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Pritam Singh Blog

09/30/2010

Parrot Key Hotel & Resort’s Key Lime Pina Colada

Check out Parrot Key’s famous Key Lime Pina Colada on “This Week’s Boat Drink”!  RumShopRyan says that “after one sip, you’ll be going Key Crazy”!

Enjoy this delicious drink poolside at Parrot Key's Tiki Bar!

In order to create this delicious tropical concoction you will need:

  • Captain Morgan Key Lime Run 1 ½ Oz.
  • Pina-Colada Mix

Once you have the ingredients, combine them with ice in a blender.  Blend until smooth.  Pour into a 16-oz hurricane or specialty glass.  Garnish with a lime.

So go ahead and pass the Key Lime Pina Colada, my friends!

If you’re feeling lazy and looking to relax beach-side  or poolside, head on over to the magnificent Parrot Key Hotel and Resort, a Singh Hotel & Resort.  This waterfront, Key West hotel is just minutes from Historic Old Town and is the perfect place to rest and re-energize after a night out on Duval Street! Our boutique hotel in beautiful Key West offers authentic-island inspired rooms, suites and cottages, spectacular swimming pools, lush tropical gardens, and more!

http://rumshopryan.com/2010/09/22/key-lime-pina-colada-drink-recipe-boat-drinks/

08/26/2010

It’s time for the 38th Annual Key West Poker Run

Join us in Key West as bikes from all over ride in for the 38th Annual Key West Poker Run, better known as Bike Week.  On September 16th through the 19th, join in on one of the greatest motorcycle rides in the tropics on America’s most stunning scenic highways (the Overseas Highway), as you take in the beautiful sites of the Atlantic Ocean on one side and the Gulf Of Mexico on the other.  It has been said that the pleasure is in the view, the refreshing ocean breeze and the picturesque stops along the way.

This organized event starts in Miami, Florida and ends in Key West, Florida.  Along the way, the crew will make five stops and at each stop, will draw a card.  There will be one very lucky winner who will draw the best hand! Join us at Parrot Key Hotel and Resort, A Pritam Singh Resort, as we welcome the bike crew to Key West for one of South Florida’s biggest motorcycle weekends of the year!

08/06/2010

Florida:Keys to Paradise at Parrot Key and Tranquility Bay of Singh Resorts

AFTER the high life of Miami or the theme park thrills of Orlando, recharge your batteries in the Florida Keys

The Florida Keys are the end of the line as far as continental USA is concerned. Straddling the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico, this ribbon of sun-kissed tiny islands are closer to Havana than Miami. The tropical islands, linked to mainland Florida and each other by the Overseas Highway, vary in size and character, but all exude a laid-back vibe.

While Orlando has become a temple to Mickey Mouse and Miami to partying, the Keys are a mecca for mavericks, moochers and meanderers. So if you’ve spent a week walking around Florida’s theme parks with the kids, why not enjoy some rest and relaxation? Offering gorgeous vistas, unrivalled weather, superb seafood, stunning national parks and coral reefs, it’s clear the USA has saved the best till last. So order a Margarita or Mojito and enjoy a cocktail of American warmth and tropical gorgeousness.

WHERE SHOULD I GO?

The Florida Keys are a 150-mile long necklace of 1,700 tropical islands, many only accessible by boat. As the Upper Keys are closest to mainland Florida (Miami is less than an hour’s drive away), they’re more developed and attract weekenders who come to stay in the likes of Key Largo. The coral reefs and magnificent marine kingdom of the John Pennkamp Coral Reef State Park are the major attraction for scuba divers and snorkellers. While nearby Islamorada is often referred to as the sport fishing capital of the world. The Middle Keys are a haven for eco-tourists, home to the Dolphin Research Center, Turtle Hospital and wildlife such as alligators, turtles and exotic birds. Base yourself in the lovely resort town of Marathon.

