
Bimini Big Game Resort & Marina
Available activities
- Biking
- Bird watching
- Boating
- Canoeing
- Caving
- Crabbing
- Diving
- Eco-Tours
- Fishing
- Historical Tours
- Island-hop
- Kayaking
- Sailing
- Scuba diving
- Snorkeling
- Spa Services
- Swimming
- Yachting
East of Miami, 50 miles. Nine square miles of what the world left behind is yours to find in these Out Islands of the Bahamas.
From the Lucayan Indian word meaning "two islands", and known around the world simply as "Bimini", North and South Bimini, along with their smaller neighboring cays, make up this group of Bahamian islands situated on the edge of the Great Bahama Bank, overlooking the cobalt blue waters of the storied Gulfstream and Florida Straits.
While prosperity came and went quickly during the 1920's and the era of Prohibition, the enduring appeal of Bimini was first popularized in the 1930's by the exploits of noted sportsmen, industrialists and philanthropists who ventured to Bimini for world-class fishing. Legendary angler Zane Grey and his captain, Tommy Gifford, recluse Howard Hughes, and retailing genius turned scientist/naturalist Michael Lerner all collaborated in turning Bimini into the "Big Game Fishing Capital of the World".
It was this celebrity, and friendship with Lerner, that brought novelist Ernest Hemmingway to Bimini in 1935 - where he drank, brawled, and wrote his way through several fishing seasons, travelling back and forth between home in Key West and his beloved "Island in the Stream". Tournaments attracting anglers from the far corners of the world became common as Bimini's reputation for giant blue marlin and bluefin tuna blossomed.
Today, the schools of giant fish have moved on, with record catches the exception, not the rule. The island tempo has returned to a more leisurely pace. With its convenience to the mainland, Bimini remains a popular destination for boaters. Recreational fishermen have mostly replaced the professionals, and have expanded their interests beyond the pursuit of giant marlin. Owing to a unique seagrass habitat and endless miles of shallow flats, Bimini is a particularly popular bonefishing destination. The flats comprising Bimini Bay off North Bimini Island are now part of the Bahamas "Marine Protected Area", ensuring a healthy bonefish habitat for generations to come.
From the Lucayan Indian word meaning "two islands", and known around the world simply as "Bimini", North and South Bimini, along with their smaller neighboring cays, make up this group of Bahamian islands situated on the edge of the Great Bahama Bank, overlooking the cobalt blue waters of the storied Gulfstream and Florida Straits.
While prosperity came and went quickly during the 1920's and the era of Prohibition, the enduring appeal of Bimini was first popularized in the 1930's by the exploits of noted sportsmen, industrialists and philanthropists who ventured to Bimini for world-class fishing. Legendary angler Zane Grey and his captain, Tommy Gifford, recluse Howard Hughes, and retailing genius turned scientist/naturalist Michael Lerner all collaborated in turning Bimini into the "Big Game Fishing Capital of the World".
It was this celebrity, and friendship with Lerner, that brought novelist Ernest Hemmingway to Bimini in 1935 - where he drank, brawled, and wrote his way through several fishing seasons, travelling back and forth between home in Key West and his beloved "Island in the Stream". Tournaments attracting anglers from the far corners of the world became common as Bimini's reputation for giant blue marlin and bluefin tuna blossomed.
Today, the schools of giant fish have moved on, with record catches the exception, not the rule. The island tempo has returned to a more leisurely pace. With its convenience to the mainland, Bimini remains a popular destination for boaters. Recreational fishermen have mostly replaced the professionals, and have expanded their interests beyond the pursuit of giant marlin. Owing to a unique seagrass habitat and endless miles of shallow flats, Bimini is a particularly popular bonefishing destination. The flats comprising Bimini Bay off North Bimini Island are now part of the Bahamas "Marine Protected Area", ensuring a healthy bonefish habitat for generations to come.
The Shark Lab engages in some of the most pioneering research on the biology of sharks. And the population of sharks in and around the waters of Bimini keeps them plenty busy. Guy Harvey himself has become dedicated to educating the public on the plight of these apex predators, and the devastating slaughter that occurs from illegal harvesting for shark-fin soup. At the Guy Harvey Outpost Bimini, not only will you have the opportunity to test your nerves facing off with these majestic animals, you'll learn first-hand about the research and conservation efforts underway by the dedicated folks at the Shark Lab and the Guy Harvey Ocean Foundation. If you time your trip to Bimini right, we might even get you in a skiff, and take you out to the Sharkland nursery pen, like we did just the other day!
The gin-clear waters surrounding Bimini have given rise to popular year-round recreational diving. Uniquely situated on the edge of the Continental Shelf, Bimini offers some of the most interesting dive sites in the Bahamas, and is consistently ranked one of the world's top dive destinations. From a leisurely dolphin encounter to an adrenaline filled shark encounter, from a wall dive to a snorkel along the mysterious "Altantis Road" an ancient, underwater arrangement of stones that has baffled natives, mystics and scientists for generations - Bimini offers something for the diver of every skill level.
Bimini continues to retain its allure for the water sports enthusiasts. Alice Town is a colorful out-island port of call, complete with character and the characters that give it a special personality. On an after-hours stroll down Kings Highway, new and returning visitors are as likely to run into Jimmy Buffett as their neighbor from down the street back home. For each, Bimini is their "Island in the Stream".
Bimini Big Game Resort & Marina
Location
Alice Town, North Bimini
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