But there’s a historically interesting, politically stable country with gorgeous beaches—and not much further away from Europe than either the Canaries or Egypt—that somehow never gets a look-in. Even last year, when its near-neighbor Gambia had a huge political wobble that sent sun-seekers packing, Ghana just wasn’t able to pick up the slack. So why not?
Accessible art was a symptom of a growing middle class, who have the time and the money for such things … But I wanted to know why they didn’t go to the beach.
We ended up in Jamestown, Accra’s oldest district, a fishing community jammed onto a sandy spit, wedged between a colonial-era British lighthouse and the shell of a Dutch fort once used in the slave trade. The shoreline was thick in rough-hewn fishing boats, daubed with flags and Biblical quotes, and blanketed under a thin film of smoke emitted by fish smokeries improvised out of old oil barrels.
[The hotel] price was far too high. And that’s the symptom of a lack of competition …
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These are mouth-watering travel prospects for those with a sense of adventure and who are prepared to be flexible.
Author: Andrew EamesTravel writer, broadcaster and ex-newspaper journalist Andrew Eames writes for UK publications from the Financial Times to the Sunday Mirror. He’s also the author of five books and often speaks at travel writing seminars.