymond Weil, Movado, Tudor, Philip Stein, Christian Dior, Frederique Constant and Fendi. There are also collections from Seiko, Swiss Army, Citizen, Casio, Luminox, Fruitz, Rotary, Guess and Michael Kors. Our main store is on Front Street in Hamilton, with another on Queen Street. There’s also a store in the Clocktower Mall at Dockyard. If you are staying in one of Bermuda’s major Hotels, you’ll find a Crisson store there as well. Each of these boutique-style stores features pieces selected from our main collections in Hamilton. The shopping experience is relaxed and intimate, and the quality, value and prices are the same whichever store you choose to visit. Crisson Jewellers, 55 Front Street & 16 Queen Street, Hamilton; Clocktower Mall, Dockyard, and all major hotels. Tel: 2952351 • www.facebook.com/crissons • www.crisson.com
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island style
Photo courtesy Bermuda Dept. of Tourism
Bermuda shorts are de rigueur among the island’s businessmen, among others.
Bermuda shorts: A brief history By SIMON JONES | It’s not everywhere in the world a man can walk down
the street in pink shorts and matching knee-high socks and hold his head high. But in Bermuda, no one bats an eyelid when such colourful dressers wend their way around town. Bermuda shorts are a national uniform. They come in all colours, from salmon pink to sunshine yellow. And they are accompanied by a pair of long socks, called Bermuda hose, pulled up to the knee. Add a navy blazer, a tie and smart shoes and you have standard business attire here in the semi-tropics. Don’t be fooled by the bright colours – Bermuda shorts are serious stuff. We once passed a law that states they should not be shorter than six inches above the knee. 74 bermuda.com guide
Wear tasselled loafers with your shorts. Bermuda shorts trace their origins to the British Army; soldiers sported cutoff trousers to combat the tropical and desert climates they were sent to. They were created at the turn of the 20th century by office workers in London, whose job it was to make sure the forces were suitably attired in farflung corners of the Empire. The look caught on and by the 1950s, most Bermudian men were happy to don a pair of comfortable shorts for work. Although they are Bermuda shorts by name, they are not made here; typically they’re imported from the United States. They make terrific gifts and/or mementos and who knows — you might start a trend in your hometown. The largest selection of Bermuda shorts can be found at the English
what’s on island style
When British soldiers wore shorts on the battlefields of North Africa during WWII, little did they know the look would become fashionable in far off Bermuda.
Sports Shop, which has several branches islandwide. Its flagship store is at 49 Front Street, Hamilton, tel: 295-2672. n
Bermuda’s leading retailer of exclusive, Bermuda-designed resort wear for men, women and children.
Mangrove Bay, Somerset, tel: 234-0770 49 Front Street, Hamilton, tel: 295-2672 Somers Wharf, St. George’s, tel: 297-0142
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shopping
PhotoS by Kageaki Smith
Onion Jack’s Trading Post not only has a broad range of T-shirts, but also lots of caps and other items that make handy souvenirs or gifts.
A Bermuda T-shirt is a must-have souvenir By Terri mello | It’s on every visitor’s shopping list — a souvenir Bermuda T-shirt. After all, it’s the easiest way to tell the world you’ve paid a visit to paradise. And with our help, you can be sure Uncle Hank and little niece Nicole will be thanking you profusely for that perfect shirt you found. Whether you’re shopping for a co-worker, relative or yourself, choices abound in stores across the island. But to make your life easier we’ve chosen a few of our favourite places to find great Bermuda T-shirts. If you’ve only got time to visit one store, Onion Jack’s Trading Post, handily located in the middle of Hamilton’s Front Street, might just take care of all your needs. Here you’ll find a large array of shirts in all sizes (up to 5XL), styles and colours. They stock simple and classy, kitschy and 76 bermuda.com guide
shopping
Hamilton became our capital in 1815.
