Saturday, December 3, 2011

Dominican Passport and Visa entry requirements

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Dominican Passport and Visa entry requirements
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Passports:

A passport valid for twice as long as intended stay is required by all nationals referred to in the chart above to enter the Dominican Republic.
Visas:

Nationals referred to in the chart above (1) may enter the Dominican Republic with a 30-day tourist card that is purchased on entry for US$10.

Those wishing to extend a tourist card to 90 days need to pay UD$20 to immigration on leaving the Dominican Republic.

Note: Nationals not referred to in the chart are advised to contact the embassy to check visa requirements for the Dominican Republic.


Passport and Visa entry requirements :-

Entry requirements for Americans: US citizens must have a passport valid upon arrival in the Dominican Republic. A visa is not required, provided that visitors obtain a Tourist Card on arrival for a maximum stay of 30 days.

Entry requirements for UK nationals: British citizens must have a passport valid upon arrival in the Dominican Republic. A visa is not required for passport holders endorsed as British Citizen or British Overseas Territories Citizen, provided that they obtain a Tourist Card on arrival for a maximum stay of 30 days. Other British passport holders should contact the relevant embassy to check entry requirements.

Entry requirements for Canadians: Canadian citizens must have a passport valid upon arrival in the Dominican Republic. Passport exemptions apply to travellers in possession of an original birth certificate, birth registration papers, a military hospital-issued birth certificate, Canadian Citizenship Certificate or Naturalization Certificate issued to Nationals of Canada. If not including a photo of the bearer, these documents must be accompanied by an official photo ID document (e.g. driver's licence); and visitors must travel for touristic purposes only. Note that it is recommended that Canadian citizens be in possession of a valid passport upon arrival in the Dominican Republic. A visa is not required, provided that visitors obtain a Tourist Card on arrival for a maximum stay of 30 days.

Entry requirements for Australians: Australian citizens must have a passport valid upon arrival in the Dominican Republic. A visa is not required, provided that visitors obtain a Tourist Card on arrival for a maximum stay of 30 days.

Entry requirements for South Africans: South African citizens must have a passport valid upon arrival in the Dominican Republic. A visa is not required, provided that visitors obtain a Tourist Card on arrival for a maximum stay of 30 days.

Entry requirements for New Zealanders: New Zealand citizens must have a passport valid upon arrival in the Dominican Republic. A visa is not required, provided that visitors obtain a Tourist Card on arrival for a maximum stay of 30 days.

Entry requirements for Irish nationals: Irish citizens must have a passport valid upon arrival in the Dominican Republic. A visa is not required, provided that visitors obtain a Tourist Card on arrival for a maximum stay of 30 days.

Passport/Visa Note: In lieu of visas, Tourist Cards can be issued on-arrival to certain nationals, at a cost of USD 10 for a stay of 30 days. Extensions are possible. A return or onward ticket is required by all visitors, as well as the travel documentation needed for their next destination. As part of the Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative (WHTI), all travellers going between the United States and Canada, Mexico, Bermuda, and the Caribbean region are required to present a passport or other valid travel document to enter or re-enter the United States. If departing from the USA, a valid passport will be required by immigration authorities. NOTE: It is highly recommended that your passport has at least six months validity remaining after your intended date of departure from your travel destination. Immigration officials often apply different rules to those stated by travel agents and official sources.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Fun Facts Planning For Travel To Dominican

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Fun Facts Planning For Travel To Dominican
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Are you fond of the beach, great scenery, swimming, snorkeling, tennis, or golf? If you do the Dominican Republic Holidays is just the perfect getaway for you. You can also hike, climb up the mountain, visit historical spots, or simply laze around in your hotel room while enjoying the unique Caribbean atmosphere.

The Dominican Republic ranks second in the list of the biggest countries in the Caribbean. The region is also considered as one the most affordable places to have a holidays.

The weather here is generally excellent all throughout the year and its culture is sort of diverse with a unique touch of Latin. The peak season in this island runs from Christmas time to spring as this is when the weather is the driest. Now, in order to avail of the best rates for your vacation, it is a good idea to reserve your visit during summer months or late spring time. September to October (fall season) is also the best time to get lower rates.

