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ABOUT
GRENADA
From
August through November, the M/V Wind Dancer visits dive sites around
Grenada and into the Grenadines offering new diving grounds for those
tired of sites that have been visited by thousands of people.
There's a great variety of diving adventure to be enjoyed, from easy
excursions on shallow reefs to more challenging dive opportunities.
Grenada and nearby Carriacou are well known for spectacular wreck
diving and walls, with turtles, sharks, lobsters and giant moray eels
in abundance with the backdrop of soft coral gardens, spectacular
reefs and sponges.
Grenada is a colorful, hearty travel destination, dubbed the "Spice
Island" for its impressive production of nutmeg, mace, cinnamon,
ginger and cloves. It has a rugged, mountainous terrain and interior
of rain forests and waterfalls and an indented coastline with protected
bays and beaches. St. George's is the capital of Grenada, boasting
one of the prettiest harbor settings in the Caribbean.
Since Grenada and Carriacou are not as heavily frequented by visitors
as other Caribbean destinations, the reefs, wrecks and coral walls
remain unspoiled by crowds and many have yet to be explored. Divers
will discover nearly every kind of coral imaginable, along with sea
fans, gorgonians, sea horses, rays, barracuda, dolphin (dorado) and
colorful reef fish.
The reefs are composed of finger coral, sea whips, sea fans, brain
coral, pillar coral, black coral and deep-water gorgonians plus lost
of colourful sponges, hydroids and soft coral.
Some of the marine life you will encounter include: rock beauties,
angel fish, tang, grunts, damsel, blennys, parrot fish, trigger fish,
jaw fish, spotted drum, moral eels, snake eels, lobsters, nurse sharks,
barracudas, eagle rays, turtles, groupers and mackerels.
Grenada, Carriacou (pronounced Carry-a KOO) & Petite Martinique
(pronounced Pitty Mar-ti-NEEK) are three beautiful islands located
in the eastern Caribbean at the southern extremity of the Windward
Islands, only 100 miles north of Venezuela. The islands are threaded
by the Caribbean Sea, connecting North and South America. The Caribbean
Sea laps gently on the western shores of these islands, while the
Altantic casts magnificent swells onto the eastern coastline. To the
north lie St. Vincent and the Grenadines and to the south lie Trinidad
and Tobago.
Average temperatures range from 75†F to 85†F (24†C to 30†C), tempered
by the steady and cooling trade winds. The lowest temperatures occur
between November and February. Due to Grenadas remarkable topography,
the island also experiences climate changes according to altitude.
The driest season is between January and May. Even during the rainy
season, from June to December, it rarely rains for more than an hour
at a time and generally not every day.
Approximately 101,400 people inhabit Grenada, including the 8,000
inhabitants of Carriacou and the 600 residents of Petite Martinique.
The nations citizens are primarily of African, East-Indian and
European descent, with the largest proportion of the population, approximately
75%, of African descent. Grenada is an English-speaking nation..
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