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Dominica
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Dominica is a ruggedly beautiful island whose landscape has changed little since the first European explorers. |
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Essentials |
Home of the World Creole Music Festival Located between the French islands of Guadeloupe and Martinique, Dominica (pronounced Dom-in-EEK-a) is a lush paradise with some of the world's last untouched rain forest. It offers natural attractions that you normally see only in adventure movies: Tall cascading waterfalls, hidden fern grottoes and mysterious regions of volcanic activity make this seem like a Lost World only now being explored. Dominica's rugged terrain made it impossible to grow sugar cane here. As a result, it was never scalped of its vegetation, making Dominica one of the most natural islands in all the Caribbean. Because its name is often confused with the Dominican Republic, located a considerable distance away on the island of Hispaniola, Dominica's official name is the Commonwealth of Dominica. If you take only one Caribbean hike in your lifetime,do it here on the demanding, roller-coaster assault through the mountains that takes you first into the Valley of Desolation. This craggy, sulphur-spewing piece of earth so primordial you feel time- warped to the days of the dinosaurs, that it would be no surprise if a lumbering Tyrannosaurus Rex suddenly appeared and chased you. Reinforcing the eerie, prehistoric mood is the even more amazing phenomenon called The Boiling Lake, a large cauldron of steaming water that reaches three-quarters of a football field across. Depending on your sources, this is the world's first or second largest boiling lake. The only other one of note is located in a different hemisphere, in New Zealand. Dominica is as rich underwater as it is on land. Not only is the scuba diving superb, whales can be sighted year-round just offshore.
With assets like these, Dominica understandably promotes itself as "The Nature Island." Dominica also is the last stronghold of the once-fierce Carib Indians, whose own dreams of expansion and domination of the region were interrupted by the colonialists from Spain and England. The Caribs may have been conquered, but the Carib language survives in everyday English. And so does their reputation as cannibals, one of the most successful war propaganda slanders ever. (So why did the fierce Caribs lose?) With the Caribs marginalized, the English and French fought continually for possession. England won but French influences dominate the language (a patois), religion, customs, Creole cuisine and many place names including the capital city of Roseau (pronounced ROSE-oh). Detailed
Background Facts & Map Dominica
Arrival Briefing Dominica Road Map Major Attractions Botanical
Gardens The
Carib Reserve Emerald
Pool Freshwater
Lake Trail Hidden
Assets Morne Diablotin
National Park Morne
Trois Pitons National Park North Coast Hiking & Walking
Trails Sari
Sari Falls Trafalgar
Falls Victoria
Falls World
Creole Music Festival
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Old Caribbean Proverb: |
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