Cayo Largo del Sur

"Cayo Largo" redirects here. For the cay in Florida, see Key Largo.
Cayo Largo del Sur
Cayo Largo
Resort island and village


Map of the island

Location of Cayo Largo in Cuba

Coordinates: 21°38′00″N 81°28′00″W / 21.63333°N 81.46667°W / 21.63333; -81.46667Coordinates: 21°38′00″N 81°28′00″W / 21.63333°N 81.46667°W / 21.63333; -81.46667
Country Cuba
Province Isla de la Juventud
Municipality Isla de la Juventud
(seat: Nueva Gerona)
Elevation 5 m (16 ft)
Time zone EST (UTC-5)
Shallow water surrounds Cayo Largo, evidenced by the lighter shade of blue

Cayo Largo del Sur, or simply Cayo Largo ("Long Cay"), is a small resort island in Cuba, off the south coast of the northwestern part of the main island in the Caribbean Sea. The cay is about 25 kilometers (16 mi) long and 3 kilometers (1.9 mi) wide and is the second largest island in the Canarreos Archipelago. Cayo Largo is part of the special municipality of Isla de la Juventud.

History

Christopher Columbus is said to have visited the island on his second expedition in 1494, and Sir Francis Drake may have also stopped on the island during his circumnavigation of the globe. Pirates also likely used the island as a base. Today, pristine beach, scuba diving, and wildlife draw tourists to the island, but no people live there permanently; locals who work in the hotels stay for about 20 days, then return to their families on nearby islands. There are five all-inclusive resort hotels on the island. Flights from Argentina, Italy, and Canada serve the island. A large catamaran style ferry provides surface transportation.

Geography

Climate

Month Avrg Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Temp (C) 26 23 23 25 26 27 28 29 29 28 27 26 24

Tourism

Typically, the fine white sand is packed hard on the surf's edge and allows easy walking.

A major tourist attraction of Cayo Largo are the west beaches, Playa Sirena, and Playo Paraiso. These beaches are a kilometre apart, and one may easily walk between them when the tide is not full. Sirena offers full service facilities for tourists. A shuttle "train" service takes tourists from the resorts to these beaches. Paraiso offers one of the finest undeveloped beaches in the world. Activities on the beach may be curtailed during turtle egg laying season. The beach has water sports related to the hotels, a restaurant, dolphin attraction, docks for catamaran trips. The lee side of the beach features tidal flats where many very large starfish congregate and other tropical fish are easily viewed.

Travellers to Cayo Largo should be advised nudism is tolerated in Cayo Largo and is practiced on the periphery of the resorts in designated areas, and on the many desolate stretches of beaches (20 km) on this island.

Natural environment

A beach on Cayo Largo

Cayo Largo is a limestone island, formed over millions of years from the remains of marine organisms, such as the ones that build coral reefs. Living coral reefs form one more attraction for tourists on this island, although coral bleaching has stressed some reef communities in the Caribbean. The northern coast of Cayo Largo consists largely of mangroves and salt pans. While the water south of the island appears clear enough to reveal the underlying ocean floor, the water on the north side of the island is cloudy. This cloudy water indicates that sediment is washing off the land surface and into the water or is being stirred up from the shallow sea floor.

In November 2001, the entire island was covered by storm surge in Hurricane Michelle.

Transport

Vilo Acuña Airport (IATA: CYO, ICAO: MUCL) is an international airport on the island.

References

    External links

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