Cayman Brac’s Bluff: Hiking to Breathtaking Island Vistas
The eastern edge of the Cayman Islands is not a sandbar but a 153-foot limestone wall that runs like a spine for most of Cayman Brac’s twelve-mile length. The Bluff, as it is simply known, creates the only dramatic elevation in the entire territory—a 140-to-153-foot outcrop of porous rock that gives the island its name from the Gaelic word for bluff. Below it, the north wall plunges 6,000 feet into the Cayman Trench, one of the deepest points in the Caribbean. For hikers accustomed to Grand Cayman’s flat terrain, this ridge rewrites expectations. The Bluff is a 153-foot limestone