|
Discover our regions world
class resorts and explore the beauty of nature or the excitement of
festivals and events. Savor the delights of fine cuisine or casual fare.
Venture "off-the-beaten-path" and browse unique galleries, antique shops,
and artists colonies. Challenge yourself with championship golf along the
north coast of Playa Grande or just relax and enjoy the simple pleasures of
the Island.
Try one of the hundreds of water sports activities our Island has to offer;
W i n d s u r f i n g
S n o r k e l i n g
P a r a s a i l i n g
S a i l i n g
S c u b a D i v i n g
D e e p S e a F i s h i n g
and many more that
include.......
Try
Humpback whale-watching by boat off the Dominican Republic's Silver Bank or
a round of golf at Casa de Campo's famous Teeth of the Dog course in La
Romana. The artists and artisans of Altos de Chavon, a recreated
16th-century Spanish village.
Baseball:
Not only the national sport, but also a national obsession, and even the
smallest communities have floodlit stadia. The centre of the country’s
baseball is the industrial seaport of San Pedor de Macoris. Many Dominican
players go on to play in the US major leagues. Juan Marichal, whose pitching
exploits for the San Francisco Giants landed him a place in the Baseball
Hall of Fame, is now the country’s Director of Sports. The professional
winter season runs from October to January. Visitors should ask local people
or look in the local paper for schedules and the nearest game.
Watersports:
The
opportunities for watersports in the Dominican Republic are excellent.
Although some shores are rough and rocky, there are magnificent stretches of
beach suitable for swimming. For scuba diving and snorkelling enthusiasts
there is reef diving, good visibility, warm waters, wrecks, caverns and a
rich marine life. Good dive sites include Sosúa (near Puerto Plata); Cabrera
(freshwater cave diving with an underground lake); Las Terrenas; the Sasmaná
peninsula; Punta Rucia (good for coral diving); La Caleta National
Underwater Park (accessible by boat from Boca Chica); Catalina and Saona
islands (accessible by boat from La Romana); and Barahona (an area currently
being developed for ecotourism). Experienced divers can also join the North
Caribbean Research Group and participate in a government-funded project to
recover and remove artefacts from sunken ships (some dating back to the 16th
century); details can be obtained by e-mail (e-mail: info@oldship.com).
Snorkelling and diving equipment can be borrowed or hired from dive
operators and resort hotels. Small sailing craft are available through
hotels in Santo Domingo and most other resorts in the country. Boat trips to
the marine caves of the Gri Gri Lagoon near Sosúa are a popular tourist
attraction. Hotels also organise charter boats for offshore fishing for
marlin, sailfish, dorado, benittos and other game fish. River fishing in
flat-bottomed boats with guides can be arranged at La Romana, Boca de Yuma
and on the north coast. Windsurfing is particularly good at Sosuá, which
also hosts the Professional Windsurfing Association World Cup.
Adventure sports:
The Dominican Republic was quick to jump onto the adventure sports bandwagon
and, hence, has well developed facilities for the usual range of
adrenalin-generating sports. Whitewater rafting is available on the Río
Yaque del Norte in Jarabacoa. The best places for tubing, in which
participants individually float down the rapids in oversized rubber tubes,
are on the Río Jamao del Norte, the Río Yaque del Norte and the Río Isabela
in Santo Domingo. Cascading involves climbing up to the top of a waterfall
and rapelling down the cascade tied to a rope; the best places to do this
are El Salto de Jimenoa, Cascada del Limón, Cascada Ojo de Agua and El Salto
de Baiguate. Canyoning, which is cascading minus the rope (meaning that
practitioners climb up a river gorge and then jump into the river below), is
popular at La Madajagua in Imbert and the Jarabacoa area.
Trekking and hiking:
The best places for trekking are Jarabacoa, the Constanza Valley, and the
Nuevo Valley. Hiking and climbing enthusiasts may join the locals’ annual
pilgrimage to the Caribbean’s highest mountain, the Pico Duarte
(3210m/10,7000ft), which they can conquer either on foot or by riding a
mule. Similar tours can also be made at Pico Yaque, El Mogote, Mount Isabel
de Torres and, in the southwest, the Sierra de Bahoruco.
Horseriding:
Dominicans love horseriding and their country offers some of the best riding
in the Caribbean. Regular polo games are held at Sierra Prieta in Santo
Domingo and at Casa de Campo near La Romana where guests can join in the
twice weekly competitions.
Golf:
There are nine championship golf courses (and several others under
construction), many of which are bordered by the ocean on one side and the
mountains on the other. Following on from the 42nd Caribbean Golf
Championships, which were held in the Dominican Republic in 1998, the
country continues to actively promote itself as a major international golf
destination. Some of the best courses can be found at La Romana Country
Club, Casa de Campo, Dientes del Perro (Teeth of the Dog), Playa Dorrada
(designed by Robert Trent Jones), Gran Diabolo Links (the planned location
for the country’s first Golf Academy) and Santo Domingo Country Club.
Cities |
Lodging | Tours |
Real Estate | Maps |
Demographics
Dominican Republic Info Guide - Pedro
Henriquez - San Domingo - Dominican Republic |