Oceanfrontier Hideaway
Check rates and availability for this hotel
Find the best prices for Oceanfrontier Hideaway from our 7 partners. Show all partners
Travel Blogs from Great Abaco Island
Getting ready to leave paradise
... mile stretch of beach; Green Turtle Cay, one of the earliest settlements and cleanest villages anywhere and Man-o-War Cay and its peace and tranquility and gentle pace of life. They all offer something.
Our weather has been fantastic. We had storms roll through yesterday with high winds and lightning but that was the only day and we all were safe in Black Sound. We will be out of touch until we reach Florida's shores and will update everyone once we arrive.
...
Waiting for a window
... old home on Huron Pointe Drive. When we told her we were from Harrison Twp. she asked if we knew Heidi Bauer! What a little world we live in. That's Branden's wife and this Joyce used to work with her, but she just retired. They own this 56' catamaran that was anchored outside the harbor. They just bought it and were going to bring it back to Harrison Township.
...
Two tracking on the golf cart
... we arrived at West End on Feb. 22 that we have electricity. Every day and night we have been using our generator to keep the boat's batteries charged so we could run our small freezer and refrigerator, the hot water heater, use our computer and radio and charge our camera batteries . We also used our gimbled oil lamp and a candle. But now we're plugged in and the stereo is on and we don't have to run the generator at all.
...
Tahiti Beach
... into a golf cart and took off to explore. We were given specific instructions regarding the roads to travel and the ones to avoid. Who cares about rules! So we headed south along gravel and pothole filled roads to more spectacular beaches. The Atlantic was not so calm today and several times we found ourselves running up the dunes to escape the waves. The beach was so steep that the spray would often fly 20 feet or more in to air. No ...
What a view!
... the top! What a spectacular view. We could see all the reefs and islands for 20 miles. The lighthouse was built by the British Imperial Lighthouse Service in 1863 and still uses a kerosene-fueled mantle and a huge rotating glass fresnel lens to send a beam of light which can be seen for 20 miles. The locals were up in arms when the British government built it because it took away their livelihood - ...