Miami Beach

Miami Beach

Miami’s trendy South Beach (SoBe) is a trifecta for cruisers: A top-ten beach populated by the bronzed, buffed and beautiful; a non-stop party with days at the cafes along Ocean Drive and Lincoln Mall, and nights at chic restaurants and clubs fueled by 5 am last calls; and alongside all that sun, surf and revelry, there’s a lively, dynamic world-class cultural scene.

Two top-drawer marinas bookend SoBe’s famous Art Deco historic district making this a perfect destination for an arts-centric layover with plenty of opportunities for beach breaks, people watching, shopping, food foraging, and bar hopping. Just a few blocks northeast of the Miami Beach Marina and southeast of Sunset Harbour Yacht Club, the district pulses with historic and contemporary architecture, visual arts, performing arts, and culinary arts, all of which is oh, so close to some of the best sand in the U.S.

Art Basel

December’s celebrity-packed annual Art Basel Miami Beach hails as one of the most electrifying art events in the country, attracting over 200 top art galleries from North America, Europe, Latin America, Asia, and Africa. More than 50,000 visitors flock to the Miami Beach Convention Center (MBCC), including the international art world’s top collectors, dealers, curators, and critics.

Book a guided tour of the 500,000 square feet of exhibition space filled with an overwhelming display of paintings, sculptures, drawings, installations, photographs, films, and works by 4,000 artists ranging from emerging to museum caliber. Art Basel sprawls beyond the MBCC into the streets, along the beach and into both Collins Park and SoundScape Park (just north of Lincoln Road) with special presentations, performances and more guided tours. artbasel.com

Food and Wine Fest

February’s Food TV Network’s South Beach Wine and Food Festival (SOBEWFF) delivers a star-studded, four-day extravaganza that showcases chefs, culinary personalities and wine and spirit producers to benefit Florida International University’s Chaplin School of Hospitality & Tourism Management and the Southern Wine & Spirits Beverage Management Center. sobefest.com

Art appreciators, rejoice

Even if you don’t hit one of these hot events, cruisers with an appreciation for art have their choice of venues. Start your visit with the highly rated Art Deco Walking Tour sponsored by the Miami Design Preservation League. Local historians and architects provide an introduction to Art Deco, Mediterranean Revival and the Miami Beach Modern (MiMo) in a fascinating ninety-minute trek from the Art Deco Welcome Center along Ocean Drive and beyond. mdpl.org

Alternatively, pick up the iPod-based, self-guided tour and walk at your leisure. Espanola Way—edged with Mediterranean Revival circa 1925—becomes an impromptu crafts market on weekends.

Historic Sites

At SoBe’s south end, the Jewish Museum of Florida (now part of Florida International University – FIU)—housed in a beautifully restored 1936 synagogue—tells the story of 250 years of Jewish culture, arts and heritage in Florida through book discussions, lectures, films, food tours, poetry readings, and concerts. jmof.fiu.edu

A one-of-a-kind gem, Wolfsonian-FIU hosts the Mitchel Wolfson, Jr. collection in an Art Deco, landmarked building. A comprehensive survey of the persuasive power of art and design includes furniture, industrial design objects, glass, ceramics, metalwork, paintings, textiles, Egypt’s King Farouk’s matchbook collection, and thousands of medals. The Wolfsonian exhibits draw from over 70,000 artifacts. wolfsonian.org

The adults-only World Erotic Art Museum features over 4,000 erotic sculptures, paintings and ceramic artifacts dating from 300 BC to the present. weam.com

A Miami Beach cultural pioneer, ArtCenter/South Florida has been home to 42 artist studios and four exhibition spaces since 1984. Originally 21 storefronts in a dilapidated and abandoned section of Miami Beach’s Lincoln Road, ArtCenter is credited with the phoenix-like rise of the now trendy Lincoln Road Pedestrian Mall, which runs east and west from the Atlantic to Biscayne Bay.

Today the 60,000 square foot campus is open to the public, offers classes, and the First Saturday Lincoln Road Gallery Walk (7-10 pm) gives visitors an opportunity to visit all the juried artists-in-residences in their studios as well as five other galleries along the strip. artcentersf.org

Food Scene

More than forty restaurants (Cuban to Fusion Haute)—a half dozen with sidewalk cafes—and a dozen bars and clubs edge Lincoln Mall alongside a hundred or so shops, boutiques and upscale chains, making it easy to pick your favorite alfresco dining spot to enjoy the people watching here (some say it’s better than Ocean Drive). For those with a penchant for retro clothing and mid-century furnishings, Lincoln Road is also home to the Outdoor Antique and Collectible Market on the 2nd and 4th Sunday of each month from October to May.

