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where sun shines
360 days a year and clear water is 80 degrees

By Bob Downing | Beacon Journal staff writer - April 22,
2007
Source:
http://www.ohio.com/mld/ohio/living/travel/17113566.htm
WILLEMSTAD, CURACAO, DUTCH ANTILLES -
The colorful waterfront is the heart of bustling
Curacao, one of the most unknown islands in the
Caribbean to most Americans.
Even if you don't know of Curacao,
odds are you have seen photographs of the
Caribbean-colored, Dutch-looking offices and storehouses
that grace Willemstad's waterfront.
The waterfront looks like something
out of a fairy tale -- with buildings painted blue,
pink, citrus yellow, pistachio and other pastel tones.
They feature Dutch gables and red-tiled roofs.
The row of stately buildings from the
17th and 18 centuries flanks what some call the
prettiest harbor in the Caribbean, with a floating
700-foot pedestrian bridge that connects the two banks
and swings to shore when a ship enters the harbor.
Around the corner from the buildings
on the waterfront's Handelskade is the Floating Market,
where produce, fish, spices, dried meats and fabrics
arrive daily via small boats from nearby Venezuela and
Colombia.
Not far away, Afro-Carib artists sell
their wares on a crowded plaza.
Curacao (it's pronounced kur-a-SOW)
was once dubbed the isla inutil, or useless island, by
the Spanish, after they found no gold.
Something for everyone
Today Curacao has a lot going for it and it remains a
cultural crossroads in the Caribbean, with a diverse and
ethnically mixed population representing 50 countries.
It is a place where a beach-and-surf
vacation can get mixed with Dutch-flavored culture and
history.
Curacao is an island of cactus
forests and oil refineries, lizards and stray goats, 38
secluded beaches and world-class diving and snorkeling,
a little-known slavery museum and a historic synagogue,
casinos and nighttime partying.
It features 360 days of sunshine a
year, gentle trade winds and water temperatures from 75
to 82 degrees.
The island even produces its own
citrus liqueur: Curacao of Curacao.
The liqueur comes in different colors
and is derived from the peel of the laraha orange. Tours
are available at the Senor & Co. distillery on weekdays.
With its sister islands of Aruba and
Bonaire, Curacao is a small island that is off the
beaten track in the southern Caribbean.
The island is 38 miles long and 9
miles wide with a population of 140,000. It lies 35
miles north of Venezuela and away from most hurricanes
Curacao gets 23 inches of rain a year
and its average daily temperature is 82 degrees.
Holland ties
It is an island with strong ties to Holland -- in its
history, food, architecture and lifestyle. It also is
popular with Dutch and German tourists.
The official languages are Dutch and
Papiamentu (a combination of Portuguese, Dutch, English,
Spanish and African dialects), although English and
Spanish are widely spoken.
You may dine on goat, iguana or some
of the best Indonesian fare in the Caribbean.
Curacao is known for its oil refining
and its offshore banking. But tourism is growing.
The island is flat and arid -- like
Arizona on the edge of the always-blue Caribbean. Its
main plants are 20-foot-tall cacti and wind-shaped
divi-divi trees. The coast features rocky coves and
craggy cliffs.
The beaches -- known locally as bocas
or playas -- feature silky white sand and water so clear
you can count your toes in shoulder-deep water.
The beaches generally aren't big and
are found in secluded coves and bays. Many are
surrounded by limestone outcroppings and cactus-topped
cliffs. Some are lined with mangroves. They aren't as
famous as themileslong beaches in neighboring Aruba.
Competition
Curacao seems to be jealous of Aruba and its booming
tourist industry and Aruba seems to look down on
Curacao. There are some very strained relations between
the two islands.
Curacao's Mambo Beach on the
southwest shore features swaying palm trees, sand, surf
and coral reefs. It is one of the prettiest beaches you
will ever see. At night, Mambo Beach becomes party
central, with music, dancing and lots of revelry.
Curacao was discovered by the Spanish
in 1499, but the Dutch seized the island in 1634. It
became a major Dutch trading center because of the
natural harbor at Willemstad.
The harbor features a long channel,
Sint Annabaai, that divides the Punda (the point) area
on the east bank and the Ostobanda (the other side)
neighborhood on the west bank.
It's the Punda's waterfront that you
see in postcards of Curacao.
The buildings got their eye-popping
paint job in 1817 after a governor got migraines from
the sun striking the then-white surfaces. The governor
also had financial investments in a paint company,
according to local stories.
You can reach the Punda via the
wood-decked Queen Emma Bridge, the wide pontoon bridge
that was built in 1888 and rebuilt in 1939. Free ferries
cross the bay when the floating bridge is moved for
ships.
During the day, the Punda is filled
with low-priced shops, restaurants, stores and souvenir
stands. At night, it is a world of open-air bars and
karaoke cafes.
The whole area with its 750 buildings
officially is a UNESCO World Heritage site.
That includes the yellow Mikve Israel
Emanuel, the oldest synagogue in continual use in the
Americas. It was founded in 1732. It features white sand
on the floor to symbolize the Jewish trek through the
desert for 40 years. The synagogue has elaborate
mahogany and silver in its interior trimmings. There is
a central courtyard. Next door is the Jewish Historical
& Cultural Museum.
At one time, half of the white
population of Curacao was Jewish. Jews from Spain and
Portugal who had fled to Holland during the Inquisition
in the 15th century first moved to Curacao in 1651. They
were joined by Jews from Brazil and Mexico.
There are old Dutch forts like
Waterfort from 1634, made of coral stones in and along
the waterfront, parts of which have been turned into
shops.
You will find the slavery museum in
the Hotel Kura Hulanda on the Ostobanda bank.
Heritage site
Hotel Kura Hulanda is in a restored neighborhood and is
another of Curacao's World Heritage sites. It is a hotel
that takes the form of a village, where you can walk the
original lanes and alleys, relax in courtyards and stay
in rooms that would have been shops and homes 300 years
ago. It covers eight blocks and features some of the
island's best and most expensive restaurants.
The hotel also houses the African
History Museum, which is generally considered the best
look at slavery in the Caribbean. It fills 15 buildings
and more than 16,000 square feet with artifacts and
displays. One display takes you inside a replica of a
slave ship.
The museum traces slavery from Africa
to the Americas and looks closely at Curacao's role as a
slave market from the 1600s to 1863. More than 500,000
slaves from Africa were shipped through Curacao.
The $6 million museum was funded by a
Dutch philanthropist, Jacob Gelt Dekker.
The island also features the remains
of Dutch colonial land-huizas, or plantation houses,
from when Curacao was a tropical playground for wealthy
industrialists and traders. They were built on hilltops
across the island.
Divers love the reefs in the
12-mile-long Curacao Underwater Park along the island's
southwest coast.
Other attractions on Curacao include
the Curacao Sea Aquarium, with 400 species of tropical
fish, corals and sponges at the southwest coast and the
4,650-acre Christoffel National Park at the island's
northwest end. It features Mount Christoffel, the
island's high point at 1,220 feet, and covers three
former plantations.
A note to travelers: Expect to pay
hefty lodging taxes on Curacao.
For tourist information, contact the
Curacao Tourism Corp., 3361 Southwest Third Ave., Suite
201, Miami, FL 33145; 305-285-0511 or 800-3-CURACAO. The
Internet site is
www.curacao.com.
For information about Hotel Kura
Hulanda, see
www.kurahulanda.com or call 877-264-3106.
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