cute, T-shirts with Bermuda maps, storefront. Here you’ll find a dazzling local flowers and birds, Bermuda collection of just about any kind of cottages and even some which Bermuda T-shirt you could possibly proclaim that you’ve want. survived the Bermuda A.S. Cooper is a Triangle. And they department store with cater to all age groups. locations in Hamilton Onion Jack’s VP and Dockyard, where Irene Cardwell says the you’ll find an array of biggest seller is the quality Bermuda T-shirts, store’s signature logo ranging from simple and T-shirt. “People like it classy to colourful and because it’s so unique,” cute. she told us. Be sure to Brown & Co., on Front check out the bargain Street in Hamilton, has bins, which offer shirts a range of shirt styles One of the colourful designs for as little as $6.95. bearing a Bermuda logo, available at Onion Jack’s. You can’t miss with bright selections Riihiluoma’s Flying Colours on Queen for children and T-shirts boldly stating Street. It’s a two-storey souvenir shop ‘Life is always better in Bermuda’. And that sports an array of flags across its who are we to disagree? n
10% discount on purchases over $10 on presentation of this ad. Not valid for tobacco products, parking vouchers, phone cards or other specials.
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made in bermuda Artist draws from nature to craft unique jewellery Bermudian artist Alexandra Mosher draws from the island’s natural beauty to create extraordinary and unique pieces of jewellery. She incorporates our pink coral sand, sterling silver and gold into her handcrafted designs. “I developed a love for craft at a very young age,” she told us, “often creating sculptures out of found objects.” Alexandra studied jewellery design
at The Fashion Institute of Technology in New York and launched her line in 2005. Her work is elegant, highly collectible and available island wide at AS Cooper, Bermuda Arts Centre in Dockyard, and the Alexandra Mosher Studio Gallery in the Washington Mall, Hamilton. Tel: 236-9009. Email studio@alexandramosher.com. Alexandra also ships internationally: see www.alexandramosher.com n
art jewellery inspired by Bermuda’s beauty Washington Mall West, Reid Street, Hamilton
www.alexandramosher.com ¦ 441-236-9009
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made in bermuda Bermuda an inspiration for handcrafted designs By Lynn Morrell | As an artist I try to capture the beauty of what delights me. My lovely little island is a constant source of inspiration for my jewellery: Longtails swooping over the south shore, the tiny whistling frog outside my kitchen door, my grandmother’s cottage. I trained in a fine jewellery workshop
with several master goldsmiths, one ofwhom is now my husband. I work mainly in sterling silver as I love to wear it myself and the stones I choose are mostly semiprecious and cabochon cut. My jewellery is simple, clean-lined and very easy to wear. It can be found at The Craft Market in Dockyard and The Bermuda Arts Centre at Dockyard. n
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made in bermuda Jewellery designer inspired by our beautiful beaches Jacquie Lohan has been designing and making jewellery since her teens, having studied in her native Canada. She opened Atlantic Jewellery Studio 12 years ago and won Best of Bermuda Gold Awards in 2005 and 2008. Her work was even featured on a local postage stamp. Jacquie’s Oceania Collection features local beach glass in many colours, pink coral and tiny seashells from Bermuda’s
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stunning beaches, set in sterling silver. The glass is treated like a gemstone and then mixed with precious stones, semi- precious gemstones and pearls. Jacquie crafts both trendy and classic designs; some are bold, others sexy and quite feminine. “There is truly something for everyone” she says. “Bermuda’s beaches offer me inspiration in a vast array of shapes and colours.” n
nightlife
Photo by Kageaki Smith
Whether it’s just for cocktails or for dinner, too, classy Port O’Call on Front Street is warm and welcoming.
