Bayahíbe is a town in the Dominican Republic, located about 10 miles (16 km) east of La Romana on the shore of the Caribbean Sea with 5,618 inhabitants (2022).
[1] Founded as a fishing village in 1874 by Juan Brito and his family, who came from Puerto Rico, the town is now a tourist destination.
"Baya" is the name given to a bivalve mollusk, like clams that are glued to the rocks or roots of mangrove trees.
[4] Chicho's cave, an exceptionally impressive cavern, may be accessed at Bayahibe by following the Padre Nuestro trail.
[5] The park's location, with its deep and immaculate blue oceans, attracts a significant influx of tourists annually.
Visitors can currently explore caves and springs embellished with petroglyphs and Tainos art along a 2-kilometer walk that meanders through the forest.
As it becomes threatened, Act 146-11 made the Bayahibe Rose the Dominican Republic's national flower and protected it.