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Cook Islands
Cook Islands - The Cook Islands’ is an authentic and refined Pacific experience encased in a lifestyle that exudes warmth, happiness and respect. We are a proud people with a rich culture and a lush tapestry of traditions that entwine with our daily lives. As part of our welcome to you, we would be honoured if you would share our customs and culture, and in this way, become one of us.
Just a 50 minute flight to the north of Rarotonga, the idyllic paradise island of Aitutaki is home to the Pacific Resort, boasting a special sense of magic with its crystal clear lagoon waters and soft white sun-bleached shores - the ultimate beach holiday destination. |
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Madagascar
Madagascar - Madagascar island, the world's 4th largest island, measuring 1571 km in length and 571 km across. Because of its isolation most of its wildlife, half its birds, and most of its plants exist nowhere else in the world.
Almost everything is strangely different, on the Madagascar island, wildlife, the famous Madagascar hissing Cockroach, the trees, the fauna, the rock formations, everything you'll see and touch on your Madagascar holiday is seldom found anywhere else. The only place in the world where you can see lemurs dancing with their babies in the wild. The Madagascar Island also has its share of beautiful beaches and magnificent untouched coral reefs enticing scuba divers and snorkelers into the warm tropical Indian Ocean waters. Madagascar island is a big country where you can return again & again and never see the same thing twice. As soon as the road network is restored we intend to start self drive tours of Madagascar. |
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Malaysia - Langkawi - Penang
Malaysia - Malaysia is the 43rd most populated country and the 66th largest country by total land area in the world, with a population of about 27 million and a land area of over 320,000 km2 respectively. It is comparable in population to Saudi Arabia and Venezuela, and is roughly similar in size to Norway and Vietnam, along with the U.S. state of New Mexico.
The two distinct parts of Malaysia, separated from each other by the South China Sea, share a largely similar landscape in that both West and East Malaysia feature coastal plains rising to often densely forested hills and mountains, the highest of which is Mount Kinabalu at 4,095.2 metres (13,435.7 ft) on the island of Borneo. The local climate is equatorial and characterised by the annual southwest (April to October) and northeast (October to February) monsoons. |
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The Maldives
The Maldives - Sun, sand and sea, a thousand 'Robinson Crusoe' islands, massive lagoons with different depths and infinite shades of blue and turquoise, dazzling underwater coral gardens; a perfect natural combination for the ideal tropical holiday destination. However there is more to the Maldives than just that.
The Maldives is an island paradise on the equator and a necklace of tiny palm-studded coral islands, surrounded by sparkling lagoons. This is a place where your ‘castaway’ dreams come true. A seaplane or speedboat will whisk you away from the main island of Malé to your chosen atoll – where you can be forgiven for doing absolutely nothing – such is the norm in the Maldives! |
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Mauritius
Mauritius - Mauritius is Often referred to as the 'Star of the Indian Ocean' with safe beaches, gentle seas and mild tropical climate combined with a legendary Mauritian hospitality make this one of the world's most sought-after holiday destinations.
Famous for its fabulous beaches and crystal clear waters, Mauritius is home to some of the world’s most desirable hotels and resorts, acclaimed for their world class service, superb cuisine and contemporary style, all have consistently proved an irresistible magnet for discerning travelers, honeymooners and an endless list of celebrities. |
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Mozambique
Mozambique - A Mozambique holiday boasts beautiful island archipelagos to explore, fascinating markets and extreme nightlife in Maputo, also Ilha de Mocambique, a World Heritage Site.
Mozambique is Africa’s undiscovered jewel and a melting pot of cultures and exotic influences, from early North African and Arab traders to Portuguese colonists who have all left their mark. A splendid array of flora and fauna is interspersed with traditional villages and flanked by a coralfringed coastline of translucent tropical waters. |
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Seychelles
Seychelles - 115 granite and coral islands extend from between 4 and 10 degrees south of the equator and lie between 480km and 1,600km from the east coast of Africa in the western Indian Ocean.
This Indian Ocean republic occupies a land area of 455 km² and an Exclusive Economic Zone of 1.4 million km². It represents an archipelago of timeless beauty, tranquillity and harmony that is famous for its world-beating beaches and for its great diversity which rolls from lush forests down to the warm azure ocean. The Seychelles has a pleasant tropical climate all year round with a temperature which seldom drops below 24° or rises above 33° celsius. |
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Tahiti
Tahiti - Tahiti covers over two million square miles of the South Pacific Ocean and is comprised of 118 islands spread over five great archipelagos.
Many islands are crowned with jagged peaks while others appear to barely float above the breaking waves. Spread over an area as large as Western Europe, the total land mass of all the islands adds up to an area only slightly larger than the tiny state of Rhode Island. |
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Zanzibar
Zanzibar - Zanzibar forms part of the East African nation of Tanzania. It is an archipelago in the Indian Ocean 25–50 km (15–30 mi) off the coast, consisting of numerous small islands and two large ones: Unguja (the main island, sometimes informally referred to as "Zanzibar"), and Pemba. Zanzibar was once a separate state with a long trading history within the Arab world; it united with Tanganyika to form Tanzania, and still enjoys a high degree of autonomy within the union. The capital of Zanzibar, located on the island of Unguja, is Zanzibar City, and its old quarter, known as Stone Town , is a World Heritage Site.
Zanzibar's main industries are spices and tourism. It is still sometimes referred to as the Spice Islands, because of the significance of its production of cloves, of which it is a world leader, and also nutmeg, cinnamon and pepper. The ecology is of note for being the home of the endemic Zanzibar Red Colobus monkey, not to mention the diverse marine life found on the islands' surrounding coral reefs. |
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