Need baby gear, water sports gear, prepaid cell phones, other sporting gear and much more for your upcoming trip…visit www.emptysuitcases.com to reserve those bulky items that can’t fit into your suitcases or that you just don't wish to travel with.

 

Rum Point

“Imagine a cold drink with an exotic flavour. Now imagine you’re sipping that drink in a hammock on a beach, shaded by majestic casuarinas trees with island rhythmus wafting by. Sounds good? Trust us, it feels even better.”

                                                           Cayman Islands Travel Directory 2005/2006

 RumRum Point Dock, Cayman Kai, Cayman Islands

 

Entry Requirements for Visitors

On your trip to the Cayman Islands, you may be planning to SCUBA or snorkel, explore the sights, and/or see friends and family. Keep in mind that all visitors should land in the Islands with a return ticket and enough money to finance their stay.

US and Canadian citizens, traveling directly to the Cayman Islands from the US and Canada, need only proof of citizenship for entry, such as a passport. They do not need visas. 

For more information:

Immigration Department
Cayman Islands Government
PO Box 1098GT
Elgin
Avenue
Grand Cayman,Cayman Islands

Telephone: (345) 949-8344
Fax: (345) 949-8486

GOING FISHING ON GRAND CAYMAN: 

 

Bayside Watersports Ltd                                      345-949-3200

Black Princess Charters                                       345-949-0400

Captain Crosby’s                                                 345-945-4049

Captain Marvin’s Watersports                               345-945-4590

The Happy Hooker                                               345-949-3200

Frank’s Watersports                                            345-945-5491

Burton Tourist Info & Activity Service                    345-949-6598

 

 

GETTING MARRIED IN THE CAYMAN ISLANDS:

Non-Residents

This information is designed primarily to give non-residents a guide to getting married in the Cayman Islands, but it will also be of assistance to residents.Couples wishing to marry during a vacation or a cruise ship stop may apply for a special licence. Under the law, the Governor grants special licences, and marriages may be performed as soon as applications have been processed. The Deputy Chief Secretary's office handles applications on Grand Cayman, and District Administration represents the Governor on Cayman Brac and Little Cayman. Phoning for an appointment usually ensures that processing will take about half an hour.

The application, which must be signed by both persons, must give full names, occupations,permanent addresses and any current temporary address. It must also name the marriage officer who will perform the ceremony, state whether either party has been previously married, and confirm that there is no lawful hindrance to the intended marriage.

The couple may choose to bring the required documents to the specified Government office and make the application in person. Or, working with their marriage officer, they may fill out and sign the form, provide the necessary documents, and then turn the process over to the officer for completion.

The documents required are:

  • Proof of identity, such as an original or certified birth certificate or passport;
  • Cayman Islands international embarkation/disembarkation card or ship's boarding pass;
  • Certified or original copies of divorce decrees/death certificates.

The fee of CI$150 (US$180), together with a $10 postage stamp, must accompany the documents. Stamps may be purchased from the government office or from any post office Applications should be filed at the Deputy Chief Secretary's office, on the third floor of the Government Administration Building, Grand Cayman, telephone 345-244-2222; or at the District Commissioner's office, Government Administration Building, Cayman Brac, telephone 345-948-2222.The license must be produced to the marriage officer performing the ceremony and becomes void if not used within three months.

Company                                   Phone

 

Cayman Weddings                    345-949-8677

Celebrations                             345-949-2044

A Wedding For You Ltd.             345-947-6942

Bevandale Island Weddings       345-949-3435

Grand Old House                      345-949-9333

Heart Of Cayman                      345-949-1343

 

Cayman Islands Location Info Page :

Location and Geography

The Cayman Islands comprises Grand Cayman, Cayman Brac and Little Cayman. The three islands are situated in the western Caribbean, about 150 miles south of Cuba, 480 miles south of Miami, Florida, and 180 miles northwest of Jamaica. George Town, the capital, is on the western shore of Grand Cayman.
Geographically, the Cayman Islands is part of the Cayman Ridge, which extends westward from Cuba. The Cayman Trench, the deepest part of the Caribbean at a depth of over four miles, separates the three small islands from Jamaica.

Grand Cayman, the largest of the three islands, is approximately 22 miles long with an average width of four miles. Of its total area of about 78 square miles, almost half is wetland. The most striking feature is the shallow, reef-protected lagoon, the North Sound, which has an area of about 35 square miles. The island is low-lying, with the highest point only about 60 feet above sea level. Cayman Brac lies about 89 miles northeast of Grand Cayman. It is about 12 miles long, with an average width of 1 1/4 miles. Its terrain is the most spectacular of the three islands. The Bluff, a massive central limestone outcrop, rises steadily along the length of the island up to 140 ft. above the sea at the eastern end.

Little Cayman lies five miles west of Cayman Brac and is approximately ten miles long with an average width of just over a mile. The island is low-lying, with a few areas on the north shore rising to 40 ft. above sea level.
Together, the islands have a land area of about 100 square miles. There are no rivers on any of the islands, but there are large areas of luxuriant vegetation. The coasts are largely protected by offshore reefs and in many places by a mangrove fringe that often extends into inland swamps that play a key role in the islands' ecology.

Almost 2,000 acres of dry forests and mangrove wetland are protected by the National Trust for the Cayman Islands. An internationally acclaimed system of marine parks is managed by the Department of Environment.

