+1 (809) 550-7227

Office Hours

+1 (888) 623-6104

Toll-Free USA & Out of Office Hours

Working Hours: Mon to Sun 8:30 AM – 11 PM

Uncategorized

Dominican Republic is a safe country and statistics show it

Alarming news has appeared in some Media about the deaths of some American citizens in the Dominican Republic. What at first seemed like unnatural deaths, have turned out to be after medical examinations: heart attack; septic shock; pneumonia…


This news, with distorted and exaggerated information of reality, has created a crisis in the tourism sector of the Dominican Republic, a pillar of the economy of that Caribbean country that employs 300,000 people.
Statistics show that you are more likely to be killed in a homicide at home in the United States than to die from unnatural causes in the Dominican Republic.


More than 2 million American tourists visited the Dominican Republic in each of the last two years and despite a 7.9% increase in US visitors. Between 2017 and 2018, the number of unnatural deaths has decreased since 2015, according to statistics from the US State Department.
Seven Americans have died in the Dominican Republic this year for unnatural causes, which fell from 15 reported in June 2011 and 2015, according to NBC News.

 


Unnatural deaths include drowning, homicides and vehicle accidents, the latter being the main cause of unnatural death among Americans in the Dominican Republic in automobile accidents, according to statistics from the State Department from 2014 to 2018.


In the United States there is a much higher homicide rate.
The chances of an American dying from homicide in the Dominican Republic (0.19 per 100,000 in 2017) are much lower than the probability of dying in a homicide in his country.


The last death of the United States in the Dominican Republic was due to heart failure, according to an official.
As of 2017, the rate of homicides, homicides, and non-negligent homicides in the United States was 5.3 per 100,000, according to the Pew Research Center, citing FBI data.


In some US cities The homicide rate is significantly higher: approximately 66 per 100,000 people in St. Louis, 56 per 100,000 in Baltimore, 40 per 100,000 in Detroit and 40 per 100,000 in New Orleans.
Other destinations in the Caribbean have higher unnatural death rates, such as Jamaica and the Bahamas, but also the unnatural death rate among Americans is less than the probability of dying in a homicide in their country, the United States.

Read More...
+

Cueva de las Maravillas National Park

Cueva de las Maravillas National Park

between San Pedro de Macorís and La Romana

The Parque nacional Cueva de las Maravillas (English: Cave of wonders National Park) is a national park located approximately 3 kilometres (2 miles) west from La Romana, in the south-eastern part of the Dominican Republic on the Caribbean island of Hispaniola.

Named after the Cave of Wonders, it was previously known as the Cueva Jaguar until 1949, and it is well known for its ancient paintings by the Taíno Indians.

The park is located on the road between the town of San Pedro de Macorís and La Romana, near the Soco River and Cumayasa. It is 800 meters long and is 25 meters underground, and has an area of 4.5 square kilometers. The caves were declared a national park on July 22nd, 1997.

Inside the cave you can see about 500 paintings and engravings on the walls, painted in black and red and made by the Taínos, the ancient inhabitants of the island.

According to reports, it has about 10 petroglyphs (rock engravings), and 472 pictographs (paintings on the walls). Of these 472, 144 pictographs were classified as cryptic or abstract and whimsical groupings at 69 points. In addition you can see 135 pictographs with a human face, 18 animal, 41 human and animal form, 18 and 38 geometric and human.

The attractions of the caves of wonder are pictographic, The Water Mirror Gallery, which consists of an artificial lake that reflects like a mirror the top of the cave and The Great Panel, in the latter you can see a cave painting created by the Taínos, which represents a funeral ritual, among others.

In the variety of flora include 48 natural species arraijanes, guáyiga, yellow caya, lignum vitae, pegapalo, jasmine, cat’s claw, carboy, stick hen, black Cuba, yaya brown, bighorn coffee, cane juice, stick donkey, Pringamosa and bitter stick, among others.

The cave opens in limestone reef belongs to the geomorphological unit known as South East Coastal Plain.

In 1926 it was called Cueva Jaguar, and in 1949 Professor Francisco Richiez Acevedo assigned the name of Cave of wonders for the beauty revealing inside and everything visitors could imagine by looking at the figures created by the stalactites and stalagmites, as well as its wide variety of pictographs.

Want to visit Cuevas de las Maravillas?

We take you there!

#1 Voted The Best Airport Shuttle / Transfer Service in Punta Cana.

Read More...