Things to do in the island

Various water sports and boating activities are just two of the best things that you can do while on vacation. As a guest in the island, you can rent kayaks, boats, windsurfers, and catamarans. You can also opt to try the Sunset cruise which is a popular activity in DR.

Things to see/visit

If you are a sports buff, you can sit and watch professional baseball players as they practice during off-season starting October to January.

Next, you can drop by Santo Domingo. This is listed as one of the oldest cities in the world so there are nice historical sites to see and marvel at. Santo Domingo is also the capital of Dominica Republic. Despite being old, the city has many modern cafés, restaurants, and shops which lined the cobblestone streets being illuminated by the old-fashioned gas lamps.

Of course, your Dominican Republic holidays will not be complete without visiting the world famous beaches along the eastern coast of the Caribbean island. At Punta Cana, the stretch of immaculate white beach sand is around 20 miles.

Transportation while on vacation in DR

You can arrange transportation as soon as you arrived at the airport. This arrangement will make your transfers more convenient and hassle-free. Once you book for this service, from the airport, you will be fetched and brought straight to your hotel.

Vehicles to be used can vary depending on your chosen scheme. There are taxis or private car services to choose from and this will make your travel around the island even more enjoyable since you will have non-stop transfers. The private vehicles available include cars, mini-vans, and 4-wheel jeeps.

Over-all, the private transfers in the Dominican Republic already include transfers from airport to hotel. The driver here is usually English speaking so there will be no problem with communication. Luggage assistance and endless supply of bottled water while in the vehicle is also included in the transportation service package deal.

Keep these facts and tips in mind so that you will have a perfect Dominican Republic holiday. Then again, make sure that your choices go well with your budget so you will minimize overspending and just enjoy the whole vacation thing.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Free Guide Santo Domingo City

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Free Guide Santo Domingo City
Travel tips for your trip to Dominican Republic Hotel Maps Famous Places in Dominican Republic helps you to make your trip to Dominican Republic in the holiday a Splendid One


One of the richest naturally endowed lands in the world, Santo Domingo, the capital city of the Dominican Republic is unfortunately one of the lesser known tourist destinations in the world. However, a visit to this beautiful land makes sure that images and influences of this tropical paradise remain in your mind forever.

Located just besides the Caribbean Sea, the history of Santo Domingo can be traced back to hundreds of years in time, when the country of the Dominican Republic was discovered by Christopher Columbus. One of the greatest advantages that the tourism industry has in the city of Santo Domingo is if course the amazing landscape that the city offers to the tourists to the land.


A perfect picture postcard land the capital city of the Dominican Republic is traversed by the Ozama River, with its perfectly clear water and lush green river valleys. The Ozama River finally flows out to the Caribbean Sea, which in itself is a sight that never ceases to amaze the visitors to the land. A tropical paradise, the entirety of the Santo Domingo landscape is influenced by the green; almost where ever you look you are greeted by green hills below which flow the many distributaries and tributaries of the Ozama River.

Add to that the perfect coast line which the city enjoys and you will know exactly what makes this country one of the best-loved natural retreats of the regular travelers to the land. Kissed by the soft golden rays of the sun, the white sanded beaches of the Santa Domingo are dotted with coconut trees which make you feel as if you have landed in a page right out of a story book. Most of these beaches are located towards the eastern fringes of the capital city, which is of course where the land meets the Caribbean Sea. This is also the area in which most of the hotels of this capital city are also concentrated.

The capital city of the Dominic Republic is also home to the Los Tres Ojos, or the Three Lakes, which is noted as one of the most popular tourist destinations for people planning a trip here. Located within a group of caves, these lakes are almost 50 feet inside the earth's surface. The lakes are also known for a special reason; The color of the water of the lakes change in accordance with the temperature within the caves, which is one of the rarest kinds of geological mysteries of this part of the world. In fact, locals believe that this group of caves owes its origin to mythical sources and a number of stories based on this theory are sure to thrill you during your visit to the place.

