Rivertrash
Reged: 08/02/05
Posts: 870
Loc: Tyler, Texas and Beaver Creek,...
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Emmanuel at Santa Fe told us last night that there is a very small relatively unknown public beach near Guanahani. He said you can park near Registration at Guanahani and ask the person there for directions to the public access. He said you go down some stairs that are to the left of where yhou would go to the Guanahani beach. Anyone know what he's talking about?
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stbartslover
Reged: 02/09/03
Posts: 753
Loc: Ann Arbor. Flamands Blue
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This place is not very private since the hotel was built, a small beach, but a "sleeper" for sure. My friend Emmanuel is a great source of these tips.
Don't bother with the desk (hard to park/turn arround)---just leave your car outside on the right where staff parks & walk straight down steps to the beach, excellent snorkeling left toward Marigot Bay.
In my youth I walked those still uneven stone steps my very first SB trip before the hotel was built---they were the plage access for some villas on/near the then compound that existed on the site an old girlfriend invited me to. The land was full of large palm trees right up to the beach...an absolute private paradise.
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MartinS
Reged: 05/25/03
Posts: 735
Loc: Anna Maria Island, Florida.
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I used this same beach as a starting point for snorkeling a few times years ago. There is a nice artificial reef system there also which at the time was home to many lobster. Not that I would touch them, the place being a marine park and all…..
-------------------- You can rest when you're dead !!!
www.silentcaptain.com
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stbartslover
Reged: 02/09/03
Posts: 753
Loc: Ann Arbor. Flamands Blue
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Marigot Bay as a marine park is fairly recent. Not long ago large boats anchored in the there and fishermen as well. At the old Marigot Bay Club, a sight was the waiter swimming out to the traps to retrive your lobster. A couple of years ago with friends we observed sea turtles, too.
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JEK
Moderator
Reged: 01/20/04
Posts: 10358
Loc: Northern Virginia
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Anse de Maréchal
A sliver of beach next to Grand cul de Sac. The villa in the picture is the Rothschild estate, or what is left of it.
Old money abounds here. Colombier Beach is nicknamed Rockefeller's Beach because David Rockefeller owned the surrounding property. The twin tropical villas shown here were built in 2002 by the Rothschild family.
"Gitana Bay," an estate in the small cove of Marigot Bay, is now on the market for $21.4 million. The seven-and-a-half-acre property begins at the beach and rises up a hillside, giving both villas ocean views. The houses are lush with exotic woods, and some of the floors are made from lava stone. The path to the private beach passes through a coconut grove lined with totem poles. Lest one think this is rustic island living, both villas have deck pools, high-tech air conditioning and Bose surround-sound systems.
Even the bathrooms at Gitana Bay are clad in exotic woods and polished lava stone.
Because of its unique location and acreage, the price puts Gitana Bay at the very top of the St. Barts market, says Christian Wattiau of Sibarth Real Estate, who is handling the listing. If north of $20 million is too rich for most people's blood, for somewhat more moderate, though by no means inexpensive, prices, prospective buyers can still certainly find property on St. Barts.
"Five million will get you a very nice property on this island," Wattiau says.
Baron Benjamin de Rothschild has been running Gitana Bay as a high-end hotel. During the winter holidays, "Reserve Villa," closer to the beach, rents for $50,000 per week. Makes the $21.4 million sales price seem like a steal.
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JimD
Reged: 05/16/04
Posts: 687
Loc: St Barts of Course
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FYI, all beaches are public, even the hotel beach boys try to tell you otherwise.
-------------------- Premium IV
St Barts
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JEK
Moderator
Reged: 01/20/04
Posts: 10358
Loc: Northern Virginia
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Quote:
FYI, all beaches are public, even the hotel beach boys try to tell you otherwise.
True, but there are only certain official public access points. The one on the trail I noted in the image is marked as such.
-------------------- Carnaval 2009: Mardi 24 Février 2009!!!!
JEK
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WishIWereThere
Reged: 11/04/04
Posts: 260
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Quote:
I used this same beach as a starting point for snorkeling a few times years ago. There is a nice artificial reef system there also which at the time was home to many lobster. Not that I would touch them, the place being a marine park and all…..
We enjoy snorkeling there. Always see at least one beautiful gliding stingray. Last trip found many little shells in the surf at waters edge. Also saw this big guy there.
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cassidain
Reged: 07/31/07
Posts: 59
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Quote:
FYI, all beaches are public, even the hotel beach boys try to tell you otherwise.
Right, in France (remember la Collectivite is still largely under French domaine) the littoral is always public domaine and private properties stop short of the coast. Now, on a plage with some depth, part of it may indeed be private.
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Voosh
Reged: 01/14/07
Posts: 1512
Loc: Detroit
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It's a nice trek. And, we got some good background info here on this thread today.
My 2 cents worth is - this spring most of the east beaches were low down, weedy and populated with stuff that shoulda been served for dinner a few nights earlier. Sounds like it may have improved with the weeks. Maybe these unusually early and heavy storms cleared it up a bit?
Rivertrash - we need an onsite report. Y'know, someone's gotta do it.
Hope you got the binocs. But some pictures, please.
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