
Shoal Bay East, Anguilla
The tiny British island of Anguilla, three miles from St. Martin in the Caribbean, is so exclusive that it’s like a country club in many ways. For one thing, anyone familiar with the island clearly has money, or has prioritized their annual budgets to include a trip here because they know it’s worth it. And members of this exclusive club can talk “island talk” to each other, as my doctor did to me today during my visit. “Ah, Anguilla, he sighed. “Uncle Ernie’s is the best,” referring to the little beach-front ribs shack that is so popular and famous on the island for reasons still unbeknownst to me (they’re just $8 chicken and ribs, they are tasty, and I suppose they come with an ocean view). It was once one of the best-kept secrets of the Caribbean, a beautiful strip of tranquility without the cruise ships, the mobs of tacky tourists, the noise of casinos and the drunken stupor of college kids at a strip bar. Anguilla is above all that, and on purpose, too: in the 1980′s, the island government made a deliberate decision to target the high-end customer and never to build a casino. In exchange, it welcomed travelers who would not only respect the island and beautiful azure waters and white sand made of crushed sun-bleached seashells, but to grow to love Anguilla as much as the locals did. Outsiders are “guests” of the island, not tourists, and everyone treats each other equally.
Sure, entrees at the award-winning restaurants start at $40 and it cost us nearly $100 just to get off the island back to St. Martin (taxi to the ferry, ferry ticket, departure tax). But why leave the island at all? Jon and I seriously contemplated never coming home while we were there on our ocean-front studio with kitchen, snorkeling and sunning and getting sand between the pages of our paperbacks. When the tide was fierce outside our studio, we took the rental car to a random trail and ended up at quiet Junks Hole Bay for a morning of swimming and seashell gathering. For a few days, we were island folk, people who lived a simple life out of a single carry-on suitcase and two backpacks. And of course, my ever-growing bulky camera bag, which caught a few Anguillan moments when I wasn’t too lazy on my beach chair.
Junks Hole Bay
Scilly Cay fishing village
Sunset over Shoal Bay East

Church in Island Harbour
Sunset over Shoal Bay Villas
Palm trees, Shoal Bay East









World Trade Center Memorial





Kite flying in Culebra, Puerto Rico
Making a funny face, one he trained each of his daughters and then grandchildren to make
Kisses from granddaughter
Shooting hoops in Bethesda, Md.
For my wedding, he folded more than 200 paper roses, cranes and stars; snipped several versions of the Chinese character Xi for “double happiness”, and created a bride and groom beneath a red pagoda.
Relaxing in a hammock in Puerto Rico
Reading to his grandchildren
Cuddling with his grandson
Walking along the ocean at dusk by himself in Anguilla
Here’s the adorable 




Boats, West Lake, Hangzhou
Sunset, West Lake Park, Hangzhou
Lake through trees, Hangzhou
Boating dock, West Lake, Hangzhou
Guardian dog-lions on a bridge, Hangzhou
Buddhist lanterns, Lingshan Buddhist Temple, Wuxi
Giant Buddha, Lingshan Buddhist Temple, Wuxi
Bells, Lingshan Buddhist Temple, Wuxi
Longjing Tea fields, outside Hangzhou
Sun-Yat Sen Memorial, Purple Mountains, Nanjing
Rock garden, Nanjing
Canal, Suzhou
Window in Liuyuan (Lingering Garden), Suzhou
Student drawing a rock garden in Liuyuan, Suzhou
Yu Gardens and Bazaar
Pudong skyline
Walkway, Yu Gardens and Bazaar
Wall of flowers, the Bund
Yu Gardens and Bazaar
Door, Tian Tan
Ming Tombs
Climbing a Great Wall Tower
Cherry blossoms at Jing Shan park
Kite flying at Olympic Promenade by the bird’s nest
A relaxed parent on vacation, Tian Tan
Bird’s nest, up close
The Water Cube, Olympic Village