| Flight
from Miami is just over 1 hour; there are several a day and they are running
full. Hotels are about 10 minutes by taxi costing about $20; taxis here
are priced very high. Hyatt upgraded me to their concierge floor (breakfast,
lounge, tea, evening and night munchies, etc.). Hyatt very good in ambience
with small sections and an overall feeling of tropical oasis but the physical
plant needs upgrading (ie: ants on the bathroom sink and weak water pressure,
conditions housekeeping told me were “normal”) and the beach is a good
5 minute walk away and over a street overpass. Beach is no big deal anyway.
I paid $228 plus 20% at the Hyatt and that was a travel agent’s rate;
it really costs about double. The Westin hotel is the other 5-star choice
and is on the beach but a bit bus-touristy, bland and compact although
the physical plant is much better though TV choices more limited; all things
considered, I’d stay at the Hyatt. Both hotels are a mile apart; the Ritz
Carlton is building a property in the same area but I am told it will not
be directly on the beach. Town is about 10 minutes away and also about
a $10 ride. It takes about 5 minutes to see the town which is all of 2
blocks long and there is nothing to say except that cruise ships come in
for the day and people walk around looking for something to buy and to
do. There is no port so ferries bring in the passengers from the ships.
The day I was there was a national holiday but several cruise ships arrived
so the town opened up for a few hours, but after the ships left and the
town closed up, I happened to wind up being dropped off (after an excursion)
in the center of town standing on the main street for 15 minutes and couldn’t
find one taxi to get me back to the hotel.
Something special: Take a submarine ride. “Atlantis”
is located right at the center of town on the waterfront and has several
options. You can take a 2 hour tour where you go on a boat onto the sea
and then get in a 48 seater submarine which goes down 100 feet and you
look at the fish, coral and interesting animals including stuff that looks
like underwater french fries swaying back and forth. Turtles get a big
reaction from the people on board. Once the submarine goes under water,
you don’t have any shaking and rolling like you have above water. The tour
costs $85 but I got half price as a travel agent. You can go in a 2-seater
submarine to a depth of about 1,000 feet riding along the canyon “wall”
which makes the Caymans one of the world’s leading dive destinations but
that trip costs about $400.
The Caymans is a UK Territory and they use Cayman
Dollars. 1.25 USD = 1 Cayman Dollar. This is a great gimmick because it
is always in the fine print that you realize the prices are in Caymans
Dollars, and the tourists here are mainly US tourists who have never been
anywhere else. So they read the menu and it says the salad is $6 which
seems reasonable. But after you add in the 25% and then another 15% service
charge, the salad costs almost $9 which is rather expensive. So it
is across the board; a 50 minute massage in the spa comes out to be $136
(but it was a very professional one). Since they sign all this to their
hotel bill, they don’t realize what is going on until they get hit with
their bill at checkout. Things here are rather pricey for what you get,
and in my opinion the Hyatt is in no way worth $500 a night, but in my
case the discounts evened up the score a bit. The Hyatt has some
very good food and beverage options: Hemingways on the Beach for dinner;
the golf club on the lake for lunch. Hotel questionnaires ask you to rate
items as Good or Exceptional; I would rate things in between.
I was here for 48 hours; the first day was lovely
and in the 70's. Clouds covered the sunset disappointing the people on
the beach and the roof all set up with tripods to capture the moment. The
second day was cloudy and windy but still in the 70's. The Caymans are
completely flat; it is a rather boring place and American cellphones don’t
work, thank heavens. A good place to escape to and not feel stressed that
you’ve missed anything you should have done. Tourists I ran into wanted
to be here instead of Cancun or Jamaica because it is safer here. All the
US national newspapers get here by evening; all the American channels are
available here. Considering it is a British territory, I am surprised that
the BBC World Service is not carried on the radio or on the TV except at
certain hours. The water tastes pretty awful but it is safe. Tourist information
is all advertiser-driven so it is hard to get a comprehensive catalogue
of things to do here (the only satisfaction being that there is not much
you need to know). One thing I didn’t do which is supposed to be fun is
Sting Ray City; you go in the water and touch the sting-ray fish which
are tame. Water temperature here is in the high 70's, which is colder than
Miami ocean in the summer (mid 80's), which is strange since the Caymans
are south of Cuba and about 500 miles south of Miami.
The Caymans were a bit of a disappointment; anyone
who watched The Firm with Tom Cruise remembers his jaunt to the Caymans
(filmed at the Hyatt); the reality is less upscale with a strip of McDonalds
and Kentucky Fried Chicken outlets just outside the resort and the resort
itself not being that luxurious. In Bermuda you won’t see any of that kind
of thing and it is more interesting to drive around. Here I didn’t even
bother to have anyone drive me around the island because it was obvious
there was nothing to see. The more interesting stuff is underwater. On
the flight back to Miami I sat with a well-traveled couple who were bored
and were ending their holiday early, so I know it’s not just me. But if
you want a reliable place to go in January where the temperature will be
in the 70's, your phone won’t work so that you can’t be disturbed, the
people speak English and the surroundings are safe, the Caymans are an
excellent diversion an hour’s flight from Miami. Also, with American Airlines,
it costs 25,000 miles to fly to Miami from New York, but 30,000 miles will
let you stopover in Miami and continue to the Caribbean. The flight to
Miami is $200 but the flight into the Caribbean is an extra $500, so it
really pays to use your miles to do this because it is at essence a free
ride south.
I didn't take any pictures and there were no interesting
post cards on sale either. |