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In February 2009, Martinique and its sister island Guadeloupe took an unaccustomed turn in the world's headlines with heated general strikes over inequality and the cost of living, resulting in the first ever cancellation of Martinique's Carnival. The poobahs in Paris responded by raising salaries and other concessions, President Nicholas Sarkozy paid a conciliatory visit last summer, and things pretty much returned to normal.
So when I headed down to check things out a couple of weeks ago, I found the same calm, beautiful island and friendly people that have earned Martinique something of a following among some Caribophiles.
This overseas département of France is less pretentious and far more accessible and down-to-earth than St. Bart's, yet sports the same kind of French flair, small resorts and fabulous eating, while at the same time arguably being more interesting as an island. And now there's finally even a decent hotel (see below) right in the capital, Fort de France (right). Another welcome bit of news is that getting there is now more convenient, since a American Airlines inaugurated a direct flight from Miami in April 2013.
Martinique Travel Tips: Sand & Sights
Now, if you remember your history, it just might ring a bell that one of the Caribbean's most traumatic natural disasters (and the 20th century's worst volcano eruption) happened here in 1902, when Mount Pelée blew its top, burying the nearby town of Saint-Pierre (below left). Today the rebuilt town makes for a pretty picturesque sightsee, with some historic architecture in addition to a small museum devoted to the eruption and some preserved ruins, including the jail cell that saved the life of one of the event's three survivors. Too bad that more than a century later, jitters about another eruption keeps the place so economically stunted that it's only last year that a hotel opened in town, the nine-room boutique Villa St.-Pierre.
Of course, turn-'n'-burn beaches are still Martinique's main draw (absolutely do not miss Les Salines down south), but Saint-Pierre's just one of the groovy spots to see and do things that could have you criss-crossing this lush, hilly 436 square miles for days on end. On that list I'd include: the rum trail, some dozen distilleries of varying size which accept visitors and offer tastings (I visited the smallish, family-owned Neisson (below, left) up near the town of Le Carbet, as well as the former Clément distillery, which has been turned into one big, interesting museum); the ruins and museum on La Pagerie, the one-time sugar plantation where Napoleon's Empress Josephine was born (they kinda hate her guts hereabouts because she talked him into re-establishing slavery); and the Caravelle Peninsula, a national park with the atmospheric ruins of another sugar plantation, Château Dubuc, and a trail leading to the world's highest-altitude lighthouse.
Caribbean Food, à la française
Comment
I'm impressed with how much you saw on your recent trip to Martinique. One thing you didn't see (you couldn't, because it hasn't opened yet) is the five-star, 17-suite Hotel French Coco that will open this summer adjacent to the national park on the Caravelle Peninsular. Introductory rates start at about $400, including breakfast, and I think this hotel will provide a top-of-the-line alternative to (the excellent) Cap Est.
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