Enjoy a cocktail or two By SARAH LAGAN | It’s not as wild
as New Orleans, as uninhibited as Jamaica or as high octane as Vegas, but Bermuda’s nightlife is fun, friendly — and varied. There’s a good choice of laid back pubs and upscale bars and some hotels also offer live music and dancing. Most restaurants close well before midnight — but ask a local and they’ll point you to a take-out joint if you need a fried food fix in the early hours. Looking for strip clubs or casinos? Not here. Though decorum’s a watchword, we do know how to let our hair down at night. Here’s our guide to some of the some of the best spots: In the heart of Hamilton, the Hog Penny is the top spot for live, local bands. Enjoy rock covers by house
musician Will Black, who does a good Bon Jovi impression. From 10pm onwards the DJs take over to keep the party pumping. The Pickled Onion on Front Street has live music every night in the summer plus open mic sessions, when everyone can join in the fun. A mixed crowd for the live music gives way to younger, party people after 10pm who take to the dance floor with DJs spinning everything from pop, rock, hip hop and R&B. When you need a little fresh air there are great views from the balcony overlooking Hamilton Harbour. Classy Port O’ Call, also on Front Street, typically draws more mature business professionals, especially at Happy Hour on Fridays. It serves the best French fries in Bermuda and has a chic and yet welcoming atmosphere. bermuda.com guide 81
nightlife
Entertainment news in Friday’s Bermuda Sun
Food and drinks are moderately priced and service is excellent. Nearby, Café Cairo is another lively spot overlooking the harbour. It has a lavish Middle Eastern theme; enjoy a hookah pipe with friends and sample dishes from Egypt, Lebanon or Morocco. After 10pm a young crowd flocks here to dance or chat on the balcony. Also on Front Street is Muse, a fine dining restaurant and bistro specializing in French cuisine. It boasts a rooftop skybar overlooking the harbour. Cosmopolitan Nightclub has an outdoor bar and open air space for dancing. It’s high energy, with DJs playing the lastest music to a mature crowd. To sample local talent, try the Chewstick Lounge on Elliott Street. This music and spoken word venue is a strong draw for locals of all ages looking for a truly Bermudian experience.
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In St George’s, The White Horse pub offers live entertainment and its nightclub, The Light, has DJs spinning the hottest music from around the world. Check out the extensive choice of special cocktails. Just around the corner is Wahoo’s Bistro and Patio, where patrons enjoying a pre-dinner cocktail or a nightcap spill out onto the cobbled street. Also in St George’s, The Beach House Restaurant and Bar at Blackbeard’s is a wonderful spot to enjoy a cocktail and a meal while watching the sun go down. Out west, the lively Bone Fish Bar and Grill at Dockyard attracts a good mix of locals and tourists. It often hosts salsa dancing on the outdoor patio and occasionally live music by local artists. Also see our pub guide, pages 94 & 95. n
F O U R
R E S T A U R A N T S
O N E
M O U T H W A T E R I N G
S T A N D A R D
Lunch: Monday - Friday Dinner: 7 days a week 87 Front Street, Hamilton Tel: 295-5373 www.portocall.bm Private Dining Room
Contemporary
Lunch: Monday - Friday Dinner: Monday - Saturday Closed: Sundays 87 Front Street, Hamilton (upstairs above Port O Call) Tel: 295-9150 www.pearl.bm Take Out Available
Sushi
Lunch: Monday - Friday Dinner: Monday - Saturday Closed: Sundays Chancery Lane, Hamilton Tel: 296-8546 www.bistroj.bm
Casual
Open: Monday - Saturday, 7:00am - Late Closed: Sundays 10 Dundonald Street, Hamilton Tel: 295-0857 www.ten.bm Take Out Available
CafĂŠ
Email: chathamhouse@logic.bm
food & drink
Photo by Kageaki Smith
Elegant and classy, Barracuda Grill is a reliable choice for lunch or dinner.
