Malindi, North Coast of Kenya
Diamonds Malindi Beach hotel is an all-inclusive family-oriented resort just 5 mins from Malindi Town on the north Kenya coast. Standing in extensive tropical grounds, it offers 23 rooms, all of which are in double-storey Arab-style villas. The all-inclusive package includes all meals, drinks (including alcoholic), entertainment and extensive water sports. The resort enjoys access to the wider facilities of the neighbouring Tropical Beach Hotel, which is a part of the same Plan Hotel complex.
General facilities:
• 2 swimming pools
• 2 restaurants
• 3 bars
• Boutique
• Hairdressing and massage
• Discotheque
• Live music and entertainment
• Satellite TV with sports channel at the lounge
• Fax services & Internet
The Swahili coast, a glorious ribbon of silver and sapphire, crashing surf and bright coral, is steeped in a turbulent history pre-dating Da Gama. The Swahili culture, a fabulous fusion of Arab, African, and Portuguese has created a pace of life, a style of cuisine and a mosaic of architecture, heritage, myth and magic that is found nowhere else in the world.
Location and seasons
The resort is situated in on the Silversands Beach in Malindi, Kenya. It is approximately 140km north of Mombasa and 15 minutes from Malindi Airport. The nearest town is Malindi and is roughly 3km or 5 minutes by road. Kenya's north coast, one of her most popular beach holiday destinations, offers clear blue sea, marine parks, excellent water sports, coral reefs, monsoon winds, numerous hotels and beach resorts, family vacations, sun n sand, cultural and beach travel and more. Close to Mombasa, it is also within easy reach of Malindi, Lamu, Diani and many other popular Kenya safari resort hotels.
Beach vacation facts
The Kenyan coast is roughly divided into ‘North and ‘South' of the island city of Mombasa.To reach the south coast, it is necessary to cross from the island of Mombasa via the Likoni Ferry (10 minutes) to the start of the south coast beaches. The link to the north coast is via the Nyali Bridge, which leads from the island (via the suburb of Nyali) to the north coast. The north coast features features: Nyali Beach, Kenyatta and Bamburi Beaches, Shanzu beach, Kilifi, Watamu and Malindi
Beach facts: Hottest time is between November and March, rainy season is May and June (hotel closed 01 May to 15 June); sea weed on beach and strong winds May /August. September to November is cool and pleasant.
The Background
Kenya's stunning coastline (485 km from Nairobi) runs 700 km between the Tanzanian and Somali borders and is renowned for its silken white sandy beaches, coconut palms, sheltered lagoons, pellucid blue waters, remote islands, uncharted mangrove swamps and mysterious Arab and Swahili ruins, many of which date back to the 8th Century AD. An idyllic climate cooled by the monsoon, the Swahili coast offers a daily average of 8 hours of sunshine, and the hot steamy climate is tempered by the monsoon winds: the south-easterly Kusi, which blows from April to October; and the north-easterly Kaskazi which blows from November to March.
Accommodation
The hotel has 23 rooms, all of which are presented in Swahili or colonial style and are large and airy with, terraces, wooden floors and four-poster beds.
All the air-conditioned rooms have en-suite bathrooms with hand basins, showers, bidets and a WC. They also have terraces safes and laundry service. The hotel offers an all-inclusive package (meals and beverages - alcoholic drinks/cocktails/spirits), which also includes all entertainment and sporting activity.
Dining and bars
Frangipane Restaurant
Mediterranean inspired cooking style
A la Carte restaurant with Salads, BBQ and Desserts Buffet
Breakfast service from 7:30am to 10:00am
Lunch service from 1:00 pm to 2:30pm
Dinner service from 7:30pm to 9:30pm
Bouganville Bar
Large selection of cocktails, imported liquors
Opening Hours from 12:00 noon to 2:30om and from 6:00pm to midnight
Beach Bar
Refreshing drinks, fruit juices, coffee & tea, snacks & pastries
Daily morning fruit on the beach
Opening Hours from 10:00am to 12:00 noon and from 2:30pm to 6:00pm
Child-friendly
This is a family hotel and offers a wide range of children's facilities including animation programmes, dedicated areas and meals, baby-sitting and more.
