Spanish Port From Which Columbus Sailed In 1492 – Crossword Clue Answers
The crossword clue Spanish port from which Columbus sailed in 1492 with 5 letters was last seen on the January 01, 2015. We think the likely answer to this clue is PALOS. Below are all possible answers to this clue ordered by its rank. You can easily improve your search by specifying the number of letters in the answer.
Rank
Word
Clue
94%
PALOS
Spanish port from which Columbus sailed in 1492
4%
CADIZ
Port from which Columbus sailed
2%
AMOR
Love, in Spanish
2%
NADA
Nothing, in Spanish
2%
NINOS
Boys, in Spanish
2%
GUAPO
Handsome, in Spanish
2%
TIA
Aunt, in Spanish
2%
SHIP
‘That ___ has sailed’
2%
ESPOSA
Wife, in Spanish
2%
PRIMO
Cousin, in Spanish
2%
ESO
That, in Spanish
2%
ROJO
Red, in Spanish
2%
DOS
Two, in Spanish
2%
OHIO
Columbus setting
2%
CARTAGENA
Spanish port on the Mediterranean
2%
OSU
Coll. in Columbus
2%
NINA
It sailed in 1492
2%
PINTA
Columbus concern in 1492
2%
OCEANBLUE
What Columbus sailed
2%
PALOSSPAIN
Whence Columbus sailed: Aug. 3, 1492
Refine the search results by specifying the number of letters. If certain letters are known already, you can provide them in the form of a pattern: “CA????”.
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We found 1 solutions for Spanish Port From Which Columbus Sailed In 1492. The top solutions is determined by popularity, ratings and frequency of searches. The most likely answer for the clue is PALOS.
With crossword-solver.io you will find 1 solutions. We use historic puzzles to find the best matches for your question. We add many new clues on a daily basis.
With our crossword solver search engine you have access to over 7 million clues. You can narrow down the possible answers by specifying the number of letters it contains. We found more than 1 answers for Spanish Port From Which Columbus Sailed In 1492.
1492 S E O’Donnell Ln, Port Saint Lucie, FL 34983 – MLS RX-10795387
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1492 SE Odonnell Lane, Port Saint Lucie, FL 34983
$525,000
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Sold
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Single Family
4 Beds
2 Full Baths
2,480 Sq. Ft.
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1492 SE Odonnell Lane, Port Saint Lucie, FL 34983View this property at 1492 SE Odonnell Lane, Port Saint Lucie, FL 34983
1492 SE Odonnell LanePort Saint LucieFL34983
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Map & Location
Street View
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Property Description
Full Property Details
Full Property Details for 1492 S E O’Donnell Ln
General
Sold For: $525,000
Taxes: $5,245
Status: Closed
Type: Single Family
MLS ID: RX-10795387
Added: 140 day(s) ago
Interior
Interior Features: Bar, Ctdrl/Vault Ceilings, Entry Lvl Lvng Area, French Door, Pantry, Pull Down Stairs, Roman Tub, Sky Light(s), Split Bedroom, Walk-In Closet
Appliances: Auto Garage Open, Dishwasher, Disposal, Dryer, Intercom, Microwave, Electric Range, Refrigerator, Washer, Water Heater – Elec
Other Room 4: Attic, Cabana Bath, Den/Office, Family, Laundry-Inside, Maid/In-Law, Pool Bath, Storage
Porch: 23 x 24
Additional Information
Pool Description: Gunite, Heated, In-Ground, Salt Chlorination, Screened, Solar Heat, Spa
Exterior
Exterior Features: Auto Sprinkler, Covered Patio, Custom Lighting, Fence, Fruit Tree(s), Screened Patio, Well Sprinkler
Parking
Garage Spaces: 2
Parking: 2+ Spaces, Driveway, Garage – Attached, RV/Boat, Street
Garage Description: 2 Spaces
Location
Area: 7170
County: St. Lucie
Development Name: Floresta Gardens
Subdivision: Port St Lucie Section 3
Driving Directions: Crosstown to Manth, Right on Walter’s Terrace and Left onto Odonnell
Heating & Cooling
Cooling Type: Central
Heating Type: Central
Utilities
Utility Description: Cable, Electric, Public Water, Septic
Structural Information
Construction: Brick, Frame
Roof: Composition Shingles
Windows/Doors: Blinds
Stories/Levels: 1.00
Square Feet: 2,480
Year Built: 1994
Lot Features
Property View: Pool
Zoning: RS-2PS
Lot Description: 1/4 to 1/2 Acre, Corner Lot, Paved Road, Public Road, West of US-1
Water Features
Water Front Type: None
Water Front Desc. : None
Water Front View: Pool
Financial Considerations
Tax Amount: $5,245.12
Terms: VA
Listed by Baron Real Estate Sold by Southern Key Realty
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Schools
Schools serving 1492 S E O’Donnell Ln
School District:St. Lucie Schools
Rating
Name
Grades
Distance
6
PK-5
0.5 mi
5
PK-8
2.2 mi
6
PK-5
2.8 mi
4
6-8
2. 8 mi
4
6-8
4.6 mi
5
9-12
3 mi
4
PK-5
3.2 mi
3
PK-5
4.2 mi
5
PK-5
4.3 mi
Disclaimer: School ratings provided by
GreatSchools. Ratings are on a scale of 1-10.
Learn more about GreatSchools ratings.
School attendance boundaries provided by Pitney Bowes and are for reference only. Contact the school directly to verify enrollment eligibility.
Price & Sales History for 1492 S E O’Donnell Ln
6/28/2022
Sold
$525,000
1.16%
MLS
5/25/2022
Price Reduced
$519,000
-5.64%
MLS
5/18/2022
Price Reduced
$550,000
-0.18%
MLS
4/26/2022
Listed
$551,000
—
MLS
Disclaimer: Historical sales information is derived from public records provided by the county offices. Information is not guaranteed and should be independently verified.
1492 SE Odonnell Lane, Port Saint Lucie, FL 34983 (MLS# RX-10795387) is a
Single Family property that was sold at $525,000 on June 28, 2022.
Want to learn more about 1492 SE Odonnell Lane?
Do you have questions about finding other
Single Family
real estate for sale
in Port Saint Lucie?
You can browse all Port Saint Lucie real estate or
contact a Coldwell Banker agent to request more information.
This property is no longer available to rent or to buy. This description is from July 07, 2022
Owner Occupied, Come see now! BEAUTIFUL SALT WATER POOL HOME. 4/2/2 that has been recently remodeled and updated with top of the line solar pool heater, new salt cell & pump. Situated on a park like landscaped oversized corner lot! Features Double Master Bedrooms with in-law suite with private access to pool & spa. Fully tiled, stainless appliances. Large updated kitchen that overlooks the pool and spa with Pass through bar to the lanai. Dual sinks in the guest cabana bathroom. Must see enormous family living area! FENCED YARD. Welcome to paradise yet centrally located to schools, parks, and great peaceful Florida living in your new entertaining Dream Home! Bring your RV & Boats.. City sewer hookup available. Home has city water already.
