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Hello and welcome to Mauritius
Travel to Mauritius Cheap
Are
you planning for a nice holiday under the tropics,in the Island
of Mauritius? Make your dream come true and get there for less.
Please spend some time to study our holiday bargains offers,vacation
rentals by owner left to you at competitive prices. See our
new affordable ,studios,bungalows,villas and appartments located
in the town of Flic en Flac, a long time developed tourist area
having all the amenities and infrastructure to make your stay
a memorable,troublefree and easy one.
Back to Paradise
Lost in the middle
of the Indian Ocean ,halfway from the East coast of Kenya,Tanzania
,South Africa and below the Maldives Island,the Seychelles and
India, Mauritius form part of the Mascarenhas Achipel with Rodrigues
and Reunion Island, a French DOM TOM.This bewitching island,its
luxurious vegetation,its fine sand beaches, it's shallow turquoise
lagoons,its burstling cities and its people are all awaiting
for you. Because hospitality is a way of life in our island
and because every day is like being on holiday,it is our commiment
to offer you only the best .
Location
& Access
Situated on the west coast of the island, 50
kms from the airport, Flic en Flac has the nicest beach
of Mauritius. You can find within walking distance,
plenty of restaurants, shopping centres,
supermarkets, bars, night-clubs, car rentals,
watersports and most of all, hundreds of meters of
tropical white sand beach.
Merely 50 metres from the beach, Alpha Villa
offers several most beautiful, cosy and fully furnished
self-catering apartments
and studios with all the necessary amenities.
Weather Condition:
The western coast enjoys warm and stable weather conditions
Additional Services:
Maid avaiable on demand.
Our rates include the transfer
from Villa to the airport .
Aditional information
Restaurants, supermarkets, car
and bike hire, shops and other services are readily available
in the region.
Travelling inland :
From Flic en flac to Port Louis,
the Capital city and Harbour
30 minutes(17km) By bus (Route N°123)
One way ticket £0.30
Connection by bus to other
parts of the island
15 mins by Taxi at the cost of £7.00
- Bike rent : – £2/day
- Car rent –
£20/day
including insurance.
Accommodation:
- 4 self catering 2-bedroom appartments
- 10 self catering
studios and 1-bedroom
appartments
Alpha Villa
remains the ideal location for singles, couples & families wishing
to be independent and discover Mauritius.
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Each
studio or one bedroom apartment
is
equipped with:
- Double bed
- Dressing table
- Table and chairs
- Wardrobe
- TV
- Laundry washing machine
- Terrace or balcony
- Kitchenette with fridge, gas stove, kettle, utensils
- Bathroom with shower / WC
Can
accomodate 2 persons + 1 infant
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Each
2-bedrooms apartment
is equipped
with :
- Dressing table,
- Table and chairs
- 2 bedrooms with double bed
- Wardrobe
- TV
- Terrace or balcony
- Laundry washing
machine
- Kitchenette with fridge, gas stove, kettle, utensils
- Bathroom with shower/WC
Can accommodate up
to 5 persons
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Our rates :
- Starts from : £ 15 per night
-
Check prices and up to date
availibility
- For 3 or more
bedrooms please contact us
- Also available special rates for long stay (over 3 weeks)
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For further
details and reservation, please contact us through
Tel
in UK : + 44 79 62 48 62 52
Email
:
Tel
in France : 33 1 40 30 54 20
or
+ 33 8 73 06 60 20 / + 33 6 06 78 67 00 / + 33 6 1 86 06 77
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Mauritius self catering holidays
General
information to the Traveller en route to Mauritius
Just inside the Tropic of Capricorn and some 1.200 miles off the coast
of Africa lies the beautiful island of Mauritius. The stunning white
sand beaches offer a superb choice of watersports, and the 330 kilometre
coastline is almost entirely surrounded by one of the largest unbroken
coral reefs in the world, perfect for diving and snorkelling. The landscape
of Mauritius is rich and varied, mountains dominate the islands interior,
surrounded by gorges, lush fields of sugar cane and the beautiful sandy
coves. The people of Mauritius are as varied as the landscape, a fascinating
blend of people from Europe Africa India and the Far East have created
a unique cosmopolitan island culture. The standards of accommodation,
facilities and service are very high in Mauritius, and there are many
top class hotels. Evening entertainment is centred around the hotels
and is mainly local folklore shows, Creole music and sega dancing. The
island is deceptively large and it is very easy to spend your holiday
in the proximity of your hotel, however there is plenty to see and do
other than relaxing on the beach.-
Royal college
Curepipe
Short History
17th century
Mauritius, as the island is named, in honour of Holland's Stadtholder
Prince Maurice of Nassau, is a useful stopping-point for ships on their
way to Dutch bases in Java. Attempts at agriculture on Mauritius fail.