Live Arts

The performing arts are also well represented in the Lincoln Road area. The beautiful Art Deco Colony Theater originally opened in 1935 by Paramount Pictures and is the beneficiary of a $6.5 million renovation, hosting a wide variety of programs including music, dance, theater, opera, comedy, performance art, and film for present-day enthusiasts. Just north, the Fillmore Miami Beach at the Jackie Gleason Theater (between the MBCC and Lincoln Road) is a venue for concert tours and dance performances managed by Live Nation.

Designed by Frank Gehry, Miami Beach Soundscape Park is the New World Center’s striking edifice that hosts the New World Symphony—America’s orchestral academy. A springboard for some of the finest instrumentalists on the planet, the post grad curriculum includes wide-ranging, eclectic, inexpensive, open-to-the-public performances including the very popular wallcast concerts. Far from your run-of-the-mill student recitals, these musicians are heading to positions in the finest orchestras in the world. nws.edu 

Just a few blocks beyond and close to the Miami Beach Convention Center—Kenneth Treister’s powerful and haunting Holocaust Memorial of Greater Miami dramatically conveys the unthinkable and unimaginable. In the Meditation Garden, a lily pond surrounds the Sculpture of Love and Anguish, a four-story arm that reaches for the sky. holocaustmmb.org

The nearby Bass Museum of Art is housed in the 1930 Miami Beach Public Library & Art Center designed by Russell Pancoast, a grandson of Miami Beach pioneer John A. Collins. The 500-piece founding collection of Renaissance and Baroque old master paintings, textiles and religious sculptures—gifted by John and Johann Bass in 1963—has grown to 3,000 works, including European painting and sculpture from the 15th century to present plus 20th and 21st-century North American, Latin American, Asian, and Caribbean pieces. bassmuseum.org

Seeing it all is both easy and relatively inexpensive. The South Beach Local bus (#123) loops SoBe passing by both marinas and most attractions. The Miami Beach Chamber of Commerce’s Miami Museum Mile Cultural Pass covers admission to the Bass Museum of Art, the Wolfsonian, the Jewish Museum of Florida, and the World Erotic Art Museums for $25 with a bonus of 15% or greater discounts at over 20 popular Miami Beach restaurants (good for 30 days, adults only).

By Beth Adams-Smith, Southern Boating, December 2013
Photos & Video by John Lambert

 

 

Abacos, Bahamas

A Step Back in Time

Just 135 miles off the coast of Florida, due east of Grand Bahama Island is unsung, oft overlooked Abaco—the northern tip of The Bahamas. The 780-square-mile cruising ground boasts long stretches of unspoiled beach, clear turquoise water, quaint villages, good provisioning, professional marine services, friendly locals, great snorkeling, a wide range of eateries, and predictable 5- to 20-knot trade winds. Little Abaco and Great Abaco Islands—from Crown Haven to Hole in the Wall—form a 120-mile arc that acts as the “mainland” for an outer archipelago of small reef-protected “cays” that dot the Sea of Abaco.

Abaco seems to exist in a time warp. Despite its proximity to the United States, none of the hustle and bustle of the more populated Bahamian Islands has crept northward. That is not an accident. Most Abaconians are aggressively anti-development and determined to preserve this unique and special place. Each of the Abaco islands still has its own distinct persona—many families, descendants of the Loyalists who fled the United States during and after the American Revolution, have called these islands home for well over 200 years. Some of the villages are quaint and charmingly gentrified, others a little less prosperous, but all are well tended with at least one water-view, aboveground cemetery. The surnames on those headstones are the same names on today’s shops, ferries, boatyards, and services.

The jumping-off point for a loop cruise of the Abaco archipelago is centrally located in Marsh Harbour, the third-largest city in The Bahamas. Its protected, deep water has made it the main supply depot for the islands and the home for most of the ferries, yacht charter companies, and a tiny but international airport. The Conch Inn Marina, with pool and restaurant, hosts the Moorings/Sunsail base. Within walking distance, a new Maxwell Supermarket has significantly raised the provisioning bar.

Lubbers Quarters

An easy sail from Marsh Harbour, Lubbers Quarters Cay is a small seven-acre island that is home to funky Cracker P’s beach shack. At the head of a 200-foot dock lined with philosophical “Burma Shave”-style signs, Cracker P’s offers lots to do—from a closet full of board games to the equipment for volleyball, bocce, croquet, horseshoes, badminton, ping-pong, dominoes, and darts. Climb the steps up and over the 40-foot sand dunes to a large sweep of pristine beach, or hike the lush estate amid sapodilla (planted by the original Cracker P), mahogany, tamarind, and mangroves as well as wild orchids, bromeliads and hibiscus.

