But what devil go to the Maldives? ", will ask some. " It's just nothing! Say, in general, we don't go to the Maldives to actually visit a country and its culture. On tiny island islands exclusively reserved for tourism, we lie on a beach of fine sand facing a turquoise lagoon and savor. The goal is just to leave in an island paradise, and forget everything.

 

Little more visible on the map than a few ink spots distilled by a conscientious cartographer, the Maldives islands gently stretched into the heart of the Indian Ocean, from the southwest end of the Indian subcontinent to the equator. 1,190 islands, belonging to 26 separate coral atolls, spread over an area of almost 100,000 km ². The ocean is king, occupying 99.7% of the country's area, and directing the life of the premises, rhythmic their days at the time of fishing hours. For about 30 years, the Maldians have found new opportunities in tourism, to which their country is wonderfully well suited thanks to paradisial landscapes, which are conducive to the establishment of luxury hotels, which therefore keep open every year. Many islands in the Maldives, which already fascinated the first offshore sailors, have all the ingredients to make the western tourist hungry for tropical clichés dream. Graceful coconut cots on translucent lagoons, wonderfully temperate turquoise waters, a mild and generous sun all year round and submarine funds that make a nation proud. However, there are some problems with the sea.

 

In the late 1990 ' s, the Minister of the Environment Hussain Shihab drew global attention to global warming problems, predicting the pure and simple swallowing of Maldives during the twenty-first century if the industrialized countries did not drastically reduce CO 2 emissions. If the threat has never been so real, visitors and divers can reassure themselves: the Maldives is always there, always prettier. More fish than ever in crystal-clear waters, the corals color more than ever the many reefs of the atolls, the beaches always of white sand and end, for the happiness of contemplative tourists looking for absolute relaxation in a paradise of the end of the world.

 

So you're trying? Travel to the Maldives with Nomade Adventure.