Home Highlights
Parking
2 Car Garage
Outdoor
Patio, Pool
Price/Sqft
No Info
Listed
138 days ago
Home Details for 1492 SE Odonnell Ln
Interior Features
Interior Details
Number of Rooms: 3Types of Rooms: Master Bedroom, Master Bathroom, Dining Room
Beds & Baths
Number of Bedrooms: 4Number of Bathrooms: 2Number of Bathrooms (full): 2
Dimensions and Layout
Living Area: 2480 Square Feet
Appliances & Utilities
Utilities: Cable Connected, Electricity ConnectedAppliances: Dishwasher, Disposal, Dryer, Microwave, Electric Range, Refrigerator, Washer, Electric Water HeaterDishwasherDisposalDryerLaundry: InsideMicrowaveRefrigeratorWasher
Heating & Cooling
Heating: CentralHas CoolingAir Conditioning: Central AirHas HeatingHeating Fuel: Central
Roof: Comp Shingle Year Roof Installed 2021Patio / Porch: Covered Patio, Screened PatioFencing: FencedVegetation: Fruit Tree(s)Exterior: Auto Sprinkler, Custom Lighting, Well SprinklerHas a Private Pool
Parking & Garage
Number of Garage Spaces: 2Number of Covered Spaces: 2Open Parking Spaces: 5No CarportHas a GarageHas an Attached GarageHas Open ParkingParking Spaces: 7Parking: 2+ Spaces,Driveway,Garage – Attached,RV/Boat,On Street,Auto Garage Open
Pool: Gunite, Heated, In Ground, Salt Water, Screen Enclosure, Solar Heat, Pool/Spa ComboPool
Frontage
Waterfront: NoneRoad Frontage: Public RoadRoad Surface Type: PavedNot on Waterfront
Water & Sewer
Sewer: Septic Tank
Property Information
Year Built
Year Built: 1994
Property Type / Style
Property Type: ResidentialProperty Subtype: Single Family ResidenceArchitecture: Mediterranean
Building
Building Name: Floresta GardensConstruction Materials: Brick, FrameNot a New Construction
Property Information
Condition: ResaleParcel Number: 342051008010000
Price & Status
List Price: $519,000
Status Change & Dates
Possession Timing: Funding
Active Status
MLS Status: Closed
See Virtual Tour
Location
Direction & Address
City: Port Saint LucieCommunity: Port St Lucie Section 3
School Information
Elementary School: Floresta Elementary SchoolJr High / Middle School: Somerset Academy Middle SchoolHigh School: Somerset Academy Charter High
The listing broker’s offer of compensation is made only to participants of the MLS where the listing is filed
Miscellaneous
Attic: Pull Down StairsWater View
Last check for updates: 27 minutes ago
Listed by Christy Torres, (860) 961-3500
Baron Real Estate
Bought with: Kim Freitas, (772) 263-2509, Southern Key Realty
Originating MLS: Beaches MLS
Source:
BeachesMLS, MLS#RX-10795387
Price History for 1492 SE Odonnell Ln
Event Details
Price
06/28/2022
Sold
BeachesMLS #RX-10795387
05/31/2022
Pending
BeachesMLS #RX-10795387
$519K
05/25/2022
PriceChange
BeachesMLS #RX-10795387
05/18/2022
PriceChange
BeachesMLS #RX-10795387
04/29/2022
Listed For Sale
BeachesMLS #RX-10795387
$551K
10/16/2017
Sold
Public Records
08/14/2017
Listed For Sale
Agent Provided
$299K
05/04/2017
ListingRemoved
Agent Provided
$300K
03/04/2017
Listed For Sale
Agent Provided
$300K
02/10/2016
Sold
Public Records
09/09/2015
Sold
Public Records
08/26/2015
ListingRemoved
Agent Provided
$0
08/04/2015
Listed For Sale
Agent Provided
$0
10/14/2004
Sold
Public Records
08/11/1999
Sold
Public Records
Property Taxes and Assessment
Year
2021
Tax
$5,245
Assessment
$258,700
Home facts updated by county records
LGBT Local Legal Protections
LGBT Legal Protections updated by Movement Advancement Project
All listings featuring the BMLS logo are provided by Beaches MLS, Inc. This information is not verified for authenticity or accuracy and is not guaranteed. Copyright 2022 Beaches Multiple Listing Service, Inc. Information is provided exclusively for consumers’ personal, non-commercial use and may not be used for any purpose other than to identify prospective properties consumers may be interested in purchasing. The listing broker’s offer of compensation is made to participants of BeachesMLS, where the listing is filed, as well as participants of MLSs participating in MLSAdvantage or a data share with BeachesMLS.
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1492 SE Odonnell Ln, Port Saint Lucie, FL 34983 is a 4 bedroom, 2 bathroom single-family home built in 1994. This property is not currently available for sale. 1492 SE Odonnell Ln was last sold on Jun 28, 2022 for $525,000 (1% higher than the asking price of $519,000). The current Trulia Estimate for 1492 SE Odonnell Ln is $547,400.
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Well Known Ports (1492-2032) | Homepage of Jens Scheffler
Port
Kurz
Beschreibung
1492
stone-design-1
1493
netmap_lm
1494
ica
1495
cvc
1496
liberty-lm
1497
rfx-lm
1498
watcom-sql
1499
fhc
Federico Heinz Consultora
1500
vlsi-lm
VLSI License Manager
1501
sas-3
Satellite-data Acquisition System 3
1502
shivadiscovery
Shiva
1503
imtc-mcs
Databeam
1504
evb-elm
EVB Software Engineering License Manager
1505
funkproxy
Funk Software, Inc.
1506
utcd
Universal Time daemon (utcd)
1507
symplex
1508
diagmond
1509
robcad-lm
Robcad, Ltd. License Manager
1510
mvx-lm
Midland Valley Exploration Ltd. Lic. Man.
1511
3l-l1
1512
wins
Microsoft’s Windows Internet Name Service
1513
fujitsu-dtc
Fujitsu Systems Business of America, Inc
1514
fujitsu-dtcns
Fujitsu Systems Business of America, Inc
1515
ifor-protocol
1516
vpad
Virtual Places Audio data
1517
vpac
Virtual Places Audio control
1518
vpvd
Virtual Places Video data
1519
vpvc
Virtual Places Video control
1520
atm-zip-office
atm zip office
1521
ncube-lm
nCube License Manager
1522
rna-lm
Ricardo North America License Manager
1523
cichild-lm
1524
ingreslock
ingres
1525
orasrv
oracle
1525
prospero-np
Prospero Directory Service non-priv
1526
pdap-np
Prospero Data Access Prot non-priv
1527
tlisrv
oracle
1528
mciautoreg
1529
coauthor
oracle
1530
rap-service
1531
rap-listen
1532
miroconnect
1533
virtual-places
Virtual Places Software
1534
micromuse-lm
1535
ampr-info
1536
ampr-inter
1537
sdsc-lm
1538
3ds-lm
1539
intellistor-lm
Intellistor License Manager
1540
rds
1541
rds2
1542
gridgen-elmd
1543
simba-cs
1544
aspeclmd
1545
vistium-share
1546
abbaccuray
1547
laplink
1548
axon-lm
Axon License Manager
1549 (tcp)
shivahose
Shiva Hose
1549 (udp)
shivasound
Shiva Sound
1550
3m-image-lm
Image Storage license manager 3M Company
1551
hecmtl-db
1552
pciarray
1600
issd
1645 (udp)
#radius
RADIUS authentication protocol (old)
1646 (udp)
#radacct
RADIUS accounting protocol (old)
1650
nkd
1651
shiva_confsrvr
1652
xnmp
1661
netview-aix-1
1662
netview-aix-2
1663
netview-aix-3
1664
netview-aix-4
1665
netview-aix-5
1666
netview-aix-6
1667
netview-aix-7
1668
netview-aix-8
1669
netview-aix-9
1670
netview-aix-10
1671
netview-aix-11
1672
netview-aix-12
1723 (tcp)
pptp
Point-to-point tunnelling protocol
1812 (udp)
radius
RADIUS authentication protocol (IANA sanctioned)
1813 (udp)
radacct
RADIUS accounting protocol (IANA sanctioned)
1986
licensedaemon
cisco license management
1987
tr-rsrb-p1
cisco RSRB Priority 1 port
1988
tr-rsrb-p2
cisco RSRB Priority 2 port
1989
mshnet
MHSnet system
1989
tr-rsrb-p3
cisco RSRB Priority 3 port
1990
stun-p1
cisco STUN Priority 1 port
1991
stun-p2
cisco STUN Priority 2 port
1992
ipsendmsg
1992
stun-p3
cisco STUN Priority 3 port
1993
snmp-tcp-port
cisco SNMP TCP port
1994
stun-port
cisco serial tunnel port
1995
perf-port
cisco perf port
1996
tr-rsrb-port
cisco Remote SRB port
1997
gdp-port
cisco Gateway Discovery Protocol
1998
x25-svc-port
cisco X. 25 service (XOT)
1999
tcp-id-port
cisco identification port
2000
callbook
2001 (tcp)
dc
2001 (udp)
wizard
curry
2002
globe
2003 (tcp)
cfingerd
GNU finger
2004 (tcp)
mailbox
2004 (udp)
emce
CCWS mm conf
2005 (tcp)
berknet
2005 (udp)
oracle
2006 (tcp)
invokator
2006 (udp)
raid-cc
raid
2007 (tcp)
dectalk
2007 (udp)
raid-am
2008 (tcp)
conf
2008 (udp)
terminaldb
2009 (tcp)
news
2009 (udp)
whosockami
2010 (tcp)
search
2010 (udp)
pipe_server
2011 (tcp)
raid-cc
raid
2011 (udp)
servserv
2012 (tcp)
ttyinfo
2012 (udp)
raid-ac
2013 (tcp)
raid-am
2013 (udp)
raid-cd
2014 (tcp)
troff
2014 (udp)
raid-sf
2015 (tcp)
cypress
2015 (udp)
raid-cs
2016
bootserver
2017 (tcp)
cypress-stat
2017 (udp)
bootclient
2018 (tcp)
terminaldb
2018 (udp)
rellpack
2019 (tcp)
whosockami
2019 (udp)
about
2020
xinupageserver
2021 (tcp)
servexec
2021 (udp)
xinuexpansion1
2022 (tcp)
down
2022 (udp)
xinuexpansion2
2023
xinuexpansion3
2024
xinuexpansion4
2025 (tcp)
ellpack
2025 (udp)
xribs
2026
scrabble
2027
shadowserver
2028
submitserver
2030
device2
2032
blackboard
1492 SW Devera Ave – 1492 SW Devera Ave Port Saint Lucie FL 34953
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Last Updated: 1 Day Ago
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Monthly Rent
$2,400
Beds
3
Baths
2
3 Beds
3 BR
2 Baths
2 BA
$2,400
1,796 Sq Ft
Available Now
Note: Prices and availability subject to change without notice.