Once you’ve passed over Seven Mile Bridge, you’re in the Lower Keys, a cluster of smaller unspoiled islands with fewer visitors, dense forests home to the endangered Key deer, and the Looe Key National Marine Sanctuary. Last but not least is Key West, a two-by-four mile island that is the final dot of mainland USA. Renowned as a haven for writers, there’s also large Cuban community as it’s only 90 miles from Havana. Popular with party animals, day-trippers and cruise ships, Duval Street is the main touristy thoroughfare lined with bars, restaurants and souvenir stores. While the historic Mallory Square is where everyone flocks to watch the sun set, the street entertainers and to shop at the market stalls.

WHERE SHOULD I STAY?

While there are plenty of fancy resort hotels dotted around the Keys, one of the best ways to soak up the quirky charm of the islands is to stay in a B&B. OK! checked into the delightful Ambrosia, a short walk from Key West’s Duval Street. Beautiful spacious en-suite guest rooms are arranged around tropical foliage-filled courtyards with their own private pool, fountains, sculptures and verandas. There’s more than a whiff of the Caribbean at the Ambrosia, a residence brimming with real personality and warmth that serves as a better introduction to Key West life than any guidebook. Families or bigger groups may prefer Key West’s waterfront Parrot Key Resort as it offers the choice of two or three-bedroom cottages as well as rooms and suites. This lovely white clapperboard modern resort offers five acres of landscaped grounds with four pools.

WHAT SHOULD I SEE?

Kids will go nuts for the Dolphin Research Center (www.dolphins.org) as they’ll get a captivating glimpse into the lives of both dolphins and sea lions. There’s also an opportunity to be a trainer and to swim with the dolphins.

Another must-see is the home of revered novelist Ernest Hemingway, who lived in Key West for many years. His lovingly preserved Spanish colonial home still houses the descendents of his six-toed cats and a fragrant, evocative scent of old Key West.

The Florida Keys also plays host to some unique events – from the Underwater Music Festival (July), where music is piped underwater for snorkellers and divers, to the Key Largo Pirates Festival (October) and Key West’s Pirates In Paradise buccaneer-fest (November/December).

WHAT STARS MIGHT I SEE?

Many films have been shot on the islands, ranging from the 1948 film Key Largo, starring Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall (you can still visit the original steam-powered boat Africa Queen used in the film) to the more recent Meet The Fockers, 2 Fast 2 Furious and I Love You Phillip Morris. Arnold Schwarzenegger and Jamie Lee Curtis filmed True Lies here, while Sheryl Crow, Will Smith, Jennifer Lopez, Jude Law and Sandra Bullock are island fans.

Sandra is one of the many A-listers (including Johnny Depp and Cameron Diaz) who’ve stayed at the Little Palm Island Resort, the only hotel on the tiny Little Torch Key. While in Key West, Top Gun actress Kelly McGillis owns Kelly’s Caribbean Bar, Grill & Brewery.

WHERE SHOULD I EAT?

Local delicacies abound but no trip is complete without sampling the Key’s signature dishes, such as conch fritters – the flesh from large sea snails, which OK! found surprisingly chewy but delicious. Also make sure you try the coconut-crusted shrimp – ours came with piquant orange marmalade and horseradish dip. The Keys are also famed for their key lime pie, a gorgeous, tangy, meringuey baked delight served almost everywhere. Great places to sample local dishes are the Conch Republic Seafood Restaurant in Key West, while the quaint Porky’s Bayside diner in Marathon, where Elizabeth Taylor once dined, serves great barbecue seafood.

One of OK!’s culinary highlights was dining alfresco on the veranda of the Butterfly Café, part of the beachside Tranquility Bay Resort in Marathon, where we tucked into a heaven-sent shrimp cocktail, horseradish encrusted grouper and a sublime sticky toffee pudding. Head to the Rum Barrel restaurant in Key West for American classics such as a Philly steak and Portobello mushroom sandwich. Or try local dishes such as the blackened mahi mahi salad or the blood orange marinated tuna. Beware, though, the starters are huge and the main courses are big enough to feed a coach party!

