Providenciales Travel Guide

Friendly bottle-nosed dolphins greet visitors in the unbelievably clear and warm waters off Grace Bay on the beautiful island of Providenciales, where miles of sandy white beaches are protected by a healthy coral barrier reef. It's hardly surprising that this tropical wonderland has become the most developed of the Turks and Caicos Islands, luring thousands of diving enthusiasts and holidaymakers intent on getting away from it all.

Although well equipped with tourist facilities, including an international airport, superb hotels, a casino, a golf club and several small shopping malls, Providenciales remains largely unspoilt. The beaches stretch for miles and, on some of the little offshore cays, it's still possible for visitors to imagine they are Robinson Crusoe. But unlike the famous literary castaway, visitors to Providenciales (known usually as 'Provo') enjoy pleasurable pursuits with which to occupy themselves. Most find it difficult to tear themselves away from the beach, but with so many watersports on offer it's hardly necessary to do so. Scuba diving, snorkelling, sea kayaking, parasailing, windsurfing, fishing and sailing are all popular diversions.

It's also great to hop on a bike and explore the sights. Among the attractions on the island is the Hole, billed as a beautiful bottomless pit near Long Bay Beach. Travellers can also wander up the hillside above Sapodilla Bay to read the graffiti on the scattered rocks left by shipwrecked sailors. At the Caicos Conch Farm visitors can see how conch is grown, before settling down to sample the delicious mollusc along with some fiery rum punch at one of the many superb local restaurants. Just offshore, more interesting creatures await on Little Water Cay, a haven for rare rock iguanas that can be viewed from raised boardwalks.