Inaugurated to coincide with the president’s birthday on 25th May, this biennial cultural festival in the president’s birth town celebrates all...
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A dirt road in Gambia
© 123rf.com / Alan Kraft
Gambia Travel Guide
11,295 sq km (4,361 sq miles).
1.8 million (2011).
159 per sq km.
Banjul
Republic. Gained independence from the UK in 1965.
President Al-Haji Yahya AJJ Jammeh since 1996.
Al-Haji Yahya AJJ Jammeh since 1996.
230 volts AC, 50Hz. Plugs are either UK-style with three flat pins or Western European-style with three round pins.
The Gambia may be mainland Africa's smallest nation, but it punches way above its weight in terms of attractions. With its glorious low-key beaches, bustling towns that combine colonial architecture and traditional activities and wealth of wildlife, The Gambia is the most approachable of all West African countries.
Virtually enveloped by its much larger neighbour Senegal (an eccentric legacy of the colonial carve up of Africa), the shard of land comprising The Gambia still retains its own clear identity, and although this accessible Anglophone country does deliver relaxing winter sun at good-value rates, its rich history and fascinating mix of cultures make it hard to pigeonhole. If you escape the sun loungers you will uncover another side of the country, rich in eco-tourism opportunities, wilderness, wildlife and birdwatching.
Inextricably linked to the river Gambia, one of Africa's great waterways, The Gambia comprises a varied landscape, featuring sandy beaches, lush tropical forests, swamps, marshes and large areas of wooded savannah. Then there are Gambia's parks, reserves and riverbanks including Kiang West National Park and River Gambia National Park, where you’ll see all kinds of wildlife, amongst them monkeys, crocodiles, a small population of hippos and well over 500 bird species.
Visitors keen to experience West African music and rural culture may head off the beaten track and up-country to simple, traditional villages - there are always vibrant festivals, events full of traditional drumming, energetic dancing as well as customary wrestling matches, going on. But, for many, it is The Gambia's idyllic cocktail of sunny days, warm welcomes and relaxing Atlantic beach resorts which lures them to this little slice of Africa.
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