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Pirates Hideaway Guest House on Salt Cay – reviews, photos

Victoria Street, Salt Cay
Hotel amenities
Pirates Hideaway Guest House on Salt Cay
Ranked #1 of 2 hotels in Salt Cay
4.5 of 5 stars 15 Reviews
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15 reviews from our community

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Reviewer
3 reviews 3 reviews
Reviews in 3 cities Reviews in 3 cities
3 helpful votes 3 helpful votes
“a treat for those getting away from the rat race”
5 of 5 stars Reviewed 29 July 2011
1
person found this review helpful

Candy met us from the airport and was very welcoming. She showed us to our accommodation at Pirates Hideaway and what a great place to stay. Full of character and plenty of space. We were sorted a golf buggy for getting around which was fantastic. Just infront of Pirates Hideaway is a great snorkeling location and Salt Cay is a snorkelers paradise, with the best snorkeling on TCI. The island is great for the quiet get away,with friendly locals and a back in time and unspoilt feel. The beaches are great and you really feel you are not in a tourist hotspot. There are several places to eat and all the food was good, but book ahead, as this is a small island that has to plan even the most basic supplies. You will enjoy your stay, the charm, the history , the people and the uniqueness that is Salt Cay. I fully recommend Pirates Hideway and Salt Cay.

  • Stayed July 2011, travelled with family
    • 5 of 5 stars Value
    • 5 of 5 stars Sleep Quality
    • 5 of 5 stars Cleanliness
    • 5 of 5 stars Service
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Ask sargethediver about Pirates Hideaway Guest House on Salt Cay
This review is the subjective opinion of a TripAdvisor member and not of TripAdvisor LLC
1 review
“a great place for all the family.”
5 of 5 stars Reviewed 29 July 2011

Pirates hidaway was a great adventure. Me and my family stayed there for two nights and it was very good! We are snorkel lovers and always like a good beach! Straight outside the door, acrross the road was a lovely beach although the rocks were jagged in some areas it was perfect for a sunbathe and a snorkle, not so good for a swim but the beaches up the road are good for that.

The place was a really good, well furnished and looked lovely. Alot of space and the conserventory was a great place for relaxing after a day of fun.
The rooms were spacious and kids will love looking at all the pictures and painting of all the pirates on the walls.

Candy, who manages the accommadation was helpful and informative.
Overall this was a really good place to stay and i would recommend it to someone going on holiday to the turks and caicos islands.

  • Stayed July 2011
    • 5 of 5 stars Value
    • 5 of 5 stars Location
    • 4 of 5 stars Rooms
    • 4 of 5 stars Cleanliness
    • 5 of 5 stars Service
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Ask BeckySargent about Pirates Hideaway Guest House on Salt Cay
This review is the subjective opinion of a TripAdvisor member and not of TripAdvisor LLC
Midcoast, Maine
Reviewer
3 reviews 3 reviews
Reviews in 3 cities Reviews in 3 cities
3 helpful votes 3 helpful votes
“A great introduction to Salt Cay and Pirates Hideaway”
5 of 5 stars Reviewed 11 May 2011
3
people found this review helpful

