@Mendalla How was the vacation?
Just realized I had not answered this. It was lovely. Seven days on a cruise ship out of San Juan, Puerto Rico and hitting several Caribbean islands plus a day in San Juan at each end.
Highlights:
Old San Juan is one of the nicest old European areas I've seen outside Europe. Right up there with the French Quarter in New Orleans and Granada, Nicaragua. The city walls are mostly intact (one side was torn down in the nineteenth century to enable urban expansion), which is rare in Europe, let alone the New World and feature two old Spanish forts that are national historic sites and a UNESCO cultural heritage site. The view of the city from San Cristobal, the fort we went into, was spectacular.
El Yunque rainforest, about 45 minutes outside San Juan, is the only tropical rainforest in the US National Forest system and has been a forest reserve since late in the Spanish regime (the US took over in 1898). Had a nice hike, saw some lovely waterfalls, and the biggest bloody land snails I have ever laid eyes on.
Saint Lucia is a bit of a study in contrasts. Their economy is in the tank (26% unemployment per our driver, other sources have cited even higher) so the towns are a mess. However, the core of the island is volcanic mountains covered by protected rainforests and it is gorgeous. Then there's the Pitons, massive peaks of volcanic rock overlooking the old French town of Soufrieres.
Charlotte Amalie, the capital of the Virgin Islands (it's the cruise port for St. Thomas), is another nice old European city. Strangely, St. Thomas was not colonized by one of the usual suspects (Spain, UK, France, Netherlands) but by Denmark, who then sold it to the US in 1917. The streets still bear both Danish and English names and there's some nice Northern European architecture around (e.g. the legislature, a former Danish barracks, and the city's original fort which is currently undergoing a major reno/restoration).
On St. Kitts, we saw Brimstone Hill, a massive British fort designed to keep the French at bay (the island's colonial ownership was settled in 1763 in the same treaty that ended the Seven Years War here). They've done a great restoration job on the citadel and one of the bastions with work still ongoing on other parts. View is fantastic (it was placed to enable the garrison to watch the seas for incoming ships).
Sint Martaan/Saint Martin (the island is split between the Dutch in the South and the French in the North) is a nice island but I can't really cite any specifics. There's a good beach right along the waterfront of Philipsburg (the Dutch capital).
Barbados is, to be honest, a bit rundown but the legislature is one of the nicest I've seen and they have spectacular beaches (we were on Carlisle Bay, just South of the capital). If you take a walk in Queen's Park, the former home of the British garrison commander, there's a huge thousand year-old Baobab tree. These are normally native to West Africa and they figure the seed must have drifted across the Atlantic because it is too old to have been brought by humans.
That about covers it. I'll see about some pics later. Haven't even downloaded the main camera yet, only my phone.