Orango Parque Hotel Spot
Orango Parque Hotel2018-10-31T20:12:04+01:00Orango Parque hotel in Guinea Bissau. A responsible tourism project in the Bijago archipelago.
Orango Parque hotel in Guinea Bissau. A responsible tourism project in the Bijago archipelago.
¡Estaremos el 28, 29 y 30 de Septiembre de 2018 en Ruesga (Cervera de Pisuerga, Palencia) en la feria de [...]
Te proponemos una semana (del 1 al 8 de diciembre) de vacaciones diferente, sorprendente, responsable y solidaria. Diferente porque aún no [...]
¡Come with us to Orango National Park! White sandy beach, routes, rest and relaxation. You can taste the delights of [...]
Do you have not heard yet about it? Come with us to the Orango National Park! Excursion through the forest [...]
If you want this new year to be the one that takes you to Guinea Bissau and the Archipelago of [...]
The CBD-Hábitat Foundation has made available to anyone who wants to learn more about and/or get to know Guinea Bissau [...]
Have you realised that it is not long before you can enjoy carnival again? Now is the time to think [...]
A unique exhibition at the Orango Parque Hotel in the Bijagó archipelago in Guinea Bissau brings us closer to this [...]
Did you know that direct flights Lisbon – Bissau are back? And this also means it´s easier than ever to visit the Bijagós Archipielago. Right now, two companies provide Lisbon – Bissau itineraries, with flights practically every day of the week.
A picture is worth a thousand words... It´s one of those phrases that, for having heard it millions of times, doesn´t lose its meaning, at least sometimes. And we think this is one of those times, because although we´ve been doing our best for years to tell you about the Bijagós Archipielago, in Guinea Bissau.
Between myth and reality are tales of the existence of a matriarchal society among the Bijagós. The German anthropologist Hugo Adolf Bernatzik left us an amazing story in his work, “En el Reino de los Bijagós” (In the kingdom of Bijagós), where we can read: “In the land of the Bijagós, the expression, ‘the weak sex’ does not ring true at all to the female inhabitants of Orango.”