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A
morning on the pristine beach under waving palm trees. A buffet
lunch, with vast tables of salads, vegetables, seafood, hot
sliced meats. An afternoon of water sports, tennis, aerobics,
or circus stunts such as leaping from the flying trapeze.
And all the drinks you can manage. All for 49 Euros, or $62.
A
ìjourneeî (day) at a tropical Club Med has become a viable
and entertaining alternative for vacationers. Unless you are
already staying at an all-inclusive, a lunch and afternoon
can be most pleasantly and economically spent ìau Club.î I
have done a number of such adventures, and they come in price
ranges and timing to fit most agendas: the day, 10:30 a.m.
to 6 p.m., including lunch, costs 49 Euros ($62.34) per adult,
E 31 for teens ($39.44) and E 24 for children under 12 ($30.53)
on weekdays, E 54 ($68.70), E 42 ($53.43) and E 31 ($39.44)
on weekends; the evening, 6:30 p.m.-closing of disco, including
dinner, E 40 per adult ($50.89)
, E 42 ($53.43) for teens and E 31 ($39.44) for children
under 12; and the late night, 11:30 p.m. onwards, E 40 for
adults ($50.89) (www.clubmed.com).

When
it started, Club Méditerranée was an ingenious
solution to the singles vacation. Amid an atmosphere of decadence,
it required communal meals at large tables (everyone had to
use the familiar ìtu,î unheard of for the formal French) and
it made introductions easy ó on the tennis court, in the windsurfing
lesson or at the circus, where patrons learn various highflying
tricks showcased late in the week. Rooms were Spartan: narrow
single beds, no view or balcony to speak of, and a bunk mate
if you arrived alone. The focus was on the public places:
meeting people, doing activities, drinking, and dancing at
the late-night disco. The resorts operated on two premises:
That single people wanted to meet others like them, and that
they wanted to know what to expect from their resort.
In
the new millennium, the former may not be a primary mission,
but the latter continues to operate. The ascetic accommodations
are gradually being phased out, and most Club Meds now cater
to families, offering considerable advantages for those with
children.
And
the clubs have a loyal following among aging Boomers, faithful
to the decadent memories but firm in their preference for
the atmosphere Club Med has to offer. During a recent visit
to Buccaneer's Creek on the Caribbean
island
of Martinique
, this faithfulness was abundantly
evident. (For more about this island, check out www.martinique.org.)
That club is on the verge of a 17-month closure for upgrading
(and believe me, it is needed ó when was the last time you
paid $200 per person a night for a room with a linoleum floor?)
and regulars were distraught about next year's vacation. I
suggested that they might visit Guadeloupe
, where to me the club is almost
identical ó both are on a French island, an hour's flight
apart; both in fact are in a town called Sainte Anne (the
French imperialists were not very original in their choice
of names). Oh
no, came the response. Nothing could replace ìLes Buccaniers.î
Unless it were a Club Med in Africa, one distraught couple
suggested.
The
club with which I am most familiar is the one on Guadeloupe,
called Caravelle. (Look to future columns for a more thorough
discussion of this charming yet occasionally difficult vacation
island, and check out www.guadeloupe-fr.com.) At the quiet
resort where I stay, only breakfast and tennis are included
in the litany of opportunities available at ìLe Clubî practically
next door. I do a lot of my own cooking, and purchase every
drop of alcohol. Escape for a day or an evening to Caravelle
can be an entertaining alternative. You
still have to talk your way in. The guards are used to the
old days when clubs were fiercely guarded, only admitting
a select few. After some conversation, however, you will be
ushered to the front desk where they imprint your credit card
and entwine your wrist in the signature bracelet that gives
access to everything from beach chairs to free drinks at the
bar.
If
you're just doing the ìjourneeî (day), you now have the run
of the place. My favorite thing is tennis, so I try to go
on Tuesdays when there are mixed doubles and I get a chance
to meet some likeminded friends. I've also had some stellar
tennis lessons at Club Med, the most recent at Buccaneer's
Creek, where I spent the night. Max, the tennis pro, gave
the clearest explanation of a serve I have ever seen, and
had us all improving.
If
you have time to stay a little longer, Club Med offers wonderful
diving in some of the best-equipped boats I've seen in resort
sites not dedicated to diving. The facilities at Sonora Bay
in Mexico, and Turks and Caicos Islands in the Caribbean,
include tanks already on the boat (no need to tote your own,
as happens so often with tropical dive providers); the opportunity
for giant stride entry, rather than the nervous-making backwards
roll off the side of the boat; easy-off, easy-on decks
and ladders; and a pipe hung 15 feet below where divers can
take their rest stops comfortably. You will also be offered
plenty of water and fruit punch laced with rum as you relax
after your beautiful underwater experience.
You
can also take out a sailboat for as long or as short as you
want (no keeping an eye on the watch, as when you rent by
the half-hour); take a windsurfing lesson; play volleyball.

Or
you can simply lie on the beach. As an early comer to the
tropical resort business, Club Med has snarfed up some of
the best beaches on many locations. That is certainly true
in Guadeloupe ,
where the club occupies arguably the best beach on the eastern
part of the island, a pristine sweep of white protected from
the often fierce winds and with a rocky spar that affords
entertaining snorkeling. In Cancun
, the club has claimed the beautiful
point behind which other resorts must huddle, and in Martinique
, the quiet bay with its two scalloped
beaches outshines many other such spots.

The
meals are far from gourmet, but the food is abundant and varied.
As a vegetarian, I delight in the many salad options and vegetables
undrenched with sauce, sugar, glazing or any of those other
calorie-inducing ways vegetables can be diluted. There are
also many seafood options, as well as chicken and meat.
While
in the minds of many Americans, Club Med is associated with
decadent sex, actually the company has worked hard to change
its image. Culture has made it change If you, as I do, you
often vacation in a setting where every sailboat ride and
every meal must be paid for separately, a day of Club Med's
current blend of athleticism and self-indulgence in food and
drink against a beautiful natural backdrop can be a highlight.
Happy Traveling!
You
may e-mail me at:
EGraham@photoandtravel.com
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