Ghana Travel Guide - Expert advice and travel information featuring Accra hotels and restaurants, national parks and wildlife tours, music and festivals, birdwatching, chocolate, highland hiking, Busua beaches, elephant and monkey tracking. Also covering Gold Coast and Cape Coast history, Ashanti region, Wli Falls, Kejetia market, mud mosques.
This 8th edition of Bradt's Ghana remains the only dedicated guidebook on the market. Ghana was the first country in sub-Saharan Africa to gain independence and is the world's second-largest producer of chocolate. Covering everything from Ghana's 550km of Atlantic coastline to its remote and sparsely populated northern border with Burkina Faso, this new edition has been thoroughly updated and is an ideal companion no matter what your interests are. Written by Philip Briggs, arguably the world's most experienced guidebook writer, it covers everything from inexpensive opportunities to see wildlife to cultural and historical aspects such as the slave trading posts. Background, practical and health information are complemented by a dedicated, illustrated chapter on wildlife, 60 maps and 18 chapters split across five regional sections, from Accra and surrounds to the coast, through eastern and central Ghana, right up to the north. The popular Cape Coast and Ashanti regions are both covered, as is the increasingly high profile Chale Wote Street Art festival. Friendly, safe and inexpensive, Ghana is an ideal destination for first-time visitors to Africa. It is rich in little-visited national parks, forest reserves, cultural sites and scenic waterfalls and blessed with bleached white beaches and the lush rainforest of the Atlantic coastline. Bradt's Ghana is accompanied by a dedicated, updated website run by the author himself and caters for everyone from birdwatchers to bar-hoppers. Whether you want to cruise the world's largest man-made reservoir, Lake Volta, on a pokey old steamer, hike with elephants in Mole National Park, or party all night in Accra's glittering Osu district, Bradt's Ghana is an indispensable companion.
'A great travelling companion.' Director magazine.
Recommended reading The Sunday Telegraph