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Top 5 for diving Cities
Grand Cayman is the largest of the three islands in the Cayman Islands. George Town is the largest city and capital of the Cayman Islands. Grand Cayman's Seven Mile beach is one of the finest beaches in the world.
Owen Roberts International Airport (IATA: GCM) (ICAO: MWCR), Airport information: 345-949-5252 or +1 345 949-7811, Flight information: 345-949-7811. Located 2.5 km (1.5 mi) east of George Town. The airport has one runway and one terminal.
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This is a very interesting town. It is pretty compact, you can walk round it all in a few hours. Anything you might want is therefore in walking distance. However there is also a triving local town taxi servie so you can arrive cool and relaxed wherever you may go.
Bakau is perhaps the most developed settlement in The Gambia with excellent communication facilities. Nearly all the roads are paved and the rate of electricity connection is almost universal.
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Cape Maclear (aka Chembe) is a small fishing village on Lake Nyasa (Lake Malawi) in Malawi. It has one dirt road leading into (and straight out of) town. Along this road, there are a few hostels, some dive shops, a handful of vendors selling curios and fruit and a few bars. The pace of life here is . . . very . . . slow.
Cape Maclear is a fishing village of about 10,000. The fishermen live in the center of the town, while either end of the village caters to tourists.
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Mackay is a city on the eastern coast of the Australian state of Queensland, some 900 km north of the state capital Brisbane.
Be warned that Mackay has the very worst drivers in all of Australia, so be careful with your combie. The roads are equally as bad as the local drivers so a suspension check after a weeks vacation would be advised. Although the locals seem friendly and laid back that still think it is two decades earlier and can be very sceptical of strangers.
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