10 Caves to Explore in Bermuda

07/19/08  Print This Post Print This Post    8 Comments   Popular   Written by Lola Akinmade
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Feature photo by Lola Akinmade. Photo above by Lola Akinmade.

Beaches, blue seas, and… caves? They’re all waiting for you in Bermuda.

Sure, Bermuda is known worldwide for its pristine pink beaches and crystal clear turquoise waters, but did you know that it’s also a spelunker’s paradise?

With a labyrinth of over 150 limestone cave systems boasting pristine azure blue pools and impressive stalactites and stalagmites, Bermuda’s unspoiled beauty may very well lie beneath the ground.

Spelunking, you say?

Spelunking, popularly known as caving, is the increasingly popular recreational sport of exploring caves. It may require you walk, climb or crawl through tight passages, zip or rappel down to different platforms, or even dive underwater.

The recent media resurgence of the Batman franchise has put the spotlight back on caving and more people are becoming recreational spelunkers.

Bermuda has one of the highest concentrations of limestone caves on earth, which have inspired many creative endeavors such as Jim Henson’s “Fraggle Rock” and Shakespeare’s “The Tempest.”

Many of these caves extend all the way down to the sea floor even though you can walk right in. Below are just a few caves you can explore on your next trip to the Island.

Photo above by Lola Akinmade.

1. Admiral’s Cave

Located in Hamilton Parish, Admiral’s Cave is one of the largest caves on the island and was named after a British admiral around 1819. Within the cave are small lakes that are fed from the ocean through underground passageways.

The Smithsonian Museum has discovered fossils here that are a couple hundred thousand years old. Although no longer a show cave with guided tours, you can explore at your own risk with a flashlight!

2. Cathedral Cave

One of the two caves located on the properties of the Grotto Bay resort, Cathedral Cave boasts clear turquoise underground lakes which you can swim in to cool off. Explore this lit cave from viewing platforms. There’s also a launch off spot should you decide to take the plunge.

3. Church Cave

Church Cave is located deep beneath Ship’s Hill on the grounds of the Marriott Castle Harbour Resort in Hamilton Parish. It contains the largest underground lake in Bermuda with an area of 16,146 square feet and a depth of 74 feet.

Photo by gcourbis

Its sister cave, Bitumen Cave, contains the deepest underground lake on the entire island at 84 feet deep.

4. Crystal Caves

One of the most famous and visited caves in Bermuda, Crystal Caves was said to have been discovered by two 12-year old boys, Carl Gibbons and Edgar Hollins, in 1905 when they went looking for their lost cricket ball.

Laced with million year old immaculate white stalagmites and stalactites and crystal clear pools with a visible depth of 55 ft, Crystal Caves provides guided tours and wooden floating pontoon walkways for your exploration.

5. Devil’s Hole

Once a subterranean cave, its roof collapsed, turning the cave into a natural aquarium. Today, it contains sea life such as sharks, 6 foot long Moray eels, and turtles and has been opened to the public since 1843.

Photo by morgansutherland

It earned the moniker “Devil’s Hole” because when its roof collapsed and wind rushed into the cave, it produced an eerie sound that locals referred to as moans of the devil. It is located in Harrington Sound.

6. Fantasy Caves

Fantasy Caves, a sister cave to Crystal Caves, is the more spectacular of the two cave systems with impressive formations. Its walls are lined with mineral deposits that look like frozen waterfalls, and the cave is connected to and fed by the Atlantic Ocean through deep pools with underground pathways.

7. Green Bay Caves

Boasting about 2 km of underground passageways, Green Bay Caves is longest cave systems on the island. It is totally submerged with an average depth of 59 feet below sea level, so you may want to get your scuba diving gear on!

Photo by Lola Akinmade.

8. Leamington Caves

Another impressive and wildly popular limestone cave, Leamington Caves near Harrington Sound boasts crystal formations and underground pools.

9. Prospero’s Cave

The second cave located on the property of Grotto Bay Resort, this cave is chock full of stalagmites and stalactites.

Originally discovered between 1609 and 1610 by Sir George Somers, the cave is also known as Island Cave or Prospero’s Magic Cave.

Named after the famed Shakespearean character from “The Tempest,” Prospero is one of the more spectacular caves and it houses a deep, clear blue lake in addition to a bar and discotheque.

10. Wilkinson Cave

Photo by numb3r

Discovered in 2002 during a quarry blasting operation, Wilkinson Cave is the newest cave to be unearthed on the island. Like the other caves, it is filled with massive stalactites and stalagmites, crystals, an impressive sea level pool as well as underwater sub caves.

It is currently being researched by American Cave Expert and Professor of Marine Biology, Dr. Tom Iliffe, who explored the cave in depth. Wilkinson Cave is years away from becoming a major tourist attraction.

As with any adventure sport, exploring or diving Bermuda’s caves can be dangerous. It is always best to check with local government and tourism offices to make sure that the caves above are still open for public exploration.


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About the Author

Matador ID: geotraveler

Lola Akinmade co-edits Matador Goods. Her work has appeared on National Geographic Traveler’s Intelligent Travel and National Geographic’s Your Shot. She has written articles and contributed to GoNOMAD, the Away Network, Transitions Abroad, Vagabondish, and the Common Language Project among others. She can be reached at http://www.lolaakinmade.com

8 Comments... join the discussion!

  • tourtoo replied on July 20, 2008

    Wow, nice places to visit and to be lost… in truth I do not like caves at all. though it is all extremely mystic, but this I like. :) Alex

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  • Bernd replied on August 15, 2008

    Bermuda is just the most beautiful mysterious island in this whole world. You can revisit Bermuda countless times and find again and again something still undiscovered, but you will always find the full satisfaction of your changing needs.

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  • paresh replied on August 15, 2008

    nice collection, thanks for sharing.

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  • Free xbox 360 Elite replied on August 16, 2008

    Nice pictures. All of these are places that I will most definitely have to visit.

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  • sudha replied on August 22, 2008

    nice collection, thank u.

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