Tourists visit popular islands of the Caribbean by the planeload. What  they don't see from their resort hotels are the hundreds of  out-of-the-way, uninhabited islands sprinkled along the West Indies  chain from Florida to South America. This alluring archipelago, strung  with beaches accessible only by boat but spaced temptingly close  together, led Mississippi adventurer Scott B. Williams to embark upon an  open-ended quest to see how far south he could go in a seventeen-foot  sea kayak.
No one was willing to accompany him. He spent months working his way  down the west coast of Florida, through the Bahamas, and on to  Hispaniola, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. On Island Time, his  narrative of this journey of a lifetime, describes the wonders of  discovery as he makes landfall on pristine cays. Relentless headwinds,  dangerous surf, countless beaches declared off-limits to trespassing,  and aggressive sharks that ram his kayak and snap him out of his musing  remind the adventurer that this paradise is far from perfect. Every day  of the journey required constant vigilance.
With no one to depend on and often no one even knowing where he was for  weeks at a time, Williams learned what it means to be self-reliant and  to adjust to "island time." With just a simple, human-powered craft and  the few belongings that would fit inside, Williams explores an almost  boundless frontier and a powerful natural stretch of the Caribbean  rarely if ever accessed by the island tourist.
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Scott B. Williams - On Island Time: Kayaking the Caribbean
Labels: Travel Guides