Climate

The temperature, summer or winter, seldom goes lower than 70 deg. F. or higher than 90 deg. F. The average is 78 deg. F. in the winter and about 84 deg. F in the summer. The average annual humidity in 2000 was 77 percent. Rainfall varies over the Islands and seasonally, but in George Town, the capital on Grand Cayman, the average monthly figure for 2000 was 4.7 inches.

Between May and October the prevailing winds are from east to south; from November to April, the coolest season of the year, prevailing winds are from the northeast to northwest. The hurricane season typically lasts from June to November, but the Islands have been fortunate in escaping serious damage or fatalities since the last major strike in 1932 until 2004 when hurricane Ivan devastated the island Grand Cayman. 

History

The Cayman Islands were first sighted by European explorers on 10 May, 1503, owing to a chance wind that blew Christopher Columbus' ship off course. On his fourth trip to the New World, Columbus was en route to the island of Hispaniola (now Haiti and the Dominican Republic) when his ship was thrust westward toward "two very small and low islands, full of tortoises (turtles), as was all the sea all about, insomuch that they looked like little rocks, for which reason these islands were called Las Tortugas."

The two islands were Cayman Brac and Little Cayman. A 1523 map showing all three Islands gave them the name Lagartos, meaning alligators or large lizards, but by 1530 the name Caymanas was being used. It is derived from the Carib Indian word for the marine crocodile, which is now known to have lived in the Islands. This name, or a variant, has been retained ever since.

An early English visitor was Sir Francis Drake, who on his 1585-86 voyage to these waters reported seeing "great serpents called Caymanas, like large lizards, which are edible." It was the Islands' ample supply of turtle, however, that made them a popular calling place for ships sailing the Caribbean and in need of meat for their crews. This began a trend that eventually denuded local waters of the turtle, compelling the local turtle fishermen to go further afield to Cuba and the Miskito Cays in search of their catch.

The first recorded settlements were located on Little Cayman and Cayman Brac, during the 1661-71 tenure of Sir Thomas Modyford as Governor of Jamaica. Because of the depredations of Spanish privateers, Modyford's successor called the settlers back to Jamaica, though by this time Spain had recognised British possession of the Islands in the 1670 Treaty of Madrid. Often in breach of the treaty, British privateers roamed the area taking their prizes, probably using the Cayman Islands for replenishing stocks of food and water and careening their vessels. During the 18th century, the Islands were certainly well known to such pirates as Edward Teach (Blackbeard), Neal Walker, George Lowther and Thomas Antis, even after the Treaty of Utrecht, in 1713, was supposed to have ended privateering.

The first royal grant of land in Grand Cayman was made by the Governor of Jamaica in 1734. It covered 3,000 acres in the area between Prospect and North Sound. Others followed, up to 1742, developing an existing settlement, which included the use of slaves.

On 8th February, 1794, an event occurred which grew into one of Cayman's favourite legends, The Wreck of the Ten Sail. The convoy of more than 58 merchantmen sailing from Jamaica to England found itself dangerously close to the reef at Gun Bay, on the east end of Grand Cayman. Ten of the ships, including HMS Convert, the navy vessel providing protection, foundered on the reef. With the aid of Caymanians, the crews and passengers mostly survived, although some eight lives were lost.

The court martial of the fleet's leader, Captain Lawford, revealed that a current had unexpectedly carried the fleet 20 miles north of its course. The incident underscores how common shipwrecks have been in the history of the Islands, and how much Caymanians themselves have depended on the sea.

The first census of the Islands was taken in 1802, showing a population on Grand Cayman of 933, of whom 545 were slaves. Before slavery was abolished in 1834, there were over 950 slaves owned by 116 families. Emancipation paved the way for development of a homogeneous society.

Though Cayman was always regarded as a dependency of Jamaica, the reins of government by that colony were loosely held in the early years, and a tradition grew up of self-government, with matters of public concern decided at meetings of all free males. In 1831 a legislative assembly was established comprising two houses: the eight magistrates appointed by the Governor of Jamaica and ten elected representatives or vestrymen.

The constitutional relationship between Cayman and Jamaica remained ambiguous until 1863 when an act of the British parliament formally made the Cayman Islands a dependency of Jamaica. When Jamaica achieved independence in 1962, the Islands opted to remain under the British Crown, and an administrator (in 1971 the title became Governor) appointed from London assumed the responsibilities previously held by the governor of Jamaica.

Cayman Islanders have a tradition of hardiness and independence of spirit, which sustained them through many difficult years when their home was sometimes referred to as "the islands time forgot." In those years, they earned a livelihood at sea, either as turtle fishermen or as crew members on foreign-owned ships, or by working in North and Central America. In 1906 more than a fifth of the population of 5,000 was estimated to be at sea, and even as late as the 1950s the government annual report said that the main "export" was seamen whose remittances were the mainstay of the economy.

Since those days the economy has grown in remarkable fashion, to be a model envied in other parts of the region. Over the last 30 years, governments have pursued policies aimed at developing the infrastructure, education, health and social services of the Islands, fostering the stability which is an important factor in the continued growth of Cayman's two main industries, tourism and financial services

 

Public Holidays 2007

Date Holiday
Monday, 1st January New Year’s Day holiday
Monday, 22nd January National Heroes' Day
Wednesday, February 21st Ash Wednesday
Friday, 6th April Good Friday
Monday, 9th April Easter Monday
Monday, 21st May Discovery Day
Monday 18th June Queen's birthday
Monday, 2nd July Constitution Day
Monday, 12th November Remembrance Day
Tuesday, 25th December Christmas Day
Wednesday, 26th December Boxing Day