Home >  Travel Guides >  Caribbean >  Antigua and Barbuda > Activities

Antigua and Barbuda Activities

 
  • Overview
  • Tours
  • Where to Go
  • Activities
  • Country Info
  • History
  • Weather
  • Travel Tips
  • Food & Dining
  • Shopping
  • Visa & Health
  • Travel Photos
  • Hotels
  •  
    Selected Travel Guide:     More Antigua and Barbuda Travel Guides: Adjust Font Size:
    WTG Travel Guide   Word Travels Guide +-
    Printable Destination Summary Bookmark and Share

    iExplore Travel Experts can help you build the perfect itinerary to this destination.
    Contact us to start
    building your tour!
    Name:
    Email:
    Travel Inquiry Details:
       Sign up for our newsletter!
    or call our experts at:
    1-800-iExplore
    Watersports
    Most resort hotels offer facilities for a range of watersports. Equipment for snorkeling and scuba diving is cheap and easy to hire and most hotels also hire out windsurfing boards. The coastal waters offer a good selection of coral reefs and there are more than 365 beaches, all of them open to the public and suitable for swimming. Most of the larger hotels provide water-skiing and sunfish sailboating facilities. Antigua has excellent facilities for sailing and is famous for its international sailing regatta held once a year during April or May. Smaller regattas are held throughout
    the year, in particular a two-day event at the Jolly Harbour Yacht Club starting on Valentine’s Day, a Cruise Race in July, and a two-day regatta in November. An annual Model Boat Race Competition is held in April. The less adventurous may wish to hire a dinghy and find their own secluded cove or sheltered beach and anchor for a day of peace and quiet. There is year-round deep-sea fishing for wahoo, kingfish, mackerel, dorado, tuna and barracuda. Yachts of all sizes can be chartered and an annual sportfishing tournament is held at the end of April to early May. Spear fishing is prohibited. There is also opportunity to go beachcombing and surfing is good on Gallery Bay on the northwest coast.

    Crab-racing
    A sport for the very lazy, crab-racing is staged in certain bars once or twice a week. A punter may win enough to pay for the next round of drinks, but stakes are moderate and the crabs are unlikely to make anyone a millionaire.

    Golf
    There are two first-class golf courses: the spectacular 18-hole golf course at Cedar Valley and the 9-hole Jolly Harbour. Daily, weekly and monthly memberships at Cedar Valley also include tennis privileges. K-Club on Barbuda has a 9-hole course.

    Other
    The national game is cricket, which is played to the highest international standard. In Viv Richards, Antigua produced one of the finest cricketers the game has ever seen. January is the official start of the cricket season, as well as the beginning of the netball and volleyball seasons. There are also many lawn tennis courts and the International Tennis Weeks in January (men) and April (women) attract numerous professionals, some of whom stay for extended periods to train for the international tennis circuit.
    Horse riding can be organized through hotels and there is a well-equipped riding club with competition facilities of an international standard. There is horse racing at Cassada Gardens. The annual football season runs from September through to February.
    It is also possible to hire bicyles.


    Next Page »

       The Columbus World Travel Guide has been published for 26 years and is sold in over 90 countries worldwide.
  • Overview
  • Where to Go
  • Activities
  • Country Information
  • History
  • Weather
  • Travel Tips
  • Food
  • Shopping
  • Visa & Health
  • Travel Photos
  • Hotels
  • Related Antigua and Barbuda Content

       Word Travels is a comprehensive travel guide covering hundreds of cities and holiday resorts in more than 125 countries.
  • Information
  • Facts
  • Visa and Health
  • Climate
  • Culture
  • Business
  • Destinations
  • Things to Do
  • Airports
  • Attractions
  • Travel Photos
  • Hotels


  • Antigua and Barbuda Airport Guides:





    Why iExplore? About Us iExplore Blog Advertise Site Map Privacy Policy Travel Agents Contact Us