Hamilton Beaches
Hamilton is on the west side of the 57 sq km (22 sq miles) island of Bermuda, 16km (10 miles) west of the airport. Overlooking Hamilton Harbour and its tiny islets in the Great Sound, Bermuda is actually a necklace of about 138 coral islands that sits nearly 1,050km (650 miles) east of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, well north of the Bahamas.
Although the coastline of Bermuda has bragging rights to glorious pink-sand beaches, there are none in Hamilton. The closest stretch of sand, Elbow Beach, is about 1.5km (nearly a mile) away. Kayaks are available for hire, diving and snorkelling boats book passengers and there are food concessions.
Hamilton's thoroughfare is Front Street, and everything is on it or nearby. Make your first stop the Visitors Service Bureau, adjacent to the Ferry Terminal, to get a map, tokens for the buses and ferries, and the Heritage Pass (about 10 pounds a person) for admission to six cultural attractions. Victorian buildings are painted in sherbet colours, adding to the feel of this being a Caribbean island, though it isn't. Lovely Victoria Park, fancied up in honour of that Queen's Golden Jubilee, features concerts on its vintage bandstand. Or contemplate the Empire's history at Fort Hamilton.
Along Hamilton Harbour, stroll to the Underwater Exploration Institute (40 Crow Lane) to experience a 3.65km (2.3 mile) simulated dive of a submersible, or just study the cannon and other artefacts recovered from the numerous shipwrecks. It IS called the Bermuda Triangle, remember? Maybe you just want to take in a cricket or football match, played all about the island.
Five public golf courses (www.bermudagolf.org), horses for hire, tennis courts and the excellent 30km (18-mile) Railway Trail, the renovated bed of the former railroad (for biking, plus three nature trails) will satisfy outdoor enthusiasts. The Royal Navy Docklands, once the Western Atlantic base for the fleet but now filled with historic exhibits and shops, and at the opposite (eastern) end of the islands, the quaint village of St George's, with its museums, restored 17th-century fort, town crier and a replica of the ship that carried the original settlers here almost 400 years ago, are popular tourist haunts.
Dance off dinner at the Oasis Nightlife & Rock Room. Oddly enough, it is on the third floor of a major building the Emporium (69 Front Street). Oasis has plenty of speakers for its throbbing music, but no food is sold and smoking is not permitted.
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