HOW DO I GET THERE?

Virgin Atlantic (www.virgin-atlantic.com; 08442 092 770) flies to Miami daily from London Heathrow from £429 return, including tax.

A water-view two-bedroom beach house at the Tranquility Bay Beach House Resort in Marathon (www.tranquilitybay.com) starts from £120 per night. A double room at the Ambrosia Lodge in Key West (www.ambrosiakeywest.com) costs from £120 per night. A double room at the Parrot Key Resort in Key West (www.parrotkeyresort.com) costs from £112. All prices based on a September 2010 stay.

For a Miami stopover, book into the W Hotel (www.wsouthbeach.com), where rooms start at £235 per room per night. Rent a car with Dollar (www.dollar.co.uk) from £130 per week.

Florida: Keys to Paradise at Parrot Key Resort and Tranquility Bay Beach House Resort

Posted By: http://www.tripideas.co.uk/ on July 19th, 2010

Tranquility Bay in Marathon Key–Go Right Now! From Lucky Magazine

At this point in the Miami summer, I send up the white flag and stop fighting the elements. It’s all about a ponytail, SPF, a swimsuit, and floaty dress–and a weekend getaway that makes me glad that it’s 98 degrees out.

Case in point: I just got back from Tranquility Bay in Marathon Key–the most adorable, lavishly landscaped hotel, which sits right on the beach. Ralph Lauren would love it. You can walk to a boat to go snorkeling on the reef or head off Jet Skiing–or, if you’re too lazy for that, simply loll in the shade by the pool with the occasional small iguana or get a lovely spa treatment in your room. It’s off-season in the Keys (read: lower hotel rates), and Marathon is only a two-hour drive from Miami. And the iguanas are shy, not-at-all-dangerous peaceniks. (On cold winter days, the hotel staff actually go around and cover them up with blankets.)

August 03 2010 by Jennifer Scruby

Click Here for the full Lucky Magazine Article on Tranquility Bay

Parrot Key Hotel and Resort Announces a Summer Special Offering Guests a Third Night Free

Filed under: Parrot Key Singh Resort, Pritam Singh Key West — admin @ 12:06 pm

Parrot Key Hotel & Resort is proud to announce a summer special offering guests a third night free. Stay two nights at Parrot Key in Key West, Florida before August 31 and receive a complimentary 3rd night. With rates starting at just $159/night, this is an unbelievable summer special.

Guests at this boutique luxury resort can enjoy spacious hotel rooms, suites, or 2-3 bedroom cottages for a taste of island living. Enjoy stunning pools, onsite watersports, poolside dining at Café Blue and more. Located oceanfront on the beautiful island of Key West, Parrot Key is the ideal destination for a tropical paradise getaway.

This amazing summer special includes:

  • Luxury accommodations starting at $159/night
  • Free night after a 2-night stay
  • Full access to all property amenities
  • Valid through August 31, 2010

“Everyone deserves a summer vacation” said Pritam Singh, Founder and Developer of The Singh Company. “This special allows travelers to stretch their budget and enjoy a long weekend without breaking the bank. We hope that people will take advantage of this opportunity to spend a little extra time in Key West, and use the additional day to explore our beautiful island.”

This offer is valid through August 31, 2010. Room rates start at $159 and vary based on availability. All reservations require a deposit of the first and last nights’ stay. To learn more about this package, visit the Parrot Key website.

About Parrot Key Hotel & Resort

Parrot Key Hotel & Resort is a boutique luxury resort located on the Florida Bay in Key West. Boasting breathtaking views and unparalleled amenities paired with exceptional service, this Florida Keys resort is a premier vacation destination. Featuring elegant hotel rooms, suites, and cottages, this hotel and resort is able to accommodate a variety of leisure travelers, from family vacations to destination weddings to romantic getaways.

