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    World's Most Unusual Beaches


    No disrespect to gorgeous beaches with powdery white sand, but sometimes the standard-issue paradise starts to feel, well, bland. It's time to set off for shores with strange hues of sand, alarmingly low-flying aircraft, and hot pools you can dig yourself. From Florida to New Zealand, these 10 picks take you to some peculiar beaches, all worth a visit.

    Giant's Causeway
    Near Bushmills, Northern Ireland


    Take a beach walk in the footsteps of a mythical giant. Along Northern Ireland's coast more than 38,000 interlocking basalt columns descend like a huge stepping-stone highway that disappears into the sea. Volcanic eruptions fashioned the perfectly shaped hexagonal towers grouped in honeycomb-like clusters. As the legend goes, the giant warrior Finn McCool built this causeway so he could walk across the sea and face his Scottish rival, Benandonner. Apparently, Benandonner had the same idea; there are similar basalt columns on Scotland's isle of Staffa. You can explore the causeway, a UNESCO World Heritage site, on coastal and cliff paths or stop in at a new visitor center set to open this summer.

    Glass BeachGlass Beach in Ft. Bragg, California (Photo: Visit Mendocino County)Glass Beach in Ft. Bragg, California (Photo: Visit Mendocino County)
    Ft. Bragg, California

    What was once the town dump is now a treasure that sparkles in the northern California sunlight: Glass Beach. Until the late 1960s, Ft. Bragg residents would hurl their garbage from the overlooking cliff into the sea. But decades of wave action tumbled the old car taillights, perfume bottles, six-packs of beer, and other refuse, transforming it into tiny, translucent, smooth-edged pebbles of every imaginable color and shape. This beach has the highest concentration of sea glass in the world. And it's so tempting to pocket. Unfortunately, collecting is off-limits, as Glass Beach lies within the protected MacKerricher State Park.

    Red BeachRed Beach in Santorini, Greece (Photo: Thinkstock/iStockphoto)Red Beach in Santorini, Greece (Photo: Thinkstock/iStockphoto)
    Santorini, Greece

    Santorini's unusual beaches are the stuff of sci-fi novels. Volcanic explosions and collapses have left behind swaths of black sand, lunar-esque landscapes, and one sandy stretch that looks like it belongs on Mars: Red Beach. Towering red lava cliffs drop right down to a smallish red-sand beach and into the Aegean Sea. From a distance, even the shallowest water looks like blood. Despite its remote location, the beach still gets crowded with sunbathers basking on the warm, dark sand. Exceptionally clear waters make this an interesting spot for swimming and snorkeling. Avoid visiting midday in summer, when the beach underfoot can be scorching.

    Maho BeachMaho Beach in St. Maarten (Photo: Thinkstock/Medioimages/Photodisc)Maho Beach in St. Maarten (Photo: Thinkstock/Medioimages/Photodisc)
    St. Maarten

    Don't expect to get uninterrupted time with your Kindle on this beach. At the end of St. Maarten's airport runway, Maho Beach gives beachgoers a thrill every half hour: jumbo jets taking off and landing nearly within arm's reach. Only a narrow road separates you from the runway at Princess Juliana International Airport, the second-busiest airport in the eastern Caribbean. With the heat from the jet blast and winds of up to 100 mph whipping the sand, every takeoff and landing feels like a close call. The peak arrival time for the long-haul heavies, Boeing 747s and Airbus 340s, is between 1 p.m. and 4:30 p.m.

    Petroglyph BeachPetroglyph Beach in Alaska (Photo: Wrangell Convention and Visitor Bureau, photographer Ivan Simonek)Petroglyph Beach in Alaska (Photo: Wrangell Convention and Visitor Bureau, photographer Ivan Simonek)
    Wrangell, Alaska

    It's anyone's guess what the 40 rock carvings on Wrangell's Petroglyph Beach mean, and that's part of the intrigue. There's a strong indigenous Tlingit influence here on the tiny island of Wrangell, tucked away on the Inside Passage of southeast Alaska. And scientists believe it was the original local Tlingit who etched out the rock artwork some 8,000 years ago. Visible at low tide, unique faces, spirals, birds, salmon, and a killer whale appear on boulders and bedrock near important salmon streams. Want to speculate on interpretations? For some petroglyphs, slanted light at sunrise or sunset improves visibility; others are easier to see when rain leaves the rocks shiny and wet.