Lease Terms
Contact office for Lease Terms
About 1492 SW Devera Ave
This 3/2/2 home has split floor plan, open concept, New stainless-steel appliances, Pantry closet, Eat in kitchen, Formal dining area. Tenant responsible for all utilities, lawn maintenance & $20.00 a month HVAC filter program. Pets are case by case with additional pet fee ($300.00 nonrefundable per pet + $25 per month pet rent), and pet screening fee
1492 SW Devera Ave is located in
Port Saint Lucie, Florida
in the 34953 zip code.
Protect yourself from fraud. Do not send money to anyone you don’t know.
Floorplan Amenities
Air Conditioning
Smoke Free
Dishwasher
Pantry
Microwave
Range
Refrigerator
Tile Floors
Vinyl Flooring
Parking
Garage Parking
Pet Policy
No Pets Allowed
Universities
Parks & Recreation
Oxbow Eco-Center
Drive:
22 min
11. 2 mi
Shopping Centers & Malls
Schools
Public Schools
Private Schools
Attendance Zone
Nearby
Property Identified
Oak Hammock K-8 School
Grades PK-8
1,461 Students
(772) 344-4490
Windmill Point Elementary School
Grades PK-5
884 Students
(772) 336-6950
Treasure Coast High School
Grades 9-12
2,823 Students
(772) 807-4300
Kidzone Preschool Academy
Grades PK-5
363 Students
(772) 340-3440
Holy Seed Christian Academy
Grades K-6
(860) 533-9483
Westport Private School
Grades 1-12
(772) 237-1155
School data provided by GreatSchools
?
Schools data provided by GreatSchools
Ratings give an overview of a school’s test results. The ratings are based on a comparison of test results for all schools in the state.
School boundaries are subject to change. Always double check with the school district for most current boundaries.
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Like What You See?
This 3/2/2 home has split floor plan, open concept, New stainless-steel appliances, Pantry closet, Eat in kitchen, Formal dining area. Tenant responsible for all utilities, lawn maintenance & $20.00 a month HVAC filter program. Pets are case by case with additional pet fee ($300.00 nonrefundable per pet + $25 per month pet rent), and pet screening fee
$2,400
Rental
3
BEDS
N/A
ACRES
2
BATHS
1/2 BATHS
1,796
SQFT
Neighborhood:
Port St Lucie-Sec 19
Type:
Rentals
Built:
2005
County:
St. Lucie
Area:
Port Saint Lucie
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1492 – Official discovery of America by Columbus – EADaily, October 12, 2019 – History of
Its shore became the first land on the American continent that Europeans saw, so this day is considered the official date of the “discovery of America”.
Columbus was born in Italy to a poor Genoese family. He studied at the University of Pavia and lived in Genoa until 1472, and then in Savona. In the 1470s, he participated in several sea trading expeditions.
It is believed that back in 1474, the astronomer and geographer Paolo Toscanelli informed Columbus in a letter that India can be reached by a much shorter sea route if you sail west. The assumption was based on the ancient doctrine of the sphericity of the Earth, however, the calculations of scientists of the 15th century about the size of the planet were incorrect. Based on them, Toscanelli believed that getting to India around the globe would be shorter than going around Africa through the Cape of Good Hope.
Columbus got excited about this idea and drew up his project of a sea voyage to India. Having made his own calculations on the basis of the Toscanelli map, he decided that it was most convenient to sail through the Canary Islands, from which, in his opinion, there were about five thousand kilometers in a straight line to Japan.
In 1476, Columbus moved to Portugal, where he lived for nine years. In 1483, he offers his project to the Portuguese king João II . There is evidence that at first the king wanted to support a bold project, but after a long study he rejected it. The likely reason was that the new sea route to India threatened the Portuguese monopoly on the spice trade.
In 1485, after his project was rejected in Lisbon, Columbus moved to Castile, where, with the support of mainly Andalusian merchants and bankers, he organized a government ocean expedition under his leadership.
The first expedition of Christopher Columbus (1492-1493) consisting of 91 people on the ships “Santa Maria”, “Pinta”, “Nina” left the port of Palos de la Frontera on August 3, 1492. On September 9, the squadron turned west from the Canary Islands, crossed the Atlantic Ocean in the subtropical zone and reached the island of San Salvador in the Bahamas, where Christopher Columbus landed on October 12, 1492 (the official date of the discovery of America).
On October 14-24, the Columbus expedition visited a number of other islands of the archipelago, and on October 28-December 5, they discovered and explored a section of the northeastern coast of Cuba. During this period, the Pint disappeared. Her captain Pinson Sr. was notable for unauthorized actions and repeatedly left the subordination. He left Columbus near the island of Cuba, hoping to discover another imaginary island.
On December 25, 1492, the flagship Santa Maria landed on the reefs. With the help of local residents, guns, supplies and valuable cargo were removed from the ship. From the wreckage of the ship on the island of Haiti, a fort was built, called La Navidad (Christmas). Columbus left 39 sailors here, armed the fort with cannons from the Santa Maria and left them supplies for a year, and on January 4, 149For 3 years, taking several islanders with him, he went to sea on a small “Ninya”.
On January 6, 1493, off the northern coast of Hispaniola, the Nina unexpectedly ran into the Pinta. Pinson Sr. explained his absence by the influence of weather conditions. Under the circumstances, Columbus decided not to initiate disciplinary proceedings, and on January 16, the two ships set out on their return journey.
The way back turned out to be difficult – in the Atlantic the ships were swept away by a storm and they lost each other again. However, in the end, everything ended well: 9March “Nina” anchored in Lisbon, where João II received Columbus as his most illustrious prince and ordered to supply him with everything necessary.
On March 15, Nina returns to Spain. On the same day, “Pinta” also comes there. Columbus brings with him the natives (who are called Indians in Europe), some gold, plants, fruits, and bird feathers never seen before in Europe.
Despite the rather modest results, the significance of the first expedition of Columbus turned out to be, without exaggeration, epochal. At the same time, the discoverer himself did not realize the true scale of his discoveries, despite the fact that after that he undertook three more expeditions. Until his death in 1506, Columbus continued to believe that the American lands he had discovered were part of Asia.
At the same time, the formal priority of Columbus in the discovery of America in the modern world is the subject of discussion. It has been established that the islands and coastal regions of North and Northeast America were visited by the Normans hundreds of years before Columbus. It is possible that Europeans and Africans from ancient times could accidentally reach the shores of tropical America.
However, the fact remains that only the discoveries of Columbus were of world-historical significance, since it was only after his voyages that the American lands entered the sphere of geographical representations.
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90,000 first expedition of Christopher Kolumba (1492-1493)
On August 3, 1492, the first expedition of the navigator Christopher Columbus began, discovering new lands for Europeans.
Born in Genoa, Columbus became a sailor at an early age, sailing the Mediterranean in merchant ships. Then he settled in Portugal. Under the Portuguese flag, he sailed north to England and Ireland, sailed along the west coast of Africa to the Portuguese trading post of São Jorge da Mina (modern Ghana). He was engaged in trade, mapping and self-education. During this period, Columbus had the idea to get to India by the western route across the Atlantic Ocean.
