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Taking the Kids: To Antigua, spared from recent hurricanes

By Eileen Ogintz, Tribune Content Agency on

Have faith. Travel missteps can lead to the most unexpected pleasures.

"This is the best mistake we ever made," said Ashley Tetrich, building a sandcastle with her very happy 5-year-old daughter, Trysta, on the beach at Antigua's Curtain Bluff resort. Antigua was spared in this past season's hurricanes, though neighboring Barbuda was hard hit. As a result, Antigua is attracting new tourists to the island, which has some 365 beaches and most on the calm waters of the island's Caribbean side.

Tetrich explained that she, her husband Tim and Trysta, along with two other couples, were supposed to stay in a house that wasn't what they expected. "We took one look and said we had to go," she said. Not only was there nothing for Trysta to do, but no one wanted to drive up and down that steep, windy road. Though they didn't get their money back, the couple's consolation was that the trip had been won at a charity auction -- and led them to the small (just 72 rooms), upscale, all-inclusive Curtain Bluff, which they found while searching for a child-friendly resort.

Curtain Bluff welcomes kids with a breezy, open-air kids' club and an adjacent playground tucked in the shade. The activities, says Ainsley Smith, a former teacher and daycare provider who oversees the kids' program, are designed to teach kids about Antigua -- making wind chimes out of shells, for example, coloring a book with the flag of Antigua on the cover, pictures of the sugar mill tower, the island's national historic symbol, and the Hawksbill Turtle and the frigate, the national bird.

"Today people expect a resort to have a kids' camp, like having a spa," said Smith. "But we're not just babysitters ... the parents come and hang out and do the activities with the kids!"

For older kids, there is sailing, complimentary snorkeling trips twice a day, complimentary diving, tennis instruction, kayaking, tubing, waterskiing and more.

 

There is an early kids' dinner offered and kids are encouraged when they eat with their parents to try new foods. "If they don't like something, we will bring them something else," said Chef Christopher Blatz.

But this is one resort that manages very well to balance the needs of families and couples. I admit I'm partial -- my husband and I honeymooned here 35 years ago and have been back several times since. We haven't brought our kids (only once for dinner when we were on a sailing trip) because it has always been "our place."

That this resort, which has recently undergone a $13 million renovation, works as well for those with older kids as it does for those with adult kids traveling with parents is a testament to how hard owners and staff try to satisfy guests -- from the masseuse who starts the treatment early and then goes the full time to the "beach butlers" serving up drinks and cold towels, to the chef who will accommodate most any request, to the wine tastings where every drop is drunk, laughed Sommelier George Williams, who travels the world seeking out new vintages.

Chelle Hulford, whose husband Howard built Curtain Bluff 55 years ago and now is buried on the property, still greets every guest, many of whom hug staff members who have been here decades. Upon arrival everyone is invited to a weekly cocktail party at Chelle's house, which offers a spectacular view.

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