Dominica sounds great. I like an adventure holiday where you never know what is going to wrong.
Last year John and i went to Zanzibar (here's a few pics). I uploaded some to Facebook as well.
We flew from Dubai via Nairobi. Our onward flight was cancelled and Nairobi airport is sh1t hole, to say the least. We had an 8 hour wait till the next connection. We bribed the immigration officer with just 10USD and got a visa for a day, went to the animal sanctuary, the Carnivore restaurant and paid a cab driver to take us around town. Not really recommended to do if you're not Africa savvy - you need to watch carefully around you. We took the cab driver with us to lunch, I think he was quite chuffed!
Zanzibar was incredible. Old, rustic, mosquitoes, bumpy roads with potholes, spices drying on the side of the road (with people riding over them with bicycles rofl) and little kids and cows on the beach playing like life never had an ending. The tide rose up to the cliffs, and then lowered and spread out to sea, and the Zanzibarians spent hours on the reef, pulling up shell fish.
The food was great, it was quiet, and diving was second to none.
Last year John and i went to Zanzibar (here's a few pics). I uploaded some to Facebook as well.
We flew from Dubai via Nairobi. Our onward flight was cancelled and Nairobi airport is sh1t hole, to say the least. We had an 8 hour wait till the next connection. We bribed the immigration officer with just 10USD and got a visa for a day, went to the animal sanctuary, the Carnivore restaurant and paid a cab driver to take us around town. Not really recommended to do if you're not Africa savvy - you need to watch carefully around you. We took the cab driver with us to lunch, I think he was quite chuffed!
Zanzibar was incredible. Old, rustic, mosquitoes, bumpy roads with potholes, spices drying on the side of the road (with people riding over them with bicycles rofl) and little kids and cows on the beach playing like life never had an ending. The tide rose up to the cliffs, and then lowered and spread out to sea, and the Zanzibarians spent hours on the reef, pulling up shell fish.
The food was great, it was quiet, and diving was second to none.