At that time, many Western European countries were looking for sea routes to the countries of South and East Asia, which were then united under the common name “India”. From these countries, pepper, nutmeg, cloves, cinnamon, expensive silk fabrics came to Europe. Merchants from Europe could not penetrate the countries of Asia by land, as the Turkish conquests cut off traditional merchant ties with the East through the Mediterranean Sea. They were forced to purchase Asian goods from Arab merchants. Therefore, the Europeans were interested in finding a sea route to Asia, which would allow them to purchase Asian goods without intermediaries. In the 1480s, the Portuguese tried to go around Africa to get across the Indian Ocean to India.
Columbus suggested that Asia can be reached by moving west across the Atlantic Ocean. His theory was based on the ancient doctrine of the sphericity of the Earth and the incorrect calculations of scientists of the 15th century, who considered the globe to be much smaller in size, and also underestimated the real length of the Atlantic Ocean from west to east.
Between 1483 and 1484, Columbus tried to interest the Portuguese king João II with his plan of an expedition to Asia by the western route. The monarch submitted his project for examination to the scientists of the “Mathematical Junta” (Lisbon Academy of Astronomy and Mathematics). Experts recognized Columbus’s calculations as “fantastic”, and the king refused Columbus.
Having received no support, in 1485 Columbus went to Spain. There, at the beginning of 1486, he was introduced to the royal court and received an audience with the king and queen of Spain – Ferdinand II of Aragon and Isabella of Castile. The royal couple became interested in the project of a western route to Asia. A special commission was created to consider it, which issued an unfavorable conclusion in the summer of 1487, but the Spanish monarchs postponed the decision to organize an expedition until the end of the war they waged with the Emirate of Granada (the last Muslim state on the Iberian Peninsula).
In the autumn of 1488, Columbus visited Portugal, where he re-proposed his project to Juan II, but was again refused and returned to Spain.
In 1489, he unsuccessfully tried to interest the regent of France, Anne de Baeuze, and two Spanish dukes with the idea of sailing westward.
In January 1492, unable to withstand a long siege by the Spanish troops, Granada fell. After lengthy negotiations, the Spanish monarchs, overriding the objections of their advisers, agreed to subsidize Columbus’s expedition.
On April 17, 1492, the royal couple concluded a treaty (“capitulation”) with him in Santa Fe, granting him the title of nobleman, the titles of Admiral of the Sea-Ocean, Viceroy and Governor-General of all the islands and continents that he discovers. The rank of admiral gave Columbus the right to decide in disputes arising from trade matters, the position of viceroy made him the personal representative of the monarch, and the position of governor general provided the highest civil and military power. Columbus was given the right to receive a tenth of everything found in the new lands and an eighth of the profits from trading with foreign goods.
The Spanish Crown undertook to finance most of the expenses of the expedition. Part of the funds for it was given to the navigator by Italian merchants and financiers.
In the first expedition, Columbus equipped three ships: a four-masted sailing ship “Santa Maria” (as a flagship) and two caravels – “Santa Clara” (better known as “Nina” by the name of its owner) and “Pinta”, with a total team of 90 people. All three ships were small and were typical merchant ships of that era.
The Columbus fleet left the Spanish port of Palos on August 3, 1492. On August 9, she approached the Canary Islands. After repairing the Pinta on Homer Island, which had leaked, on September 6, heading west, the ships began crossing the Atlantic Ocean. The journey was uneventful with fair winds.
On September 16, the ships entered the Sargasso Sea, which Columbus described in his notebook as a bank of algae. Through this unusual body of water, he sailed most of his way to the Bahamas.
Having passed the Sargasso Sea, Columbus changed course on October 7, and the ships turned to the southwest. On October 12, 1492, land was discovered from the Pinta. The Spaniards reached the islands of the Bahamas, the first land they encountered in the Western Hemisphere. This day is considered the official date of the discovery of America.
Columbus landed on the coast, hoisted the banner of Castile on it and, having drawn up a notarial deed, formally took possession of the island.
He called the island San Salvador (St. Savior), and its inhabitants – Indians, believing that he was off the coast of India.
However, the discussion about the first landing site of Columbus is still ongoing. For a long time (1940-1982), Watling Island was considered San Salvador. In 1986, the American geographer George Judge processed all the collected materials on a computer and came to the conclusion that the first American land that Columbus saw was Samana Island (120 km southeast of Watling).
October 14-24, Columbus approached several more Bahamas. Having learned from the natives about the existence of a rich island in the south, the ships left the Bahamas on October 24 and sailed further to the southwest. On October 28, Columbus landed on the northeast coast of Cuba, which he named “Juana”. After that, the Spaniards, inspired by the stories of the natives, spent a month searching for the golden island of Baneque (modern Great Inagua).
On November 21, the captain of the “Pinta” Martin Pinson took his ship away, deciding to search for this island on his own. Having lost hope of finding Baneke, Columbus with the two remaining ships turned east and on December 5 reached the northwestern tip of the island of Bohio (modern Haiti), which he named Hispaniola (“Spanish”). Moving along the northern coast of Hispaniola, on December 25, the expedition approached the Holy Cape (modern Cap Haitien), where the Santa Maria ran aground and sank, but the crew escaped. With the help of local residents, guns, supplies and valuable cargo were removed from the ship. A fort was built from the wreckage of the ship – the first European settlement in America, named on the occasion of the Christmas holiday “Navidad” (“Christmas City”).
The loss of the ship forced Columbus to leave part of the team (39 people) in the established settlement and set off on the Nina on the way back. For the first time in the history of navigation, on his orders, Indian hammocks were adapted for sailor bunks. To prove that he had reached a part of the world previously unknown to Europeans, Columbus took with him seven captive inhabitants of the islands, outlandish bird feathers and fruits of plants unseen in Europe. Having visited the open islands, the Spaniards saw corn, tobacco, and potatoes for the first time.
On January 4, 1493, Columbus put to sea on the Nina and sailed east along the northern coast of Hispaniola. Two days later he met “Pint”. On January 16, both ships headed to the northeast, taking advantage of the favorable current – the Gulf Stream. On February 12, a storm arose, and on the night of February 14, the ships lost sight of each other. At dawn on February 15, the sailors saw the land, and Columbus determined that he was near the Azores. On February 18, the Nina managed to land on the coast of one of the islands – Santa Maria.
On February 24, Nina left the Azores. Two days later, she again fell into a storm, which on March 4 washed her ashore in Portugal. March 9 “Nina” anchored in the port of Lisbon. The crew needed a break, and the ship needed repairs. King Juan II gave Columbus an audience, at which the navigator informed him of the discovery of a western route to India. March 13 “Nina” was able to sail to Spain. On March 15, 1493, on the 225th day of sailing, the ship returned to the Spanish port of Palos. On the same day, “Pinta” also came there.
King Ferdinand II of Aragon and Queen Isabella of Castile gave Columbus a solemn reception and, in addition to the previously promised privileges, gave him permission for a new expedition.
During the first journey, Columbus discovered America, which he mistook for East Asia and called the West Indies. Europeans first set foot on the islands of the Caribbean – Juan (Cuba) and Hispaniola (Haiti). As a result of the expedition, the width of the Atlantic Ocean became reliably known, the Sargasso Sea was discovered, the flow of ocean water from west to east was established, and for the first time an incomprehensible behavior of the magnetic needle of the compass was noted. The political resonance of Columbus’s voyage was the “papal meridian”: the head of the Catholic Church established a demarcation line in the Atlantic, indicating different directions for rival Spain and Portugal to discover new lands.
In 1493-1504, Columbus made three more voyages across the Atlantic Ocean, as a result of which he discovered part of the Lesser Antilles, the coast of South and Central America. The navigator died in 1506, being fully convinced that the lands he had discovered were part of the Asian continent, and not a new continent.
The material was prepared on the basis of information from RIA Novosti and open sources
On December 6, 1492, Columbus discovered the island of Haiti
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Bookmark
The first expedition of the Spanish navigator Christopher
Columba began in 1492. Her goal was
search for a western route to India and
Japan.
In August 1492, Columbus, together with the Pinson brothers, began
his first expedition. A fleet of caravels “Pinta” and “Nina” and
four-masted sailboat “Santa Maria” , out
from the port of Spain in search of a western route to India and Japan.
The seafaring team consisted of 90 people, and at their head was
Christopher Columbus.
Only in October
travelers opened the land. Found area
they named San Salvador and placed a flag there
Castile. The next stop for the Columbus team was Cuba named by the navigator Juan, mistaking it for one of the peninsulas
East Asia. After that, the sailors headed for
east in search of Japan. On the way they lost one ship and
continued the expedition on the remaining ships. Heading for
east, the team reached Cape Maisie.
