
Hamilton Princess & Beach Club
Pembroke Parish Bermuda Caribbean & Central America
When you book Hamilton Princess & Beach Club in Pembroke Parish, Bermuda through our Accor Hera partnership, your stay includes daily breakfast, room upgrades and a $100 hotel credit.
Exclusive Booking Perks
- Daily complimentary breakfast for 2, per room
- VIP Welcome
- USD 100 credit to be spent on property (conditions defined at check-in)
- Early check-in & late check-out (upon availability)
- Upgrade at time of check-in (upon availability)
Location
Bermuda announces itself not in shades of beige or the predictable turquoise of Caribbean brochures, but in startling bursts of pink: the coral-hewn houses, the sand at certain coves, the oleander blooms spilling over limestone walls. Hamilton, the capital, occupies a narrow peninsula in Pembroke Parish, its pastel-fronted shops and quiet harbourfront a world apart from the cruise-ship crowds. This is a British Overseas Territory that drives on the left, measures distances in kilometres, and closes its beaches to non-residents on certain stretches, a reminder that insularity here is both geographic and cultural.
The Fairylands neighbourhood sits just west of the city centre along the northern shore, where sailboats tack across Hamilton Harbour and the scent of frangipani mingles with salt air. Barr's Bay marina, four hundred metres east, hosts superyachts and working fishing boats in equal measure. The rhythm is slower than you expect: motorbikes outnumber cars, no rental agencies exist (visitors lease scooters or rely on taxis), and rush hour means ten minutes of congestion on Front Street.
L.F. Wade International Airport lies thirteen kilometres east, a twenty-minute taxi ride along the North Shore Road that skirts turquoise inlets and limestone cliffs. The island measures only twenty-two kilometres end to end, making every point theoretically accessible, though winding roads and the lack of car rentals ensure that distance here is measured in effort, not metres.
Mornings often begin on the water. Barr's Bay marina, a brief walk from the property, offers charters for those who want to sail to the outer reefs, where angelfish and parrotfish dart through coral gardens visible from the surface. Pembroke Marsh Nature Reserve, one and a half kilometres west, shelters mangroves and migratory herons in a landscape that predates the island's settlement. For a deeper historical thread, make the fifteen-kilometre journey east to the Historic Town of St George, a UNESCO site where cobbled lanes and fortifications date to 1612, the earliest English foothold in the New World. The town's powder magazine and unfinished church stand exactly as colonial planners left them, weathered by centuries of Atlantic wind.
Golf claims much of the island's interior. Belmont Hills Golf Course, two kilometres south, unfolds across rolling terrain with views that stretch to the South Shore. Elbow Beach, two and a half kilometres away, offers pink sand and the kind of crystalline shallows that beg for an afternoon spent doing nothing. Book a table at one of Hamilton's waterfront spots for Bermuda fish chowder laced with black rum and sherry peppers, a dish that appears on every menu but varies wildly in execution, the best versions rich with tomato and sharp with heat.
January through March brings temperatures that hover around nineteen degrees, cool enough for linen blazers in the evening and still warm enough for midday swims. The light takes on a crystalline quality, the kind that sharpens the colours of the harbour and makes the pink sand glow. Winds pick up across the harbourfront, rattling the rigging at Barr's Bay.
Summer arrives in earnest by late June, with July and August pushing past twenty-seven degrees and the humidity wrapping around you the moment you step outside. August sees the heaviest rainfall, sudden afternoon downpours that clear as quickly as they arrive, leaving the limestone streets steaming. This is hurricane season, though direct hits are rare.
October and November offer the best balance: warm enough for the beaches, dry enough to explore St George's ramparts without wilting, and free of the summer crowds. The oleander blooms fade, but the water remains inviting, and the evenings cool just enough to justify a sweater after sunset.
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