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From the moment you step on the private transfer boat at a dock just 10 minutes drive from VC Bird international airport you know you are going to be well looked after. Jumpy Bay Island is a 300-acre private resort, which is now part of the Oetker Collection. You can choose to either stay in one of the luxurious hotel suites, or an extravagant villa that could accommodate the extended family. Bicycles and golf carts help you navigate this car-free island and you can investigate the sugar mill or the island’s farm. Loungers stretch along the main beach with full beach service and dining is superb, whether you opt for a private candlelit dinner on the beach or a sociable Caribbean barbecue at the farm. Have a game of tennis with the resident pro, take a paddle board out on the still sea, relax in the spa or rejuvenate with early morning yoga. Bring the children along and they’ll be well looked after in the kids club and get to help with the conservation of the resident Hawksbill turtles.
Families
Total relaxation
Other Activities
Yoga
Tennis
Golf
Sights nearby
Self catering
Eco
Kids Club
Family Suites
Views
Rooms with balcony/terrace
Sailing
Barefoot Luxury
Sit-out Terrace
Full of character
Watersports
Beach Life
Spa
Restaurant
Self catering to rent
Great walks
On the beach
Fishing
Boutique
Cycling
Luxury
Gym
Child friendly
5* Luxury
Beach nearby
On an island
Diving
Contemporary
Tennis coaching
Scuba course
Safe
Kids Club
Views
Bath robes
Wifi
Family Suites
Bar
Bicycles available
Rooms with balcony/terrace
Outdoor dining
Sauna/Steam
Cots available
Massage
Library
Sit-out Terrace
Spa
Restaurant
Self catering to rent
Swimming Pool
Garden
Gym
Child friendly
Room service
Hot Tub
Other Activities
Yoga
Tennis
Golf
Sights nearby
Sailing
Watersports
Great walks
Fishing
Cycling
Diving
Tennis coaching
Scuba course
As well as a hotel of jaw-dropping luxury (refurbished at a cost of $28million), it's a co-op villa community for millionaires and a nature reserve, home to the white egret, blue pelican and the endangered hawksbill turtle. Celebrity villa owners, such as Lord Sainsbury and author Ken Follett, and short-term visitors including Sir Paul McCartney (there, incognito, at Christmas) are no less carefully nurtured. My courtyard suite is a house of marble-floored grandeur, with a front and rear courtyard (the latter with open-air bathtub) and a four-poster bed swathed in mosquito nets. I don't know what Jumby Bay was like before its refurbishment, but if you want high-end luxury of the kind that would be ideal for honeymooners, this is it.
Originally published by The Daily Mail
For somewhere so new, the look is resolutely old-school, ostensibly 'British colonial' with terracotta (or roseate stone) floors, loud colours and prints. But every room is impressively kitted out, right down to the provision of Nespresso machines, Bose sound systems and bicycles (each villa has its own golf cart). There's a substantial spa and an excellent kids' club (the whole place is supremely child-friendly), and as a big, slick, luxurious, happy holiday resort, it's hard to fault. Only its proximity to the main flight path is a disincentive.
Originally published by Conde Nast Traveller
"Totally over the top yet tastefully so—it's like living in a dream." Named for the local patois word for a playful spirit, this former sugar plantation on a private island has room palettes of pale cream and café au lait, with bright coral and jewel tone accents. In the Pool Grille, which has a casual atmosphere and views of the Caribbean and the pool, guests recline on loungers in canopied areas. "It's a wonderful resort that gives you a first-class stay." The kids' club, Rose Buds, runs an endangered hawksbill turtle adoption program.
Originally published by Conde Nast Traveller
The point is, Jumby Bay is as exclusive and luxurious as the Caribbean gets – a 300-acre pure paradise reached only by private ferry; an island owned by its 56 villa owners, where no cars are allowed so transportation is by bike, golf cart or a slow amble along the white sand. Yet, its palatial villas aside (the most expensive sold for US$28m), obsequious and flash it’s not.
Originally published by The Telegraph
The hotel and handful of private villas - are set on their own 300-acre island a couple of miles off the north coast of Antigua. The sea barrier and the space (some people use bicycles to get around) give it a very different, leisurely feel from Antigua. It has a lovely, west-facing beach which is effectively completely private.
Originally published by The Telegraph
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