In early December, the new land became visible to the sailors. They are
entered the bay and named the cape after St. Nicholas. So
Columbus discovered the island of Haiti . Until the end of the 18th century
believed that the island was called “little Spain”, but later
it became clear that this was a mistake of cartographers. Columbus gave him
the name “Hispaniola”, which is translated from Spanish
means “Spanish”. The island got its name because
that these lands reminded Columbus of Castile.
Island Haiti – the second largest island of the Greater
Antilles in the Caribbean. From discovery by Columbus
Haiti was an island colony of Spain, but in 1697 Spain
ceded the western third of the island to France.
Indians, the local population of the island, were killed and brought to Haiti
slaves from Africa. Later, in January 1804, the island had
an independent state was created, headed by Jean-Jacques
Dessalines. During his time in power in the country,
many revolutions. His rule is considered despotic and
cruel, but Dessalines is recognized as a national hero
countries. One of the cities is named after him, and the anthem of Haiti
called “Dessalinena”.
Jean-Jacques Dessalines
Haiti’s independence was recognized by France in 1825. However,
a large contribution was demanded from the island. In 1915-1934 Haiti
occupied by the Americans, after which the elite rose to power
mulattoes. Now the island is located on its territory
Dominican Republic and Republic of Haiti.
Columbus Expeditions
1. 1492 – 1493
On his first voyage, he passed the Atlantic Ocean, discovered
Sargasso Sea and reached the Bahamas. 12 October 1492 years
considered to be the day of the discovery of America. Then Columbus reached
Saman Islands.
2. 1493 – 1496
The second campaign of the navigator is famous for the discovery of the Lesser Antilles
islands, Dominica and Jamaica.
3. 1498 – 1500
During these years, Columbus was able to reach the islands of Trinidad and Margarita and
marked the beginning of the discovery of South America. He made his trip to
fleet of six ships.
4. 1502 – 1506
During the last expedition, the navigator discovered Martinique, reached
to the Gulf of Honduras and explored the coast of Central
America along the Caribbean.
Map of the four expeditions of Columbus
Photo: Wikipedia.
The material was prepared on the basis of information from open
sources.
Author Oksana Shlyakhtina
December 6, 1492
Christopher Columbus
opening haiti
Information provided by the Information Agency “Scientific Russia”. Mass media registration certificate: IA No. ФС77-62580, issued
Federal Service for Supervision of Communications, Information Technology and Mass Communications on July 31, 2015.
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1492 by christopher columbus – Translation into Russian – examples English
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by christopher columbus
Christopher Columbus
Christopher Columbus
Christopher Columbus
The islands were sighted in 1492 by Christopher Columbus .
The islands were open at 1492 by Christopher Columbus .
This ancient colony, discovered in 1492 by Christopher Columbus , has kept its colonial roots, with distinct historical features throughout the island.
This ancient colony, discovered in 1492 by Christopher Columbus , has been able to remain true to its colonial past and immortalize its unique history in the incredible monuments found throughout the island.
The islands were sighted in 1492 by Christopher Columbus and were allegedly named “Islands of the Virgins” by him in honor of St. Ursula and her attendants.
The islands were discovered in 1492 by Christopher Columbus and are believed to have been named by him the Virgin (Maiden) Islands in honor of Saint Ursula and her companions.
Other results
October 12th Columbus Day Descubrimiento de América Commemorates the Discovery of the Americas in 1492 by the Italian navigator Christopher Columbus .
October 12 Columbus Day Descubrimiento de América Celebrates the discovery of America in 1492 by the Italian navigator Christopher Columbus .
1492 – Christopher Columbus reported strange lights and strange compass readings.
In 1492 Christopher Columbus reported strange lights and strange compass readings in the area.
In 1492 Christopher Columbus discovers America and the Spanish rulers start forming their empire.
In 1492 Christopher Columbus discovered America and the Spanish rulers began to form their empire.
1492 – Christopher Columbus ‘ first voyage.
1492 – First voyage of Christopher Columbus .
Bringing it forward many years to 1492 Christopher Columbus discovered not only America but also tobacco.
So, in 1492 Christopher Columbus discovered not only America, but also tobacco.
In 1492 Christopher Columbus arrived in America while searching for a direct western route to the Spice Islands.
In 1492 Christopher Columbus arrived in America in search of a direct western route to the Spice Islands.
On August 3, 1492 Christopher Columbus
When December 5, 1492 Christopher Columbus
In 1492 , Christopher Columbus unknowingly discovered the new continent.
AT 1492 Christopher Columbus discovered a new continent without knowing it.
In 1492 , Christopher Columbus landed here.
In 1492 Christopher Columbus landed in this place.
In August 1492 Christopher Columbus stopped at Gomera in the Canary Islands, for wine and water, intending to stay only four days.
In August 1492, Christopher Columbus stopped at the island of Homer in the Canary Islands to resupply wine and water, intending to stay there for only four days.
Today In History: April 17, 1492 Christopher Columbus signs a contract with Spain to find a western route to the Indies.
HISTORICAL EVENTS APRIL 17: 1492 – Christopher Columbus signed a contract with Spain to open a new route to India.
The historical fact that most marked Huelva is the discovery of America, when in 1492 Christopher Columbus started from these lands the first of his voyages to the New World.
But the historical event that undoubtedly left the greatest mark on the people of Huelva was the discovery of America, since in 1492 Christopher Columbus made the first of his journeys to the New World from these lands.
October 12, 1492 Christopher Columbus , leading a Spanish expedition, landed on the island of Huanuni, in the archipelago of the Bahamas, starting a cultural bridge between the peoples of America and Spain, which remains until today.
October 12, 1492 Christopher Columbus , leading a Spanish expedition, landed on the island of Guanani, in the archipelago of the Bahamas, starting a cultural bridge between the peoples of America and Spain, which remains to this day.
But the historical event that has undoubtedly left the greatest mark on the people of Huelva was the discovery of America, as, in 1492 Christopher Columbus undertook the first of his voyages to the New World from these lands.
But the historical event that undoubtedly left the greatest mark on the people of Huelva was the discovery of America, since in 1492 Christopher Columbus made the first of his journeys to the New World from these lands.
In 1492 , Christopher Columbus set sail.
In 1492, Christopher Columbus set sail.
It was 1492 when Christopher Columbus explored and claimed the Island of Hispaniola on his maiden voyage.
In 1492 Christopher Columbus explores and proclaims the island of Hispaniola during his first voyage.
After his first voyage to the Americas in 1492 , Christopher Columbus took sweet potatoes back home to Europe.
In 1492 after his first trip to the American continent Christopher Columbus brought sweet potatoes to Europe.
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August 1492 Anno Domini. Port of La Frontera
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The predawn wind terral, which in August always blows here from the mountains of the Sierra Morena, carries through the narrow streets port aromas – rotten algae, fish, glandular [191] Rio Tinto water and tarred wood. But once the port of Paloe knew better days and better smells!
There used to be a smell here of Malabar pepper, and ginger, and cinnamon, and other precious spices, a pinch of which is worth a whole cow or a couple of sheep. Countless loaders then rolled barrels of Chios mastic and expensive wines onto the piers, unloaded the finest, unprecedented fabrics, drove thin-legged horses with nervously trembling, shiny skin along the echoing gangways. Oh, yes, you never know! But all this – before the Mohammedans took Constantinople. Now it has become much more dangerous for Europeans to go along the ancient Mediterranean trade routes: the Turks now and then let other people’s merchant ships sink to the bottom. Only the Portuguese prosper. In their famous school of Henry the Navigator in Sagres, they managed to build caravels capable of sailing confidently in ocean waters, and now the dangers of El Mediterraneo[192] the Portuguese are not concerned: by the ocean they went to the rich gold coast of Africa and took possession of it, and also they rounded the Cape of Storms, from where it is within easy reach to the abundant East! That is why the Portuguese now call the Cape of Storms in a new way – Cabo da Boa Esperanca, the Cape of Good Hope. For them, it’s good! But in the Spanish ports – much more deserted and quieter. Thinned the forest of masts in the harbors. Shipowners are ruined. Families of loaders and sailors are begging.
