We arrived at SJU on time (~ 5 pm), took bus T5 (running from the airport to old San Juan, $ 0.75+0.25, coins only) and checked-in to our Super Cozy Apartment in Isla Verde (Carolina) on Cll Venus (recommended). Enough time left to swim and walk at sunset on the closest beach. On the way back we picked-up some groceries at SuperMax and settled at The New Ceviche for Peruvian food: ceviche and mariscos.
The following morning started with a small disappointment as the pickup shuttle promised by rental company never came. We decided for a brisk walk (~2km) rather than to wait for the bus. The rental process was quick and efficient (yes, we asked how to open the car trunk and were reminded to release parking break) and we were on our way to ☞ Ceiba-Vieques ferry terminal. Decided to avoid toll roads. We parked our car at paid Smart Parking and made it to the terminal (free shuttle) just in time for pre-boarding. It was the slower, larger ferry carrying cars (for Vieques residents and businesses only) – smooth 1-hour sailing ($4+$2 plus $2 for one piece of luggage, round trip). Michelle, our host, picked us up for a 6-km transfer to Esperanza to our cottage Artist Studio at Casa Esperanza on Cll Orquideas (recommended). She was loaded with energy and good info – based on her advice and our earlier research we quickly decided on what to do on the island (walking – no driving).
But the evening was all about bioluminescence – one of the main impulses behind our decision to visit Vieques (Puerto Rico). Joanna decided to go with ☞ JAK Water Sports (recommended ☞ TA review) on 8:15 pm kayak (clear bottom) tour ($60 per person). Michelle recommended them too. Light pollution (sunset time, moon phase, cloud cover) and group size were the key considerations. We had good combination of the conditions and very good guides (but group was larger than what we were told). We decided to leave our phone behind and enjoy the “show” without wasting time trying to capture perfect pictures. It was beautiful and fascinating – million sparkles whenever water was moved by hand, paddle, big fish or ran under kayak’s transparent bottom. Next day was 14-km beach hopping walk (longest of the trip) with snorkeling and swimming. Snorkeling around pier remnants was quite nice (when there were no ther people around the first time; Joanna tried one more time but pier was occupied by a large crowd) – we could quickly see more than a dozen different fish species (probably more for a trained eye). We ended the day at Rancho Choli (recommended) for Piotr’s birthday dinner.
There is no trail connecting Esperanza to the Playa Negra trailhead on PR 201. With little traffic, we just walked along local roads. The beach is known for black magnetite sand (visitors came with magnets to check it out, it worked) washed down Quebrada Urbana creek (the trail follows the creek) from the hills above. With no recent rains, the black color was not prevailing, but enough on top of “regular white” sea-sand beach to examine. Black streaks running down when waves retreat. After lunch at Bananas we took taxi to Vieques for 6:30 pm (fast, passenger) ferry back to the main island. We retrieved our car and drove to Fajardo where we settled in Julia’s Apartment on Cll 4-2 (recommended). Picked-up some groceries and local beer at Supermercado Pueblo.