Mélange Travel & Lifestyle Magazine April 2017 | Page 491

CRUSOE’S CAVE, CROWN POINT When Daniel Defoe wrote of Robinson Crusoe being shipwrecked on an island, he said the island was in sight of the ‘great island of Trinidad’ and inhabited by only goats and fierce Amerindians, he could only mean Tobago. Today visitors can visit a cave in a limestone buff above Crown Point Beach, just a few minutes from the airport. This cave is best visited at low tide and is today known as Crusoe’s cave. © Tobagohoteltourism.com FORT KING GEORGE Sitting regally at 140ft above Tobago’s coast, Fort King George is the best- preserved historical site on the twin islands. Although originally built by the British in 1777, in French built its perimeter walls in 1871. The fort changed owners many times but in 1804 it was finally won back by the British. In the grounds of the fort which are known for its great panoramic views, cool breeze and tranquility, there is a museum located with exhibits of military memorabilia and fossils. Photo Credit: BGabel BUCCOO REEF & NYLON POOL This is the most visited of the island’s reefs and is vibrant with sea life and coral. Visitors can see the reef via glass bottom boat if they wish and between the reef and the mainland is a meter deep pool formed by a sandbar. The pool was given the name Nylon Pool after a visit by Princess Margaret who mentioned that the waters in the pool were as clear as her nylon stockings. Photo Credit: Quillons