    Pagination

    (2 Pages) | Read all
     
    • Rob  •  3 months ago
      For Led Zeppelin fans, the Giants' Causeway was were the album cover for Houses of the Holy was shot.
      • Kelly 3 months ago
        Cool!
      • Kathleen 3 months ago
        Very cool!
      • My 3 months ago
        Did not know that...thanks!
    • Johnny V baby  •  3 months ago
      im at work. and i would like to be at the beach right now.
      • Knee G. 3 months ago
        i am in the beach .. and working right now
      • Johnny V baby 3 months ago
        lol. i guess ur 50% free
    • Helen  •  3 months ago
      Maho Beach is a 'must' everytime we go to St. Martin. It's not the kind of beach you can sit at all day, but it's fun to watch the jets come in.
    • billiam  •  Southfield, Michigan  •  3 months ago
      Seems like there are quite a few Caribbean islands with some pretty short runways.
      • major 3 months ago
        I gave you a thumbs up but yahoo said i already voted i'm looking at your post that i just read, there are no votes at all on your post at this time.
      • CHUCK 3 months ago
        The runways aren't short, they still need the same distance to get the plane up. The beach is just there past the airport. On the other end of the island there is a mountain that you take off into. Just an illusion though there is still enough room to elevate in plenty of time to miss the mountain. Still gives you a chill the first time.
      • Jonathan Schretzman 3 months ago
        if the runways were short a 747 wouldn't be landing on it...
    • Max Shadows  •  3 months ago
      I want to go back to St. Maarten someday. Not only to watch the airliners at Maho Beach but also because the guavaberry rum punch drinks there are incredible.
      • susie q 3 months ago
        Heading there for spring break - want to check Maho Beach out just to see those planes come by...and of course drink some rum punch!
      • Karen 3 months ago
        The drinks are great. St. Maarten was awesome. Everyone needs to experience it. We tried to find guavaberry in the states but to no avail.
      • Sunshine Parel 3 months ago
        I know their great!! Wish we have it here...lol
    • Tom  •  3 months ago
      i have been on the beach in st. maarten and the jets do cone in low
      • V L 3 months ago
        not familiar with that aviation term: "cone in low"
      • NDNgirl4ever 3 months ago
        Easy typo to make considering the m and n keys are right next to each other. Lay off him V L.
      • M. 3 months ago
        Yep, they do. The same in Larnaca, Cyprus.
    • Syarifah Dinah  •  Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia  •  3 months ago
      Have you been to Langkawi Island which has beautiful black sandy beach? Yup, it's black sand.
    • Scontz  •  3 months ago
      Yessssss I'll have a glass-rubble cocktail with a petroglyph chaser please. Oh and a side order of red-sand coated fries. That's for here. Thank you.
    • Tim  •  3 months ago
      I live at the end of an airport runway maybe i should put some sand and lawn chairs on the roof?
    • Who Dat  •  Pomona, California  •  3 months ago
      Nothing like a hit in the face with jet fuel exhaust
    • Enrique B  •  Miami, Florida  •  3 months ago
      There's a beach on the southern part of Puerto Rico ( I think it's name is La Parguera) in which the water has some kind of phosphorescent organisms that if you go at night the water and everything on it glow in the dark.
    • MdM.D.  •  Nashville, Tennessee  •  3 months ago
      Lived in St. Martin(the French side) for 2 years. Sunset Beach Bar and Bamboo Bernies were great palces to hang out and watch the knuckle-headed tourists get sand blasted and tumbled into the water!
    • Brenda Y  •  Orlando, Florida  •  3 months ago
      They mentioned red sand, white sand, and green sand, but the rare black sand beach is pretty impressive also.
    • Mohican Love Junk  •  3 months ago
      Who the hell would want to hang out at a beach where jets are blowing out your eardrums dumping exhaust in your Mai Tai?
    • John  •  Montreal, Canada  •  3 months ago
      hmmmm.........theSeychelle Islands is never mentioned.I guess that is why they call it the best kept secret .
    • JerryMerry  •  Manila, Philippines  •  3 months ago
      Ah! I still fondly remember standing on top of a VW bus at Maho Beach, St. Maarten, and waving to the pilots as they came in for a landing. Total freak-out.
    • Mab  •  Pitman, New Jersey  •  3 months ago
      SXM beach is amazing when the planes fly over.... I will be there soon enough (about 26 days!)
    • Mienghs  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 months ago
      glass beach has become a lot less glass over the years I went there when i was 10 or so and it was amazing giant rusted hulks of long forgotten machinery embeded in billions of muticolored pebbels 20 years later it was mainly a standard sand beach with some glass "stones" scattered about
    • Aaron  •  Mililani Town, Hawaii  •  3 months ago
      Collect all you want at Glass Beach - the Park service is too broke to enforce any rules.
    • stevew  •  Corpus Christi, Texas  •  3 months ago
      They ran this article, or a very similiar article about 6-8 months ago...sad they have to reach back for old material.

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