Looking for a WARM place to climb this winter?
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Consider Cayman Brac.
When you are on "Island Time", it doesn't really matter what time it is in the rest of the world. Cayman Brac is an island in the Caribbean that is a sport climber's paradise with amazing limestone cliffs most of the way around it. It has an amazing variety of climbs, including Adventure Climbing right over the sea (See last video segment this thread). It's also the only place in the Caribbean that has all titanium bolts, so you don't have to worry about them breaking. A British Territory, the three Cayman Islands are English speaking, have first-class medical care, and safe food and water. Cayman Brac, one of the small islands, is about 12 miles long and a mile wide. It has a population of about 1500 people (the size of my high school), no traffic lights, no stress and essentially zero crime. More information, many more climbing photos and the free climbing guide is available at climbcaymanbrac.com. On MP at: International > Cayman Brac. Notice that Elvis is having so much fun he repeatedly forgets to clip the bolts! youtube.com/watch?v=1DlXK0k… |
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I've looked at Cayman Brac a couple times -- but the lack of routes I can climb (unless the grades are really soft) means I'm unlikely to pick it as a destination. |
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Besides something impractical like swimming or kayaking, what's the cheapest way to get there? I looked at the cost of round-trip airfare from Denver to Cayman Brac briefly, it's about the same as round-trip air to Asia. |
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aikibujin wrote:Besides something impractical like swimming or kayaking, what's the cheapest way to get there? I looked at the cost of round-trip airfare from Denver to Cayman Brac briefly, it's about the same as round-trip air to Asia. If you fly on holidays (Xmas, New Years, Spring Break) the airlines jack the fare up. But other than that, it's about $650. I just priced it three days ago. And you should try using a travel agent instead of doing it yourself. |
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Bump |
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It sounds like a lovely place to visit, but there's no way I can justify going there without the wife and the kid... so I guess it's time to start saving up for the airfare. Just curious, what's the benefit of using a travel agent, when I can book the airfare myself? |
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aikibujin wrote:It sounds like a lovely place to visit, but there's no way I can justify going there without the wife and the kid... so I guess it's time to start saving up for the airfare. Just curious, what's the benefit of using a travel agent, when I can book the airfare myself?I've found that my agent can get me better times and fares than I can get doing it myself. YMMV, but over the years, this has been consistently true. Besides, there's so many ways to get there it'll drive you nuts trying to piece it together. Go ahead and try to do it, then contact an agent and compare. If you PM me, I'll send you the contact info for mine; I've used two, both have been booking DEN-CYB for me for decades. |
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Bump. |
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aikibujin wrote:It sounds like a lovely place to visit, but there's no way I can justify going there without the wife and the kid... so I guess it's time to start saving up for the airfare. Just curious, what's the benefit of using a travel agent, when I can book the airfare myself?Let me know when you want to go. I would probably consider this one with you. |
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Come to Saint Marteen, I take you in some warm routes and boulders then shark fishing hiking shooting... Seriously no jokes.. |
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