However, though the greenery and natural beauty of the city and neighboring areas are mind-boggling, yet it is important to remember that the tourism industry within the city is not just limited to the natural wealth of this part of the world. The entirety of the capital city is dotted with a number of historical grounds, which includes some of the most exotic architectural specimens imaginable. Notable amongst these are the various museums and churches which dot this historical town. The city is also home to several monasteries which are scattered towards the more historical districts and bordering fringes of the capital city, often clustered together and connected to each other by cobbled pathways. So, just in case, you are planning a trip to Santa Domingo, make sure that you provide enough time to check out some of these beautiful historical buildings and monuments that showcase the rich history of the city.

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Money Exchange for Dominican Services - Money

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Money Exchange for Dominican Services - Money
Travel tips for your trip to Dominican Republic Hotel Maps Famous Places in Dominican Republic helps you to make your trip to Dominican Republic in the holiday a Splendid One




Currency information:

Dominican Peso (DOP; symbol RD$). Notes are in denominations of RD$2,000, 1,000, 500, 100 and 50. Coins are in denominations of RD$25, 10, 5 and 1.
Credit cards:

American Express, Diners Club, MasterCard and Visa are all accepted.
ATM:

Most ATMs in the Dominican Republic accept international bank cards.
Travellers cheques:

Traveller's cheques are accepted by some banks. To avoid additional exchange rate charges, travellers are advised to take traveller's cheques in US Dollars.
Banking hours:

Mon-Fri 0800-1500, Sat 0900-1300. In shopping centres: Mon-Fri 0900-1900, Sat 0900-1300.
Currency restriction:

The import and export of local currency is limited to RD$20,000 in notes and RD$100 in coins; the import of foreign banknotes is allowed provided they are declared on arrival and if they are over US$10,000 and re-export is intended.
Currency exchange:

The peso is not available outside the Dominican Republic. Currencies of Canada, France, Germany, The Netherlands, Spain, Switzerland, UK and USA may be converted into local currency. On departure, up to 30% of the exchanged currency can be reconverted into US Dollars at any bank, provided original receipts are shown. All exchange must be done through official dealers such as banks and hotels approved by the Central Bank. Most resorts quote prices in (and are happy to accept) US Dollars. Some street vendors in touristic areas also accept US Dollars although these are not legal tender in the country.

Friday, October 14, 2011

Health and Medical Information for Dominican

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Health and Medical Information for Dominican
Travel tips for your trip to Dominican Republic Hotel Maps Famous Places in Dominican Republic helps you to make your trip to Dominican Republic in the holiday a Splendid One




Health Issues in the Dominican Republic

Major health problems among Volunteers in the Dominican Republic are rare and are often the result of a Volunteer’s not taking preventive measures to stay healthy. The most common health problems in the country are minor ones that are also found in the United States, such as colds, diarrhea, sinus infections, skin infections, headaches, dental problems, STIs, adjustment disorders, and alcohol abuse. These problems may be more frequent or compounded by life in the Dominican Republic because certain environmental factors here raise the risk or exacerbate the severity of illnesses and injuries.

The most common major health problems are malaria, amoebic dysentery, dengue fever, and HIV/AIDS. Because malaria is endemic in the Dominican Republic, taking antimalarial pills is required. You will receive vaccinations against the following: hepatitis A, hepatitis B, meningococcal meningitis, rabies, typhoid, MMR (measles, mumps, and rubella), and TD (tetanus and diphtheria). If you have already received any of these vaccinations, please bring written documentation of the dates they were administered.

Amoebic dysentery can be avoided by thoroughly washing fruits and vegetables and either boiling drinking water or using the water purification tablets provided in your Peace Corps-issued medical kit.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Short History Of Dominican and Culture

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Short History Of Dominican and Culture
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THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC EXPERIENCED many setbacks on the road to the democratic system under which it functioned in the late 1980s. The nation did not enjoy full independence until 1844, when it emerged from twenty-two years of occupation by Haiti; this liberation came later than that of most Latin American countries. Reacceptance of Spanish rule from 1861 to 1865 demonstrated the republic's insecurity and dependence on larger powers to protect it and to define its status. Dominican vulnerability to intervention from abroad was also made evident by the United States military occupation of 1916-24 and by a more limited action by United States forces during a brief civil war in 1965.

