Some fun facts about
Castaway Cay:
Cay pronounced "key," not "kay."
It is a 1,000 acre Disney owned three-mile long island in the Bahamas.
Formerly known as Gorda Cay, it was used chiefly as a stop for drug smugglers and still has an old runway, presumably used by drug runners. The crumbling airstrip now bears the Disney touch in the form of big white letters spelling out "Castaway Cay."
Castaway Cay is located at 26°04'608N 77°32'283"W
Castaway Cay has a character greeting area.
Castaway Cay has a separate beach for families and kids. At the half-mile family beach, you can rent bikes, volleyball, snorkels for the 15-acre, offshore snorkeling course, walking trails, sail boats, sea kayaks and cabanas for open-air massages.
Construction to make it look like a perfect deserted island took 18 months which included dredging 50,000 truckloads of sand from the depths of the Atlantic Ocean.
Imagineers created a few weathered-looking, tin-roofed buildings that house tiki bars, an open-air dining pavilion, bathrooms, a Disney gift shop, and a post office.
A Bahamian post office on the island will cancel mail with a Castaway Cay postmark.
Weather vanes on the roofs are flashy, cartoonish birds.
The island is largely undeveloped - only 55 acres are being used.
Out of view are a sewage treatment plant, two facilities that turn sea water into fresh water, and housing for about 40 employees who will live on the island.
The dock where Disney ships can berth cost more than $25 million. To create the mooring site for the ships, workers dredged sand from a 1,700-foot channel about 35 feet deep and 200-to-400 feet wide. The dredge material was used to build the landing island. The dock built to look like a natural peninsula off the craggy island.
Castaway Air Bar was built to resemble a tin hangar as a tribute to the nearby runway.
Disney has planted palms and flowers. There are signs identifying the flora, not something a true castaway would find. Included in the planting is the gumbo limbo, which natives call the tourist tree because its red, peeling bark resembles a sunburnt tourist.
Perched on a bluff overlooking the Atlantic, are two private cabanas where passengers can book open-air, 55 minute massages.
A sub from 20,000 Leagues has been partial sunk off the beach.
Crafts are sold at a shop by Bahamians who will commute via boat from the closest island -- some eight miles away. The store wiil be the only place you'll be able to purchase official Castaway Cay goods.
Most of the bikes on Castaway Cay were blown out to sea during Huricanne Floyd.