Petit Saint Vincent

Petit St Vincent, known locally as PSV, is an island 40 miles (64 km) south of St. Vincent in the Grenadine islands. It is the southernmost island in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. The entire island operates as an eco-friendly boutique luxury resort. [1] [2] Resort has 22 one- and two-bedroom bluff cottages and luxury villas, and has been a part of the Small Luxury Hotels of the World hotel chain since July 2013.[3]

Petit Saint Vincent
Aerial view of Petit St Vincent Island.
Petit Saint Vincent
Petit Saint Vincent
Petit Saint Vincent
Geography
LocationCaribbean
Coordinates12°32′15″N 61°23′02″W
ArchipelagoGrenadines
Area0.2 sq mi (0.52 km2)
Administration
Additional information
Time zone

Petit St Vincent
Private Island
Map showing the location of Petit St. Vincent within the Grenadines
Island chainThe Grenadines
OwnerPhilip Stephenson
Population
  Total130 staff
WebsitePetit St. Vincent

Location

View of Petit Saint Vincent from Petite Martinique.

Petit St Vincent is located in the southern part of the Grenadines island chain, to the north of Carriacou and Petite Martinique and south of Palm Islands and Union Island.

Geography

Petit St Vincent Island View
Aerial view of shoal Mopion.

PSV is surrounded by two miles (3.2 km) of white sand beaches. Inland, the terrain consists of gently rolling hills and tropical woodland, amid which the resort’s accommodation is built. The highest point on the island is on Marni Hill to the northwest of the island, which is 275 feet (84 m) above sea level. The Grenadines are marginally drier and warmer than St. Vincent to the north, with the average daily temperature being between 29 and 30 °C (84 and 86 °F) all year round, due to the island chain’s proximity to the equator.

History

Petit St Vincent provides fine dining experiences.

The island is privately owned. In 1963 Haze Richardson and Doug Terman chartered their 77’ schooner Jacinta to Mr. H.W. Nichols, Jr. and family.[4] During this three-week cruise, Mr. Nichols expressed interest in purchasing an island and building a small hotel. Richardson and Terman concentrated their search on the Grenadines island chain, eventually arranging the purchase of Petit St. Vincent from a woman on Petit Martinique. The two men oversaw the construction of the 22 cottage resort on the behalf of Nichols, who asked Richardson to stay on as manager. Richardson accepted this offer and never left the island, becoming owner after Nichols’ death in 1985.

Richardson died in a swimming accident in Costa Rica in 2008. His wife, Lynn Richardson, continued to manage the resort until November 2010, when it was announced that the island had been sold to Freedom Resorts Ltd., operated by business partners Phil Stephenson (majority owner) and Robin Paterson.[5] Improvements made by this group include renovations to the cottages, a new beach bar and restaurant, and a spa.

The Petit St. Vincent resort[6] features the 22 luxury cottages[7] with a Balinese-inspired spa and a dive center in the 115 acre area.[8] Food services are provided by the Main Pavilion Restaurant and Bar and the nearby Beach Restaurant with the adjacent Goatie’s Bar.[9][10] Stephenson invested heavily in the refurbishment of the resort, and under the management of husband and wife team Matthew and Anie Semark, the island was inducted into the portfolio of Small Luxury Hotels of the World in July 2013.[11]

Jean Michel Cousteau opened the diving center on the island in 2014.[12] [13] It offers guided dives for "avid diver, snorkeler or anything in-between". [14]

gollark: - Most functions return `Result`s.- Outofbounds access, for example, can `panic` for not really handleable situations.- You can use the `?` operator which sticks in an early return (returning the errory thing, obviously) if it's an error or otherwise just returns the value of the `Ok`.- You can also do valid-result-or-panic with the `unwrap`/`expect` method.- Panics are isolated to threads.
gollark: Rust handles totality quite well, I think.
gollark: A runtime error?!
gollark: Oh, really?
gollark: It's not constrained enough.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.