Politically, Dominican history has been defined by an almost continuous competition for supremacy among caudillos of authoritarian ideological convictions. Political and regional competition overlapped to a great extent because mainly conservative leaders from the south and the east pitted themselves against generally more liberal figures from the northern part of the Valle del Cibao (the Cibao Valley, commonly called the Cibao). Traditions of personalism, militarism, and social and economic elitism locked the country into decades of debilitating wars, conspiracies, and despotism that drained its resources and undermined its efforts to establish liberal constitutional rule.

In the late 1980s, the republic was still struggling to emerge from the shadow of the ultimate Dominican caudillo, Rafael Lenidas Trujillo Molina (1930-61), who emerged from the military and held nearly absolute power throughout his rule. The apparent establishment of a democratic process in 1978 was a promising development; however, the survival of democracy appeared to be closely linked to the country's economic fortunes, which had declined steadily since the mid-1970s. As it had throughout its history, the republic continued to struggle with the nature of its domestic politics and with the definition of its economic and political role in the wider world.

Dominican Republic - THE FIRST COLONY

The island of Hispaniola (La Isla Espaola) was the first New World colony settled by Spain. As such, it served as the logistical base for the conquest of most of the Western Hemisphere. Christopher Columbus first sighted the island in 1492 toward the end of his first voyage to "the Indies." Columbus and his crew found the island inhabited by a large population of friendly Taino Indians (Arawaks), who made the explorers welcome. The land was fertile, but of greater importance to the Spaniards was the discovery that gold could be obtained either by barter with the natives, who adorned themselves with golden jewelry, or by extraction from alluvial deposits on the island.

After several attempts to plant colonies along the north coast of Hispaniola, Spain's first permanent settlement in the New World was established on the southern coast at the present site of Santo Domingo. Under Spanish sovereignty, the entire island bore the name Santo Domingo. Indications of the presence of gold--the life's blood of the nascent mercantilist system--and a population of tractable natives who could be used as laborers combined to attract many Spanish newcomers during the early years. Most were adventurers who, at least initially, were more interested in acquiring sudden wealth than they were in settling the land. Their relations with the Taino Indians, whom they ruthlessly maltreated, deteriorated from the beginning. Aroused by continued seizures of their food supplies, other exactions, and abuse of their women, the formerly peaceful Indians rebelled- -only to be crushed decisively in 1495.

Columbus, who ruled the colony as royal governor until 1499, attempted to put an end to the more serious abuses to which the Indians were subjected by prohibiting foraging expeditions against them and by regulating the informal taxation imposed by the settlers. Being limited to this milder form of exploitation engendered active opposition among the settlers. To meet their demands, Columbus devised the repartimiento system of land settlement and native labor under which a settler, without assuming any obligation to the authorities, could be granted in perpetuity a large tract of land together with the services of the Indians living on it.

The repartimiento system did nothing to improve the lot of the Indians, and the Spanish crown changed it by instituting the system of encomienda in 1503. Under the encomienda system, all land became in theory the property of the crown, and the Indians thus were considered tenants on royal land. The crown's right to service from the tenants could be transferred in trust to individual Spanish settlers (encomenderos) by formal grant and the regular payment of tribute. The encomenderos were entitled to certain days of labor from the Indians, who became their charges. Encomenderos thus assumed the responsibility of providing for the physical well-being of the Indians and for their instruction in Christianity. An encomienda theoretically did not involve ownership of land; in practice, however, possession was gained through other means.

The hard work demanded of the Indians and the privations that they suffered demonstrated the unrealistic nature of the encomienda system, which effectively operated on a honor system as a result of the absence of enforcement efforts by Spanish authorities. The Indian population died off rapidly from exhaustion, starvation, disease, and other causes. By 1548 the Taino population, estimated at 1 million in 1492, had been reduced to approximately 500. The consequences were profound. The need for a new labor force to meet the growing demands of sugarcane cultivation prompted the importation of African slaves beginning in 1503. By 1520, black African labor was used almost exclusively.