We’re always looking for a balance between comfort, adventure, and affordability when we travel, and were delighted with our 4-night stay at Pirates Hideaway on Salt Cay. The owner, Candy Herwin, is one of the most interesting, generous hosts we’ve ever met, and went to great lengths to make sure that we enjoyed every moment of our vacation. She was helpful even as we planned the trip weeks in advance. She suggested we spend our first night at Sibonné on Providenciales, and we loved the place.
Candy joined us on the flight to Salt Cay, and once we landed, we were greeted by the owners of two of the three restaurants on the tiny island. Dinner reservations on Salt Cay are essential, given the logistics of importing fresh ingredients and planning meals. Pat’s Place offers delicious, traditional meals like conch fritters, plantains, and rice and beans (called “rice and pease” on all the islands). We enjoyed the Wednesday “Conch Fest” at Coral Reef Bar and Grill, and had excellent quesadillas and grilled red snapper there.
With only five days to explore the island, Candy’s suggestions and quick tours of some of the best spots helped us avoid any dithering and get right down to enjoying ourselves. She’s written a beautiful coffee table book on Salt Cay, and produced a documentary on the history of the island. We highly recommend watching it if you visit Salt Cay; with that level of detail filled in so vividly, we enjoyed our travels around the island all the more.
We stayed in the first floor suite in the main guesthouse, and even on hot afternoons, found that the overhead fans kept the room breezy and comfortable. We’d read about bugs bothering people in the Caribbean, but only encountered a few mosquitoes outside after dusk. Long sleeves and a little spray around the ankles were all we needed. There were no mosquitoes in the room at all. There’s a super beach for collecting shells and bits of coral just a few minutes’ walk from Pirates Hideaway, so bring some small ziplock bags to hold your treasures.
We poked our heads into a newly renovated Salt Raker house on the property, with colorful piratical and sea life themes painted on the walls of the bedrooms by a local artist. The two other tourists on the island (yes, there were only 4 of us that week) rented bikes, but we highly suggest a golf cart. It’s a bit bumpy on some of the beach tracks, but after a long winter of being cooped up indoors, we loved having the warm salt air against our faces on our daily journey past the salinas and historic Bermuda-style buildings. North Beach was our favorite spot to snorkel. We had the entire beach to ourselves, and the water was crystal clear, free of the sandy murk we’d encountered on Grand Turk and Provo beaches.
Other details of the trip: we flew to Salt Cay with Caicos Express -- an excellent airline. At the beginning and end of our trip, we rented a car from Grace Bay Car Rental on Providenciales. Their Nissan Tiida is a great little car.
Bottom line: we can’t wait to go back!

Room Tip: Contact Candy via e-mail.
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  • Stayed April 2011, travelled as a couple
    • 5 of 5 stars Value
    • 5 of 5 stars Location
    • 4 of 5 stars Sleep Quality
    • 5 of 5 stars Rooms
    • 5 of 5 stars Cleanliness
    • 5 of 5 stars Service
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Ask playasuerte about Pirates Hideaway Guest House on Salt Cay
This review is the subjective opinion of a TripAdvisor member and not of TripAdvisor LLC
New York, New York
Reviewer
4 reviews 4 reviews
Reviews in 4 cities Reviews in 4 cities
4 helpful votes 4 helpful votes
“Push through the footsteps...”
4 of 5 stars Reviewed 26 March 2011
2
people found this review helpful

It was time to get away from the glitz, glamour, and pull of the big city. I boarded a plane and found my way to Turks and Caicos. Which is wonderfully great for a vacation, but there are others there, others with their big hats, sunscreen white noses and screaming kids either pushing off the cruise ships or jostling for a lounge seat on Grace bay (that is if you stay at one of the hotels on Grace bay--).. I needed less, much much less... So I googled 'Off the beaten path'. And what do I see but a wonderful tiny 2mile island 30 minutes off the coast of Provo. -Salt Cay- I flew into a tiny airstrip on Caicos express. As of my visit the plane- a 8 seater Cessna flys in twice on Monday and Fridays and once on Wednesday. That fit the bill for my need for less people and relaxation to a tee. Candi the owner of Pirates Hideway was there with a nice gentleman/island guide Cozi to meet the plane and take me on a golf cart back to the hideaway. Candi had a wealth of knowledge of the orgins of the island, the current political situations, and the best ways to relax here. Two other wonderful ladies were there as well to pick up people that were staying on the island. Debbie from Salt Cay Divers/island tours (as well as a wonderful casual ocean front eatery), And Heidi the owner of Island Thymes(a wonderful casual bar/restaurant--you have to try the almond crusted snapper--better then any ny eatery!!) as well as manager of small island rental properties. Yes. When you land you are far removed from anywhere you have ever imagined. You are brought back to the basics of life and relaxation. The roads are sand/dirt. There are several really really friendly donkeys, and a couple of cows that meander up and down the streets. Little families of chickens walk on the sides of the roads. Yes there are roosters that remind you that its time to wake up and enjoy the splendor of nature. The hideway is on the south portion of the town it has a nice pool to cool down after a long hike or a strenuous day snorkeling/sun bathing. On a walk home late one night after enjoying a wonderful fish dinner at Debbies I walked off the property and onto the road next to the salinas and looked forward. The island is relatively flat and there were stars--- more stars then I have ever seen from straight ahead to the sides over the ocean to behind me I was engulfed in another world of bright twinkling lights. You even saw the Milky Way, Orion even had all the stars so that he really did look like Orion!!.. The next morning I decided to go exploring the soft sand of the North beach and the Rocky east beach. There were no footsteps in the sand. There was no one. The ocean was three different shades of turquoise. Beautiful Conch shells litter the white sand (make sure you go to Debbies for Conch night!!), gorgeous corals, natural bridges over the rocks, and serenity. Just the gentle sound of the waves meeting the shore. As you get to the south portion of the island you see a gentle inlet from the ocean into the island and the beautiful mangrove forest and nursery for the baby ocean fish. Out a hundred yards in to the ocean is the Columbus Channel. Every day I saw humpback whales blow or breaching. Debbie has a nice excursion where you take a small boat out to get close to these gentle giants. Amazing doesn't even come close to the bond you feel with life and with nature. Its like your very own survivor show only its you and the sea... I saw two donkeys grazing further up the hill and followed the footsteps back to the small town.. There are less then a hundred people on the island. Three main eaterys --Debbies, Island Thymes, and Pats (all who are amazing ladies that can make fabulous fish, conch, lobster or just a burger!!!).. Just remember that this is a small island and although fish is plenty it costs alot to bring fuel, basic cooking supplies, and spices to the island and the costs you incur correspond with this.. I always felt welcome by the islanders, ex pats, and fellow travelers. By the end of the trip most even knew my name!!... So come call any of the nice ladys and look up saltcay.org. and find yourself in the most basic of ways...

