Culebra Island: Historical beach

Puerto Rico, Jan 17: Many people fail to associate a Caribbean paradise with historic significance, assuming instead that it has always been a sandy, sun-drenched beach swathed in sunbathers and snorkelers. That's part of the beauty of Puerto Rico's Culebra Island. Yes, this island, situated 20 miles (30 kilometers) off the northeast coast, has beautiful beaches and plenty of sun, but it's also an old pirate hideout loaded with virtually undisturbed treasures.

Puerto Rico, Jan 17: Many people fail to associate a Caribbean paradise with historic significance, assuming instead that it has always been a sandy, sun-drenched beach swathed in sunbathers and snorkelers. That's part of the beauty of Puerto Rico's Culebra Island. Yes, this island, situated 20 miles (30 kilometers) off the northeast coast, has beautiful beaches and plenty of sun, but it's also an old pirate hideout loaded with virtually undisturbed treasures.
Not to mention that in 1493, Christopher Columbus dropped by this tropical oasis during his second voyage, and in 1909, Theodore Roosevelt declared Culebra one of America's first wildlife refuges. When World War II erupted, the U.S. Navy turned Culebra and the 23 other islands in the archipelago into the primary site for gunnery and bombing practice. This island remained a target until 1975, which turned out to be a good thing — the reefs and surrounding waters remained unscathed by boaters and divers and the beaches were unspoiled by large-scale tourism development.
Today Culebra is appealing for what it lacks. There are no luxury resorts, elegant restaurants, discos, movie theaters, casinos, museums or boutiques. There's also no crime, hardly any traffic and few crowds (except during Semana Sancta — Holy Week — which precedes Easter).
What Culebra does offer is an unsullied and under-populated beach along with pristine waters filled with beautiful fish. There is also plenty of wildlife. The disconnected tracts of the Culebra National Wildlife Refuge, which total more than one-third of the islands' area, are populated with terns, gulls, pelicans, boobies and several species of endangered turtle. And the natives — or Culebrenses as they are known — as well as the expatriates provide plenty of the signature laid-back attitude that is so familiar in the Caribbean.
Culebra means serpent in Spanish, a reference not to native wildlife but to the curling shape of the seven-by-four-mile (11-by-six-kilometer) main island. Its nickname, Ultima Virgen (Last Virgin), derives from its geological affinity to the Virgin Islands, just 12 miles (20 kilometers) east. Culebra's single town is named Dewey — after Admiral George Dewey who commanded U.S. Caribbean forces — but culebrenses call it "Pueblo" and to gringo expats it's simply "Town." Dewey is where nearly all of Culebra's restaurants, stores, and about 220 hotel rooms are found.

The small area, mostly flat terrain and virtually traffic-free roads of Culebra make it an ideal place for cycling. Possible destinations include Playa Brava — a heavy surf area on the northern coast — secluded Playa Zoni on the eastern coast and Punta del Soldado, a great place for snorkeling at the end of the peninsula, south of Dewey. Or ride out to Flamenco Beach for an alfresco lunch at Coconuts Beach Grill, where options include burgers, fresh lobster and piña coladas.

Don’t miss Playa Flamenco (Flamingo Beach). This horseshoe-shaped, palm-tree-lined public beach that is situated between mountain ridges, used to be in the line of fire of U.S. Navy artillery practice. Today the mile-long strand is the most popular beach on Culebra. And with its soft white sand, warm shallow water and unthreatening surf, it's also the most child-friendly beach. An excellent site for entry-level snorkeling and diving, Playa Flamenco offers toilet facilities, Coconuts Beach Grill for lunch and a couple derelict target-practice tanks to explore. Home to brown boobies, sootie terns, laughing gulls and endangered leatherback sea turtles (nesting season is March through June), the beach gets its name from flocks of flamingoes that winter on the premises. Flocks of mainland Puerto Ricans also turn up on summer weekends and holidays, but at other times the beach is relatively unpopulated.

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