St. Lucia (Loo -sha) is one of the most popular yacht charter destinations
in the Caribbean, with some of its finest resorts. The heaviest tourist
development is concentrated in the northwest, between the capital,
Castries, and the northern end of the island, where there's a string of
white-sand beaches.
St Lucia is a popular yachting destination, and a "must-see"
location for yacht charters starting in Martinique or St. Vincent. It has
several natural harbours and great marinas.
The rest of St. Lucia remains relatively unspoiled, a checkerboard of
green-mantled mountains, valleys, banana plantations, a bubbling volcano,
wild orchids, and fishing villages. The island has a mixed French and
British heritage, but there's a hint of the South Pacific about it as well.
A mountainous island of some 623 sq. km (243 sq. miles), St. Lucia has
about 160,000 inhabitants. The capital, Castries, is built on the southern
shore of a large harbor surrounded by hills.
Writer Derek Walcott was born in Castries. His father was an unpublished
poet who died when Walcott was just a year old, and his mother was a former
headmistress at the Methodist school on St. Lucia. In 1992, Walcott won the
Nobel Prize for literature. He prefers, however, not to tout the charms of
St. Lucia, telling the press, "I don't want everyone to go there and
overrun the place." Alas, his warning has come too late.
Rising out of the relative obscurity in which it languished for most of
the 20th century, St. Lucia is becoming -- post-millennium -- one of the
biggest players in Caribbean tourism. Since the dawn of the new century, World
Travel Awards has named it "the world's leading honeymoon
destination." Local authorities estimate that 36% of the island's
business comes from visitors either getting married or else on a honeymoon
here. At the same time, Natural History Magazine has honored St.
Lucia as one of the 50 top eco-tourism destinations in the world.