Classroom lesson · Bequia Island · 🇻🇨 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines

Bequia Island

A friendly island known for its boat-builders, sailors and brilliant views

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Bequia (say it 'beck-wee') is the largest of the Grenadine islands and one of the friendliest places in the whole Caribbean. It is famous for its tradition of boat-building — local craftsmen have been shaping fishing boats and sailing vessels from wood for hundreds of years. The harbour at Port Elizabeth is always busy with colourful fishing boats, visiting yachts and the ferry from the mainland.

Tell me more

The heart of Bequia life is Admiralty Bay, a wide sheltered harbour where dozens of yachts from all over the world drop anchor. The front street, called the Belmont Walkway, runs along the water's edge and is lined with small restaurants, craft stalls and ice-cream shops where you can sit and watch the boats bob in the breeze.

Boat-building is not just a job in Bequia — it is an art form passed down from parent to child for generations. Craftsmen use local hardwoods and shape everything by hand, from the curved hull of a fishing pirogue to the mast of a sailing dinghy. Every April, these local skills are celebrated during the Bequia Easter Regatta, when races fill the bay with sails.

The island has some wonderful beaches, with Princess Margaret Beach and Lower Bay Beach being particular favourites. The water is calm and shallow close to shore, perfect for paddling and snorkelling. A little further out, coral gardens shelter angelfish, parrotfish and the occasional seahorse hiding in the sea grass.

Bequia also has a small sea-turtle conservation project where local volunteers protect hawksbill turtle nests and release hatchlings safely into the sea. Children from the island's school visit to learn about the turtles and help with counts. It is a great example of a community looking after the wildlife that makes their home special.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Boat-building skills in Bequia are passed down through families. What skills or traditions are passed down in your family?
  2. 02Why do you think a sheltered harbour is so important for a small island community?
  3. 03How do the people of Bequia show they care about their natural environment?
  4. 04Bequia holds a big sailing regatta every Easter. What local tradition or skill would you celebrate with a festival in your community?
Try this

Classroom activity

Design a wooden fishing boat as if you were a Bequia boat-builder. Draw it from the side and label the hull, mast, sail and bow. Then write a three-sentence description of what your boat would be used for and what it would look like painted in bright colours.