
Skies are Blue
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Colours and Hues
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Things to Do
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“Wafer-thin cays and far flung atolls, white-sand beaches and lush green volcanic mountains, a slow pace, friendly people, dancing - what's not to like about the Cook Islands? If that's not enough, they also have excellent hiking, snorkelling, caving and lazing.” – is what the traveller’s bible, Lonely Planet has to say about the Cook Islands.
Consisting of only 15 islands scattered over some 2 million square kilometres of the Pacific Ocean, the Cook Islands has a total population of some 18,000 people. We lie in the centre of the Polynesian Triangle, flanked to the west by the Kingdom of Tonga and the Samoas and to the east by Tahiti and the islands of French Polynesia.
Renowned for our Polynesian hospitality, we have our own unique language and culture and there are significant differences between the islands. Even though some 90,000 travellers visit the capital island Rarotonga each year, the Cooks are largely unspoiled by commercial tourism.
Sources: www.lonelyplanet.com, www.cook-islands.com
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