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Travel Destination Guide - Comino
Comino (Malta) 
Comino Information
Slideshow of Photos
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Comino is the smallest of the 3 islands of Malta, located in the middle of the chai, some 16 mls NW of Valletta and the airport. The island lies just over 1ml from the N tip of Malta and ½ ml S of Gozo. A delightful, little island boasts a jagged coastline, sea caves and a pretty lagoon. Otherwise it is mostly bare rock interspersed with low-growing plants although it is home to colonies of birds and a wide variety of butterflies. A tranquil virtually car-free haven from busy everyday life.
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The area is most suited to upmarket peace-seekers; tennis groups; scuba-divers and other water-sports enthusiasts. Accommodation is limited with only 2 establishments, both low-rise, casual, 4-star tourist hotels; one has a separate bungalow complex.
There are 2 small, sandy bays with good swimming. There is also a stunning lagoon of brilliant turquoise blue, popular with day-trippers particularly at weekends. Hotels run a windsurfing school and water sports.
Activities are generally limited to exploring the area, sightseeing and water sports. By night there is evening cabaret, barbecues and dancing in the hotels.
Getting around the area is made easy with frequent passenger ferries from Marfa (Malta) to the Blue Lagoon; passenger ferry from Mgarr (Gozo). Hotels have their own ferries to Gozo and Marfa. Buggies and a jeep are provided to transfer guests and luggage to hotels. The area is also served by regular helicopter service from Malta's airport.
Local excursions travel to Gozo: Ggantija temples, Citadel at Victoria, fishing villages, walking. Malta: Mdina, Valletta, harbour cruise, Popeye Village.
Comino Suitability ProfileSun Snow Beaches History/Culture Romance Peace & Quiet Hustle & Bustle | Activity & Adventure Famous Landmarks Water Sports Natural Beauty Art & Architecture Family Entertainment Good Nightlife | Safari Plenty of Restaurants All Inclusive Hotels Luxury Accommodation Plenty of Shops |
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Population: 398.500
Languages: Maltese and English (both official)
Currency: Maltese lira Currency code: MTL
Local Times:
Malta - Valletta
Country Dialling Code: +356
Voltage: 240V 50Hz
Electrical plugs:
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The five Maltese islands-Malta, Gozo, Comino, Comminotto, and Filflawith-have a combined land area of just 122 sq miles featuring narrow cobblestone streets, crowded with Norman cathedrals and baroque palaces. The countryside is littered with the oldest known human structures in the world. Malta is very good at selling its romantic past of Copper Age temple builders and crusading celibate knights, and it has used this image to crank up a formidable tourism industry. Not that the islands are overrun with highrise resorts - yet.
It has been said that the Maltese islands are the 'open air museum of the Mediterranean', offering 7,000 years or more of history to explore with numerous cultural, historical and megalithic sites unique in the world. The islands boast prehistoric ruins older than Stonehenge and the Pyramids of Egypt, and are steeped in the legacy of the medieval order of the Knights of St John, who used the island as their stronghold for defending Christendom.
The main island of Malta, covering just 95 square miles (246 sq km), is also a popular holiday destination because of its secluded bays and sandy beaches, washed by unpolluted clear blue waters. Set against the backdrop of the island's scenery and its honey-coloured stone buildings, Malta is alluring and fascinating.
Malta and its little sister island, Gozo, are not stuck in a time warp, however. The islanders enjoy life to the full, and the calendar is filled with summertime 'festas' with fireworks and revelry in every little parish in honour of the village patron saints, as well as the major carnival in early spring every year. The capital, Valletta, besides offering some awesome Baroque buildings and fortifications as its main sightseeing attractions, is bustling and bursting with restaurants and cafes. The island's compact size is also a plus for visitors; it takes no more than an hour to drive between any two points on the main island, and there is very little open space. The dense population means that the island is virtually one large urban area, with buildings occupying every inch.
Malta lies about 60 miles (97km) south of Sicily and 160 miles (257km) north of Libya, a strategic position in the Mediterranean that has made the islands a crossroads of history. The last occupiers were the British, who granted Malta independence in 1964, but the biggest and most unique influence was left by the Knights of St John, to whom the island was donated in 1530; the Knights reigned supreme over the island for 270 years, building magnificent churches and monuments to themselves.
Malta has its mysteries too, in the form of 30 prehistoric sites boasting massive Neolithic temples, considered to be the oldest freestanding stone buildings known to man. |
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Local Area Weather
Luqa, MALTA |
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28°C
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