Eleuthera

walter hiott eleuthera

Eleuthera is an island in the Bahamas that offers all of the relaxation, serenity, and beauty typically associated with this archipelago country. The name “Eleuthera” is derived from the Greek word meaning free, and when you go there and feel the stresses from everyday life melt away – once you finally get through the seemingly impossibly tiny airport and an inevitable issue with a rental car transaction – you’ll probably come to feel that the name is an apt description of how you feel during your stay.

In addition to the scenic beauty of its choral reefs and crystal clear water, Eleuthera is one of the only places in the world with pink sand beaches, a really interesting sight for most people who are used to, well, sand colored sand. Lending an additional air of wonder to an island already full of it, the pink hue of the sand on some of the beaches is caused by thousands or millions of broken coral pieces, shells, and calcium carbonate left behind by tiny marine creatures with red and pink shells that live in the coral reefs that surround the beach.

One really interesting institution on Eleuthera is The Island School, where high school students from around the world can go for a semester to learn about how to be green, how to snorkel, and most importantly how to be engaged global citizens. With the campus and the surrounding ocean as their laboratories, The Island School partners with a world class science research facility to explore Eleuthera both culturally and environmentally. If a short vacation in Eleuthera is amazing, imagine how lucky the students who attend this school are to spend a whole semester or summer there, and to learn more thoroughly about its ecology and culture.