Castaway Cay

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Castaway Cay
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Location Disney Cruise Line, The Bahamas
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Theme Private island
Operated by The Walt Disney Company
Opened July 30, 1998
Website Castaway Cay homepage
Castaway Cay is located in Bahamas
Castaway Cay
Location of Castaway Cay in the Bahamas

Castaway Cay is a private island in the Bahamas which serves as an exclusive port for the Disney Cruise Line ships Disney Wonder, Disney Magic, Disney Dream, and Disney Fantasy. It is located near Great Abaco Island and was formerly known as Gorda Cay. In 1997, The Walt Disney Company purchased the island for the cay from the Bahamian government, giving the company substantial control over the guest experience on the island. A post office on the island has special US Disney postage specific to Disney Cruise Line, and a "Castaway Cay" postmark.

History and development

Gorda Cay was once used as a stop for drug runners. The Castaway Cay Airport and helipad on the island are no longer in regular use, but are kept maintained for emergencies. The runway is used primarily as a bike and tram path to Serenity Bay.[1] Gorda Cay had also been used for filming; the beach where Tom Hanks first encounters Daryl Hannah in Splash is on the island.

Disney is said to have spent US$25 million to develop and outfit the island. Construction took 18 months and included dredging 50,000 truckloads of sand from the depths of the Atlantic Ocean. The pier and its approaches were constructed to allow the Disney ships to dock alongside, thus removing the need for tenders to get the passengers ashore. To create the mooring site for the ships, workers dredged sand and used explosives to blast coral, and form a 1,700-foot (520 m) channel about 35 feet (11 m) deep and ranging from 200 to 400 feet (120 m) wide. The island is still largely undeveloped: only 55 of the 1,000 acres (4.0 km2) are being used.[2] Castaway Cay now has 90-140 permanent residents who keep the island running daily; the numbers fluctuate between the busy season and off season.

Facilities

Disney Magic docked next to the Castaway Cay Family Beach

The island is developed in the theme of a castaway community, with buildings made to look as if they had been improvised after a shipwreck. The facilities are maintained like any other Disney theme park, and the shops accept guests' stateroom keys for payment. The food service is operated as an extension of the cruise package. A variety of activities are available to guests including bicycle hire, personal watercraft rental, massages overlooking the ocean, snorkeling, para-sailing, volleyball and basketball. There are monkey bars and a rope for children to climb across set about 30 metres (98 ft) in the ocean on one beach and a slide about 25 metres (82 ft) into the ocean on another beach. There are three beaches for guests: one for families, one for Cabana guests, and another exclusively for adults, called Serenity Bay.

Two submarine-ride vehicles from the now-closed 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea: Submarine Voyage ride at Walt Disney World lie underwater in the snorkeling area. The Flying Dutchman pirate ship, from the Pirates of the Caribbean film series, was formerly on display in the lagoon, but as of November 2010, it had been removed and taken to another location on the island where it was dismantled.

Castaway Cay has facilities for the exclusive use of the ships' crews, including beaches and recreational areas. A staff of 145 custodians, boat captains, drivers, landscapers, and maintenance personnel live on the island, and are supplemented by crew from the ship when one is in port. Food and other supplies are brought in by the ships themselves. Sea water is desalinated for drinking with reverse osmosis water processors.

Image gallery

References

  • Ward, Douglas ed.. Berlitz ocean cruising & cruise ships. London : Berlitz, 2003.
  1. http://www.disneydispatch.com/content/columns/the-626/2011/04-the-colorful-story-of-castaway-cay/ The history of Castaway Cay
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