06/17/2010

This is the Florida Keys June 12-13 – Home of Singh Resorts

Filed under: Pritam Singh, Pritam Singh Key West — Tags: , — admin @ 4:49 pm

06/16/2010

Living Past in a Vibrant Future in Key West

Filed under: Pritam Singh Key West, Uncategorized — admin @ 4:41 pm

In many countries, the custom house, where government officials negotiate import and export goods, as well as currency and passport dealings, is one of the most important and historic buildings.  In Key West, which considers itself its own entity away from the United States, it is no different its custom house exhibits a pictorial look at the past.

On a path once traveled by wreckers, pirates and politicians sits Custom House.  The old red brick building was built in 1891 as a post office, and then a court house.  Not long after the island’s bankruptcy in the 1930s, the building was boarded up and abandoned.  Years later, the Key West Art & Historical Society restored the building after a nine-year, $9 million restoration project.

Key West Art & Historical Society has been collecting and preserving Key West’s history since 1949.  All the remnants are stored within the Custom House, on display for locals and tourists.

Find famed author and adventurer Ernest Hemingway’s bloodstained WW1 uniform, as well as other personal items.  A short video, entitled “Fishing, Friends & Family,” can be viewed, which discusses the author’s life.

Folk artist Mario Sanchez’s colorful wood paintings showcasing the city’s heritage are on display.  Each woodwork painting portrays a sense of time and place.  View internationally acclaimed painter Paul Collin’s work, as well.  His modern portraits of Key West’s most famous characters, from Henry Flagler to Hemingway, can be seen throughout the building.

Drawings, sketches, prints, paintings and brochures from the 1930s are displayed, each presenting a downtrodden Key West.  This “Coping with Depression,” exhibit was put together by the Works Progress Administration.

Aside from permanent collections, Custom House has rotating exhibits, including its current Babar’s USA, which features drawings from Key West resident Laurent de Brunhoff’s book.  The famous cartoon elephant was originally created by Brunhoff’s father in 1931, and is now brought to life in more than 30 books.  Brunhoff draws Babar onto real photographs.  In his exhibit, Babar is featured in various Key West locations.

Opening in June is Seascape: Large-Format Photographs by Alan Kennish.  Each beautiful photograph captures the tropical turquoise waters surrounding the Florida Keys.  In July, Hemingway in Havana will be displayed at Custom House.  The exhibit features remnants of Hemingway’s time in Cuba.  In conjunction with the exhibit, two performers of Hemingway on Stage: Hemingway’s Hot Havana will be performed at the Red Barn Theater on July 22 and 23. 

Aside from the artifacts and artwork, the house itself is a remnant of yesteryear.  Tour the room where the United Staes decided to go to war with Spain, or discover how pirates hid themselves and their loot around the inlets of Key West.  Custom House is a little nook on the island allowing visitors to learn about the city’s important past, while enjoying its vibrant present.

For more information, visit kwahs.com or call 305.295.6616.

 By Lauren Gibaldi                     June 2010

06/15/2010

Who Owns the Little White House? Pritam Singh.

By Robert Wolz

KWHx – Issue #28

Hidden within the gates of Truman Annex is one of South Florida’s most historic sites…The Harry S. Truman Little White House State Heritage Landmark.

Built in 1890 on the waterfront as a two-family dwelling for the base commandant and paymaster, the building was known as Quarters A and B.  In order to accommodate the deeper draft war ships, the Navy dredged the harbor directly in front of Quarter A in 1909.

The building was converted into a single-family residence in 1911.  Seven American Presidents have visited it.  President William Howard Taft arrived on Flagler’s Overseas Railroad in December 1912 en route to Panama to inspect the construction of the canal.  He had made previous trips as Secretary of War to view the work of the Army Corps of Engineers heading the canal project.  Then-Mayor, J.N. Fogarty, hosted a dinner in his home on Duval Street, and Taft posed for photos on the lawn of Quarters A before boarding a ship docked in front and sailing to Panama.

