Wakanda News Details

Tobago awakening - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

Tobago had become the sister that I took for granted. I found my way back in the 2000s, when I first took my daughter, then six, for many vacations. At that age they prefer the sand and sea and so Tobago was the perfect choice. My first experience was Kariwak Village, situated on the Crown Point side of the island, which can now coin the phrase of being the "touristy part."

Kariwak Village for me was warm and inviting and exuded small island charm of which the food was the star. Ms Clovis, as she was fondly referred to, was the magic that was Kariwak. Splendidly curated local menus from her special recipes, home-grown herbs, freshly-baked bread, cocoa tea, flying fish, spice cake, to name a few. Everything local was on that menu, which was prepared from the freshest of ingredients. This small boutique hotel had captivated me, and so we returned many times until my daughter grew up.

I did not return to Tobago for many years until this year. I found myself on the quieter Prospect side, more peaceful and rustic.

A day was spent discovering the coastline which included the scenic drive up to explore Englishman’s Bay and Castara Bay a little further up we would have found ourselves in picturesque Parlatuvier.

Postcard perfect Englishman’s Bay with its turquoise waters, shady trees and golden sand still remains my favourite Tobago beach. I lunched at Eula’s Restaurant which is conveniently located on the beach, the upstairs being the restaurant which treated us to ocean views and breezes. I looked forward to sampling her food because the massive brown sugar cake, (only $12) was dangerously good, big coconut chips, hints of ginger and molasses with great coconut flavour.

Lunch was delightful, a choice of either stewed chicken or grilled fish served with local sides of peas and rice, plantain and salad, or fries. Both options were tasty and well-prepared. I opted for the fish which was delicious because it was ocean caught that day, lightly seasoned, and perfectly grilled. If a restaurant can grill a slice of king fish well, then I don’t need much else to satisfy me! Eula’s delivered. Did I mention that she has home-made ice cream for sale too, along with generous slices of sponge and carrot cake?

After lunch and another swim, we drove down to Castara Bay, a calm and picturesque fishing village, not as shady as Englishman’s Bay but beautiful in every sense. I enjoyed yet another swim and we were on our way.

The evening found me at The Fish Pot for dinner. Small, friendly and family-owned, this charming restaurant offered a variety of local options, excellent cocktails and dreamy desserts. The tuna was grilled just as I asked, rare to medium, served up with rice and peas, and a variety of vegetables. The soursop ice cream was the right amount of creamy and all the soursop flavour. Fish Pot was a wonderful choice, one to remember and recommend.

Reminiscing on that short but sweet weekend in Tobago I realised that there is so much more to be discovered in the sister isle, so much beauty and serenity lie ther

You may also like

Sorry that there are no other Black Facts here yet!

This Black Fact has passed our initial approval process but has not yet been processed by our AI systems yet.

Once it is, then Black Facts that are related to the one above will appear here.

More from Home - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

Spirituality Facts

Kids 2 Kings: The Last Great Gathering

Arts Facts