Mandarin Oriental Elbow Beach: Paget Parish, Bermuda

bermuda-exterior-pool-and-ocean-view

While the main building is the one showcased on many of Elbow Beach’s brochures, and while it looks appealing in a Grand Hotel sort of way, at this point, this buttercup-yellow building is in serious need of renovation—which is apparently due to commence in November 2007.

Until then, your best bet is to stay at one of the 104 ocean view cottages (approximately 600 square feet, with names such as Oleander and Alamanda,) which have been impeccably renovated to five-star standards, complete with Italian marble spa bathrooms and brand-new lanais, and furnished in a streamlined and contemporary manner, all the better to appreciate that pristine beach and the azure ocean—right outside your door.

Public Spaces

Staying in one of the cottages means having the gardens—fifty acres of them—as your front and back yards, and the grounds are indeed lusciously appointed, complete with hammocks and benches, flowering bushes and towering cypress, and all situated so as to best appreciate the hillside views of the splendidly blue ocean and pink sand beach.

Atop the hill, in the main building, the Verandah Bar with its full-length porch also affords splendid ocean views—and countless varieties of rum. And the Seahorse Grill is lovely for breakfast, birds hopping across the floor in search of crumbs, and romantic at dinner and well known for its new Bermudian cuisine.

Just down the hill but still on the hotel property, there’s Lido, run by Little Venice Group, serving some of the best food on the island. Also managed by Little Venice Group, is Mickey’s Bistro, smack dab on the beach and surely one of the more splendid settings for a meal.

(Source: Mandarin Oriental)

(Source: Mandarin Oriental)

Breakfast

A full buffet at the Seahorse Grill (enough food and variety to leave you comatose for the remainder of your stay) offered on the lushly-planted porch of the dining room, windows flung open to the sounds of birds and the ocean. What a lovely way to start the day.

Staff

Leave your hurry behind; things will get done when they get around to doing it. It’s Bermuda—get used to it.

Location

A five-minute cab ride away from Hamilton, the “big city” of Bermuda (population 1,000-1,500 depending upon who’s fishing), costing approximately ten dollars—but the cabs are nearly always lined up underneath the Elbow Beach’s imposing porte-cochère.

Overview

A combination resort hotel and cottage colony, the Elbow Beach, originally built in 1908, has history—and as its new owner, Mandarin Oriental is working to honor its fabled past while meeting the needs of a luxury client. Admittedly, there is work to be done—and yet there’s much to be said for the zen calm of the exquisite setting and its many pleasures

Link: Elbow Beach

Mark Thompson

About Mark Thompson

A member of Authors Guild, Society of American Travel Writers (SATW), and New York Travel Writers (NYTW), Mark Thompson is an editor, journalist, and photographer whose work appears in various periodicals, including Travel Weekly, Metrosource, Huffington Post, Global Traveler, Out There, and OutTraveler. The author of the novels Wolfchild (2000) and My Hawaiian Penthouse (2007), Mark completed a Ph.D. in American Studies. He has been a Fellow and a resident at various artists' communities, including MacDowell, Yaddo, and Blue Mountain Center.

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