Destination: St. Lucia
Overview Text Size A A A
In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, France and England fought so bitterly over St. Lucia that the the prized Caribbean island switched hands no fewer than fourteen times, becoming known as la belle Hélène, after Helen of Troy, whose beauty was also famous for starting wars. France eventually lost the fight, ceding St. Lucia to the British in 1815. The island remained part of the British Empire for more than 150 years; it was granted self-governing power in 1969 and full independence in 1979 (it remains a member of the British commonwealth). Today the mixing of St. Lucia’s colonial past with the influence of the African, Indian and Creole cultures here has yielded a tapestry that’s as lush and varied as its fabled rain forest. You can hear it in the patois, the blend of French and English interlaced with Caribbean melodies that island residents speak; you can see it in the games of cricket that local children play in front of their homes, and you can taste it in spicy dishes like curried fish and sweet native fruit like fleshy soursop.
As for the landscape, there’s something primordial about the 239-square-mile island, one of the Caribbean’s most mountainous. The Pitons, two rocky pyramids that rise out of the Caribbean Sea in the southwest, are part of a UNESCO World Heritage site and have become St. Lucia’s most iconic symbol—even the local brew is called Piton beer. In addition, the rain forest here covers 19,000 acres and is so untouched in parts that it could easily serve as the backdrop for the television show Lost (in fact, the movie Jewel of the Nile was shot on the island). Driving across St. Lucia, along roads that snake up and down steep hills in heart-stopping hairpin turns, you will see the island’s beauty at its most spectacular: sweeping green valleys, expansive banana plantations and everywhere flowering jasmine, orchids and frangipani plants.
Search By Keyword
Popular Destinations
U.S./Canada: Hawaii: Hawaii: Kauai
Kauai’s nickname, the Garden Isle, scarcely does justice to Hawaii’s...
U.S./Canada: Florida: Palm Beach
Forget about your grandmother’s Palm Beach, the winter playground manages...
Indagare News Flash
- Win A Trip To the Beach: Enter our sweepstakes to win a trip to Barbados: The Ultimate Resort Destination. Brush up on the latest news with our destination report and learn chic restaurants and local secrets from beauty guru and island insider Jemma Kid.
- Editor’s Picks: An insider’s report on the best of Boston. A postcard on a memorable honeymoon in Africa. Plus: A profile of up-and-coming London designer Gwendolyn Carrié and an in-depth London Update. Join an art lover’s trip to TEFAF in Maastricht with private dinners, visits to collectors and hotel rooms already booked.
- Member Advice: FAQs and major trends to help you navigate the new travel landscape.
- Coming soon: Insider reports on Bangkok, Cabo, Anguilla and Phuket.
- What’s your travel IQ? Take the quiz USA Today called “a killer” and establish your Indagare quotient.
- Postcards: Family trip to South Africa, a philanthropic trip to Jamaica and a special discovery in Sicily. Submit a postcard.
- Indagare Insiders: Top picks in Delhi from Fiona Caulfield; Marie Brandolini on Venice; the design duo behind Kirna Zabete on shopping the world. Club 55’s Patrice de Colmont on St. Tropez, Eva Lorenzotti on Cairo and Loulou de la Falaise on Paris.
- Reviews: In-depth guides to Buenos Aires, Delhi and Deer Valley.
- Indagare Plus: Remember that hotels marked by an Indagare Plus symbol offer preferential rates and benefits to members.
- Sample Indagare: By signing up for bi-weekly email blasts on new hot spots and insider tips. Join our mailing list.
- News: Indagare named Best Travel Website by Vanity Fair. Read an interview with our founder on Vivre.
- New feature: Members share your profiles, comments, favorite articles and IQs. Just click on the Profile tab on the upper right of your screen and look for the Edit My Profile blue tab.
- Indagare means to discover, explore, seek, scout in Latin.