The early grants of land without obligation under the repartimiento system resulted in a rapid decentralization of power. Each landowner possessed virtually sovereign authority. Power was diffused because of the tendency of the capital city, Santo Domingo (which also served as the seat of government for the entire Spanish Indies), to orient itself toward the continental Americas, which provided gold for the crown, and toward Spain, which provided administrators, supplies, and immigrants for the colonies. Local government was doomed to ineffectiveness because there was little contact between the capital and the hinterland; for practical purposes, the countryside fell under the sway of the large landowners. Throughout Dominican history, this sociopolitical order was a major factor in the development of some of the distinctive characteristics of the nation's political culture such as paternalism, personalism, and the tendency toward strong, even authoritarian, leadership.

As early as the 1490s, the landowners demonstrated their power by successfully conspiring against Columbus. His successor, Francisco de Bobadilla, was appointed chief justice and royal commissioner by the Spanish crown in 1499. Bobadilla sent Columbus back to Spain in irons, but Queen Isabella soon ordered him released. Bobadilla proved an inept administrator, and he was replaced in 1503 by the more efficient Nicols de Ovando, who assumed the titles of governor and supreme justice. Because of his success in initiating reforms desired by the crown--the encomienda system among them--de Ovando received the title of Founder of Spain's Empire in the Indies.

In 1509 Columbus's son, Diego Columbus, was appointed governor of the colony of Santo Domingo. Diego's ambition and the splendid surroundings he provided for himself aroused the suspicions of the crown. As a resulted, in 1511 of the crown established the audiencia, a new political institution intended to check the power of the governor. The first audiencia was simply a tribunal composed of three judges whose jurisdiction extended over all the West Indies. In this region, it formed the highest court of appeal. Employment of the audiencia eventually spread throughout Spanish America.

The tribunal's influence grew, and in 1524 it was designated the Royal Audiencia of Santo Domingo, with jurisdiction in the Caribbean, the Atlantic coast of Central America and Mexico, and the northern coast of South America, including all of what is now Venezuela and part of present-day Colombia. As a court representing the crown, the audiencia was given expanded powers that encompassed administrative, legislative, and consultative functions; the number of judges increased correspondingly. In criminal cases the audiencia's decisions were final, but important civil suits could be appealed to the Royal and Supreme Council of the Indies (Real y Supremo Consejo de las Indias) in Spain.

The Council of the Indies, created by Charles V in 1524, was the Spanish crown's main agency for directing colonial affairs. During most of its existence, the council exercised almost absolute power in making laws, administering justice, controlling finance and trade, supervising the church, and directing armies.

The arm of the Council of the Indies that dealt with all matters concerning commerce between Spain and its colonies in the Americas was the House of Trade (Casa de Contratacin), organized in 1503. Control of commerce in general, and of tax collection in particular, was facilitated by the designation of monopoly seaports on either side of the Atlantic Ocean. During most of the colonial period, overseas trade consisted largely of annual convoys between monopoly ports. Trade between the colonies and countries other than Spain was prohibited. The crown also restricted trade among the colonies. These restrictions hampered economic activity in the New World and encouraged contraband traffic.

The Roman Catholic Church became the primary agent in spreading Spanish culture in the Americas. The ecclesiastical organization developed for Santo Domingo and later extended throughout Spanish America reflected a union of church and state actually closer than that prevailing in Spain itself. The Royal Patronage of the Indies (Real Patronato de las Indias, or, as it was called later, the Patronato Real) served as the organizational agent of this affiliation of the church and the Spanish crown.

Santo Domingo's prestige began to decline in the first part of the sixteenth century with the conquest of Mexico by Hernn Corts in 1521 and the discovery there, and later in Peru, of great wealth in gold and silver. These events coincided with the exhaustion of the alluvial deposits of gold and the dying off of the Indian labor force in Santo Domingo. Large numbers of colonists left for Mexico and Peru; new immigrants from Spain largely bypassed Santo Domingo for the greater wealth to be found in lands to the west. The population of Santo Domingo dwindled, agriculture languished, and Spain soon became preoccupied with its richer and vaster mainland colonies.

