• Cayman Islands Open • 11-17 April 2010 • Grand Cayman •

 
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Panoramic view from Camana Bay apartment


Grand Cayman Map


The end of 7 Mile Beach


Mark at East End

Find-a-flight

Madeline and Sarah got lucky, as they were on the phone to US Airways two seats came up on a flight this Wednesday ... if it flies of course, today's equivalent was cancelled ...

Rachael & Jenny made it to Miami, due out of New York on 27th ...

Steve's Saga ...

Due to fly out on Sunday 18th

First hear of the Volcano ash problems on Thursday morning ...should be ok by Sunday surely ...

My safety days pass, by Saturday it looks like bad news

Call US Airways, on hold for 2h10m, when they answer they can't hear me so they hang up

Call again, get through in a few minutes, "at the moment your flight is still on, we'll let you know if it changes"

Sun 8am, flight status still shows "on time"

Sun 9.30am, flight shows cancelled

On hold to US Airways for 1h45 m, no answer, better go to airport in case they want me to go to Philadelphia.

Madeline's on same flight but not on the bus, she got through and found they rebooked her for 30th, Sarah for 1st May

Go to checkin, I'm not flying (phew, I really didn't want to be stuck in Philly). They start to say "you've been rebooked for ..." then say I'll have to contact Expedia to get them to rebook me

Back to base, on hold to Expedia (UK number) for 1h30m, no answer yet ...

Find an email form for Expedia, not for changes or urgent things, fill it in anyway, so they know I'm here

Find an email form for US Airways, fill it in, reply says "a representative will be back to you in 5-7 days"

Decide I'll give up at 3 hours, at 2'58 get an answer !

Put on hold for a while ... first available flight is 1st May, Cayman to Charlotte to Gatwick to Heathrow to Manchester.

At least my return train ticket from manchester to newcastle will be valid, but flights to Marseille for EuroTeams will have to be cancelled ...

Hear that Steve Line is in Boston until 27th, Andrew Shelley in Newark until 27th ... wish you were here ...

 

#4: Thu 22nd April, Around the Island

Grand Cayman isn't that big an island, about 20 miles long by 8 miles high with a big hole in the middle. Most of the population and activity is centred on the thin strip at the Western end of the Island, and to be fair in three visits that's about the only part I managed to see.

So today, the last day before my rearranged flyout, I was really grateful to Mark Hennings, the owner of Cayman Contractor Store who sponsored last year's CASA Championships, for taking me on a tour around the whole island. So grateful, in fact, that I let him beat me at squash afterwards, but that's another story ...

Starting from our regular morning meeting at Cafe Du Sol in Camana Bay (about half way up that western strip) at 11am we headed North on West Bay Road - with the famous Seven Mile Beach (which is about five miles long) on the left - towards West Bay, where many of the local Caymanians live. We stopped off at the very end of Seven Mile Beach and watched a couple of snorkellers play with a stingray that had decided to come inshore.

A tour around West Bay then it was back down West Bay Road, cutting around the top of George Town, which sits at the bottom left corner of the island, and hitting the southern coastal road just beyond South Sound Squash Club (around Patrick's Island on the map)

There's not much in the way of beaches along the southern coast, but with a reef running along the majority of it, the colours and features in the shallow sound make spectacular viewing.

It's about 15 minutes to the Eastern end of the island - logically called East End - with a mixture of 25, 30 and 50mph speed limits. This is the poorer end of the island, and one of the things I noticed was the number of churches along the way. "We had no television and no piped water until about 15-20 years ago," said Mark, "so going to church and singing was a big thing."

We stopped off at a petrol station in East End (with a huge Haagen-Dazs lorry outside), which sits on the edge of a beach with a palm tree virtually hanging into the ocean, then set off around the corner and along the northern road - that's North Side.

It's not what you'd call built up, but there are many lovely properties on this route, and you have time to examine them as the speed limit is generally low and, as Mark says, "North Side people get very upset if you exceed the speed limit (which we never did, of course).

Ten or fifteen minutes along North Side Road - opened in 1983 by Queen Elizabeth herself - and you're at Rum Point. And what a lovely location that is, beachside restaurants, a wide, shallow bay with gorgeous colours, a pier taking you out to boat trips, just a lovely place really.

And even though there's sea for about 320 degrees, there's always something there, whether it's reef, or the inside coast of North Sound which, as Mark says, "is just a huge swimming pool".




Back down Rum Point Road, cut down across the middle of the island (which is mainly swamp or wetland) and back down South Sound Road to the squash club for a 15.30 match. We'll ignore that bit.

Finally, back through George Town for a last view of the cruise liners and back into Camana Bay to start packing for my Friday departure.

I finally feel that I know the island now, and Mark's comment "we are privileged to live here" rings so true.

Thanks Mark, for a great day out, but I'll get you next time ...

#3: Wed 21st April, rescue ... all out by Friday

Madeline and Sarah got lucky on what must have been the first flight out on Wednesday, Rachael and Jenny fly to Amsterdam from Miami on Thursday, Steve leaves for Manchester on Friday, and Steve L and Andrew look set for mainland US departures on Friday too ...   
#2: Tue 20th April, there's life in Camana Bay ...

 
It may, from some angles, give the impression of being a deserted town during the day, but Camana Bay is a town with a plan. It's essentially a leisure /retail / residential complex that's growing out of the swamp just back from the famous seven mile beach on Grand Cayman.

That doesn't do it justice though, and there's some crucial missing details in that description ...

It's grown considerably since last year, and will continue growing, shielded from the effects of the recession by being a family-owned venture, with no loans requires. Ken Dart had a vision for this place several years ago, and it's coming to pass piece by piece, no headlong rush, each stage is meticulously planned but may change in detail or substance when its time for implementation comes.

Examples: Camana Way, the avenue that joins Camana Bay to West Bay Road and then to 7 Mile Beach, has been stocked with plantlife reflecting the four separate ecosystems found on the island; consultants were brought in to make sure the buildings were angled correctly to allow the plantlife the correct amount of direct sunshine; the mosaics on the newly-opened observations tower comprise 1.4million tiles; and on, and on, and on, everything is planned, everything iq quality.

It's also being built back to front compared to many similar developments, in that the Town Centre is the first phase, with retail spaces, restaurants, cinema, public squares and so on, with the residential development following once that's complete. Currently there are 63 apartments (I'm still in one of them) which will only ever be leased, not sold, with more to come in the next stage.

This means it's a little quiet during the day, but that's sure to change over the coming months and years. Already there are regular events to bring people into the centre for entertainment - on the day I arrived there was a music festival in one of the squares, and of course last week we had the squash.

The court is almost gone, so the fountain that it was sitting over will be uncovered soon, can't wait to see that spring to like ...
 
#1: Mon 19th April, still here ...



"Well, there could be worse places to be stuck for two weeks" is a common riposte after hearing that Steve Cubbins, Madeline Perry and Sarah Kippax (and possibly Jenny Duncalf and Rachael Grinham too) have been cast adrift on a paradise island awaiting return flights to the UK.

Over the next two weeks we'll be doing our best to discover what this strange new land that we've been abandoned on is all about, hopefully we'll find something new every day and let you know what we find ... wish us luck!!!

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