| LOCATION/SIZE | Barbuda (Bar-byew’ da), which lies  27 miles northeast of its sister island Antigua,  has a land area of 62-square-miles.  A  low lying coral island, known for its untouched pink coral and white sand  beaches, its highest point is only 125 feet above sea level.  | 
      
        | CAPITAL | The
            capital of Barbuda is the village of Codrington. | 
      
        | CLIMATE | Sunny and warm all year  with soothing trade winds, the average temperature ranges from the  mid-seventies in the winter to the mid-eighties in the summer. Annual rainfall  averages only 45 inches, making it the sunniest of the eastern Caribbean islands, and the northeast trade winds are  nearly constant, flagging only in September. | 
      
        | LANGUAGE | English
            is the spoken language. | 
      
        | POPULATION | A
            majority of Barbuda’s 1,500 inhabitants live in Codrington. | 
      
        | TRANSPORTATION BY AIR AND SEA
 | Carib Aviation (www.carib-aviation.com) operates 15-minute flights at 8 a.m. 			and 6 p.m. daily from Antigua. Passports are not needed, as the point of entry 			for both islands is Antigua. Visitors may also opt to take a one and a half hour 		ferry boat ride between the islands.  Once on the island, taxis and the 			Barbuda Express (ferry service) are available. | 
      
        | ACCOMMODATIONS | There are three exclusive resorts on the island including  the K-Club (where Princess Diana used to stay) and Coco Point – both  seasonally, and The Beach House. | 
      
        | DINING | Two
            restaurants on the island offer traditional Barbudan cuisine and
            seafood specialties. | 
      
        | SIGHTS | Swimming, diving, snorkeling, fishing, bird watching, caving  and beachcombing are most often the activities of choice on the island.  Sights, other than the beautiful pink sand  beaches most often visited include:
 · Frigate Bird Sanctuary, accessible by boat, is home to 170 species of birds
including the Magnificent Frigate Birds.
 
 · Dark Cave, a low, boulder-hung passage that leads 400 feet  underground to (almost) fresh-water pools teeming with rare blind shrimp and  certain species of crustacean found nowhere else in the world.
 
 · Darby’s Cave featuring a  large sinkhole, about 350 feet in diameter and 70 feet deep that contains a  small but lush rainforest.
 | 
      
        | MEDIA
              CONTACT | Marie  Kephart (407) 838-1827
 marie.kephart@ypbr.com
 
 Heather Keroes
 (407) 838-1704
 heather.keroes@ypbr.com
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