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Caribbean Island Margarita Meets Your Expectations With Its Beautiful Venezuelan Beaches
by Anonymous
(ContentDesk) September 16, 2005 -- Margarita Island has many choices of beaches. There is one for everyone: With or without waves, crowds, wind, hotels, or facilities (restaurants, shades, chairs...).Just this year alone the beaches and the Island itself has seen an increase of tourist movement on its beaches. The governor of Nueva Esparta, as the state is called, Morel Rodriguez has done an excellent job at working on tourism on the island and making sure that Margarita's beaches are clean and ready for high season here on the Island.It said that the governor Morel Rodriguez increased the budgetary allocation, and of the 600 million bolivars that was handled in 2004, to which this year it has surpassed to 1,600 million bolivars.Playa el Auga Beach still remains to be the favorite and most visited by tourists. While Playa El Yaque is famous for wind surfing. Margarita Island also hosts Professional Windsurfing Association competitions each year.
Margarita is not just for the pros, though. Windsurfers at all levels seek out the favorable conditions at Playa El Yaque.The beaches are the reason for coming to Margarita, but what makes Margarita different from other Caribbean islands is that it is much cheaper and the majority of the beaches are quite sun-catching white lines of sand and are not riddled with so many with attractions such as the food stalls, wind-surfing outlets, scuba entrepreneurs, etc.The beaches here are virtually endless as they ring this enchanting island. Your only problem will be to find enough time to explore even half of them. One general rule: the best swimming in most areas is the early part of the day.For further information, photos and travel articles please visit: http://www.margaritaislandvacation.info.
Recommended Reading
A Week in Porlamar, Margarita Island, Venezuela
Book Description
This is an irreverently funny, intimately charming, culinarily conscious true saga of a culturally challenged couple on the loose in Latin, no problema, America.
The war of worlds begins with planning a vacation in the wake of an attempted coup and proceeds down to Margarita Island, Venezuela, where pristine beaches, exotic cuisine and copious quantities of alcohol form the backdrop for the myriad disasters, aggravations and pleasures that make up a week in paradise. There is even an excursion back to the 1800’s with the couple’s historic counterparts (Simon Bolivar and Maria Guevara).
The book has a lighthearted, quirky voice that captures human nature in appealingly identifiable terms. Every blissfully mismatched couple who has set toe to tarmac will want to take this trip.
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