After more than 2 months we will say good-bye to Guadeloupe tomorrow evening and celebrate the New Year in Barbados.
We are curious to see another quite different Caribbean Island with monkeys on it (really missed those cute fellows!), but also some sort of snakes on it (didn’t miss those at all! But luckily only non poisenous ones).
We are also so much looking forward to speak English again, our French knowledge and also Google translator is just a mess. It surely will be much easier for us to get in contact with the locals on an English speaking island. At the beginning we imagined to somehow get along here with our freaky and weird kind of English/French mix and some funny gestures and a lot of nice smiles, but unfortunately we had to accept that it’s not always that easy. I also would not recommend Guadeloupe for single female travellers as some guys here can be quite annoying 😉
Due to the language problems and as the locals enjoy being on their own here, we stayed the last two months quite on our own in our airbnb house. Good for us that we love being with and talking to each other 😛
And hopefully (especially for Andy) we get some tasty and affordable draught beer on Barbados!!!
But we definitely enjoyed Guadeloupe’s many amazing beaches! Even though I got kind of sea sick quite often while trying to swim in the huge and very chaotic waves. We have also never seen an island where there are so many different colours of sandy beaches (nearly like the pic below).
And for sure our best swim was the one with a great rain shower out of nowhere. The sky turned suddenly black and all the people left the beach, running in panic to their cars. We had the whole lagoon on our own with enormous and heavy cold rain drops from above and great warm waves below. What an unforgetable experience and what a fun 🙂
Finally there are also some very sad news about Guadeloupe, too: It was really quite shocking for us to read a local news blog by chance- after staying here already for some weeks – about the up to date contamination of the French West Indies with chlordecone and the problems especially the locals – but also the tourists – have to face. So Guadeloupe and also Martinique are not really the idylic paradise islands one may think at the beginning … 🙁