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A typical, beautiful Antiguan beach.
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Ticonderoga leads Whitehawk during
Classic Week
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Its natural harbours
are unparalleled in the islands, a fact not wasted on
the British Navy who fortified several of them to protect
their sugar interests in the 17 and 1800's.
Their silent cannon now decorate restored forts at Nelsons
Dockyard, Shirley's Heights and other commanding points
as yachts of all descriptions sail the same waters as
the old-time aggressors.
Almost any type of sailing is available in Antigua,
from windsurfing to dinghy sailing to crewed or bareboat
charters.
An often exercised option is a day sail on one of the
local catamarans.
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Couple enjoying
a day charter
cruise.
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Now a world class
yachting destination, Antigua is home to one of the
largest and best known regattas in the world, Antigua Sailing Week
which takes place in late April each year and brings
together over 200 boats of many nationalities for
a week of racing.
Antigua Classic Regatta occurs the week before Sailing
week and has built a reputation as one of the finest
annual gatherings of classic yachts.
If you want to sail here, Sunsail and Sun Yacht offer
bareboat charters out of Falmouth and English Harbour.
Windsurfing Antigua at Dutchman's bay near the airport
caters to all levels of windsurfers, from beginners
to expert bumpy water sailors.
Wadadli Cats, Kokomo Cat and Treasure Island Cruises offer
day charter catamaran cruises to a variety of destinations
including circumnavigations of the Island.
There are also a number of private charter yachts
available.
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A
look at the map reveals countless embayments, harbors and
islands - one of the most complex coastlines in the West
Indies with everything from sheer cliffs to pure white sand
beaches to mangrove wetlands which host thousands of migrant
birds each winter.
Antigua
is one of those places where you will see more shades of
blue, green and in-between than you thought possible.
The ocean has provided for generations of Antiguan fishermen
and several dive operators now share its richness with visitors.
Antiguan sites are concentrated in the West and South.
Southern sites include steep rock walls with submerged boulders
and coral encrustation rather than true reef, whereas the
Western sites include wrecks and coral knolls rising from
the sandy bottom. |

Pillars of Hercules-English Harbour
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deepwater tube sponges
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A Hawksbill turtle skims the bottom
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Excursions
When sugar production
finally ceased in the early 1980's unused land was overtaken
by a species of thorny African Acacia locally known as 'cassie'.
The National Park land in the dramatic Southern hills mostly
escaped the 'cassie' and is the largest area of reasonably
untouched forest.
This area receives
more rain than anywhere else on the relatively dry island
and small fruit farms abound in the green hills.
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Mill tower at Betty's Hope estate
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Body Pond
in the southern central foothills
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Practically all of the flat land was cleared of its
original forest to make way for sugar production and
scores of stone windmill towers remain, Betty's Hope
being a fully restored example.
Several companies guide jeep and hiking tours Fig Tree Drive
and to other areas of the Island.
Tropikelly Trails, BoTours, Estate Safari offer such tours
of the interior.
XO Tours arranges custom excursions including day trips to
Barbuda. Adventure Antigua offers eco-tours by sea.
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Other parts of Antigua worth seeing includes St Johns which
offers excellent shopping, a museum, restaurants and cafes.
Other Antigua activities include offshore fishing, horseback
riding, birdwatching and watersports including parasailing,
waterskiing, jet skiing and paddle boating.
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The Anglican Cathedral, St John's.
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Magnificent Frigatebirds wheel above
their nests in Barbuda's mangroves.
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an endless beach in Barbuda.
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Not the least attractive of Antigua's sights is our sister
Island Barbuda.
If you appreciate unspoiled natural settings and having
deserted beaches to yourself, then Barbuda should not
be missed.
It is a low lying coral and sand island 27 miles due
North of Antigua - that's ten minutes by air or one
to three hours by boat.
Home to 1200 people, Barbuda boasts an unbroken 20 mile pink
sand beach, the largest nesting colony of Magnificent
Frigate Birds in the world, a wild population of Scottish
Fallow deer as well as an estimated 200 shipwrecks on
her reefs and Shoals.
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