St. Lucia Villa Rental - How to save on your honeymoon

Honeymoons are big investment, emotionally and financially.  It is however there to be enjoyed and a time that you will want to remember  and recall to your friends, family including grandchildren.

At a time when most people are looking to get the most for their buck we have put together a few suggestions of how you can maximize your investment in your honeymoon.

1  Compare prices for your honeymoon destination

As you would to book a flight or buy a new car, go to the Internet to compare prices. Stick to the websites that afford you the ability to compare rates for traveling to your honeymoon destination. There are a myriad of them out there. If you are looking for an all inclusive then make sure you included everything. Take a look at the villa websites – you would be surprised at how reasonable they can be.  Just imagine the space and privacy you get.

2 Travel in the off-season

If you have your newlywed heart set on somewhere like the Caribbean, plan your honeymoon for the off season. The weather might be cooler or damper, but it will be more economic as well as not as crowded. That gives you more time to be alone with your significant other, which is the point, isn’t it? For example, the destination of St Lucia off season runs from April to mid December. St Lucia has good weather even in the off season. Choosing to go then might lessen your chance of running into college kids on spring break.

3  Check into travel rewards you might have

Do you have one of those major credit cards that offer a variety of perks specifically geared for traveling, such as frequent flier miles or reward points for staying at certain hotels? Some cards will allow you to redeem your points against any flights booked with any airline e.g. HSBC.  Now would be the best time to cash those in. Look at your credit card programs and see if there’s anything that can be of use to you, pre-honeymoon.

Also, figure out how you will pay your expenses while there: cash, traveler’s check, credit card. If you do use a credit card abroad, use one that offers perks for international travelers, such as no-fee foreign transactions.

4 Become a travel agent – or get your wedding planner to be one

You might laugh at this; a travel agent seems so 20th century. The Internet can turn anyone into a travel agent. Professionals with the training and skills can find the gem of a hotel or villa.  If you feel like you want to explore all your possibilities, spend time on the internet it’s easy.

Whether you take the most lavish honeymoon possible or opt for a cost-friendly alternative, remember that a honeymoon is not a destination or a splurge. It’s a time to cherish each others company.  Do that and your new life as a married couple will be off to a great and profitable start. Villa rental offers you this chance.

Akasha offers honeymoon packages for those who want luxury, privacy and service.  Make your romantic honeymoon at St Lucia Rentals memorable,  All honeymooners get free helicopter transfers to the villa.

Akasha St Lucia’s most luxurious villa is pleased to see Le Sport re-open after a major refit.  As a family we first visited Le Sport over ten years ago.  It was these visits that persuaded us to buy land and build a villa in St Lucia.

Our villa over looks the resort and we have watched the works unfold over the last few months.  Akasha is pleased that Le Sport is investing in improving the resort and thereby the quality of what is on offer to visitors to St Lucia.  This will surely help the economy of St Lucia.

The extensive renovation will unveil significant updates to the resort’s public spaces and dining venues, a new infinity-edge swimming pool and boardwalk, and an expanded Watersports Center.

The resort tapped design firm International Design Concepts to shape a setting that relies as much on innovation as tradition. The renovation will transform the public areas into a stylish haven for socializing, fine dining, and relaxation, and also add on a Penthouse Suite to the current guestroom options.

“Our decision to renovate the property was motivated by requests for upgraded and expanded facilities from guests of the resort,” stated Craig Barnard, owner of The BodyHoliday. “We are fortunate to have a large percentage of repeat guests, and we are excited for them to experience the resort after the renovation is complete.”

For those who want more private space and more privacy then Akasha is the way to go.  Here you get an all inclusive option – breakfast and lunch is included in our rates, and you can also have dinner prepared for you.  Other options available at the villa include massages in the privacy of the villa.

Le Sport is a mere ten minute walk down the hill from St Lucia’s (if not the Caribbean) most luxurious villa rental.  The sand on the beach has also been replaced with white sand so now, more than ever, its worth the short walk down the hill (take a taxi back).  If you wish to spend a day at the resort then you can buy day passes – this gives you access to all its facilities and also includes lunch and or dinner.  Akasha certainly recommends at least one trip to Le Sport during your stay at the villa.  Don’t forget the beaches in St Lucia are public so everyone can access the beaches on the island.

Akasha offers something extraordinary for honeymooners and those looking for that special location for a wedding.

 

St Lucia Villa Rental - Akasha - Piton Hike

Oprah Winfrey is one of the most trusted people on the planet. She got President Obama elected, didn’t she? When Oprah pronounces one is easily persuaded: which is how I found myself fighting to breathe as I staggered up the ‘easy’ bit of Gros Piton, one of two extinct volcanoes (the other is Petit Piton) that shoot up out of the balmy waters of the Caribbean on St Lucia.