The stagnation that prevailed in Santo Domingo for the next 250 years was interrupted on several occasions by armed engagements, as the French and the English attempted to weaken Spain's economic and political dominance in the New World. In 1586 the English admiral, Sir Francis Drake, captured the city of Santo Domingo and collected a ransom for its return to Spanish control. In 1655 Oliver Cromwell dispatched an English fleet, commanded by Sir William Penn, to take Santo Domingo. After meeting heavy resistance, the English sailed farther west and took Jamaica instead.

The withdrawal of the colonial government from the northern coastal region opened the way for French buccaneers, who had a base on Tortuga Island (Ile de la Tortue), off the northwest coast of present-day Haiti, to settle on Hispaniola in the mid- seventeenth century. Although the Spanish destroyed the buccaneers' settlements several times, the determined French would not be deterred or expelled. The creation of the French West India Company in 1664 signalled France's intention to colonize western Hispaniola. Intermittent warfare went on between French and Spanish settlers over the next three decades; however, Spain, hard-pressed by warfare in Europe, could not maintain a garrison in Santo Domingo sufficient to secure the entire island against encroachment. In 1697, under the Treaty of Ryswick, Spain ceded the western third of the island to France. The exact boundary of this territory (Saint-Domingue--now Haiti) was not established at the time of cession and remained in question until 1929.

During the first years of the eighteenth century, landowners in the Spanish colony did little with their huge holdings, and the sugar plantations along the southern coast were abandoned because of harassment by pirates. Foreign trade all but ceased, and almost all domestic commerce took place in the capital city.

The Bourbon dynasty replaced the Habsburgs in Spain in 1700. The new regime introduced innovations--especially economic reforms--that gradually began to revive trade in Santo Domingo. The crown progressively relaxed the rigid controls and restrictions on commerce between the mother country and the colonies and among the colonies. The last convoys sailed in 1737; the monopoly port system was abolished shortly thereafter. By the middle of the century, both immigration and the importation of slaves had increased.

In 1765 the Caribbean islands received authorization for almost unlimited trade with Spanish ports; permission for the Spanish colonies in the Americas to trade among themselves followed in 1774. Duties on many commodities were greatly reduced or were removed altogether. By 1790 traders from any port in Spain could buy and sell anywhere in Spanish America, and by 1800 Spain had opened colonial trade to all neutral vessels.

As a result of the stimulus provided by the trade reforms, the population of the colony of Santo Domingo increased from about 6,000 in 1737 to approximately 125,000 in 1790. Of this number, about 40,000 were white landowners, about 25,000 were black or mulatto freedmen, and some 60,000 were slaves. The composition of Santo Domingo's population contrasted sharply with that of the neighboring French colony of Saint-Domingue, where some 30,000 whites and 27,000 freedmen extracted labor from at least 500,000 black slaves. To the Spanish colonists, Saint- Domingue represented a powder keg, the eventual explosion of which would echo throughout the island.

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Dominican Accommodation. Hotel Guide. Details

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Dominican Accommodation. Hotel Guide. Details
Travel tips for your trip to Dominican Republic Hotel Maps Famous Places in Dominican Republic helps you to make your trip to Dominican Republic in the holiday a Splendid One




The Dominican Republic offers the most hotels rooms of all the Caribbean countries ! over 60,000 to be more precise ! And that naturaly leads to a couple of things. Firstly, you get a HUGE choice, and i do mean that. You can get a hotel which is anything from a budget room to a luxury suite with a pool on the top floor. My advice ? Go for a 3 or 4 star hotel. Why ? Because, well, the hotel ranking in the Dominican Republic is sort of self proclaimed. Even the 5 star hotels may be lower in standart than one would expect. And besides, the Dominican Republic is a tad special and you don’t want to spoil your travel to Dominican Republic with a lousy accommodation in Dominican Republic.


