Carefree Vacations
✆: 919-585-7105 | ✉:
Capital of Martinique, a French overseas territory, Fort-de-France is a veritable island paradise replete with striking colonial architecture, exotic flora and fauna, verdant nature parks, and sparkling beaches. Highlights of this vibrant island capital include the colorful Jardin de Balata, the cascading Fontaine Didier waterfall, and the expansive Schoelcher Library. Head to one of the city's distilleries to sample island rums, or delight in the island's staple creole eats, including boudin, fritters, and chayote. Wild orchids, frangipani, anthurium, jade vines, flamingo flowers and hundreds of hibiscus varieties give Fort-de-France its distinctive look.
Markets are at the heart of everyday life in Fort-de-France. The Grand Marché Couvert is filled with stalls offering fresh spices, tropical fruits, medicinal herbs, and hand-woven baskets. Visitors will hear Creole spoken alongside French, and vendors often offer samples of homemade rhum arrangé, local rum infused with cinnamon, vanilla, or citrus peels. Nearby, small cafés serve bokits, fried sandwiches filled with fish, chicken, or salt cod, and accras de morue, crispy codfish fritters seasoned with chili and lime.
Though Fort-de-France is urban, nature is always close. The Jardin de Balata, just 10 kilometers from the city center, offers a botanical escape with over 3,000 tropical plant species. Built around a traditional Creole house, the garden includes treetop walkways suspended above palms and bamboo groves. It’s also a good place to spot hummingbirds, which dart between the hibiscus and heliconia. For a coastal break, the beach at Anse Madame in nearby Schoelcher provides calm waters and shade from almond trees, popular with locals on Sunday afternoons.