The Caribbean

With its warm climate, unspoilt beaches and relaxed lifestyle the Caribbean is one of the fastest growing long-haul destinations for UK tourists. The Caribbean is a major centre for cruising and major tour operators now offer cut-price package holidays and charter flights to this destination.

 

Location of The Caribbean

The Caribbean Islands are located in the Caribbean Sea in the Western Atlantic Ocean, the Islands stretch from Florida in the U.S.A to Venezuela in South America.

The Islands have all been colonised by a number of European countries, including Britain, France, Spain, Portugal and the Netherlands. Many of the Islands retain the character and customs of their colonising countries, which makes visitors feel immediately at ease when on Holiday. Each Island is very different in character, from bustling destinations to undiscovered Island paradises well away from the pressures of modern life. As well as their natural attractions, the Caribbean Islands offer visitors a variety of water-based sports and activities, including scuba diving, sailing, wind surfing and fishing.

The Main Tourist Areas in the Caribbean

The Bahamas

The Bahamas are a group of more than 700 islands spread across a 750 mile stretch of the Atlantic Ocean from Florida to Haiti. Many are low lying and are covered with lush vegetation. The beaches in the Bahamas are among the finest in the world, attracting tourists throughout the year from all parts of the globe. Most visitors to the Bahamas stay in the main resort areas on New Providence and Grand Bahama Islands, including the capital Nassau. The islands are also a magnet for cruises, being the first port of call for many ships that set sail from Florida. Watersports are well catered for in the Bahamas, with sailing, parasailing, powerboat racing, diving, swimming, snorkelling and water skiing all widely available.

 

Barbados

Barbados is the most Easterly of the Caribbean Islands and is part of the Windward Islands chain. The Western coast of Barbados has sheltered, coral beaches of fine, white sand, while along the East of the Island there is a lively surf that pounds a rocky shoreline. It is a predominantly flat Island with fertile plains supporting a variety of crops including sugar cane.

Bridgetown, the Capital of Barbados, has a decidedly English appearance and character, the result of its former British sovereignty. The island is equally popular with staying tourists and cruise visitors, who enjoy its fine beaches and crystal clear waters that offer a wide range of water-based activities such as swimming, scuba diving, jet skiing and water skiing. Other sports on offer include cricket, golf, tennis, horse riding and horse racing.

Jamaica

Jamaica is the third largest island in the Caribbean, located to the South of Cuba and West of Haiti. Most of the Island is forested and mountainous, rising from 1000 metres in the West to the Blue mountains in the East reaching 2256 metres in height. Most of the beaches are found on the North and West Coasts of the Island where the principal resorts of Montego Bay, Ocho Rios, Negril and Port Antonio are located. Montego bay is one of the world's great resorts and is the jewel in the crown of Jamaica's tourism industry. The Island's capital, Kingston, is on the South Coast and is the site of one of Jamaica's two international airports. It is the largest English-Speaking city in the Caribbean and an important business and administrative centre. Like many Caribbean Islands, Jamaica welcomes both staying and cruise tourists, who enjoy its varied nightlife, relaxed way of life and numerous sporting opportunities.

 

The Dominican Republic

The Dominican republic occupies the Eastern part of the Island of Hispiola, which it shares with Haiti, and is the second largest of the Caribbean states(after Cuba). Its popularity with visitors from the UK is growing rapidly, with many of the larger tour operators promoting the Dominican republic as an all year round destination, with package holidays and regular charter flights. Its main tourist attractions are its unspoilt beaches, e.g., around Puerto Plata with the popular resort of Sosua and along the Samana Peninsula, both on the North Coast. Inland, the landscape is forested and mountainous, with many valleys, plains and plateaux. the capital, Santo Domingo was founded in the fifteenth century and the old, Colonial part of the city has been restored to its former glory. the modern part of the capital is a bustling port city, offering visitors a variety of nightlife and cultural experiences.

Tourism has developed much later in the Dominican Republic than in other Caribbean destinations. Consequently, many of its tourist facilities and tourism infrastructure are not fully developed.

 

Trinidad and Tobago

Trinidad and Tobago are sister Islands situated off the coast of Venezuela in the Southern Caribbean. Trinidad is the larger of the 2 islands with its capital, Port of Spain, dominated by mountainous terrain. Elsewhere, inland Trinidad is a relatively flat, agricultural landscape with unspoilt beaches on its North and east coasts. Tobago is a very small Island with quiet, sandy beaches and a mountainous interior with lush, tropical vegetation. the Islands particularly Trinidad are renowned for their carnivals and music festivals, and boast a good selection of restaurants serving local delicacies. The Islands are also noted for their Flora and Fauna, with more than 600 species of butterfly and 700 varieties of orchid. Hummingbirds are found in abundance in Tobago.

 

St Lucia  

St Lucia is the second largest of the Windward Islands (after Dominica), located in the Eastern Caribbean between St Vincent and Martinique. It is rich in tropical vegetation and has a mountainous interior. One of its main attractions are its unspoilt, palm fringed beaches surrounded by the warm clear Caribbean Sea. the Island has a great variety of plant and animal life, including orchids and parrots. the mountains are intersected by rivers that form broad fertile valleys in some parts of the Island. the capital, Castries, is a busy, land-locked harbour surrounded by Hills. It is a major port of call  for cruise ships, which dock at Pointe Seraphine. St Lucia has 2 international airports, Vigie and Hewanorra, 2 and 42 miles respectively from Castries.

 

Choose Your Favourite Caribbean Island or Country and carry out the following

1. Which UK tour operators and airlines offer tour programmes to the place you have chosen

2. Make detailed notes on the tourist attractions and the most popular resorts for the place you have chosen (Minimum 500 words-Maximum 750 words)

 

click HERE to return to homepage