Black Diamond Yachts

Black Diamond Yachts We create adventures, experiences & memories on beautiful luxury yachts in the Bahamas and Croatia!

Yacht Charters and Yacht Deliveries Specializing in the Bahamas, Croatia, US East Coast, Florida and the Cays.

04/17/2026

Day 4 - Some Sailing & Rented a golf cart and toured Man-O-War Cay.

Comic generated by AI of -Abacos, Bahamas.
03/28/2026

Comic generated by AI of -Abacos, Bahamas.

Comic of our day at Treasure Cay…
03/22/2026

Comic of our day at Treasure Cay…

03/11/2026

Day 2 - Just spent the day with zero plans except whatever the tide and breeze decided 😌
Drifted through these quiet little canals, cracking up over a fresh lunch right on the boat, then kicked off our shoes and wandered barefoot along the softest white sand.
Honestly, some of the best days are the ones where you just let the current carry you.
Sending these peaceful island vibes your way—hope they bring a little calm and sunshine to your scroll today 🌊☀️

Comic of our first day!
03/10/2026

Comic of our first day!

03/03/2026

Day 1 in the Bahamas paradise: Marsh Harbour arrival and we’re already living the dream! 🌴☀️🚤
We hopped onir caramaran and sailed over to Great Guana Cay for an epic day of Tiki bar hopping via golf cart adventures! Zooming around the island, hitting up iconic spots (shoutout to the legendary Nipper’s & Grabbers vibes 🍹), frolicking on those powdery white beaches, and even spotting some graceful stingrays gliding in the shallows. Pure magic in the water!
Then came the highlight: a stunning sail across to Treasure Cay, with dolphins riding our bow wave, showing off like they knew we were watching! 🐬✨
First day and the Abacos are already spoiling us rotten. More adventures tomorrow—who wants to come next time? https://www.sailboatcruise.ca/bahamas-fully-crewed-yacht-charters/ 😏

02/03/2026

THE IGUANA ISLANDS: PIRATES, PREHISTORIC SURVIVORS, AND THE COLD THAT SHOULD NOT BE HERE

By: Michael Elijah Muhammad Clare

They look like relics from another world, thick-skinned, armored, ancient-eyed creatures basking on sunburnt limestone. On islands like Allen Cay, Leaf Cay, U Cay, and scattered Exuma outcrops, Bahamian rock iguanas rule the land with quiet authority. No cars. No towns. Just wind, sea, and scales.

But their story is far stranger than most people realize.

HOW DID IGUANAS END UP ON THESE TINY ISLANDS?

There are two stories. Science tells one. History whispers another.

Biologists say Bahamian rock iguanas arrived thousands of years ago, likely drifting on storm debris from Cuba or Hispaniola. Strong currents, floating vegetation, survival against all odds. Nature does that sometimes.

But old Bahamian oral history, the kind passed down in harbors and boat sheds, tells a darker, more human version.

During the age of pirates, privateers, and wreckers, these remote cays were used as stopover points. Fresh meat was hard to come by at sea. Iguanas were slow, plentiful, and easy to catch. Crews would stockpile them alive on isolated islands, planning to return later. Some ships never did.

Those iguanas survived.

No predators. No competition. Just sun, scrub, and limestone. Over generations, they stayed. Adapted. Became what we see today: endemic Bahamian rock iguanas found nowhere else on Earth.

They are not pets.
They are not tourist props.
They are survivors of both nature and human history.

LIVING FOSSILS IN A WARM WORLD

These iguanas evolved for heat. Their bodies are designed to absorb sunlight, regulate warmth, and conserve energy in a dry, tropical environment. Cold is their enemy.

Which brings us to now.

THE COLD THAT DOESN’T BELONG HERE

An unusually strong Arctic air mass has surged out of the United States, pushing far south, crossing Florida, spilling into the northern Bahamas, and even challenging the Gulf Stream, our natural climate shield.

This is not normal.

The Gulf Stream usually weakens cold fronts before they reach us. Warm ocean water modifies the air. It’s our protection. But this system is strong enough that cold air is riding over and through that warmth, arriving with force.

Nighttime temperatures in parts of the Bahamas are dropping into ranges these animals are not built for.

“THEY’RE FALLING OUT OF TREES”

Residents and boaters in the Exuma Cays and northern islands have reported something unsettling:

Iguanas becoming sluggish.
Iguanas unresponsive in the early morning.
And yes, iguanas dropping out of trees.

This isn’t death. It’s something called cold stunning.

When temperatures drop too low, iguanas lose muscle control. Their bodies slow to conserve energy. They cannot grip branches. They fall.