Eating out here’s a treat Our island is small but it offers an abundance of dining options. Casual dress is acceptable at most restaurants, though some upscale eateries require a jacket and tie. And it’s best to make reservations. The dollar signs (see our key, below) offer a rough guide to prices. Also visit www. bermuda.com for updated information. Barracuda Grill
and enjoy cocktails and martinis by our own award winning head bartender, or one of Barracuda Grill, one of Bermuda’s most celmore than 16 wines served by the glass. The ebrated restaurants, is THE place to go for Barracuda Grill’s lavish and inviting interior outstanding seafood and chops prepared in hints at a time of luxurious passenger ships, a contemporary style, proudly winning nine popping champagne corks, and refined Best of Bermuda Awards! Breathtakingly dining, all contemporized to be thoroughly stylish, Barracuda features warm mahogaof the moment. Irresistible seafood and ny woods, plush banquettes and a sumptuchops prepared with expertise ous but ever so comfortable Restaurant and passion take centre stage dining room, suitable for power price ranges on immaculate linen covered business meals or romantic per person tables. 5 Burnaby Hill (above tête-à-tête’s. If a little early for $ Under $20 the Hog Penny), Hamilton. Tel. your reservation, join the other $$ $20-$40 292-1609. Fax 292-8354. guests at the cozy, hip and tres $$$ $40-$50 www.barracuda-grill.com chic bar with its glowing amber $$$$ Over $50 Lunch $$ Dinner $$$ coloured resin topped side bar,
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food & drink
Mussel pie includes papaya, potatoes,
Hog Penny Restaurant and Pub The Hog Penny is Hamilton’s oldest licensed establishment, having been in business since 1957 and interestingly is the original inspiration for the Cheers pub in Boston. Authentic is not a word used lightly at Hog Penny, and our 50-plus year history gives us a delightful patina of age that you just can’t replicate. Our record has been hard earned! Gourmet Magazine, in a December 1987 article exclaimed “it was love at first sight for us, as well as the throngs who flock here”, and as Gourmet wrote, this great institution is hard to beat for a truly authentic experience. Featuring great cuts of beef, genuine Indian curries, to-die-for hearty pub style comfort food that has won countless ‘Best of Bermuda’ awards, and having been featured on The Food Network’s ‘$40 A Day’, the Hog Penny continues to be a favourite spot for generations of locals and visitors alike! 5 Burnaby Hill (Just up from Front Street) Hamilton. Tel. 292-2534 Fax 292-8354 www.hogpennypub.com Lunch $$, Dinner $$
Pickled Onion Restaurant and Bar The Pickled Onion is a contemporary styled upscale but casual restaurant, with Bermuda’s best bar and ‘see and be seen’ vibe. Our chefs won the prestigious Escoffier Cup at the 2004 Bermuda Culinary Arts Festival, and we have received accolades from Food and Wine magazine, the Washington Post and most recently Giada’s Weekend Getaways on the Food Network. Our style of food is North American focused, with global influences, and our goal is to be the best value restaurant in Bermuda. Join us at our classy and fun Martini style bar, which is popular with local professionals or those wanting to enjoy a night out on the town. We feature live entertainment seven nights a week in season, and are located right on Front Street overlooking
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the harbour. We can’t wait to serve you! 53 Front Street, Hamilton. Tel: 295-2263. Fax 295-6291. www.thepickledonion. com Lunch $$ Dinner $$
Victoria Grill The Victoria Grill is an upscale-casual restaurant, quick service café, and cocktail bar, located at the centre of Hamilton, at 29 Victoria Street. Bespoke sophistication and urban chic exude from every each of the three distinct segments that make up the whole VICTORIA GRILL experience: Java Jive is a quick service gourmet café featuring take away specialty coffees, fresh baked goods, unique breakfast items, and lunches to go, served with 2011 Best of Bermuda awarded customer service. Enjoy your cappuccino and Breakfast Sausage Cheddar & Egg Muffin, North Rock Chicken Wrap or Tuna Melt Panini on our street level patio, shaded by large awnings, and watch the hustle and bustle of Victoria Street, Hamilton’s financial and legal district. Rumba°r features a 25-seat onyx stone bar and cocktail tables setting a delightful scene indoors. A covered outdoor lounge and below street courtyard beckon, with low tables and upholstered chairs and banquettes. Retractable roofing