What to see and do
Activities:
• Archery
• Table tennis
• Water polo
• Darts
• Indoor games
• Snorkelling
• Scuba diving
• Dolphin watching
• Dhow cruises
• Beach walks
• Windsurfing, canoe and sailing lessons
• International Animation Team: morning stretching, watergym, aerobics and dance classes
• Amphitheatre: daily activities, programmes, shows (seasonal)
• Safaris to Masai Mara, Tsavo, Amboseli and Nakuru Parks
• Marine Park snorkelling excursion
• African Village and Gede Ruins tour
• Lamu Island weekend tour
• International PADI diving centre (seasonal)
• Boat excursions
• Deep sea fishing
• Acrobatic shows
• Beach Volleyball
• Beach soccer
• Table-tennis
Wonderful Watamu
The popular coastal resort of Watamu (20 minutes/24 km from Malindi) centers around the small town of Watamu, home to an exotic mix of local residents, visiting Maasai warriors, Italians, Germans and the remains of the old British settlers. The 8km white sandy beach, fringed by palm trees, and lapped by the sapphire-clear waters of the Indian Ocean, has been voted one of the top ten beaches in the world.
Here the coast is broken into three separate coves, each divided by a rocky headland. Between each headland is a broad white sandy beach - ideal for swimming, snorkelling and water-sports. To the north, lies Mida Creek, an unspoilt area of mangrove forests, ideal for bird watching.
Malindi and Watamu Marine National Parks and Reserves
Africa's first marine park and one of the world's last great natural marine reserves, Malindi Marine and its sister water world, Watamu Marine offer protection to one of the world's most famous coral reefs. Glowing with coral gardens and teeming with vividly fantastic fish, the parks provide a haven for divers and a window on to the wonders of the deep for snorkelers, swimmers and rock pool dabblers alike.
A unique complex of marine and tidal habitats, the Malindi and Watamu marine parks cover an area 30 km long and 5 km wide, and stretch from just south of Malindi town southwards to beyond the entrance to Mida Creek. The widely varied habitats include intertidal rock, sand and mud; fringing reefs and coral gardens; beds of sea-grass; coral cliffs, platforms and islets; sandy beaches and mangrove forests.
Splendid Snorkelling and Glass-bottom Boating
The twin marine parks offer one of Kenya's finest snorkelling venues. Just five minutes boat ride from the shore, the extensive coral gardens can be accessed in glass-bottomed boats operated by members of the local community. Visitor tip: the best time to snorkel is two hours either side of low tide, when the greatest amount of marine life is revealed.
World Renowned Dive Venues
Enjoying perennial warm shallow waters, exceptional clarity, pristine coral and an extraordinary breadth of marine life, the outer edges of North Reef provide five of the most spectacular diving venues in the world.
Turtles, Dolphins and more...
The area is famous for its population of turtles (green, hawksbill, loggerhead, Ridley and leatherback), which can often be found feeding in the lush Thalasia beds of the reef. There is also a turtle-breeding beach immediately adjacent to the KWS Marine HQ where visitors can see young turtles tentatively emerging into the evening light and streaming down to the ocean. Dolphins are also regular visitors to the area (spinner, humpback and bottle-nosed).
The Malindi Marine Information Centre, the first of its kind in East Africa, is open 6am to 7pm daily.
Watamu Turtle Watch Programme; is a community based marine conservation organization, which works for the protection of endangered sea turtles and their marine environment. Allied to the Kenya Wildlife Service, the Kenya Sea Turtle Conservation Committee and the Fisheries Department, the programme offers education on turtle-friendly fishing methods, plus offering rewards for the preservation of eggs and nests.
Gedi ruins, the ‘precious' place
Founded in the late 13th or early 14th century, the ruined Swahili town of Gedi is located about 4km north of Watamu. Meaning ‘precious' in the language of the local Galla people, it is thought to have flourished in the mid-15th century. Obviously a prosperous town at that time, it hosted sultan's palaces, sunken gardens, a fabulous selection of grand merchant's houses, a large Friday mosque and some exquisite examples of Islamic pillar tombs. Then, in the 17th century, it was abandoned, some think quite suddenly. Theories abound as to why this happened, one being that the residents fled in the face of an imminent invasion by the Galla - who were known to be cannibals.
Today, the picturesque ruins are spread over several acres, dotted with ancient baobab trees and surrounded in dense coastal forest in which monkeys swing. Believed to be haunted by a strange ‘beast' which stalks visitors as dusk falls, excavations in the ruins during the 1940-50s revealed an extensive array of domestic, religious and commercial structures including a palace with sunken courts, fortified walls and a deep well. Finds included glass and shell beads, gold and silver jewellery, coins, porcelain and local pottery. Within the inner and outer wall is a nature tail with some 30 indigenous trees. Next door to the Gedi Museum (which houses the many finds) is Kepepeo Butterfly, a community project linked to the Arabuko Sokoke Forest Reserve, which hosts a Butterfly Pavillion, 260 species of butterfly, an education centre on the life of butterflies and illustrations of how the local community has been trained to breed pupae, which they sell to butterfly projects all over the world.
Diamonds Malindi Beach Hotel | Kenya Coast Hotels & Resorts
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