|
Caribbean / Trinidad and Tobago E-newsletter
Receive updates of new hotels, travel specials and last minute deals for Trinidad and Tobago.
|
|
Maps of The Caribbean. Click to open.
|
|
Site Information:
Birdie's Nest
Birdie's Nest, a Tobago beach house with holiday apartments for rent in the Caribbean at Courland Bay where Giant leatherback turtles come ashore.
|
More Info: You'll have the Caribbean Sea, a mile long sweep of sandy beach with coconut palms and magnificent sunsets and Giant leatherback turtles .... and a quiet beach house in the West Indies for yourself and your family.
Birdie's Nest holiday apartments are a little gem tucked away on the beach at Great Courland Bay, at the end of a country lane. It is quiet and secluded but not remote, far away enough that you hear just the sound of the birds and the ocean, yet near enough to enjoy the village steelband or a Carib beer at the local "rum shop" or go to Church on Sunday!
It is the real West Indies, this is Tobago - and you are at Birdie's Nest in Black Rock.
Nearby Attractions: Here you have an unmatched opportunity to see Giant Leatherback Turtles which virtually come to your doorstep during the annual turtle nesting and hatching season (April - September). Great Courland Bay, Tobago, is one of a handful of beaches in the world where these endangered creatures return every year to lay their eggs. It is an unforgettable, prehistoric ritual, to see the turtle emerge from the sea, lay her cache of over 50 eggs
then
camouflage the spot before returning to the sea.
Even if you do not witness this incredible event, there will always be the pleasure of a golden sandy beach and sparkling blue waters of the Caribbean Sea lapping at your feet - this is the beautiful Great Courland Bay home of the Rex Turtle Beach Resort hotel and two of Tobago's popular little tourist villages - Black Rock and Plymouth with their local Creole restaurants and 'rum shops' where you can hear the sweet sounds of Katzenjammers steelband, calypso and reggae rhythms or meet some of the village folk and join in with fishermen who still cast their nets daily in the picturesque ritual called 'pulling the seine'.
Trinidad and Tobago Message Board Posts: View All Messages
|
|