And now, out of nowhere, a certain Genoese named Columbus appears before their royal majesties Isabella of Castile and Ferdinand of Aragon and claims that he knows for sure one more, untrodden path to the cherished East: you just need to go around the globe, sailing the ocean to west . .. And he convinced the same, and royal majesties, and even experienced Palos captains – the Pinson brothers[193]! They say they even invested money. And the whole of Paloe knows perfectly well that these brothers will not put their hand in their pocket in vain, especially Alonso! Honest townspeople are also well aware of something else: if not for the support of the Genoese Pinsona, not a single sailor would have enrolled in the team of this madman for any money! Well, maybe only Vasquez, and his amigos would have signed up. Vasquez, being very drunk, killed the city crier in the spring. What was the matter, the townspeople told different things, but everyone agreed that the herald of Quintero had a voice, that the trumpet of the Last Judgment, and was a bully, the earth will rest in peace to him! So: Vazquez and his faithful amigos (they tried to arrange an escape for him, but they themselves ended up in prison for this) alguasil himself promised freedom if they signed up to sail with the Italian to the ends of the world [19four]. Is it any wonder they agreed!
In the end, there were enough sailors for three caravels.
Today they are seeing off this Genoese with the Pinson brothers. Of all their flotilla, only the Santa Maria is a decent ship of good Galician construction. The rest are not worth a good word. Especially “Santa Clara” nicknamed “Nina”: where on such a crumb – and into the Ocean!
… Unusual for such an early hour, such a crowd in the port. But the honest people of Palos have not sobered up even after yesterday’s feast of Our Lady Saint Angeles! That is why the eyes of the loaders, and the sea wolves, and their tired friends of the night craft are reddish-cloudy, like the waters of Rio Tinto! Increasingly, among the polyphony on the pier, bickering, singing, clapping and sorting out guitar strings, women’s sobs are heard, and some of the women begin to simply scream. And then, as it happens, when they heard their mothers, the babies in their arms also screamed: the howl rose – like a funeral! And that is understandable: husbands and sons leave their native Palos for an unknown ocean to some unknown, not otherwise, cursed land. Which, moreover, is either there or not. After all, even the Portuguese did not dare to swim so far. They take water and provisions with them for two months. In the Canary Islands, they will replenish the supply, and what then is unknown … And this gray-haired, nosy navigator Colon, who knows where it came from on their heads, is dragging them to certain death! Well, at least one thing consoled the families – they paid the sailors for four months in advance from the royal treasury!
From the platform, the escribano loudly reads the decree of Their Majesties. The crowd is silent. The royal banners frivolously surrender to the wind under the selfless solemn Latin of monks in coarse cassocks and cardinals in bright silk vestments with lace. Even the patroness of Palos, Saint Angeles, was taken out of the church of St. Jorge. The fair-haired saint, hoisted on her portable platform, is very similar to Queen Isabella and looks at the ships with humble sorrow.
And at this time, another caravel sails from the distant pier a little earlier than Columbus’s caravels. It is overflowing with mournful people who, in tears, look at the land disappearing behind the stern and whisper something – either farewell, or prayers, or curses. No one is escorting this caravel. The last Jews expelled by royal decree leave their native Spain [195]. Where they sail away – in Palos they do not know and do not want to know …
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Order of the Knights of the Temple
We are in the XII century, in the center of the Christian world. The Church no longer bears much resemblance to the small Jewish sect it was when it began. Its influence extends to all areas of life in Western Europe, but it is still far from the time of that gloomy obscurantism that the enlightened generations of the eighteenth century will reproach the Middle Ages.
Abbot Bernard of Clairvaux ruled over the minds in those years, who was canonized during his lifetime. A mystical writer, a great speaker, he was the inspirer of the second crusade. Popes listened to his opinion, and the feudal lords were afraid of him. During this period, all political activity took place under the sign of rivalry between the clergy of the Catholic Church and the emperors of the Holy Roman Empire for influence on the lords.
Under these conditions, Bernard founded in 1128 the military-monastic order of the Knights of the Temple Templars (templars). The core of the order was the knights who returned from Palestine. His development was swift. More and more volunteers, or rather novices, poured into the ranks of the Templars. From the very beginning, the order firmly settled in the lands of Western Europe, divided at that time into nine provinces: France, Portugal, Castile, Aragon, Mallorca, Germany, Italy, Sicily and England with Ireland. By the beginning of the XIV century, the templars had almost ten thousand residences throughout Western Europe, of which about a thousand were in France. Residences, as well as military posts and fortifications subordinate to them, covered Europe with a dense network.
Three categories of brothers made up the order itself: knights all of noble birth or, very rarely, granted to the nobility, the heads of residences were elected from among them; confessors-monks who were with the masters or served in churches; sergeants, from among whom the knights recruited squires and infantry for military campaigns and who ran the household and managed the property of the order, among them were both free peasants and artisans. There was also a category of temple guests who provided temporary services to the order. The order also took under its protection those who adjoined it: seniors who showed him loyal feelings, merchants who used his commercial services, artisans who settled on his lands, and many others. At the bottom of this hierarchical pyramid, we see dependent peasants, attached to the land by feudal dependence, and dark-skinned slaves taken out of Palestine. At the top reigns the Grand Master, chosen by a meeting of representatives of the nine provinces of Western Europe.
The Templars did not recognize any other authority over themselves. The Order of the Temple enjoyed the right of extraterritoriality and did not fall under the jurisdiction of the authorities of those lands on whose territory it was located. He had his own police and his own tribunal.
In addition, the order created a fleet and achieved a monopoly of sailing in the Mediterranean between Europe and the Middle East. His ships carried the troops of the crusaders, pilgrims, among whom were rich princes generously paying for their services.
The Templars set up their own bank. Gold was immediately put into circulation. Among the borrowers were the episcopates and communes, which, beginning in 1140, set about building churches in the Gothic style. At that time, most French cities had very limited funds. If free money appeared, it was primarily spent on strengthening the city walls.
It is all the more surprising that within a few years money was found in France for the construction of huge Gothic cathedrals. The only organization that was capable of giving them was the Knights Templar. In less than a hundred years, eighty huge cathedrals and seventy smaller temples were built.
Construction required the involvement of a large number of people. But workers cannot be paid by bills of exchange. However, we know that money, especially metallic money, was rare. There were almost no silver ones. That silver, only about a ton, that the Templars took out of Palestine, was clearly not enough. There was practically no mining of precious metals in Europe. And deposits in Germany, the Czech Republic and Russia have not yet been discovered. Gold was also not enough.
And yet the Templars minted their own coin, silver, not gold. During the XII XIII centuries, such an amount of silver money was produced that they became a common means of payment. With this money, a campaign was launched to build temples.
But where did metal come from? No one knew this, or rather, those who knew were silent. The Templars were generally silent about many things. So, the charter of the order was known only to the knights, but they could not keep it at home, so that it would not fall into the hands of the uninitiated, even among the members of the order. Masters made decisions in deep secrecy. The archives of the order have mysteriously disappeared.
La Rochelle
There are many more unexplained and sometimes inexplicable facts in the history of the order. One of them concerns the Templar fleet. For contacts with England, they had ports on the English Channel and the North Sea. But there was another port on the Atlantic coast, the location of which cannot be logically explained based on the needs of the Templars in Europe. This is La Rochelle. Located 150 kilometers south of Nantes and 70 north of Rouen at the mouth of the Gironde River, on the banks of a deep bay, it was well fortified and impregnable both from the sea and from land. (As Cardinal Richelieu later became convinced.) From this point of view, the choice of the Templars does not surprise us. Another thing is not clear why did the order need a port located far south of England and north of Portugal, the road to which was safer and more convenient by land? However, La Rochelle was by no means a secondary point for the Templars. The residence, located there, controlled a vast area, and from all sides of France, seven “roads of the Templars” converged to it.
The power of the order grew, its influence in many countries of Western Europe increased. For 200 years, the Templars were not afraid of anyone or anything. This continued until October 12, 1307, the day when the king of France, Philip the Handsome, fearful of this force, launched a sudden and well-prepared police operation against the order. The Templars were accused of heresy, their residences were destroyed, the brothers were arrested, and their property was confiscated. The Pope issued a decree dissolving the order.
The arrested were handed over to the hands of the Inquisition. Among the many confessions, one is especially interesting for us. Before us is the protocol of the testimony of the knight Jean de Chalon, where he claims that on the night before the arrests, three covered wagons came out of Paris, loaded with chests with the treasures of the Temple. The wagons were accompanied by a convoy of forty-two knights, led by Master Hugh de Chalon and Gerard de Villiers. The knights and cargo were supposed to arrive at one of the ports, where seventeen ships of the order were waiting for them. The disproportion between the number of ships and the contents of the three wagons is striking. But perhaps there were other convoys heading to this port? We don’t know what was in the chests. The word “treasure” in the Middle Ages was also used to refer to the secret archives of kings and communes. We have no doubt that the treasures of the Temple, taken out of Paris, are the secret archives of the order, which should have been hidden in a safe place.
