The Western Region of Ghana us an integrated
complex of beautiful safe beaches and African touch beach resorts. It has the
largest collection of European trading forts (later used in the slave trade); the
highest tropical jungles; numerous mines, picturesque villages and friendly people;
and old architectural styles and vivacious festivals.
The region's water villages on stilts are amazing to experience. A
visitor can charter a local canoe out to the village and actually stay over night in
a guest house on the water.
The region is
located in the south-western part of Ghana and shares boundaries with the Central,
Ashanti, and Brong-Ahafo regions. To the West it shares a border with the republic
of Cote D'Ivoire. The region has 192 Km of tropical beaches on the Atlantic Ocean
and a tropical climate characterized by moderate temperatures all year round.
The native people of the Western Region
are mostly Akans, speaking various dialects including: Ahanta, Nzema, Sefwi, Wassa,
Brosa, and Pepesa. Principal religions are Christianity, African Aminism, and Islam.
Principal economic activities include
agriculture (cash crops and food crops), fishing (commercial and subsistence), and
mining and manufacturing. The main exportable produce are cocoa, timber, copra,
coffee, rubber/latex, gold, manganese, and bauxite.
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