18th century
Mauritius Airport transfer
The French assume control in 1715 and change the name to Ile de France.
Six years later their first colonists arrive. Slaves are brought in
to work the sugar plantations and to man naval vessels. Mahé de La Bourdonnais,
Governor from 1735 to 1747, establishes the first sugar factory.
19th century
The island has become a key spot in the Indian Ocean. The British find
this irresistible, particularly during the Napoleonic Wars, since it
is close to the brightest jewel in their imperial crown—India. They
take over in 1810 (more officially in 1814 at the Treaty of Paris) and,
having reestablished the name Mauritius or Maurice Island, attempt to
apply British traditions and the English language.Travel
guide
The inhabitants accede politely but continue speaking their Creole tongue
and leading a French lifestyle. In 1835, abolition of slavery is finally
imposed, and slave owners are paid off by Britain. Asian workers are
brought in to provide cheap labour. Sugar is king in the 1850s, while
in literature and in real life, Mauritius is at the height of fashion.
But the opening of the Suez Canal (1869) isolates it from shipping routes.
The island suffers a series of disasters, including cyclones and epidemics.
By the end of the century Mauritius is falling into decline.Holidays
in Mauritius
20th century
During World War II, Mauritius is a British naval and air base. In 1968,
the island becomes an independent member of the British Commonwealth,
and a Republic in 1992.Open Monday to Friday 9.30 a.m.–2.30 p.m., on
Saturday to 11.30 a.m.Travel
Mauritius
Mauritius is the sugar-cane island of the Indian Ocean. Fields of cane
cultivation, broken only by small villages, stretch over a wide plateau
above the tropical white sand beaches, breezy bays and glorious seascapes.It
was also the island of the dodo, a large, flightless bird whose good-natured
simplicity resulted in the poor creature's total extinction.The island
forms part of the Mascarene Archipelago, all that remains of an ancient
land mass which once united Asia and Africa. To the southwest lies Réunion
Island, with its savagely beautiful volcanic landscape, while some 560
km (350 miles) east appears Rodrigues Island, a mere dot in the ocean,
surrounded by even smaller islets and reefs, and an integral part of
Mauritius.
Mauritius car rental
Small as Mauritius is, covering only 1,865 sq km (720 sq miles), it
is one of the most densely populated places in the world and supports
some 1 million people, most of them descendants of Indians brought in
to work the sugar plantations after the abolition of slavery. There's
also a large Chinese community and a number of Creoles, descended from
French colonists. Africans and Malagasy add to the mixture of races
and religions, one happy result being that there's nearly always a festival
going on in one of the great variety of Hindu or Chinese temples, mosques
or Christian churches.Flic
en Flac guide
On the jittery world market of today sugar is an uneasy staple commodity.
Increasing tourism partially helps to counteract unemployment and low
incomes: a good airport, magical beaches and the flowery loveliness
of the resorts beckon visitors in ever greater numbers. Inland, mountains
rise in lonely splendour and you may glimpse a Java deer vanishing into
the bushes. Bamboo thickets, lagoons, plunging waterfalls and delicately
pretty Creole buildings are all part of the Mauritian scene.
Mauritius Stamps
On this island the French writer, Bernardin de Saint-Pierre, some 200
years ago, set his idyllic and tragic romance of two love-struck adolescents
in Paul et Virginie, a novel that helped usher in the Romantic movement.
Mauritius knew its most glittering moments in the middle years of the
19th century. Joseph Conrad and Mark Twain both dropped by at different
times. Baudelaire visited for three weeks, and wrote of a port filled
with masts and sails and air haunted by the scent of green tamarinds.
Darwin, naturally, couldn't resist this naturalist's paradise, and the
HMS Beagle put in here on her famous voyage. Seen from grey, drizzly
Europe, it appeared like a dream of rare flowers, foaming cascades,
airy colonial houses and balmy days. Holiday
rental
Independent since 1968, Mauritius is hard at work now keeping down its
population growth and pushing up its income. The friendly inhabitants
of all the rainbow of races will confide their problems but will also
express their optimism in the progress being achieved by their welcoming,
Indian Ocean homeland. For Mauritius has a fascinating past, an inviting
present and a rosy future |