| Grand Bahama is the home of
Freeport/Lucaya, the nation's second city, with a faster pace and a more
cosmopolitan atmosphere than the old-world sophistication of Nassau.
Freeport/Lucaya is a sportsman's
paradise, with championship
golf,
tennis,
scuba diving, and
fishing. In fact, it was
designed especially for your pleasure. Forty years ago Freeport/Lucaya
didn't exist; today, it's a fantasy vacation made real on the shores of
Grand Bahama.
For unadulterated pleasure, there's no
better getaway in The Bahamas. As the popular Bahamian song says:
"If you can't find
them--they're in Freeport or they're in jail"
Freeport/Lucaya isn't the whole of
Grand Bahama. The island itself has been settled for centuries,
providing a rustic environment--if you want one--to your stay. The
easternmost edge of the island has beaches which are entirely deserted.
The towns of the West End, which during prohibition were a hideout for
rum-runners, have an old-world charm. In the parks of the island, one
can find remnants of the island's earliest Arawak civilizations, and the
more recent intrusion by
pirates. Grand
Bahama does in fact have hidden histories and a deliciously shady
past.

With an emerald ocean that can perhaps be
called the most vividly colorful in all of the islands, and a landscape
on which can be found everything from ultramodern resorts to deserted
sands, unchanged since the days of the buccaneers, Grand Bahama holds
the potential for every sort of Caribbean vacation. Where else could you
shop at an all day International
Bazaar, explore one of the largest underwater caves, stroll an exotic
nature land in search of flamingos, swim with dolphins, and come face to
face with sharks -- all in one day? You'll certainly want to take
advantage of the East End's deserted
beaches for an extended period of
tropical relaxation. After all, it was the native Bahamians, the Arawaks,
who invented the ultimate in relaxation: the hammock.
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