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With the season for Winter Sun approaching, and tourist numbers bouncing back strongly from the pandemic, record passenger numbers are expected to travel to Barbados from Manchester Airport this winter.
To celebrate the Carribean island nation’s popularity as a destination, Manchester Airport’s Terminal 2 adorned its giant media wall with imagery of Bajan sand and surf in recognition of Barbados National Day, celebrating the island achieving independence in 1966, on 30th November.
Around a third of Barbados’ visitors are from the UK, and non-stop flights from Manchester are operated by Aer Lingus, Virgin Atlantic and Tui to Bridgetown this winter – more airlines than any other UK airport. The total number of seats available is around a 50% increase on the winter of 2019/20, the last ‘Winter Sun’ season prior to the pandemic.
Covid-19 travel rules were still in place in the UK as recently as March, so the boom in flight capacity has been rapid – and Irish airline Aer Lingus chose to make Barbados the inaugural destination for their first UK transatlantic base, launched at Manchester Airport last winter, citing “strong demand from the North of England for flights to Barbados”.
So what is driving the demand? The island’s tourist board Visit Barbados says the island has ‘something for every kind of traveller: the foodie, the explorer, the historian and the adventurer’ – and with sunseekers denied the opportunity to travel abroad by pandemic restrictions over the last couple of years, many are looking for something extra-special.
Barbados bills itself as the birthplace of rum and there are four distilleries on the island, each with a storied past. Seafood is a big part of its culinary identity and shorelines are dotted with street food stalls cooking fresh fish on the grill, including the Bajan national dish – flying fish with coucou, a polenta-style side dish made with cornmeal. Asian influence can be found too, with curries and roti a common feature of restaurant menus.
The historic centre of Barbados’ capital Bridgetown, along with its 18th Century Garrison, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and is one of the best preserved examples of colonial era British architecture in the Caribbean. It boasts the world’s third-oldest Parliament building, still in its original use. Some of Barbados’ plantation houses are now open to the public as museums, including a former home of George Washington.
The island’s musical culture is world-famous. Visit Barbados recommends keeping an eye out for Tuk Bands which it says “perform during celebrations and island festivals such as Crop Over, the Holetown Festival, at Christmas and on New Year’s Day.”
The Kensington Oval, on the western edge of Bridgetown, is the home of West Indies cricket and has been in continual use for over 120 years, hosting the 2007 Cricket World Cup final.
White sandy shores are probably the island’s most famous asset, covering more than 70 miles of shoreline. The calm, clear waters of the west coast draw the most visitors. Manchester Airport’s social media followers suggest Carlisle Bay, a marine park off Bridgetown which is particularly popular with scuba divers. Catamaran tours were also picked out as a highlight. The east coast of the island faces out to the Atlantic, and its slightly choppier seas make it a hotspot for surfing.
Although often considered a flat country, Barbados’ rugged east coast is a draw for climbers, and the interior of the limestone island boasts some impressive natural caves. The biggest of these, Harrison’s Cave, is 50ft high at its widest point and has been transformed into an eco-adventure park.