In Oprah’s view The Pitons are ‘one of the top five places to see before you leave this great place called earth’. Petit Piton (2461ft) requires a rope or two, but the ascent of Gros Piton (2619ft) is described as no more than tough hike. I thought if Oprah could do it – and she carries a pound or two more than me – then I could manage the two miles up and two miles down a path shaded by tropical greenery.

A path? Ha! It is an scary irregular staircase of volcanic rock and loose boulders, interspersed with ancient tree roots. It was only when we reached the half-way point – and yes the view was memorable (I think) – that our guide let slip that Oprah hadn’t actually climbed Gros Piton, just appreciated it from sea level. A puce-faced American woman from another group then stumbled into view – heading down. She’d seen what lay ahead. I bottled it, too – about a third of hikers do. There were, I reasoned, plenty of ways other than abject terror to get one’s heart rate up which was the goal of this ‘Spring Clean’ fitness venture.

Forget those risible dreams of a ‘New Year, New You’ of three months past. How rarely they are fulfilled. How quickly we lapse back into sloth. THIS is the time of year, when the clocks go forward, when warm breezes are blowing blossom hither and thither, that a physical overhaul is needed. Your summer wardrobe beckons and you don’t want it accessorised by the pot belly, flabby arms and wobbly thighs.

I decided direct action was needed. The Gros Piton climb is one of several ‘soft adventure tours’ offered by The Body Holiday where the focus is on physical fitness and mental wellbeing delivered through a comprehensive range of daily exercise classes, sporting activities, seminars on stress management and diet, therapeutic and spa treatments, and one to one counseling at Le Sport Hotel on lush St Lucia. The target market is busy individuals of all ages who want to kick start a fitness or weight loss programme, improve an existing one, or try new sports or therapies with guaranteed sunshine and beautiful surroundings as an added incentive.

Each day starts with a challenging 7am walk to wake up the metabolism and finishes with a meditation class. One need never stop moving in between. But attendance at classes and participation in activities is voluntary. I’m a veteran of fitness holidays, most of which require a high degree of physical suffering, inedible food and no alcohol. I’ve been barked at by ex-military types while yomping over rain-soaked moorland. I’ve been hauled out of a dormitory bunk bed at 5am by former PE teachers to run around a freezing barn doing star jumps. I’ve done ‘luxury’ boot camps, and ‘gourmet’ boot camps. Some worked, some didn’t; some left me hobbling in agony. What I hadn’t experienced was a boot camp for grownups, a place where no one bullies or even raises their voice; where how much or how little you do is up to you. Le Sport’s version of Butlins’ Red Coats are the Bodyguards, a bunch of chilled out fitness specialists, on hand to advise and teach when needed but who back off if your preference one day is for the beach, or a hammock in the garden. (And yes, I was ‘guilty’ of some downtime during my stay but it is surprising how disciplined one is when no one is MAKING you do anything.)

I had two goals: to make inroads into the rolls of fat around my middle, and resurrect my stalled training for my first marathon later this year. Felix, a former Mr Caribbean, who oversees the gym was my mentor – or miracle worker. One excess roll of adipose disappeared immediately when he corrected my posture (‘If you want to look old and fat, then slump.’) A schedule was devised with two or three gym sessions a day (45 minutes intense aerobic activity on treadmill, cross-trainer and bike followed by work with free weights) and then whatever classes I fancied. I dabbled in a few (spinning, Bodystretch, Bodyburn, yoga, aqua fitness, pilates) before settling on stretching and core strength classes.

When it came to diet, I expected deprivation. The breakfast menu recommended low-carb, high fibre, GI or cholesterol-busting breakfasts from the buffet, but a full English – or at least the Caribbean version – was available, too. And I discovered that if one stops agonising over what to eat, healthy choices come naturally. I snacked on walnuts and dried apricots or vitamin-rich juices during the day, ate salad for lunch and drank wanter constantly. In the evening, I dined on conservative helpings of chicken, fish, or seafood with a heap of vegetables at one of the three hotel restaurants. And instead of dessert I rejoiced in a guilt-free glass of red wine.

Did it work? I returned home half a stone lighter, definitely firmer, and with the energy and motivation to continue exercising back home. The bonus was the sense of mental well-being. Will it last? I’m hoping that my ‘spring clean’ will be a spring board to a healthier and happier summer, so bring on the marathon!

The Telegraph – Molly Abbott