Little Harbour

The southernmost stop on an Abaco cruise, Little Harbour’s entrance—marked by pairs of red and green “found object” markers—opens into a harbor that’s protected nearly 360 degrees. Famous Pete’s Pub, Gallery and Foundry sits at the head of the harbor and rents moorings, serves casual fare in an open-air palapa, and presides over an atelier. Descendants of sculptor Randolph Johnston continue to cast bronze sculptures using a 5,000-year-old lost-wax process. Visit the Johnston Family Gallery and ask about a tour of the foundry. After a swim off the beach on the harbor’s eastern side, or off the mile-and-a-half stretch of white sand on the ocean side, join the regulars at the bar fashioned from pieces of Langosta, the old sailing vessel that carried the Johnston family to Little Harbour in the early 1950s.

Elbow Cay (Hope Town)

Founded in 1785 by Loyalists, Hope Town’s 120-foot red and white candy-cane lighthouse, protected harbor and picturesque ambience make it the poster child for the Abaco archipelago. Three marinas offer transient dockage on the harbor’s west side. The transplanted New England village is a dinghy ride across the harbor and vaunts lovingly restored, brightly colored structures—house shops, private homes, galleries, and bed-and-breakfasts drip with Bougainvillea and are edged with white picket fences. The narrow sidewalk-like streets are designed for walkers and golf carts, and public entrances lead to a sweep of gorgeous, pink-powder ocean beach protected by a live coral reef just 30 feet offshore. The compelling Wyannie Malone Historical Museum is worth a stop. Its exhibits reveal the history of the village and larger archipelago. Among them are artifacts collected by infamous shipwreckers. Hope Town owes some of its early affluence to a group who enticed boats with false signal lights that led them to founder on the reef; they would then salvage the cargo. The island of Elbow Cay is a quarter-mile wide at its beamiest point and six miles from stem to stern.

Man-O-War Cay

One of the strongholds of Abaco tradition, most of the Man-O-War families are part of the original immigration. They became boat builders and shipwrights, and today Albury Brothers’ “Deep-V” runabouts have a passionate following that extends far beyond The Bahamas. There are several options for parts, boat supplies and repairs: Man-O-War Marina has slips and moorings; Edwin’s Boat Yard offers two full-service facilities boasting an extensive marine parts inventory; Man-O-War Hardware is a gold mine for cruisers. The village has two roads that parallel the harbor so it’s easy to make a long loop and see everything in an hour or so including three eateries and The Sail Shop’s hand-made duffel bags, hats and jackets. Two well-supplied groceries offer everything but alcohol: Man-O-War Cay is a “dry” island.

Great Guana Cay

Famed Nipper’s Beach Bar & Grill put Great Guana Cay on the map. Right on the ocean dunes, it sports picnic tables, chairs and multi-level decks painted every color of the rainbow along with a shallow two-level pool designed mostly for the pool bar. The weekly pig roast is a big attraction accompanied by a powerful orange concoction. Despite Great Guana’s five-mile-wide, untouched ocean beach, the settlement is still delightfully small—a good part of the island wants it to stay that way. Pick up a mooring in Fishers Bay and dinghy ashore, or head over to upscale Orchid Bay Marina and Resort for a pampered experience.

Treasure Cay

One of the few big yacht options in Abaco, the 150-slip Treasure Cay Marina and Hotel houses a pool, 18-hole golf course, restaurants, 100-room hotel, rental villas and condos, and tennis courts. Its gorgeous three-mile arc of powder-sand beach dazzles and is well worth a visit. A popular bar is dockside and a low-key, upmarket restaurant overlooks the pool and harbor. Abaco Ceramics’ studio sells its coveted wares in shops all over The Bahamas.

Green Turtle Cay

The northernmost destination for Abaco-centric cruises is Green Turtle Cay, which requires a short outside passage around Whale Cay. When the ocean is raging, this passage is not recommended; the Cruiser’s Net (Channel 68, at 08:15AM) gives up-to-date weather reports. Green Turtle is home to three harbors: Settlement (small boats only), White Sound and Black Sound. The latter is the closest viable anchorage to the historic village of New Plymouth. A good way to see the whole cay is to join the locals and rent a golf cart. The history of Green Turtle is chronicled in the Albert Lowe Museum and the adjacent Memorial Sculpture Garden. White Sound features the quietly elegant Green Turtle Club and Marina with a pool high above the harbor, cottage accommodations and an old Bahamian-style fine-dining restaurant that serves three meals a day. Across the harbor, Bluff House Yacht Club and Marina’s Ipe (Brazilian teak) docks are filled with big sport-fish boats whose owners enjoy the facility’s two pools, two restaurants and first-class amenities. Cruising the Abacos is viable at most any time of year with the unique culture, gin-clear water and spectacular beaches. But the best weather seems to be March through May; it’s about the same temperature as the Palm Beach area of Florida.

By Beth Adams-Smith, Southern Boating May 2014

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