What port could the knights have gone to on that troubling night? Of course, to the port that belonged to the Templars. Others were unreliable, and there were no Chapter ships. The ports of the Mediterranean were far away, and not knowing how the authorities of Provence and Barcelona would behave, one could fall into a trap. The Channel and North Sea ports were closer. But the king of England, who was favorable to the Templars, could not resist the pope. Remains La Rochelle. Reliably fortified, it could withstand the siege of the king’s gendarmes. A road guarded by the Templars led to it, on which replacement horses could be found. We do not know if the shipment has reached its destination. It is only known that the archives of the order do not appear in the lists of the property seized by the people of the king, and the names of the knights who accompanied the cargo are named along with those who fled from arrest. Among the ships that took refuge in Portugal, there were no ships from La Rochelle. They disappeared forever.
Researchers are faced with three questions: 1. Where did the Templars get silver, a metal not found by that time in Europe and with which they literally flooded the countries of the Holy Roman Empire? 2. Why did they need the port of La Rochelle?
3. Where did the ships loaded with the treasures of the order, which they managed to save in 1307, go?
Jean de la Varande, a historian from Normandy, says through a character in one of his historical books that the Templars brought a lot of this metal from Mexico, and gives the expression “avoir d’argent” to be rich, where the word “argent” “silver » is synonymous with the word “wealth”, while it would be more natural to say so about gold! Unfortunately, Varand does not indicate the source of his information. Therefore, we will try to find confirmation of this hypothesis ourselves.
We can find one of the testimonies by carefully examining the painting of the pediment of the Temple of the Templars in the city of Verelai in Burgoni, which dates back to the 12th century. Among the people surrounding Christ, in the image you can see a man, a woman and a child with disproportionately large ears. A man dressed in feathers, similar to the clothes of the North American Indians, and on his head a Viking helmet. Woman bare-breasted and in a long skirt. These are the so-called panotii. It seems that medieval painters heard about people with big ears… Now we know that the Incas and their predecessors, whom they imitated, had a habit of pulling back their ears by inserting heavy rings of gold, copper or stone into their lobes, the so-called ringri (from the Old Norse ring earring). This is hard to imagine. Medieval painters also knew about the Vikings, as indicated by the helmet on the man’s head. Mixing these two concepts, they drew an “indealized” Viking, so to speak.
Another proof that the Templars knew about the existence of the continent we now call America: the seals of the order, captured by the people of Philip the Handsome in 1307, were recently found in the National Archives of France. On one of them, attached to a document belonging to the jurisdiction of the Grand Master, one can see the inscription “Secretum Templi” Secret of the Temple. In the center is the figure of a man who can only be an American Indian. He is dressed in a loincloth, and on his head is a headdress of feathers, the same as that worn by the Indians of North America, Mexico and Brazil, or at least some of them. In his right hand he holds a bow, below, under the bow, there is a swastika a cross with curved ends, a common symbol in Scandinavia of the Viking Age.
Varand is right on at least one point. The Templars knew about the existence of the New World. And that was their big secret. The secret is so important that its preservation was entrusted to the highest hierarchs of the order and the Grand Master himself. But did the Templars really extract their silver from the American mines?
All silver Peru
In the field of metallurgy, Peru was more developed than Central America. This is logical. On the one hand, it received an important cultural impetus of Chinese and Indochinese origin, as the Austrian scientist H. Heine-Geldern showed with all certainty: the Chavin culture was born suddenly, without local predecessors, many centuries before our era. She had a high level of technical knowledge, including metal smelting. On the other hand, the Vikings, who had been in Mexico for only twenty years (end of the 10th century), ruled the Tiahuanaco empire they founded in Peru for about three hundred years, and their Inca followers for another two hundred and fifty years.
Gold, silver, shampi copper, an alloy of gold and copper, bronze and even platinum were processed in Peru. They knew how to melt, forge, weld metals, cast them into molds. They made bimetallic products, and also knew how to cover silver with gold and copper so that modern metallurgical scientists can do this only with the use of electrolysis.
Gold and silver production in Peru is more known to us than Mexican: the discoveries of unlooted burials made it possible to compile an impressive collection of magnificent examples of Inca jewelry.
Precious metal mining in Peru was well organized, gold mining in particular on an industrial level. It was washed in the rivers flowing from the Andes, water of melting snow was brought to the gold-bearing lands through many kilometers of canals. Such channels have been found near Tiahuanaco and at Chungamayo, in the vicinity of La Paz. Gold was also mined in mine workings. You can still see the remains of the gold smelting industry in Huabamba, where gold was smelted from ore. And in Machu Picchu, the ruins of a mill for grinding gold-bearing quartz were discovered. Silver was mined mainly in the mines of the Porco region, located in a mountain range on the eastern edge of the Bolivian plateau, southeast of Tiahuanaco. These mountains were later called by the Spaniards Sierra de la Plata Silver Mountain, and the city located there Villa de Plata Silver City.
The Incas had no professional miners. There was a system of labor service. Every year, young Incas went with their wives to the mountain mines and the four hottest months of the year mined the precious metal. In the remaining eight months, work was prohibited.
The Tiahuanaco Vikings and their followers the Incas used precious metals to decorate their palaces and temples, making them into elegant, exquisite works of art, as well as tableware. Many of these items have survived, despite the fact that the Spanish conquerors ruthlessly melted down everything that fell into their hands into ingots.
However, during the last empire of Tiahuanaco, not all the silver mined in the mines of South America was used locally. A significant part, perhaps along with gold, went to the ocean. The Vikings, who mined silver in the mountains, built a system of roads (“peaviru” in the Guarani language) that led to the ocean coast and reached it at two points: at Santos Bay and opposite the island of St. Catherine. On the northern road leading to the port of Santos is the huge complex of Cerro Cora. There was discovered an object that clarifies a lot in our study. Among the ruins of the walls of a fortress-like structure, we found a mold for casting metal into ingots. Its pre-Columbian origin is beyond doubt.
This discovery raises two questions: where did the metal come from and why was it necessary to melt it into ingots? The first one is easy to answer. The nearest gold-bearing rivers and silver mines are in the Andes. Local tribes did not use metal tools. But nevertheless, in their language there were words for metals, which at first glance is very strange. So, for example, in the southern dialect of Guarani, the metal is called quarepoti, which means “a stone pulled out of a hole in a mountain. ” All other names of metals come from this word: gold quarepotiyu (yellow metal), silver quarepotiti (white metal), steel quarepotiata (hard metal). The whole question is, were they formed before or after the era of the conquest of America by the conquistadors? The opinions of linguists and ethnographers on this score are divided. We note, however, that these words did not experience any influence of the Spanish language, but it would be logical if the Indians gave the name to the metals brought by the Spaniards and were previously unfamiliar to them. In addition, local legends tell that before 1290 years on the road from the Sierra de la Plata to the ocean, caravans regularly passed, carrying a large amount of metal. Lamas were undoubtedly used as beasts of burden.
There can be only one answer to the second question: silver and maybe gold, but in smaller quantities, were melted down into ingots because the metal was being prepared for export. In ingots, it is convenient to count and take into account.
In addition to the road from Tiahuanaco through Paraguay, the Vikings used such convenient routes as the rivers of the Amazon basin to transport precious metals. 800 kilometers south of the mouth of the Amazon, on the banks of the delta of the full-flowing navigable river Parnaiba, the ruins of powerful fortress walls made of cemented stones were discovered. Here, obviously, on the site of the modern city of Parnaiba, there was another Atlantic port of the Vikings.
One of Brazil’s most important waterways is the São Francisco River. It is navigable for two-thirds of its length, and even today you can see large barges on it, which, by their shape and construction principle, resemble Scandinavian longships. The Vikings settled on its banks the Guarani tribes subordinate to them, as they did on all the rivers that they used as routes of communication. However, these settlements exist only at the source and at the mouth of the river. The explanation for this anomaly is both simple and hard to imagine. The river in its middle course did not exist in the recent past. In its place, between the modern city of Remanso and the Paolo Afonso waterfall, a huge lagoon stretched, consisting of swamps and lakes, about 200 kilometers wide. Ranges of hills rose above the water. The lagoon was fed by three rivers. Two of them flowed east: Opala, now called San Francisco, and Reala, whose channel was never found. The third flowed into the Pioi River, which is a tributary of the Parnaiba. This route was navigable in winter from the lagoon to the ocean.
