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Categories: Anse du Cerron
Categories: Anse Margot
Categories: Anse Mitan
Set in a large bay on the leeward side of the island looking out onto the Caribbean sea, Fort de France became the capital of Martinique when St Pierre was wiped out by the eruption of the volcano Montagne Pelée in 1902.
The town has mushroom...
Categories: Fort de France
The gastronomic capital of St. Martin, Grand Case (pronounced grahnd kahz—rhymes with blahs) is the French side's second-largest town. Its main street is lined with more than 30 charming, small restaurants, many with gingerbread-trimmed patios or ver...
Categories: Grand Case
Grande-Anse is the starting point for ocean excursions. Between July and September, Bay of Chaleur is home to whales attracted by its plankton-rich waters. It is possible to see whales from the top of the capes. Come discover many little crypts on t...
Categories: Grande Anse
The name Le Diamant (The Diamond) refers to two places. One is a rocky island that rises out of the sea about 2 mi/3 km off the southwest coast of Martinique's main island. In the 1700s, the rock was fortified and used as a British military outpost, ...
Categories: Le Diamant
Categories: Le François
Categories: Le Marin
Categories: Les Anses-d'Arlet
Marigot is the French side of the magnificent island of St. Martin. Its amenities provide for one of the most exhilarating experiences in the Caribbean. Sailing buffs can join in a real race on a pair of multi-million dollar America's Cup Yachts, fo...
Categories: Marigot St. Martin
In the heart of the Caribbean archipelago, Martinique and its 425 square miles make a really special vacation destination. Just one careful listen to the Creole language that's spoken on Martinique, and it's easy to hear what this island is...
Categories: Caribbean
Categories: Mount Pelee Coast
At 4,583 ft/1,397 m, Mount Pelee is the tallest mountain on Martinique—even without its top, which blew off in the 1902 eruption. Though smoke occasionally wisps out of its crater today, the volcano has not erupted since 1929, and scientists do not e...
Categories: Mt. Pelee
Categories: Orient Beach
Martinique's Pointe Du Bout resort center lies across the bay from Fort de France and is easily reached by one of the hourly ferries that run from the capital, as well as by car. Some of the island's best beaches can be found there, as well as facili...
Categories: Pointe du Bout
Although the island only comprises about 37 square miles, it is partitioned into two different nationalities — Dutch and French — making it the smallest landmass in the world to be shared by two separate governments. The two nations have been livin...
Categories: Caribbean
Saint-Pierre, Martinique, is often called the Pompeii of the New World—in 1902, about 30,000 people perished under a cloud of molten ash and poisonous gas there, about 20 mi/32 km north of Fort de France. Before Mount Pelee erupted, Saint-Pierre was ...
Categories: St. Pierre Martinique
Categories: Ste. Anne
The picturesque village of Ste. Marie, Martinique, northeast of Fort de France on the Atlantic coast, is known for the tombolo, a seasonal sandbank connecting the small island to the shore in front of the town. This curious natural phenomenon allows ...
Categories: Ste. Marie
History buffs may want to visit the estate just outside Trois-Ilets, Martinique, where Empress Josephine, wife of Napoleon I, spent time as a child. (She may well have been born there—as island residents say—though the island of St. Lucia also claims...
Categories: Trois Isles
Categories: Val Thorens