00109-8000 Travel Guide

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Jungle Bay Dominica Owner Sets the Record Straight

April 9, 2007 at 2:59 PM | by | Comments (0)

A while back, we did a PM Linkage that linked off to some of the hotel reviews that we received. This review about the Jungle Bay Dominica however has been hotly contested by the resort's owner who wrote into us to say that the reviewer could not have possibly been a guest there.

As long time readers and hotel mavens know, we encourage both guest and hotel management involvement--as long as it is transparent. Our goal, as always, is to present you all sides of the story and let you, the potential guest, make your own informed decision on the property in question.

For now, we're placing Hotel Maven (if you are such a thing) WindiesWanderer under a Cloud of Suspicion.

The manager's response after the jump.

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If You Can't Stand the Heat, Get Outta the Dominica

Go To The Hotel's Web 
  Site Where: Point Mulatre,, Dominica, 00109-8000
October 30, 2006 at 10:39 AM | by | Comments (0)

The New York Times' Mary Billard writes of the Jungle Bay Resort & Spa, an eco-hotel/lodge in Dominica and it's not for the faint of heart.

Get ready for no AC, heart-pumping hikes to access your room, and a serious lack of amenities. Billard explained that although ordering room service was available, she felt too cruel to imagine someone coming up all those stairs with a big ol' tray. But on that note the Jungle Bay Resort has provided much needed jobs for the locals who have been out of work. They are ready to please as is the partially open-air spa and restaurant and then there's the scenery. For those able to get over the lack of usual hotel amenities, this place provides serenity on a real level.

As for the rooms, their goal is to allow you to become one with nature :

Rustic luxe. The 35 individual, spacious cottages are on stilts, filled with sunlight (some seeping through the floorboards), and the sounds of the hummingbirds. All have balconies and views of either the water or the rain forest and are made out of local tropical hardwoods and volcanic stone. There is no air-conditioning or television. Some guests need to be in good shape: a series of footpaths connects the cottages, the highest perched like a bird's nest up 189 steps. And the vertical is steep.

The showers are outdoor, solar heated, and as Billard claims, "sublime." This is the perfect getaway for those of you who like to rough it. If you huff and puff up one flight of stairs or love central air, don't even think about it.

Related Stories:
· Check In Check Out [New York Times]
· Jungle Bay Eco-Lodge [HotelChatter]
· Jungle Bay Resort & Spa Reviews [TripAdvisor]