can be quickly deployed to cover the courtyard. Rumba°r is a perfect destination for small and large gatherings of friends, associates or business colleagues from 2 to 200. Our full menu includes delicious Kobe beef burgers, fresh crisp salads, steaks and fish entrees, and of course a wide selection of appetizers. Reserve the V.I.P. Room which, with a flick of a switch, is converted from see through glass to opaque seclusion for that privately staffed business lunch or dinner for up to 12. Victoria Grill. The perfect place for that important business lunch or power dinner, gatherings of friends, or simply to enjoy an intimate dining experience for two. With a mix of private tables or upholstered booths in the inside dining room, and cushioned
bacon, onions, lemon juice and spices. wicker armchairs and tables overlooking the below street courtyard on our outdoor verandah, Victoria Grill is in the very heart of Hamilton surrounded by sleek offices of International and Local Companies. The feeling is of a classic city bistro, with numerous wines available by the glass Victoria Grill can seat 50 guests inside and 50 outside. With lots of street parking, Victoria Grill is open for Lunch on Monday to Friday, and dinner seven nights a week. 29 Victoria Street, Hamilton. Tel. 296-5050 www.irg.bm Java Jive $, Rumbar $$, Victoria Grill $$-$$$
Frog & Onion and Dockyard Brewing Co. The Frog & Onion was created and opened in 1992 by a Bermudian (The Onion) and a Frenchman (The Frog). It is an authentic British style pub with great comfort food and tasty and unique gastro pub style dishes. The historic building the Frog & Onion is
food & drink
housed in, a cooperage, was completed in 1853 after the war of 1812. The provisioning of wooden ships during the days of sail required that almost all provisions be packaged in barrels or casks so they could be man-handled, loaded and stored in the cargo areas of the ship. Empty water casks needed to be taken ashore in ships’ boats for refilling at the watering place. The cooperage space and adjacent Victualling Yard were converted to five storehouses in the 1940s and now finds itself home to The Frog and Onion, and so continues in the victualling business. Dockyard Brewing Co is Bermuda’s only microbrewery, and has the distinction of being the only producer of any type of adult beverage that can put the “Totally Made in Bermuda” stamp on all of its products. Currently featuring 5 different types of beers and ales, Dockyard Brewing is a favourite destination of locals and tourists alike who wish to sample artisanal beverages of exContinued on page 90
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food & drink
A Dark ’n’ Stormy is Black Seal Rum
Continued from page 87
ceptional quality. The Cooperage Building, 4 Maritime Lane, Royal Naval Dockyard. Tel: 234-2900. Fax: 234-2917. E-mail frog@irg.bm. www.frogandonion.bm. $$
Flanagan’s Flanagan’s is Bermuda’s premiere Irish pub serving the best of Irish and local fare daily for lunch and dinner. Located on Front Street, Flanagan’s has a cozy pub atmosphere, affordable prices and friendly service. There is elevator access and outdoor seating with views of Hamilton Harbour. For a little bit of Ireland in Bermuda where you can enjoy a pint of draft beer and the all day English breakfast in a lively environment, Flanagan’s is the place! Its sister restaurant the Outback Sports Bar features 22 wide screen high definition TVs and is Bermuda’s only true sports bar. You can watch the game from the big 63” HD TV or watch the match from your
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own booth with your own personal TV and remote control. No matter what team you’re rooting for, you’ll always have the best seat in the house; it’s the best place to tailgate in Bermuda! Flanagan’s and the Outback Sports Bar are located across from the flag pole in the Emporium Building. 69 Front Street. Tel. 295-8299 www.flanagans.bm Lunch $$, Dinner $$
Portofino For over 35 years we’ve been Bermuda’s favorite Italian restaurant. From a quick, delicious pizza, to homemade pastas and exotic dishes, all will delight in our bustling Italian atmosphere. Prices are right and we offer al fresco dining. Winner of the ‘City of Hamilton Food Festival 2012’ — People’s Choice Award for Best Restaurant. Trip Adviser Certificate of Excellence for 2012. Lunch is served weekdays 11:30am to 2pm. Dinner is served 7 days a week 6pm to 11pm. Reservations recommended. Our take-out service is available Monday through Friday from 11am to
what’s on food & drink
