Photo story: uncovering the charm of Bermuda
By Michael George (National Geographic)
National Geographic photographer Michael George travels to Bermuda to discover the people, places, and experiences that make it a one-of-a-kind island destination.
Bermuda is often mistaken for a Caribbean island, but in reality, it is located in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. A British Overseas Territory, this subtropical paradise is situated on approximately the same latitude as North Carolina and is just a two-hour flight from the East Coast of the United States. Millions of years ago, it formed as part of a volcanic seamount near a section of the Atlantic known as the Sargasso Sea.
While stories of mysterious disappearances in the “Bermuda Triangle” may be fictional, its shipwrecks are very real. Bermuda is home to over 300 shipwrecks, earning it the nickname “shipwreck capital of the world.” Here, tour boats visit the HMS Vixen, an intentionally sunk wreck that dates back to World War II.
A staff member at the Hamilton Princess Hotel in downtown Hamilton, Bermuda, wears a traditional outfit: Bermuda shorts worn just above the knee, high socks, a button-down shirt, and a blazer. The evolution of Bermuda shorts as we know them today is often attributed to Nathaniel Coxon, a Bermudian tea merchant in the 1920s who adapted British military uniforms to make them more comfortable in the island heat.
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