Little Cayman builds upon our ultimate relaxation vacation mantra discovered in Grand Turk… Similar in the diving is top notch for the Caribbean, the hotel has everything you need and nothing you don’t, and the pace of life is somewhere between slow and stop. So, pack your flip-flops, your swimsuit, and sunnies – I’ll bring the cribbage board!
Please join Mountain Coast SCUBA on another trip of a lifetime!!!
DESTINATION LITTLE CAYMAN
LITTLE CAYMAN BEACH RESORT:
June 6-14, 2014
Double Occupancy = $2120.00
Single Occupancy = $2935.00
Double Non Diver = $1520.00
Single Non Diver = $2335.00
Ocean Room Upgrade Double = $289.00
Ocean Room Upgrade Single = $576.00
Total Spaces = 22
Available Spaces = 20
Deposit $500.00
Final Payment Due 12/06/2013
CHARTER INCLUDES:
8 nights pool view accommodation
20 boat dives
Breakfast, lunch, and dinner
2 drinks nightly
Airport transfers
CHARTER DO NOT INCLUDE:
Airfare
Drinks
Dive Staff Gratuity
Nitrox
Room Upgrades
Deviations from group itinerary
The smallest of the Cayman Islands, cigar-shaped Little Cayman has only about 170 permanent inhabitants, so nearly everybody you'll see will be a visitor, most likely from the U.S. Little Cayman is 16km (10 miles) long and about 1.6km (a mile) wide at its broadest point. Electricity didn't make it here until 1990, and phone service didn't arrive until 1991. Little Cayman lies about 109km (68 miles) northeast of Grand Cayman and some 8km (5 miles) from Cayman Brac. The entire island is coral and sand.
The Cayman Islands archipelago is made up of mountaintops of the long-submerged Sierra Maestra Range, which runs north into Cuba. Coral once formed in layers over the underwater peaks, eventually creating the islands. Beneath Little Cayman's Bloody Bay is one of the mountain's walls -- a stunning sight for snorkelers and scuba divers.
Pirate treasure may still be buried on the island, but it's in the dense interior of what is now the largest bird sanctuary in the Caribbean. Little Cayman also has the largest population of rock iguanas in the entire Caribbean (you will surely spot them) and is home to one of the oldest species of reptiles in the New World -- the tree-climbing Anulis maynardi (which is not known by any other name). This rare lizard is difficult to spot because the females are green and the males are brown, and, as such, they blend into local vegetation. Keep your eyes open for them!