mixed with ginger beer – delicious! 10pm, and Saturday and Sunday from 4pm to 10pm. Bermudiana Road, just off Front Street, Hamilton. Tel: 292-2375. Takeout: 296-0606. Lunch $, Dinner $$
Chatham House Bermuda’s leading specialty tobacco shop, established in 1895. Offering a marvellous selection of fine tobaccos and gifts for visitors, satisfaction is guaranteed. Our extensive range includes English Briar pipes, and a selection of Havanas such as Punch, Partagas, Romeo y Julieta, Upmann, Montecristo, Cohiba and Bolivar — all at good savings over U.S. prices. Corner of Front and Burnaby Streets, Hamilton. Tel: 292-8422
Somerset Country Squire Enjoy lunch or dinner at Somerset Country Squire, overlooking Mangrove Bay, in Sandys Parish, while you chat with the locals about Bermuda. Local cuisine includes fish chowder, seafood, locally caught lobster
when in season. Our Sunday Bermuda traditional “codfish and potato breakfast” has all the trimmings, banana, boiled egg with avocado pear (when in season). Whether you’re a party of one or a group, you’ll enjoy our service and food. Serving Monday through Wednesday from 3pm to 10pm, and Thursday through Sunday from noon to 9pm. 10 Mangrove Bay Rd., Somerset. Tel: 234-0105. Lunch $$ Dinner $$
The Pink Beach Club For a most romantic setting make your way to the beautiful Pink Beach Club in Tucker’s Town. The Bermudiana Restaurant prepares five-course gourmet dinners in elegant surroundings with stunning ocean views. A jacket is required for gentlemen, ties are optional. The table d’hotel menu changes daily and we are happy to accommodate special dietary requirements. Dinner served nightly 7pm — 9:30pm. South Road, Tucker’s Town. Tel: 293-1666. Breakfast $$, Lunch $$, Dinner $$$$
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brunch
Photo by Kageaki Smith
Enjoy a cocktail before brunch on a spectacular terrace at The Reefs.
Dine with the locals and enjoy a Sunday tradition By Mikaela Ian Pearman | Brunch in Bermuda isn’t just a meal, it’s a way of life. On Sundays, our restaurants are filled with friends and loved ones catching up, laughing, drinking — and of course, eating. It’s only semi-casual. While you don’t have to be dressed to the nines, people do tend to make some effort. So leave your sweats and sneakers at the hotel. The options are broad. If you prefer breakfast items, places such as Windows on the Sound at the Fairmont Southampton start early with waffles, Most brunches here include freshly carved meats.
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Enjoy a mimosa with your brunch omelette stations, pancakes, eggs as you like them and smoothies. Plus of course the traditional Bermudian Sunday breakfast — codfish and potatoes with all the trimmings. Other brunches are more geared towards lunch items and don’t start until noon, such as Henry VIII and The Reefs. So as well as codfish and potatoes you’ll find a carvery, macaroni and cheese, sushi, soups, salads — and of course a superb selection of desserts. They do Sunday brunch in style at the elegant Fourways Inn, Paget. There’s a delicious spread of hot and cold dishes and terrific desserts. A large dining room is split into small sections and the staff are pleasant and knowledgeable. At the Waterlot Inn, diners are greeted with their first course as they sit and then encouraged to partake in the buffet of salads, sushi, breads, fruit and so on. Main courses are ordered from a menu while dessert is a buffet.
brunch
Photo by www.moongateproductions.com
Brunch at At Henry VIII is fit for a king but the prices are reasonable.
Generally, beverages are not usually included, except for tea and coffee, and prices start at $30 per person plus gratuities. Join the locals at brunch for a truly Bermudian dining experience. Note: Brunch schedules vary and reservations are often required. Always best to call ahead. n Elegance personified: No-one does brunch in scruffy jeans at the classy Fourways Inn.
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food & drink
Photo by Kageaki smith
Flanagan’s has cosy décor, pleasant staff and boasts a harbourfront terrace. It’s s one of our most popular spots.
Your handy pub guide Hamilton’s Front Street is the centre of our pub scene and the Pickled Onion is a great starting point. With live music, good food and a friendly atmosphere, it’s probably our most popular bar. The Hog Penny, a cozy, oak-panelled bar that inspired the Bull and Finch pub in Cheers, is just a few steps around the corner. Back on Front Street, Flanagan’s, an Irish bar with an American feel, and the Outback sports bar, which screens everything from basketball to cricket, are worth checking out.
