• Akamas National Park

    The main road north from Paphos takes you to Chrysochou Bay, which runs from the tip of the Akamas Peninsular in the west to Pomos Point in the east. The main villages of significance are Polis and the fishing harbour of Latchi. The more adventurous can find many fine undiscovered beaches, further to the east but most tourists head for the beach resorts on the coast near Latchi and Polis. Romantics, however, usually head further west till the road reaches a parking lot by the Baths of Aphrodite, in the heart of the Akamas National Park.

    The Akamas National Park lies on the west coast of Cyprus, a truly pictorial part of the island. It has an area coverage of 230 square kilometres containing valleys, gorges and wide sandy bays. 

  • Ayia Napa Monastery

    The charming Medieval Monastery of Agia Napa stands in the middle of the village and was built in the form of a Medieval Castle around 1500 AD.

    The monastery is partially built underground and cut into the rock, surrounded by a high wall. It is dedicated to ‘Our Lady of the Forests’, with the name coming from the Ancient Greek word for wooded valley (‘Napa’) as a result of the area’s past topography.

  • Cape Greco Park

    Cape Greco is a National Forest Park In Cyprus which under the administration of the Forestry Department of the Cyprus Ministry of the Interior.. It is a relatively unspoilt area with great natural beauty which changes and offers something different each season. It is an oasis of tranquility nestled midway between the busy Hotel resorts of Ayia Napa and Protaras.

  • Green Bay

    Green Bay is the perfect beach and place for beginner divers in Cyprus. The Green bay beach is an ideal dive place for beginners and also for certified divers, wishing a refreshing dive. It is located in Protaras area, on the east coast of Cyprus, In Green Bay you can see many new divers participating in the preliminary courses for scuba diving. Maximum depth there is 12 metres, with hundreds of colourful fish to see and perfect spot for night dives with some “night marine-life species”.

  • The Byzantine Museum

    The Byzantine Museum in Lefkosia (Nicosia) within the walls contains the richest and most representative collection of Byzantine art on the island. About 230 icons dating from the 9th to the 19th centuries, as well as other typical examples of the Byzantine art of Cyprus, such as sacred vessels, vestments and books, are on display. The collection includes many icons dating from the 9th century when iconography was at its height.

    The core of the collection consists of 48 icons, which come from churches all over Cyprus and from the "Synodikon" of the church of Panagia Phaneromeni, which initially was intended to house the Cyprus Byzantine Museum.