To someone who doesn’t know better, it looks alarming. To the animal, it’s survival mode.

As the sun rises and temperatures climb, many regain movement and crawl back to shelter. This has been observed in Florida iguanas during cold snaps, but seeing it in the Bahamas is rare enough to raise eyebrows.

A WARNING, NOT A SPECTACLE

This cold is temporary. But it is a signal.

When Arctic air masses push this far south with this intensity, crossing the Gulf Stream instead of breaking apart, it tells us the atmosphere is behaving differently. More volatile. Less predictable.

For wildlife that evolved over thousands of years under stable conditions, sudden extremes are dangerous, even if brief.

WHAT PEOPLE SHOULD NOT DO

Do not throw iguanas into the sea.
Do not assume they are dead.
Do not harass or move them unnecessarily.

If an iguana is cold-stunned, the best thing is to leave it alone and allow the sun to do its work.

They survived pirates.
They survived isolation.
They survived centuries without us.

They deserve the chance to survive this too.

AN ISLAND STORY STILL UNFOLDING

These iguanas are more than a tourist attraction. They are living proof that the Bahamas is shaped by currents, climate, and human history intertwined.

From pirate provisioning stops to modern climate anomalies, they remain, watching, waiting, adapting.

And as this cold air pushes south from the United States, across waters that once guaranteed warmth, it reminds us:

Even paradise is not immune to a changing world.

Bahama Drama will continue to watch the skies and the islands beneath them.

Happy New Year from Croatia!
01/01/2026

Happy New Year from Croatia!

Cabin Charter All Inclusive Feb 28th to March 7th 2026Cabin Charter Special in the Abacos, Bahamas🚨 LAST-CABIN BLOWOUT !...
11/29/2025

Cabin Charter All Inclusive Feb 28th to March 7th 2026
Cabin Charter Special in the Abacos, Bahamas
🚨 LAST-CABIN BLOWOUT ! 🚨
Abacos, Bahamas Cabin Charter February 28 – March 7, 2026 (Saturday to Saturday) 7 Nights | 7 Islands | Fully Crewed 40ft Luxury Catamaran
ONLY $2,500 USD per person –
ONE private cabin remains on this intimate, all-inclusive Bahamas adventure!
What’s included in your $2,500 pp (everything!):
7 nights, 7 Islands in your own private cabin with en-suite bathroom & shower
Only 4 guests total on board (you + one other couple) – ultimate privacy on a 40ft owners-version catamaran
Professional Yacht Master Captain + 5-Star Bahamian Chef from Nassau's largest Resort (the chef has her own separate cabin, Captain Crew Cabin)
All gourmet meals & snacks prepared fresh daily on board
Open ship’s bar – beer, wine, spirits, cocktails & soft drinks included
Daily island-hopping excursions across the stunning Abacos
Spear-fishing adventure, beach picnics, snorkeling the clearest waters in the Caribbean
Fresh-caught seafood cooked right on deck
All ships expenses included, docking, fuel, water, crew, etc.
Only two things not included are your flights & gratuities for the crew.
One guest has already secured the huge owner’s suite for $10,000 USD. The other cabins occupied by the crew. That leaves only YOUR cabin still available.

Secure the last cabin right now for just $2,500 USD per person, We can arrange monthly payments until sail date!
First-come, first-served – this deal will vanish faster than a Bahamas sunset!
👉 Book instantly or reserve your spot: https://www.sailboatcruise.ca/bahamas-fully-crewed-yacht-charters/
Contact us immediately – this cabin WILL sell today!
[email protected] or call/text 416-829-7236
Last Cabin available for only $2,500 USD per person!
First Come First Service, One Cabin left!

Just need to Add Chef, bartender, waiter, carpenter, salvage diver, plumber, janitor, inventor, Macgiver.. www.sailboatc...
06/15/2025

Just need to Add Chef, bartender, waiter, carpenter, salvage diver, plumber, janitor, inventor, Macgiver.. www.sailboatcruise.ca

Many ocean tourism activities harm the environment, causing marine pollution and coral reef damage, threatening the very...
06/11/2025

Many ocean tourism activities harm the environment, causing marine pollution and coral reef damage, threatening the very beauty tourists seek to enjoy. Black Diamond Yachts conducts its charters with sustainable practices, like reducing plastic use and supporting conservation efforts, to protect our oceans while enjoying their wonders.

Protecting the world's oceans is an important aspect of any holiday. Discover eye-opening stats about the current nautical landscape in this handy guide.

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5399 Eglinton Avenue West
Toronto, ON
M9C5K6

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