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Mauritius

Going Out

Food and Drink

Standards of cuisine, whether French, Creole, Indian, Chinese or English, are generally very high, but fruit, meat, vegetables and even fresh seafood are often imported.

Things to know:
Waiter service is normal in restaurants and bars.

National specialities:
• Venison (in season).
Camarons (freshwater prawns) in hot sauces.
• Octopus.
Dholl purri (a wheat pancake stuffed with ground peas and served with curry).
Gateaux piments (chilli cakes).

National drinks:
• Rum.
• Beer.
Alouda (almond-flavoured ice milk drink). 
• Fresh coconut milk.

Legal drinking age: 18.

Tipping: 10% is usual in most hotels and restaurants.

Nightlife

Grand Baie is the centre of the island’s nightlife, with bars with live music, restaurants and nightclubs. Port Louis has mainly restaurants and bars. Rivière Noire is a Creole fishermen’s district where sega dancing is especially lively on Saturday nights. Sega troupes give performances at most hotels. Gamblers are lavishly catered for; casinos are among the island’s attractions.

Shopping

This ranges from sophisticated shopping for designer clothing, jewellery and handicrafts in Port Louis’ Caudan Waterfront to rooting around for T-shirts and souvenirs upstairs in the capital’s bustling Central Market, while locals bargain hard over tea and other essentials while catching up on the gossip. Island crafts, found at the craft market at The Caudan include jewellery, Chinese and Indian jade, silks, basketry, glass and model ships. Cashmere is a particularly good buy.

Duty-free shopping is popular here with around a 40% saving on textiles, jewellery, perfume and electrical goods. Mauritius is to be turned into a tax-free shopping haven by 2010, with 80% tax taken off around 2,000 goods. Tourist shopping centres are located around the island, with a good selection of designer shops at Grand Baie, but the locals shop at Curepipe, Quatre-Bornes and Rose-Hill.

Shopping hours: Mon-Sat 0930-1800. Some shops are open until 1200 on Sundays and public holidays. Markets usually close around 1600. Shops in Rose-Hill, Curepipe and Quatre-Bornes close on Thursday afternoons.

The information presented here is solely based on data provided by third parties. Please note that BCD Travel shall not assume any liability or guarantee of correctness, completeness or actuality of the presented information of the content provided by third parties.
Interesting facts about Mauritius
: Indian Ocean, off southeast coast of Africa; due east of Madagascar.
Area: 2,040 sq km (788 sq miles).
Population: 1.25 million (Mauritius Government 2006).
Population Density: 613 per sq km.
Capital: Port Louis. Population: 150,000 (2006 estimate).
Electricity: 220 volts AC, 50Hz. UK-type three-pin plugs are commonly used in hotels.
Head of Government: Prime Minister Navin Ramgoolam since 2005.
Head of State: President Sir Anerood Jugnauth since 2003.
Location: Indian Ocean, off southeast coast of Africa; due east of Madagascar.

Biztrails - Extra

Entry/Visa/Health

Check your specific situation. For example you are a citizen of Spain, live in Germany and want to enter Canada. Or you are planning a trip with multiple stopovers in diifferent countries. Which entry and health regulations apply to you? You can find out the varying regulations here: here (in Englisch).