Franklin Roosevelt developed polio in 1921 and desperately sought a cure using hydrotherapy in the winters of 1922, 1923, 1924, 1925, and 1926.  While most of his time was spent enjoying the warm waters and fishing in the Upper Keys, his diary recorded him staying in Quarters A for a week in April 1926.

President Harry S Truman used the house for 175 days during his administration from 1945 to 1953.  He spent 11 working vacations in Quarters A and it was during this time that the building became known as the Little White House.  To better serve the needs of the President, a ten foot addition was added to the southern end of the house in 1949.  The house was remodeled by Public Works and completely refurnished by interior decorator Haygood Lassiter of Miami, Florida.  Concerned Navy personnel kept the furniture collection intact and today 80-90% of the furnishing are original to the site and belong to the State Museum system.

But Key West was more than a vacation spot – the President conducted official business from here.  Truman was the first president to realize the White House was where the president was rather than just a building in Washington.  

While here the President discussed relief efforts for Europe, the Truman Doctrine that changed American foreign policy, and the recognition of the State of Israel.  From here, he wrote his fifth Civil Rights Executive Order requiring that federal contractors hire minorities and he drafted a letter that called for a two-week cease fire in Korea.  The reaction of General Douglas MacArthur to this letter led to his dismissal as Allied Commander in April 1951.

President Dwight Eisenhower used the house for meetings in 1955 while he recovered from a heart attack while staying next to the Marine Hospital (now called Mills Place) in Quarters L.

President John F. Kennedy used the site for a summit meeting with British Prime Minister Harold Macmillian in March of 1961 – just 23 days before the Bay of Pigs crisis.

Following President Truman’s death, the base was officially renamed the Truman Annex in 1973.  In 1974, the sub base portion of the base was closed.  For twelve years the property was abandoned.  In September 1986 the Truman Annex, including the Little White House, was sold by the US government to developer Pritam Singh.  This is the first time in Key West’s history that the land was privately owned.  Within a week, Governor Bob Graham was asking for the property.  Mr. Singh generously deeded the Little White House to the state in early 1987.

Over the next three years Mr. Singh privately funded and directed the restoration of the building and the grounds to reflect the Truman era.  Mr. and Mrs. Henry Drettman funded additional restoration in the 1990s.  in 1996 and again in 2007, President and Mrs. Jimmy Carter used the house for a family gathering.  In 1999, Historic Tours of America entered into an agreement with the State of Florida to supervise the continued restoration of the house.  They have been extremely generous in their support of the project and its new foundation.  The Key West Harry S Truman Foundation, a non-profit formed in 2002, has raised more than $1 million to complete the restoration.  $200,000 has been donated by the Bureau of Historic Preservation, $200,000 from the Monroe Country Tourist Development Council and the rest from citizens like you.  So when someone asks, “Who owns the Little White House?”  We all do.

06/14/2010

Time Magazine: Key West, Florida Pritam Singh’s Strange Career (Part 3)

Singh’s efforts have generally gone down well among the blithe spirits of Key West. Without Singh, the Truman Annex might have become “Meldorado,” a pirate theme park. But if islanders appreciate having a developer as sensitive as Pritam Singh, they are also worried that he is exerting a more profound influence on the island, as an apostle of good taste in a place long known for exuberant tackiness.

Key West has begun cracking down on noise, street vendors, store windows filled with obscene T shirts. Singh acknowledges his power to influence this trend: he will in time be paying 25% of the island’s tax revenues. Before the recent election, two of the five city commissioners were, by amazing coincidence, slated to have shops in his coveted retail space. But he argues that the city would be adjusting its image, growing up, even without him.

