Top Experiences in North Eleuthera, The Bahamas - Sapphire Blue Hole, Preacher's Cave, Glass Windows
Source: Our analysis of the creator's lived experience, based on what they said in this video.
Creator's Key Takeaways
we are super ill prepared for this excursion statement we're doing a north luthra island tour
we pretty much saw where the island was founded and we learned about how it was founded uh by the preacher that got shipwrecked
i still thought all three places that we went were very cool highly highly recommend visiting these three locations in north aluthra island
do not recommend the tour guide we had and i'm not even positive he was a tour guide
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Scale: 0–5 strips in half-step increments. 0 = “meh”, 5 = “bacon bliss”. Aggregated from creator-review sentiment, weighted by channel expertise.
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During our 5-night trip to Pink Sands Beach on Harbour Island in The Bahamas, we booked a private island tour of North Eleuthera to visit the Sapphire Blue Hole, Preacher's Cave, and Glass Windows Bridge. 0:00 Introduction 0:42 Planning 2:20 Heading Out 3:20 Catching Our Driver 3:37 Blue Sapphire Hole 6:31 Preacher's Cave 8:18 Glass Windows Bridge 9:20 Lunch at Queen Conch 11:30 Brooklyn's Drives Us Home 11:51 Tour Wrap-Up 13:18 Beach Break 13:08 Dinner at The Dunmore 17:04 Behind the Scenes 18:22 Outro The Sapphire Blue Hole reminded us of our Yukatan cenote swim, though this time we jumped from what our guide said was 30 feet up (and with the only way back out of the water being an upper-body-strength rope climb) and into water that was clear blue. Preacher's Cave is a large natural shelter that was discovered by William Sayle and his group of Christians seeking religious freedom from Bermuda. They were shipwrecked off the coast on a reef called The Devils Backbone and took refuge in the cave after making it ashore. They created a stone altar from a boulder at the back end of the cave and held the island's first religious service, which is how the cave got its name. The altar still stands today. Glass Window Bridge is one of the few places on earth where you can simultaneously see the dark blue waters of the Atlantic on one side of the bridge and the bright turquoise waters of the Bight of Eleuthera (often incorrectly referred to as the Caribbean Sea) on the other, while standing on a roadway of rock that's only 30 feet wide. From a viewer: ** correction @8:55 - it’s not the Gulf of Mexico, it’s the Bight of Eleuthera which is a part of the Great Bahamas Bank platform which a large number of Bahamian islands are located on (creating the shallower beautiful light blue waters). The Exuma sound is actually a little further south of Eleuthera and is deeper. The Gulf of Mexico of hundreds of miles away from that location in much deeper waters. You would have to pass Nassau , Andros and Florida to get the the Gulf of Mexico While we really felt that each of these attractions was a "can't miss," we'd probably recommend avoiding our particular "private" tour guide. In hindsight, we're not even sure that he was our tour guide because he took an additional passenger for almost 30 minutes of the drive, he told us very little about each location, and he barely talked to us at all during the drives. So you might want to just Google each of the locations to learn the history and then hire a taxi driver or rent a car to make the visits!