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Articles About Panama Tours And Travel | The Pacific Islands of Eastern Panama

Around a thousand islands are located off Panama’s Pacific coast. Of these, many lie in the vicinity of the capital, their gentle breezes offering respite from the isthmus heat to Panamanians as well as visitors on Panama tours.
 
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More About Eastern Panama's Pacific Islands

1000s Of Islands, Mostly Unnamed
More of the Pacific islands than not are unnamed. Some are privately held, owned by the rich and/or famous, while others are popular destinations for day-trippers from the capital by boat or air. A range of overnight accommodations, from rustic to luxury, can be found on one island or another. Depending on their interests, visitors on Panama tours will find plenty of enjoyable pastimes on these Pacific islands.
A number of small islands are located ten miles out to sea directly south of Panama City. With its proximity to the capital and regular ferry service, Isla Taboga, the largest of these islands, is a popular day-trip. The island’s wildlife refuge protects one of the world’s largest colonies of brown pelicans. The French painter, Paul Gauguin, lived here briefly in 1887 following a short but grueling stint on the French work crew that tried and failed to build the Panama Canal.
Thirty miles from the coast southeast of Panama City in the Bay of Panama is the Archipelago de las Perlas, or Pearl Islands, consisting of over 200 islands and atolls, mostly uninhabited and some privately owned. The archipelago may be reached by air or fast boat from the capital. Boats ferry visitors between islands. The harvesting of pearls has taken place here since pre-Columbian times, and today, the pearls are still world-famous for their high quality. Deep sea fishing is a popular activity on Panama tours to the Pearl Islands.
Perlas archipelago's Isla Contadora was once the place where the conquistadors inventoried their booty before shipping it off to the fatherland and derives its name from all the counting that occurred here then. After President Jimmy Carter allowed the exiled Shah of Iran to undergo cancer treatment in the U.S. in 1979, the banished leader was whisked to Isla Contadora to live before moving on to a permanent host-country. (Carter's humanitarian gesture caused the Iran hostage crisis in which American diplomats were held for over a year in the U.S. Embassy in Tehran). Jungle, tropical wildlife and deserted shores have made Isla Contadora and nearby Mogo Mogo and Chapera Islands the perfect setting for the popular television series, “Survivor.”
The biggest island in the Perlas chain is Isla del Rey where a luxury resort, called Cuna de Vida (Cradle of Life), will soon be turning this sleepy island into a thriving center for visitors on Panama tours who favor extended stays. The development will feature fractional-ownership villas and estates plus a privately operated international airport. To the southwest is Isla San Jose, a privately owned island where a small pristine eco-resort is located.

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MORE ARTICLES & INFO.

General Panama Articles
The Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute
The Birds of Panama
The Red Frogs of Panama
The Magnificent Coral of Panama
Surfing in Panama
Surfing the Caribbean Coast of Panama
Surfing the Pacific Coast of Panama
Snorkeling & Diving in Panama
Snorkeling & Diving in Pacific Panama
Snorkeling in the San Blas Islands
Snorkeling & Diving in Bocas del Toro
Panama's Marine Turtles
The Marine Turtles of Panama
The Leatherback Turtles of Panama
The Hawksbill Turtles of Panama
The Olive Ridley Turtles of Panama
Indigenous Peoples of Panama
Indigenous Panama
The Kuna People of Panama
The Kuna Yala
The Embera-Wounaan People of Panama
The Ngobe-Bugle People of Panama
The Naso People of Panama
Panama's Islands
The Caribbean Islands of Western Panama
The Caribbean Islands of Central and Eastern Panama
The Pacific Islands of Eastern Panama
The Pacific Islands of Central and Western Panama
About the Panama Canal
French Dreams of a Panama Canal
The French Building of the Panama Canal
Working and Dying on the French Panama Canal Construction Project
The American Building of the Panama Canal
Working on the American Panama Canal Project
Diplomacy and the Start of America's Control of the Panama Canal
Diplomacy and the End of US Control of the Panama Canal