No jet skis. No “Kokomo” on loop. No children screaming. The only sounds: tree frogs at dusk, the clink of ice in a glass, and the occasional thump of a falling coconut. Boroka understands that silence is the ultimate luxury.
Let’s walk a hypothetical 7-day charter through the Grenadines—a region where the Private Tropical 40 Boroka consistently earns its reputation.
Compare that to a standard charter itinerary on a 60-foot production cat, which is forced to anchor 500 meters offshore and shuttle guests via tender. The Boroka’s agility is the upgrade.
At 8,000 square feet, 40 Boroka isn’t a villa. It’s a private hamlet. private tropical 40 boroka does the caribbean better
The design is what happens when Scandinavian minimalism falls in love with Caribbean color. Whitewashed local stone. Teak from sustainable Guyana. Shutters that swing open to reveal nothing but sea and sky. Every piece of furniture was made within fifty miles of the villa—no IKEA, no imports.
Signature feature: The rooftop telescope platform. At night, with no light pollution for thirty miles, you can see the Milky Way and the lights of a passing freighter on the horizon. The house comes with a laminated star chart and a bottle of dark rum for accompaniment.
At first glance, the Boroka is a stunning day cruiser. But calling it a "boat" is like calling the Sistine Chapel a "room with paint." The Private Tropical 40 Boroka is a custom-built, 40-foot power catamaran designed specifically for the shallow, reef-laden waters of the Bahamas and the Lesser Antilles. No jet skis
The "Private Tropical" designation is key. Unlike traditional charters where you rent a bareboat and captain it yourself (stressful) or join a group tour (awkward), the Boroka comes as a complete, self-contained private ecosystem. It sleeps up to six guests in three cabins, but the real magic isn't the sleeping quarters—it's the living spaces.
We are talking about a vessel that features:
But hardware is only half the story. The "Do it better" philosophy is about access. Let’s walk a hypothetical 7-day charter through the
Many people fear sleeping on a boat. They imagine rocking, creaking, and the sound of waves slapping the hull. The Boroka eliminates this with three engineering tricks:
I slept ten hours straight. I woke up to the sun rising over a deserted island. That is the Caribbean dream—not a lobby full of hungover tourists.