Your calls always answered within 5 rings.
Always efficient, knowledgeable and friendly, will never go anywhere else!
First class organisation as usual. Many thanks
As usual, excellent! We have been using now for around 10 years and we couldn’t wish for better service!
Been using the company for many years now. Excellent customer service
As usual your assistance was excellent.
Superb service....10/10
DialAFlight is not to blame for the poor service by airlines, the service given by the employees of DialAFlight are excellent. Keep up the good work guys
I was grateful Stevi kept in touch and all went smoothly
Everything worked according to plan. It was good to know that if I had a problem you were at the end of a phone to help,
Thanks Warren. CX the best airline bar none and I have experienced many airlines after 30 years in the industry plus long haul through Warren!
Toby, my liaison, kept us very well informed every step of way and makes us feel he works exclusively for us.
I would like to book another trip to Australia next February. I will phone in the next month to see the best day and date to go...
Just keep doing what you're doing, people are great as is the service! 100%
Thank you Joe and the team
Best ever to deal with. Excellent. We will use this company for ever!
Smooth trip as always
Everything was perfect. Thank you Raphael.
Brilliant, helpful staff. Will definitely use this company again.
Excellent and friendly service from Jenson Palmer.
Everything went according to plan. It is good to have someone very professional on your side. I would have no hesitation in recommending this company and its lovely staff to anyone looking to book a flight or holiday.
Everyone I had contact with dealt with my queries in a respectful and helpful manner.
As usual Jordan everything was great. Thank you
Nothing is ever too much trouble for you lot.
Nicholas was amazing - sorted out everything for me. Really helpful.
Fab advice and communication
Usual excellent service from Lucas Moore. I was concerned about a couple of issues for my return flight - I emailed Lucas and the issues were resolved within one hour. Excellent service considering I was 12,000 miles away.
As always Alan delivered - excellent help and advice.
Raphael answered my questions immediately whilst I was travelling for 10 weeks. We had the best time
Everything was perfect!
Friendly, helpful and efficient as usual
Never have I seen an art exhibition as mobbed as this one. Bumping, jostling and sometimes just hovering straight in front of me, this crowd is relentless.
Yet there's not a human in sight. My fellow art lovers aren't school groups, but actual schools of fish.
The gallery as such is an underwater sculpture park, off the coast of Molinere Bay in the tiny Windward Island of Grenada. I am joined by tubular silver trumpetfish, garish squadrons of parrotfish and sergeant major fish, the latter with the kind of flamboyant technicolour markings that would please budding abstract expressionists.
British artist Jason deCaires Taylor's giant stone sculptures have been immersed here for more than a decade and have taken on the form of an artificial reef, which was his aim, in a vast range of colours and textures on top of eerie works such as Vicissitudes – 26 life-size children holding hands in a circle.
Taylor's creation is in fact the world's first underwater sculpture park and underwater museum, integrating his skills as a sculptor, marine conservationist, underwater photographer and scuba diving instructor.
His works in Grenada have been listed among the Top 25 Wonders of the World by National Geographic. He has also created the Cancun Underwater Museum off the Mexican coast between Cancun and Isla Mujere, as well as Ocean Atlas, a five metre tall, 60-ton sculpture off the Bahamas. He is currently working on a major new underwater museum off Lanzarote.
Drifting along the surface of Molinere Bay with my snorkel I spot The Lost Correspondent, a sculpture of what looks to me like a long-lost Seventies BBC newsreader hunched over the front of a desk, reading a bulletin that will only ever be heard by the fishes.
Thoughts of a submerged Kenneth Kendall or Cliff Michelmore abate when I emerge for air, gazing up into turquoise skies, the odd scudding cloud and a vista of mountainous hillsides smothered with gargantuan fan palms, mango, mahogany and breadfruit trees.
Every Caribbean island dances to its own particular rhythm. Grenada's energetic capital, St George's, has more bump and grind than the neighbouring Grenadines islands, but there's nowhere near the kind of frenetic booty shaking that you'd find in Jamaica or Puerto Rico.
Grenada was ruled by Britain until it gained independence in 1974, and for such a small island, just 134 square miles, it has had an incident-filled history since then - including more than one coup d'etat, invasion by the United States, and almost total destruction by a hurricane in 2004.
The resilience of its people shines through and the island is still working to regain its position as the world's leading exporter of nutmeg.
So much to admire
It takes barely 90 minutes to drive from one side of the island to the other, but there's much to admire. Taking to the thin, tapering ribbon of mountain roads with my guide Edwin (a former presenter of the weekly Grenada lottery show), we spend the day spotting churning waterfalls, volcanic crater lakes, ancient stone chapels and fields of sweet potato, cabbage and nutmeg at vertiginous gradients, tended by locals while indolent goats look on.
St George's is built around a perfectly-shaped horseshoe bay, where the ramshackle covered market is one giant spice rack full of potions, seeds, pastes and powders made from the locally grown nutmeg, mace and saffron. Hence Grenada has gained the Spice Island moniker.
Night comes with a bang, rather than a sigh. With the alacrity of somebody hastily fumbling for a dimmer switch, the sun sinks, the ocean churns and I bid farewell to Lottery Edwin. 'Listen,' he tells me as I head back to my beach-facing room at the Calabash Hotel, the sun turning burnt-orange, the sea flicking its silvery spume ahead.
'We'll never be a mainstream destination. But did you notice when you were under-water? Even most of the sculptures are smiling here. It's what Grenada does best.'
First published in the Mail Online - October 2018
More articles below...
Not quite what you're looking for?
We can easily customise an offer to suit your exact requirements