  • Stayed March 2011, travelled solo
    • 4 of 5 stars Value
    • 5 of 5 stars Location
    • 3 of 5 stars Sleep Quality
    • 4 of 5 stars Rooms
    • 4 of 5 stars Cleanliness
    • 4 of 5 stars Service
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Ask janetatevet about Pirates Hideaway Guest House on Salt Cay
This review is the subjective opinion of a TripAdvisor member and not of TripAdvisor LLC
New Jersey
1 review
“Poseidon the Pirate Lives!”
5 of 5 stars Reviewed 6 August 2008

Being in Salt Cay is being in love. The island and its mother the sea live together perfectly. Their beautiful flow of energy of life is magnificently reflected in Poseidon, aka Nick at Pirate’s Hideaway.

Pirate’s Hideaway is the guest house of Nick and his impressive sister Candida. It features Oliver Cromwell, a delightful parrot whose “hello” and other conversation mingled musically with the donkeys’ bray, birdsong and roosters’ crows. Nick’s connection with the wildlife enabled our children, an eleven year old girl and a six year old boy, to marvel at the donkeys’ “velvet like” fur. They also got to go salt raking -- exellent!

Nick’s generosity also gave us clamming in North Creek where the kids, after operating as clam runners from guest to guest, made sand villages along teeming tidal pools. Their villages featured bridges and a “government building” (I wondered why they would include this voluntarily) made of clam, snail, conch and more shells. The expanse of wet sand was a perfect palette for their driftwood stick drawings on a big scale – wowee zowee!

The clamming experience was better than any salted seaweed spa I can imagine. The mineral richness of magnificent mushy sea sand took me in and smoothed and soothed my body and soul – all while able to gaze upon Poseidon! Gentle North Creek is a stone’s throw from the Atlantic crashing on boulder like coral – yin and yang at its best.

Salt Cay’s hospitality was deliciously expressed in the Pirate’s Hideaway’s clam chowder – expertly prepared (from our clams!) by Nick in their own kitchen, a large comfortable space within earshot of Oliver featuring African flavored artifacts. Their freshwater pool provided a waterfall for soothing massage if one liked (I did), along with plenty of floating noodles. All of this abundance was surrounded by flowers and fruit trees -- plus, they have a cotton tree!

Not to be missed is the fried conch -- to my mind a taste of the sea's angels' wings -- at Pat's Restaurant, located near the Pirate's Hideaway.

Candi attended efficiently to all our arrangements, including our “wheels” for the week, a golf cart on which we were routinely greeted by friendly waves from resident islanders, reflecting their polite welcome for our families.

In the sunshine the scuba diving was perfect, and in the night the stars bathed us most plentifully – Neptune and the Southern Cross protecting us. And all the time the sustaining breezes – at bedtime I could feel and hear them all around and drift off so easily.

I am most grateful for the sweet refuge of Pirate’s Hideaway and Salt Cay; it holds a first in vacation destinations.

Stayed July 2008, travelled with friends
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Additional Information about Pirates Hideaway Guest House on Salt Cay

  • Pirates Hideaway Hotel
Address: Victoria Street, Salt Cay
Price range (per night):* INR7,001 - 22,404

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