Power boaters, itâs been said, are happy because they are going somewhere special. Sailors are happy because theyâre already there.
Whatever your perspective, whatever your vessel, one thingâs for sure, when you cruise the British Virgin Islands, itâs when you snug down in one of the multitude of special places that youâre truly seduced by their siren call.
Here are five such places:
LITTLE HARBOUR, GREAT PLACE
While much of Peter Island is occupied by an upscale resort, Little Harbour is the quintessential perfect anchorage.
Drop the hook in lots of water close to shore, sheltered by steep emerald hills rising skyward. Get a ringside seat to the twinkling lights of Tortola after you hike to the ruins of a tobacco plantation.
Julian Hodge, The Moorings base manager at Road Town, first told me about this spot. Iâve chartered here four times before and never noticed it. Now I owe Mr. Hodge a Painkiller.
Gorgeous in its own right, it is also close enough for that last night on the water or a quick jaunt from Dead Manâs Bay around the corner.
Itâs listed on your chart as âLittle Harbourâ. They should change it to âGreat Placeâ.
A DOCK AND A FAT VIRGIN
When Columbus first saw this island archipelago he remembered the story of St. Ursula, a corpulent virgin surrounded by a thousand others of her ilk. He wanted to impress his royal patrons with his find.
The math was wrongâcloser to forty islandsâbut the name stuck.
Welcome to Virgin Gorda â the Fat Virgin.
The Baths are a must-do spot in the BVI â a picture-postcard beach guarded by towering columns of granite â but even a lunchtime stop on a mooring ball here is rolly, and a dinghy ride ashore can feel like a jaunt in the Roaring Forties.
Snug down for the night at the yacht basin, a short walk to The Rock, one of BVIâs most romantic restaurants.
Have a nightcap at dockside Rendezvous bar or head inside to an English pub called Bath and Turtle.
One night we repaired to said bar and my wife pointed excitedly behind me.
Morgan Freeman was sipping a libation at the next table.
Now thatâs a testimonial.
FULL MOON FROLICS
If the twinkling lights of Tortola arenât sufficient evening entertainment and youâve timed your cruise to the full moon, consider Trellis Bay and a light show without equal.
When the moon is bright, they have a family-friendly party on the beach, complete with a procession of steel sculptures lazing in the surf. Full of firewood; they are set ablaze after sunset. By day thereâs an excellent craft market reclining beneath the palms.
Snug down far enough out and youâve got a perfect view of Virgin Gorda in the distance and uninhabited brown sugar beach in the foreground. A little bar named âLast Resortâ on Bellamy Cay is just off your port beam.
But for a nasty crossing from Jost Van Dyke, driven by the need for a bit of flat water, I wouldnât have considered Trellis Bay, chiefly because itâs so close to the airport.
But weâre not talking JFK.
Iâd snug down here anytime. And Iâve written the name of one more special place in the pages of my logbook.
PARTY CENTRAL
Donât be fooled by the bucolic charm of Jost Van Dyke. Itâs named after a pirate and earns the moniker.
Boasting two of the Caribbeanâs most infamous bars, Jost is worthy of the most rollicking buccaneer.
Great Harbourâs mooring field is hard by a tiny village and Foxyâs bar, where the tabletops are nautical charts and Foxy himself might sing you a song. Here you can sip a beer brewed on site while watching your anchor light samba in the gentle swell.
Come Sunday afternoons, Soggy Dollar on White Bay shows like a Cancun Spring Break, though it settles down when the sun sets.
Although snugged down in the lee of one of BVIâs most beautiful beaches, this can be a treacherous anchorage. It might be better to grab a ball at Great Harbour and dinghy over, that way you get the best of both worlds.
PARTY CENTRAL (PART TWO)
Robert Louis Stevenson reputedly based âTreasure Islandâ on Norman Island â a perfect hour-or-so beam reach across Drake Passage from the Moorings base at Road Town. They say thereâs buried treasure here.
The real treasure is the beauty of this bay; turquoise waters nestled in a green bowl of voluptuous hills, guarded at one end by a white sand beach occupied by Pirates Bar.
At the Bight on Norman Island discover another nautical tradition, Willie Tâs, a barge decked out like a pirate ship. Nosh a hamburger here after dark, sip a cold one, and then repair to a gorgeous sheltered anchorage.
Stevenson called Norman âTreasure Islandâ. I call it âParty Centralâ.
Mark Stevens is an award-winning travel writer whose specialties include Canada, the Caribbean and boating. Credits range from Sailing magazine and Canadian Yachting to the Washington Post.