BarbadosTravel guide
Tourists pour into
Barbados from all over the world, drawn by the delightful climate, the big blue
sea and brilliant white sandy beaches. Many of them rarely stray far from their
hotels and guesthouses, but those who make an effort find a proud island
scattered with an impressive range of historic sites and, away from the mostly
gently rolling landscape, dramatic scenery in hidden caves, cliffs and gullies.
For more than three
centuries Barbados was a British colony and retains something of a British feel:
the place names, the cricket, horse-racing and polo, Anglican parish churches,
and even a hilly district known as Scotland. But the Britishness is often
exaggerated, for this is a distinctly West Indian country , covered by a
patchwork of sugarcane fields and dotted with rum shops, where calypso is the
music of choice and flying fish the favoured food.
The people of Barbados,
known as Bajans , take great pride in their tiny island of 430 square kilometres
and 250,000 people, which has produced writers like George Lamming, calypsonians
like the Mighty Gabby and cricket players including the great Sir Gary Sobers,
who have for decades had an influence way out of proportion to the size of their
home country.
Tourism plays a major part
in the country's economy and revenues have been put to good use. The
infrastructure and public transport are first-rate and there is no sign of the
poverty that continues to bedevil some Caribbean islands. Development has mostly
been pretty discreet, many of the facilities are Bajan-owned, there are no
private beaches and no sign of American fast-food franchises.
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