Private Tropical 40 - Boroka Does The Caribbean... May 2026

By: Latitude 38 Correspondent

There is a moment, just after you clear the lee of a volcanic island and the trade winds fill the main sail, when a boat stops being a vessel and starts being a world. For the crew and lucky guests aboard the Boroka, a stunning Private Tropical 40, that moment doesn’t just happen once. It happens every morning as the sun cracks over the cobalt horizon of the Lesser Antilles.

In the world of high-end marine charters, the phrase “luxury catamaran” gets thrown around almost as loosely as a jib sheet in a squall. But every so often, a specific hull number and a specific itinerary align to create something truly mythical. Right now, that alignment is "Private Tropical 40 - Boroka Does the Caribbean." Private Tropical 40 - Boroka Does The Caribbean...

Private Tropical 40 is a milestone. For two decades, the series has defined the “exotic erotic” genre. But with Boroka at the helm, it evolves.

There is a notable emphasis on consent and desire as a natural force. Boroka’s character is never passive. She is the captain of her own pleasure. In one memorable line, whispered to the camera (breaking the fourth wall with a wink), she says: “In Europe, we rush. In the Caribbean, they know… the best things arrive on island time.” By: Latitude 38 Correspondent There is a moment,

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. In the world of high-end marine charters, the

Boroka motors past the boiling rocks of Soufrière. Here, the "private tropical" aspect shines. You skip the tourist ferry docks. Instead, you anchor in Prince Rupert Bay. Your skipper arranges a private guide to take you up the Indian River (famous from Pirates of the Caribbean) or to the Trafalgar Falls. Returning to Boroka, you have the hot shower and cold beer waiting for you—perks the backpackers on land do not have.