Spanish
Beaches
By Eddy De Vos
Beaches are the trademark by excellence for Spain and the Spanish
beaches are many tourists only reason to visit Spain.
Who can blame them? The Spanish beaches are amongst the most wonderful
in the entire world and Spain has an enormous coastline, more
than 3900 km long.
It would take us to far to give a description of all the beaches
along this vast coastline so we will just talk about three of
the well known coasts: the Costa Brava, the Costa Blanca and the
Costa De Sol.
Costa Brava, between the Mediterranenan and the Pyrenees, is the
popularly accepted name of the littoral of the province of Girona.
Its nature, climate and history create a setting of odd, haunting
beauty that is hard to grasp, but that never fails to seduce,
with its lush vegetation propped against the blue and green immensity
of the sea.
Right up to the edge of the sea, hanging on occasions over abrupt
cliffs, on others in the actual proximity of the beaches , the
vegetation paints the fine golden sand green, blending with the
ochre of the earth, inland, and together with the dominant landscape.
The 16ºC of average annual temperature, with moderate rainfall,
and the 2,500 hours of sunshine that illuminate the historic-artistic
vestiges, recalling the existence of a notable past, are only
the visible aspects of a reality that has a hidden pulse waiting
to be discovered.
Its 214 kilometres of coastline stretch between the beaches of
Blanes in the south, surrounded by El Maresme and El Montseny,
and Portbou in the north, on the French border.
Beaches, coves, cliffs and woods sit among renowned places like
S’Agaró, Tossa de Mar, Begur, Cadaques and Portlligat.
The modern tourist infrastructure of the area has turned Costa
Brava into one of Spain's most popular tourist destinations.
Costa Blanca takes up the stretch of Mediterranean beach that
corresponds to the province of Alicante, a great example of what
is known as Mediterranean landscape.
The traveller can choose any part of this beach line, from the
liveliest, most cosmopolitan stretch to areas that still maintain
a rural feel. Wherever you decide to go, try to visit the neighbouring
regions where you can discover the beautiful Mediterranean landscape.
The horizons of the Costa Blanca beach feature many different
types of attractions ranging from the valleys, where the memory
of its Moorish past is kept alive in its terraced vegetable gardens,
to the palm trees.
The climate is also variable. The temperature is generally mild
– the annual average being slightly higher than 17ºC
– with little rainfall, and in the northern mountains in
the area, the rainfall is logically higher than that registered
in the lowland surrounding Elche and Orihuela.
The combination of almond tree fields, vineyards, orchards and
magnificent palm trees creates a type of vegetation that is unique
in Europe.
Costa del Sol takes up about 300 kilometres of the Mediterranean
littoral that corresponds to the province of Malaga.
Protected from the northern winds by a mountain chain that in
some parts comes down to meet the sea, this sheltered coast is
shaped by a succession of extensive beaches, coves almost hidden
between cliffs, marinas and anchorage for fishing.
The mild climate, infrequency of rainfall and the sea breeze make
for semitropical vegetation in which palm and cypress trees, bougainvillaea,
oleander and hibiscus are common.
The proximity of such different landscapes -the mountain, the
valleys blanketed in vegetable gardens and the sea- is, without
a doubt, one of the greatest attractions of this beach line which
combine all the appeal of the Mediterranean landscape and culture.
Residential areas, marinas, golf clubs, entertainment centres,
nightclubs and many more tourist attractions have been built around
and now coexist within the peaceful ambience of country villages,
which have astonishingly conserved their traditional town centres.
Summer beach holidays and all the appeal that this can offer along
this stretch of the Mediterranean is not, however, the only attractions
offered by the Costa del Sol: you will have the chance to uncover
the most genuine, authentic features of the Andalusian culture
very close by.
In addition to the folkloric displays in the tourist centres,
you can also experience the lively and popular celebrations. The
fiestas, Easter parades, song contests and the bull runs without
a doubt claim first place on the list of recommendations for travellers
who want to see beyond what first meets the eye.
Tasting country wines in the intimate cellars of yore and having
some traditional fried fish (cooked to perfection by the local
folk) are some of the temptations that will seduce all visitors,
specially those that prefer the wonders of local gastronomy over
the ever-present international fare.
info courtesy
of http://www.spain.info/
Eddy De Vos
is the owner of http://www.spain-holidays-advisor.com/, a website
about travel and Spain. It contains usefull tips for your next
trip, be it to Spain or anywhere else in the world. Of course
if you are planning a trip to Spain there is no better place to
start than Spain Holidays
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