☰
×
My Account
Cart
My Account
Categories
Appliances
Arts, Crafts & Sewing
Automotive
Baby
Beauty
Books
CDs & Vinyl
Collectibles & Fine Arts
Cell Phones & Accessories
Clothing, Shoes & Jewellery
Computers
Electronics
Health & Personal Care
Home & Kitchen
Industrial & Scientific
Luggage & Travel Gear
Musical Instruments
Office Products
Patio, Lawn & Garden
Pet Supplies
Software
Sports & Outdoors
Tools & Home Improvement
Toys
Video Games
Books
>
Travel
>
Australia & South Pacific
>
New Caledonia
×
❮
❯
New Caledonia (Travel Adventures)
Not Available / Digital Item
Please be aware orders placed now will not arrive in time for Christmas, please check delivery times.
New Caledonia (Travel Adventures)
This amazing guide tells you everything you need to know about these spectacular South Pacific islands - the hotels, restaurants, the culture, what to see and do, how to get around. New Caledonia consists of a large island, Grande Terre, and a group of small islands called dependencies - the Loyalty Group, Ouen, the Isle of Pines, Huon Islands, and the Chesterfields. Grande Terre is as big in land mass as the whole state of Hawaii. Its capital Nouméa, with 70,000 people, looks big too. There are imposing buildings, freeways, traffic lights, escalators and, in the center of town there is a large bowered park called the Place des Cocotiers. Nouméa has sidewalk cafes, little corner bistros, boulangeries, patisseries and, if it weren't for the black faces and the climate, you could be in a French provincial town. The white inhabitants have a Gallic look, the slight difference around nose and mouth that perhaps comes from a nasal approach to words. Some look as if they had just left the farm, some are conservatively well dressed, and many of the young people are clad in the latest mod-chic. Then there are others. You see them and hear them in the bars and bistros. They are usually bearded and have a military appearance. They are clearly soldiers, perhaps of the Foreign Legion. New Caledonia needs them now and perhaps will in the future. Arrival in New Caledonia is attended by the feeling that you've arrived somewhere very colonial, very French, where everything works, except during the awkward hours from 11:30 AM to 1:30 PM when everything is closed. You'll soon become aware that the standard of living is much higher in New Caledonia than on other Pacific islands. For the present, New Caledonia is a great place for a vacation. In Nouméa you'll find the big hotels, the boutiques, the casinos, the beaches, and the restaurants. Half of the population lives there. That leaves a lot of empty space on the rest of the big island and the tiny islands around it. New Caledonia and its dependencies are an island group in the southwest Pacific that forms part of Melanesia. The bIg island called Grande Terre has a land area of 12,000 square miles, and is the third-largest island in the South PacIfic after New Guinea and New Zealand. Along the entire length of New Caledonia runs a chain of mountains. Mt. Passie in the north and Mt. Humbol in the south are nearly 5,000 feet high and this chain divides the island into climatic areas. In the west on the leeward side, like the Australian outback, there are wide stretches of dry savannah land dotted with eucalyptus trees. This is good cattle country but, because of invasive mangrove swamps along this coast, there are few good beaches. On the east coast where it rains over 100 inches a year, there are coconut plantations, rivers with waterfalls, and 150-foot-tall Norfolk pines. This is where most of the rural Melanesians live. Around both sides of the island, there is a protective barrier reef, the second-largest barrier reef in the world. Along the entire length of New Caledonia runs a chain of mountains.
Country
USA
Manufacturer
Hunter Publishing
Binding
Kindle Edition
ReleaseDate
2011-11-03
Format
Kindle eBook