It’s possible to grow up, he suggests, without becoming dull. Among other anarchic touches, he plans to rent office space in his complex to environmental groups that “will drive other developers crazy.” He is restoring the Little White House to its tacky Truman-era splendor, spending $15,000 just to repair the Sears, Roebuck fluorescent lights on the porch. Presidential bad taste doesn’t trouble him, in part because he has income projections for his planned Truman museum. “The Little White House is a little gold mine,” he says. But he also claims he does not mean to make Key West precious and yuppified.

“Yeah, you’ve got the nice guardhouse,” he says. “You’ve also got Harry Truman in the middle, and across the street you’ve got the Peekaboo Lounge.” For the foreseeable future, Key West also has Singh, who is weird enough all by himself to keep the place interesting.

“Eh,” he shrugs. “It works.”

12.11.89

06/13/2010

Time Magazine: Key West, Florida Pritam Singh’s Strange Career (Part 2)

When he is done with the $250 million project in 1992, Singh intends the Truman Annex to be an environmentally sound, architecturally pure, socially engineered complex of 700 homes, condominiums, shops and hotel rooms. His design guidelines, reflecting the conch-house architecture of historical Key West, run to 27 dogmatic pages: “White is the preferred and approved basic color for all structures.” “Each single-family unit shall have a bougainvillea within the front-yard area . . .” What he is building is an enclave away from the trashed-out, mixed-up modern world, and he gleefully plans to earn a pile of money doing it.

Singh has sea-blue eyes, magnified by thick, round glasses; his beard, unshaved since he was 17, is sparse and wiry. Born Paul LaBombard, he was, in adult eyes, a bad influence on anybody who knew him as a teenager. He ran away from his working-class family, smoked dope and organized a high school SDS chapter. Lacking money for college, he spent two winters camping out and gathering shells for a living in Key West. He was arrested at the Mayday antiwar demonstrations in Washington in 1971, and spent three days locked up in the basement of the Department of Justice. Afterward he sought spiritual growth in a Sikh ashram in Massachusetts, where he remained for five years before revolting against the power-hungry leader.

Singh says his past and present connect perfectly. He was always good at organizing things. He has always tried to live a moral life. “I don’t see any divergence in my program,” he says. In 1979 he borrowed $7,500, started rehabbing buildings in New England and prospered; luck or savvy got him into Key West before the Northeast real estate market went flat.

The odd thing is that he never stopped being a Sikh, and he remains full of admiration for the social reformers who founded the religion: “These guys were, like, wacko. They just appeared out of nowhere and were talking about justice and equality. Treat women equally, serve the poor, defend your rights. It fits the social and revolutionary agenda of the American republic to a tee.” He shrugs. “Except that we wear beards and turbans.”

Singh can be disarmingly frank about his failings: he has dealt with the problem of homelessness in Key West by putting up gates to close off his streets at night. His complex includes more affordable housing than required, but up to half may go to friends and vacationers, rather than to year-round residents.

He is most ardent about environmental issues, having become a rehabber at least partly because he believes it is wrong to build on open land. An aide informs him that Greenpeace will be tying up at his dock on Thursday morning. “That oughta impress the Japanese guys,” he jokes, referring to a group of financiers arriving the same day with the prospect of a $100 million loan. He dreads the idea of having lived in a period of ecological collapse and done nothing but good deals.

He also dreads power, which he admits is what he enjoys most about being a developer. “I read the papers and I think, ‘I could do that deal. Grrrrr.’ ” He makes a low self-mocking growl. “I could make $50 million on that deal.” The fingers of both hands wriggle in acquisitive frenzy. Sheer insatiability has convinced him that he must give up the business after Key West. “I’m successful only if I can walk away from it and deal with who I really am.” He aims to retreat to his sprawling farm in Vermont, where he has built a private Stonehenge, a Jeffersonian library in the middle of the woods, a Japanese teahouse. Cross-cultural follies.
12.11.89

(To be continued…)

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