The southeast cost is famed for its modern hotels and wonderful golden beaches. Don’t go for a hotel in the capital – you’re better off getting one in a resort. The rates of the hotels in Dominican Republic are roughly the same round the year, because the holiday season in the Dominican Republic is round the year.
Accommodation in Dominican Republic, Guest houses

Travel-to-Dominican-Republic-hotel

Guest houses are a bargain. Being a bargain, your best bet would be to travel to Dominican Republic, find yourself a guest house and actually bargain for it. You Would be surprised how people in the Dominican Republic love to bargain. They will probably give you a better price just because you’re a good sport.

Accommodation in Dominican Republic, Self Catering accommodation

There are apartments available in Puerto Plata at cheap rates and they’re not bad. But i’d go for a hotel if i were you.
Accommodation in Dominican Republic, Camping and Caravanning

It is possible, but not advisable. There are no official campsites. You may try to camp in rural areas, but you have to get permission from the landlord beforehand.

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Dominican Republic Travel Guide For Travelers

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Dominican Republic Travel Guide For Travelers
Travel tips for your trip to Dominican Republic Hotel Maps Famous Places in Dominican Republic helps you to make your trip to Dominican Republic in the holiday a Splendid One




The Dominican Republic shares the island it occupies with Haiti. Most tourists who come to the island are initially attracted by the magnificent golden sand beaches along her 870 miles coastline. The island’s northern, Atlantic side contains the majority of tourist attractions, hotels and resorts.

Located in Caribbean, island of Hispaniola, east of Cuba, the Dominican Republic has a population estimate of 9.5 million people who speak Spanish as their official language. Santo Domingo is the capital city

Brace yourself with lightweight fabrics since this area has tropical temperatures throughout the year with the coastal region being warmer than central regions. Fortunately, Dominican Republic boasts over 55,000 hotel rooms to offer her visitors and make them comfortable. Get some modern hotels and beautiful beaches in the southeast coast while in the capital, the choice ranges from clean and cheap to plush hotels which amazingly have constant rates throughout the year. Prices for resort hotels are usually higher during the winter season. Guest houses are an economical alternative. Around Puerto Plata are very affordable self catering establishments. For the caravanning counterparts, no official sites exist but could be done under permission within national parks.

Internal flights, cheap and efficient air conditioned buses and coaches, buses, car hires and horse drawn carriages will make movement much more convenient. Don’t hesitate to go and try out the native Dominican cooking which combines Spanish influences with local produce. There is plenty of fresh fish and sea food, island grown tomatoes, lettuce, papaya, mangoes, passion fruit and all citrus fruits. Beef is expensive and local favourites are pork and goat meat. Locally produced beer and rums are cheaper than imported alcohol. National specialities include La bandera, chicharrones (crisp pork rind), pastelon (baked vegetable cake) and sopa criolla dominicana (native soup of meat and vegetables). The national drinks include presidente (Dominican beer), rum drinks and native coffee.

Your nightlife could be rocked from a choice varying from Las-Vegas style revue, discos and casinos to a quiet café by the sea in Santo Domingo. Hotels offer more traditional shows like folk music and dancing. Concerts and cultural events are often held at the Casa de Francia and Plaza de le Cultura.

In the Dominican Republic, you could swim with dolphins in Manati Park; encounter a more dangerous type of wild life on the Cabritos Island; wander in awe along the miles of the beautiful unspoilt beaches of the Atlantic coast; dive to astonishing variety of sites around the island like Cabrera; go offshore fishing at Boca de Yuma; get wet by white water rafting and tubing on Rio Yague del Norte; do some cascading; conquer the highest mountain in the Caribbean by hiking and climbing Pico Duarte; play golf in the world’s best courses or visit the shops and get yourself amber jewellery and decorative pieces, larimar or Dominica tuquiose and rocking chairs could be made. Bargaining is also recommended.

Most visits to the Dominican Republic are trouble free. Crime against tourists is rare but care should be exercised in isolated areas especially at night. Visitors should exercise caution before planning any trips across the county’s interior as some roads are susceptible to flash flooding or landslides. The hurricane season normally runs from June to November and there’s also increased cases of dengue fever. All in all the Dominican Republic is the place to unwind.