St Lucia

You have to see it, to beleive it...

Find the best of What To Do in St Lucia here...

Info

Valid passports are required for all visitors, except US and Canadian citizens who possess valid return tickets and I.D. and stay for less than six months. Visas are not required for citizens of the US or Commonwealth countries, or where there is agreement for exemption between the home country and St. Lucia.

 

Special Events

June

The Fisherman's Feast begins with a church service, followed by the blessing of gaily decorated boats and boat sheds on the beaches. Feasting and merrymaking lasts the whole day into the early morning hours.

St. Lucia Squash Open: World renown squash players get together with amateurs for a casual but very competitve event.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

If you're seeking for pleasure and enrichment through the wonder of the undiscovered, the adventure of the unfamiliar you have to come to St. Lucia...

The Caribbean is an adventure playground for kiteboarders, specially at St. Lucia where the wind is just PERFECT...

A beautiful, looping, gravelled path parades through a rain forest, is a climb to the top of Morne la Combe that is only for the stout of heart. The mountain, towering 1,446 feet, lies on the Barre de Lisle ridge and offers panoramic views west to the Roseau and Mabouya valleys. The walk takes approximately three hours.

St. Lucia "The Small Paradise on Earth"...

St Lucians Andrew Barnard (30) and Olivia Hackshaw (58) are the sole Caribbean participants in a formidable event which is drawing athletes from North and South America, Europe and Asia: the Race Across the Sahara.
The task is a daunting one: they have to cross 250 kilometers of Sahara desert - on foot, self-supported - in seven days or less. On the morning of Sunday, September 25th, Barnard and Hackshaw will set off together with 98 other competitors from more than twenty nations around the world, carrying food for six days, camping gear and all other supplies except water, which is provided at regular intervals

A spate of resort developments on St Lucia has made this high, green island one of the Caribbean's fashionable package-tour destinations, but it's still a long way from being sanitised and overdeveloped. Bananas are still bigger business than tourism in this archetypal island paradise

 

 

 

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