BOAT International - Why the island of Canouan is ready to come out of its shell

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WAVE Bored of St Barths and over Mustique?

Sophia Wilson discovers why the Grenadine island of Canouan

120-slip superyacht marina has been built. Add the fact that Mandarin Oriental has taken over the management of the hotel – the brand’s first foray into the Caribbean – and it seems Canouan is finally poised to fulfil its luxury destiny. “Canouan is starting to be on the map,” says Duarte Correia, general manager of Mandarin Oriental, Canouan (pictured). “The brand gives people the comfort level to book.” Comfort is definitely the word that comes to mind with the cream-stoned hotel that is a deliberate mini-me of Sandy Lane. Its suites are clad in Italian marble, swathed in luxurious cottons and cashmeres, and feature the latest tech: in my room a showpiece mirror doubles as a television but also opens at the touch of an iPad to reveal a lounge and ocean views beyond. The attention to detail in its design is remarkable but it’s the service level that elevates the property, which now commands one of the highest room rates in the Caribbean. Background research has been done on you before checkin, a private butler (on call for anything during your stay) will unpack and repack your bag, and flower-filled baths are prepared in advance of your return from excursions. There are also personal touches; having arrived with a Dickensiansounding chest infection, staff practically chased me around the hotel, suggesting remedies from ginger tea to locally brewed Sunset Very Strong Rum.

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onsidering the emerald speck that is Canouan is half the size of St Barths and is inhabited by more wild tortoises than people, it has a startling investment history – one that reads like a who’s who of tycoons. Italian developer Antonio Saladino came to the island in 1998, creating a Sardinian village-inspired hotel that was taken on by Rosewood and then Raffles. Irishman Dermot Desmond (co-owner of Barbados’s Sandy Lane) later came on board and Donald Trump also joined the party – opening a Trump casino and the Jim Fazio-designed Trump International Golf Club. It became known as the island where billionaires (including Bill Gates) came to avoid millionaires, but Canouan (which means island of tortoises) failed to truly find its luxury mojo or the global recognition of its glitzy neighbour Mustique. Most of Saladino’s original hotel was bulldozed after the 2008 crash and the Trump casino closed its doors for good. However, like a phoenix rising from the ashes, a $100 million (£77.9m), 26-suite hotel opened in 2016, the island’s runway has been extended to accommodate Boeing 737s and a new

is ready to come out of its shell

w w w. b o a t i n t e r n a t i o n a l . c o m | M a r c h 2 0 1 9


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