Port Description

Barbados
Barbados is occasionally called "Little England," and with good reason. While other Caribbean islands were passed among colonial powers like so many hot potatoes, Barbados flew only one flag -- the Union Jack -- for over 300 years until it gained independence in 1966. Traces of the British invasion remain in Barbados -- in the native tongue, in the cars driving on the left side of the road, in the Anglican churches found in every parish. But perhaps the greatest evidence of the British influence is, well, the British tourists. Barbados is a prime playground for Brits on holiday -- not to mention a healthy proportion of Yanks and other international visitors as well.
Away from the big resorts and tourist hot spots, though, Barbados is a thoroughly Caribbean island, complete with lush tropical foliage, colorful chattel houses (moveable houses where plantation workers used to live) and a laid-back, "why hurry?" attitude. Despite heavy development along the western and southern coasts, the rest of the island is full of sweeping natural vistas -- from rippling fields of sugarcane in the interior to the Atlantic surf pounding against the cliffs at the island's northernmost tip. The island rewards independent exploration; rent a car or hire a driver to see its unspoiled side.
Though today the sugarcane fields speak more to the island's past than its present (tourism, not agriculture, now drives the Barbadian economy), visitors can still experience the island's heritage at a number of plantation houses and rum distilleries. If you'd rather skip the history lesson, there are plenty of places to just get away from it all, from Bridgetown's duty-free department stores to the soft white beaches of the south coast.