The ‘shame’ bit kicks in if you find yourself still partying in the early hours, having planned a ‘quiet’ night out. 94 bermuda.com guide
Rum swizzle is deceptively strong Nearby, The Beach – self-proclaimed ‘shame of Front Street’ – is a popular late-night spot. It has a good bar menu and closes late; the ‘shame’ bit kicks in if you find yourself still partying in the early hours, having planned a ‘quiet’ night out. Bermudiana Road caters to a more sophisticated crowd. Smart shoes,collared shirts and well-padded wallets are required here, where upscale wine bars nestle between swish restaurants. The Robin Hood on Richmond Road is a lively, British-style pub with reasonably priced food and live sports. If you’re streetwise and like to stray off the beaten track, take a wander down Court Street, where you’ll enjoy the atmosphere in bars like the Spinning Wheel, where the DJ keeps the dance floor busy with a mix of classic soul, reggae and soca. The friendly Swizzle Inn, near the airport, is always a good night out and is famous for potent rum swizzle cocktails. North Rock Brewery on South Road, Smith’s Parish is a good spot to sample locally brewed beers — St. David’s Pale Ale is our favourite. The Frog and Onion in Dockyard will also serve you an authentic, local pint of beer and along with the Bone Fish Bar & Grill, a terrific people-watching spot, it’s your best bet in Dockyard. Out west, the Country Squire in Somerset has a beautiful wooden balcony overlooking Mangrove Bay and is worth a visit, while Henry VIII in Southampton is another popular spot. Wherever you go, don’t drink and ride — leave your rental scooter at the hotel and take a bus, cab or ferry. Cheers! n
food & drink
Flanagan’s is bermuda’s premiere irish pub serving the best of irish and local fare daily for lunch and dinner.
Two different atmospheres. One great location!
Bermuda’s only true sports bar!
Rude not to.
EMPORIUM BUILDING, 69 FRONT ST.
295.8299
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the last word
Our airport bears his name By Tim Hodgson | L.F. Wade International Airport is our main portal to the outside world and there could be no more apt tribute to the man after whom it is named — a courteous, cultured and transformative political figure. Leonard Frederick Wade (1939-1996) was sometimes bemused and occasionally exasperated by one of the occupational hazards of island life — his fellow Bermudians’ tendency to quarantine themselves from international developments. Secluded Bermuda’s proclivity for retreating back into old habits and traditional routines during a post-World War era of runaway global reform and restructuring was what drew this one-time high school teacherturned-lawyer into the island’s political arena in the early 1960s. A founding member of Bermuda’s first political L.F. Wade party and its leader at the time of his unexpected death, Wade was first elected to a legislature that ran this small country as if it was a large country club. His Progressive Labour Party’s calls for making over an island which remained racially segregated, economically stratified and politically arrested were initially met by bafflement, serial stop-gap measures and an overreliance on noblesse oblige by Bermuda’s patrician elite, rather than any long-term 96 bermuda.com guide
remedial programmes. Bermuda stubbornly insisted on attempting to remain a Victorian outpost well into the Jet Age. But Wade forthrightly challenged Bermuda’s unwritten policy of being in the world but not of the world. His personal and political mission was to encourage Bermuda to make a rapprochement with modernity, to redress longstanding racial and socioeconomic inequities not by way of violent revolution but rather through an incremental process of evolution. And by the time of his death, he had helped to coax, cajole and occasionally arm-twist his countrymen into accepting the unavoidable fact there really were no more islands anymore — not even Bermuda. n
PIZZAS PASTAS DESSERTS
FINE FOODS & FRIENDLY SERVICE
Washington Lane, Hamilton
18 Queen Street, Hamilton
Phone 295-1877 Email: info@trattoria.bm www.diningbermuda.com
Phone 295-8444 Email: info@cafe4.bm www.diningbermuda.com
FABULOUS COCKTAILS & EVENINGS WITH A ZING!
AMAZING WATERFRONT DINING & BEST SUSHI
12 Bermudiana Road, Hamilton
At BUEI, 40 Crow Lane, Hamilton
Phone 296-3330 www.diningbermuda.com
Phone: 295-4207 E: info@harbourfront.bm