Antigua and Barbuda Travel Guide - Top Things To See

beach in Antigua © www.123rf.com/Andrew Howard
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• Take an excursion to Great Bird Island from Dickenson Bay. Glass-bottomed boats afford leisurely views of the reef, and a restored pirate ship sails around the island and takes passengers for day or evening trips, with food, drink and entertainment included.

St John's Cathedral, originally built in 1683, has been destroyed and rebuilt a number of times. Today's building dates from 1845. The figures of St John the Baptist and St John the Divine were supposedly taken from one of Napoleon's ships.

• Discover Antigua & Barbuda beyond the beaches and resorts: the Museum of Antigua & Barbuda (website: www.antiguamuseums.org) is Antigua's oldest building. It is housed in the old Court House, built in 1750. Exhibits explore Antigua's geological origins and political and cultural history.

Indian Town, a national park, is at the remote, wild, northeastern point of the island. Breakers roaring in with the full force of the Atlantic behind them have carved Devil's Bridge and created blow-holes with foaming surf.

Half Moon Bay, a popular national park, is 1.6km (1 mile) long and renowned as one of Antigua's most beautiful beaches. Nearby Long Bay is protected by a reef shallow enough to walk to, making it ideal for holidaying families.

• Go to Potworks Reservoir. The result of the Potworks Dam, completed in 1970, it is the largest expanse of freshwater in the Eastern Caribbean holding about one billion gallons. The western edge is great for birdwatching.

• Get to grips with the islands' colonial history: partially-restored Betty's Hope was Antigua's pioneer sugar plantation. It was home to many people from the Codringtons, to the French, from African slaves to, following emanciaption in 1834, labourers.

• Visit the less-developed Barbuda for its wild beauty, deserted beaches and heavily wooded interior abounding in wildlife. The main village, Codrington, sits on the edge of a lagoon and its inhabitants rely largely on the sea for their existence. The Frigate Bird Sanctuary, home to over 5,000 frigate birds, is also here.

• For even more desertion and greater eccentricity, stopover at Redonda, an uninhabited rocky islet, about 56km (35 miles) northeast of Antigua. The island is famous for its unusual monarchy and small population of burrowing owls, a bird now extinct on Antigua.

• Visit Shirley Heights and Fort James, examples of British efforts to fortify the colony during the 18th century. Close by is the cemetery, containing an obelisk commemorating the soldiers of the 54th Regiment.

See Contact Addresses for further tourist information.




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