The Caribbean has a problem: too many boats chasing too few perfect spots. The beauty of the Boroka model is exclusivity through accessibility.
Big charter yachts are limited to deep-water ports. Bareboat rentals leave you doing your own dishes and worrying about grounding. But the Private Tropical 40 - Boroka Does the Caribbean scenario offers the perfect middle ground. It is a crewed yacht with the intimacy of a small ship. Private Tropical 40 - Boroka Does The Caribbean...
The "Private" aspect is key. This is not a cabin charter. You are not sharing the salon with sweaty scuba divers from Ohio. You own the hull—all three cabins, the saloon, the flybridge, and the sugar-scoop transom. The Caribbean has a problem: too many boats
In the post-pandemic travel era, privacy is the ultimate luxury. A Private Tropical 40 charter means no crowded resort pools, no buffet lines, and no itineraries dictated by hotel managers. You and Boroka decide the route. Wake up in St. Martin, have lunch off the coast of Anguilla, and sleep anchored off the pink sands of St. Barths. The "Private" aspect ensures that the Caribbean is yours alone. Bareboat rentals leave you doing your own dishes
A boat is just fiberglass without a captain. The Boroka comes with a team (let's call them "The Guardians of the Vibe") who have been running this route for seven seasons.
They know that cruisers don't want a rigid itinerary printed on laminate paper. They want spontaneity. If the Boroka crew wakes up and sees the wind is shifting to the north, they scrap the plan for Tortola and head for the north swells of Anegada to hunt lobsters. That flexibility is the hidden engine of the Private Tropical 40 experience.