+ Bookmark this Page
Share
Write Travel Review
Add Your Photos
Hotels by Island
Anguilla
Antigua
Aruba
Bahamas
Barbados
Barbuda
Bonaire
British Virgin Islands
Cayman Islands
Costa Rica
Cuba
Curacao
Dominica
Dominican Republic
Grenada
Guadeloupe
Haiti
Jamaica
Martinique
Montserrat
Puerto Rico
Saba
St. Barthelemy
St. Eustatius
St. Kitts & Nevis
St. Lucia
St. Maarten
Trinidad & Tobago
Turks & Caicos
US Virgin Islands
Advertise
Add Your Service
Create Free Listing
Create Paid Listing
Update Listing
Contact Us
|
Home > Attractions
 Port Royal is located on the Southern coast of Jamaica, at the tip of the long, narrow peninsula forming the Kingston harbor. Port Royal was founded by the British, who after gaining control over Jamaica from the Spanish in 1655, began fortifying the settlement next to the deep harbor.
|
 The only one of its kind in the world, Cayman Turtle Farm is home to over 16,000 green sea turtles, ranging in size from six ounces to six hundred pounds each! Nowhere else can you see an endangered species so successfully raised for conservation.
|
 Swim with Dolphins! - Imagine an idyllic tropical retreat set against the backdrop of Jamaica's picturesque North Coast. Adjacent to the world-famous Dunn's River Falls in Ocho Rios, the opportunity awaits you to meet, and swim with a family of Bottle Nose dolphins at their home, Dolphin Cove.
|
 Dunn's River Falls is one of Jamaica's
national treasures. Globally, it is as well
known as reggae and equally stimulating.
There are few places where the Arawak
name "Xayamaca" - land of rivers and
springs - is more apt. The Spaniards called
the area "Las Chorreras", the waterfalls or
springs and it is truly one of the most beautiful spots on the island.
|
 The first European city in the New World with Western hemisphere's first cathedral, fortress, university, hospital... Also holds the palace of the Columbus family, and is a major center for restaurants, bars and Santo Domingo nightlife.
|
 Wallblake House, built in 1787, is the oldest and only surviving plantation house on Anguilla. It is one of the few plantation houses in the Caribbean where the entire complex of buildings including the kitchen, stable and workers quarters have survived virtually intact.
|
|
|