L'aéroport international Aimé Césaire est situé dans la ville du Lamentin, à 15 kilomètres de Fort-de-France. Pour vous rendre en Martinique, destination Sud alliant culture et nature, profitez des possibilités qui s'offrent à vous cet hiver.
Air Canada vous propose de vous envoler vers la Martinique à l'année longue, tous les dimanches. Grâce à son vol direct, cette compagnie aérienne vous permet de partir dans les Caraïbes passer des vacances d'exception, à seulement 5h00 de Montréal.
Entre le 24 décembre 2011 et le 7 avril 2012, une autre possibilité s'offre à vous pour vous rendre en Martinique : le vol CanJet décollant tous les samedis. Les tours opérateurs Club Med et Tours Mont-Royal affrètent un avion CanJet pour faire la liaison Montréal - Fort-de-France et offrir des forfaits "vol + hébergement".
Enfin, American Airlines opère un vol direct San Juan - Fort-de-France si vous désirez partir des États-Unis.
Vous pouvez réserver votre voyage en ligne ou auprès de votre agent de voyage quelque soit votre choix de compagnie.
The classic tour of Martinique travels north along the Caribbean coast to St-Pierre, the "Paris of the West Indies" until 1902 when Mont Pelée Volcano erupted and turned the city into a New World Pompeii.
A museum on the spot vividly portrays the tragedy. A convenient way to reach this historic site is on a little train, the Cyparis Express.
One-hour tours on weekdays and half-hour tours during weekends cost about 6€ for adults, 3€ for children.
The fee includes train fare and the tour.
In l990, St. Pierre was designated a Ville d'Art et d'Histoire.
The drive from Fort-de-France takes less than an hour, but several sightseeing stops along the way are highly recommended, including the fishing villages of Case-Pilote and Bellefontaine, as well as Carbet, where Columbus landed in 1502 and where Gauguin lived and painted in 1887. The Gauguin Museum is well worth a visit.
Inland is Morne Rouge, a pretty town with a cool climate and the site of MacIntosh Plantation, named for the renowned cultivator of Martinique's best-known flower, the anthurium. Nearby is La Trace, a dazzling route through the rain forest. This mountainous region in the northern half of the island is lush with banana and pineapple plantations, avocado groves, cane fields, and lovely old island inns such as Leyritz and Habitation Lagrange.
Other noteworthy communities in the north include Le Prêcheur, the last village along the northern Caribbean coast, known for hot springs of volcanic origin and the Tomb of the Carib Indians; Ajoupa-Bouillon, an enchanting flower-lined town with a nature trail called Les Ombrages and nearby the Gorges de la Falaise, mini canyons along the Falaise River that lead to a waterfall; Grand Rivière, a picturesque fishing village constantly braving the fierce Atlantic Ocean; Trinité and the Caravelle Peninsula, where at the very tip of land stand ruins of the Château Dubuc, a spot that evokes memories of the intriguing people who have lived here - such as Louis-François Dubuc, the man instrumental in preventing the spread of the French Revolution to Martinique, and Aimée Dubuc de Rivery who, like Joséphine, was destined for history. Returning home to Martinique after her schooling in Nantes, she was captured by pirates, sold into slavery, then given as a present to the Sultan of Constantinople. Aimée became Sultana Validé, mother of Sultan Mahmoud II. Close
Un vol direct hebdomadaire Montréal/Fort-de-France avec Air Canada. Cette destination Sud combinant nature et culture est à seulement 4h50 de chez vous en vol direct.
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Pour plus d’informations, consultez la rubrique Transports