In 1587, the Guarani were still telling the Portuguese about the existence of the Upa Assu (Great Lagoon) and about the silver mines on its islands. The draining of the swamps happened not so long ago. How this happened, we know from the report of General Ivo de Prado at the geographical congress of 1919 in Belo Horizonte. The waters of the lagoon found at some point sufficient flow through the Paolo Afonso waterfall. From Upa-Assu, only the channel of the San Francisco River in its middle course remained. The Reala River has disappeared and the Pioi River has lost one of its tributaries. Were such changes caused by natural disasters? There are only two possible explanations: either an increase in the flow of the Paolo Afonso waterfall due to water erosion of its bed, or it could be a grand hydrotechnical project. We must immediately discard the first assumption. It would take thousands, if not millions, of years to erode the rock bed. The second remains. Ludwig Schwenhagen carefully examined the bed of the waterfall, which the modern hydroelectric power plant built in this place has not yet changed, and found traces of an extraordinary work of building art: five symmetrical channels dump their water into one hole 50 meters deep, cut into the rock.
What was the purpose of these cyclopean works? The main thing is to establish a permanent waterway between the zone where the richest silver mines were developed and the Atlantic Ocean. A zone that included not only the mines of Upa Assu, but also the territory of the modern state of Minas Gerais, where numerous mines were also found and where the Portuguese met a tribe of bearded, white-skinned people in the 16th century.
It remains to be seen why the Vikings attached such importance to silver mining in the northeast of Brazil. Of course, they needed iron, copper and tin to make weapons and tools. But why was the gold and silver needed, with which Peru was overflowing? Is it not to export them through the port of Parnaiba? But where and how?
Vikings from Tiahuanaco sent to the ports of Santos and Parnaiba a significant amount of silver mined in the mines of the Sierra de la Plata and in the deposits of Pioi and Upa Assu. Traces of this metal seem to have disappeared into the ocean. However, we have already said that at this time the Templars literally flooded Western Europe with silver coins, the origin of which remains a mystery. Are they from America?
Country of white people
So, let’s say that the silver used by the Templars to finance the construction of Gothic cathedrals in Europe was mined in South America. And the port of La Rochelle on the Atlantic coast of France was built to import American silver. But where did the ships go, on which the secret archives of the order, which mysteriously disappeared in 1307, were loaded?
To answer this question, let’s imagine the colonization of Central and South America by Europeans before the discovery of the New World by Columbus. Our reconstruction of the event is based on the legends and myths of the Indians and studies of the ancient civilizations of America.
The Irish monks of the Columbite order were the first to reach the coast of America. In accordance with their religious customs, they looked for remote, secluded places with harsh living conditions to settle. Therefore, they were attracted by the deserted northern islands. At the end of the 8th century, their monasteries in the Hebrides, located north of Scotland, began to be threatened by the Vikings. The monks moved to Iceland. For a hundred years they mastered this land. But then the Vikings reappeared. Again, the brothers preferred to give way to them. In 887, fifty monks raised the sails of their ships and set off into the unknown. They were not heard from again.
Almost a hundred years have passed. In 963, the Viking Ari Marsson was shipwrecked and washed up on an unfamiliar shore, located east of Vinland, the Atlantic coast of North America. He was picked up by local inhabitants in white clothes. In the sagas of the northern peoples, its name is Hwitter-manaland (Land of the white people). She became so famous that in Arabic geography al-Idrisi is referred to under the name of Ireland al-Kabirah.
Where was Greater Ireland? Opinions of scientists and writers-historians were divided. But it seems to us a more correct hypothesis, according to which it is placed in Nova Scotia on the American continent. Everything suggests that the Columbite monks, who left Iceland in 877, reached America.
The Columbites were priests and sailors alike. They combined the spirit of adventurers and religious duty. It is impossible to imagine that, having arrived in America, they abruptly changed their temper and locked themselves in their monasteries. Very soon they should have gone south along the coast of the continent and could reach the island of St. Brandan according to scientists, it could be Cuba. And from Cuba to Mexico only a few hours of sailing. From the myths and legends of the Indians, we know that the first white people to come to America were monks in white robes who called themselves “Papa”, just like the Columbites. Their influence was extremely strong. They not only introduced into the thinking of the Indians the sprouts of Christianity, traces of which could be found five hundred years later, but also changed their way of life. Columbite colonies did not last long. After all, it was only a small group of monks cut off from their homeland, keeping a vow of celibacy and having no followers.
Probably nothing was left of the Irish monasteries when, in 967, the Viking Jarl Ulman set foot in America at Panuko on the Gulf of Mexico. He landed from seven ships along with seven hundred Vikings, men and women. He became the fifth king of the Toltecs Quetzalcoatl the warrior. Twenty years later, with part of his people, he went on a campaign to the Yucatan Peninsula, to the Mayan country. There he met the resistance of the local tribes and was forced to turn back. These events are depicted on frescoes in the capital of the Mayan state in the temple of Chichen Itza, where you can see the image of the battles of the Indians with white people.
Returning from a failed campaign, he saw that his place as a leader was taken – the remaining Vikings had already married local women and ruled the country. Then Ulman left Mexico, went down on ships along the coast to South America and landed on the coast in Venezuela. Then the Vikings crossed the continent and went to the Pacific Ocean. In South America, the Vikings founded the city of Tiahuanaco on the shores of Lake Titicaca, which soon became the capital of a vast empire. The empire’s borders stretched from present-day Bogota in Colombia to Valparaiso in Chile. They taught the Indians various crafts, including the art of metal production and processing. Silver they sent to the shores of the Atlantic Ocean.
In 1290, the Araucan tribes, nomads and pastoralists, descended from the mountains and invaded the Tiahuanaco empire. The descendants of the Vikings who escaped death were dispersed. Some went to the ocean, built balsa rafts, set sail and reached the islands of Polynesia. Others hid in the jungles of the Amazon and Paraguay rivers. Another part reached Cusco, where they founded a new Inca empire.
Now consider the history of the third wave of white colonialists in Mexico, which interests us most. To do this, let us turn to the work, which is of exceptional importance for our study. It goes back to the traditions of the Mayan people. This book was written in the Quiche language by an Indian converted to Christianity by Spanish monks. According to an anonymous author, it reproduces the book “Popol Vuh”, which was written long before the arrival of the conquerors and has not yet been found by researchers. The name “Book of the People” testifies to the introduction of Latin and Germanic words into the Kiche language by Irish monks and Vikings. The people Popol comes from the Latin populus and the book Vuh from the German buch, from which the meaning and pronunciation remain. We are not surprised that the book has not been found. The Mayan libraries were destroyed by the Spanish conquistadors. Only single specimens are known, hidden by the Indians and discovered later.
Of particular interest are the third and fourth parts of this book. They describe the history of the Quiche people. First, there is a story about the appearance of man from two creatures, the prototypes of which were Adam and Eve. Many peoples of different races and languages were created. Among them are the ancestors of the Kiche, the Tekpans. For some time they lived in a city called Tullan, and this city was in the east. Then the Tekpans crossed the sea and ended up in America. At first it was very difficult for them, and they yearned for their homeland. Quarrels began between them, clashes with local tribes began. In the end, the Indians were subdued, and the Tekpans began to rule the country and take Indian women as wives.
One day the sons of those who came from across the sea decided to visit their fathers’ home in the east. They crossed the sea and a year after the start of the voyage, they appeared before the eastern king. The king gave them royal signs and books. Returning to Guatemala, they founded their own state and subjugated neighboring tribes to their power. By the time the Spanish conquerors arrived, the twelfth generation of Quiche leaders reigned.
What do we learn from this text? First, that from the moment of the creation of man until the departure of the “ancestors” from Tullan, no events took place. This is logical. The Indians of Guatemala lived in a state of barbarism. History began for them when their “civilizers” left Tullan. Secondly, the city of Tullan was located east of America, across the ocean. Note also that the arrival of these white settlers, who subjugated the local tribes, which is considered the beginning of the history of the Quiche people, was recent in time. If we assume that the period of the reign of one generation of Quiche leaders was about sixteen years, then this date falls on 1332.
The Templars, as a descendant of the rulers of Chalco Chimalpajin points out in his chronicle, arrived in Mexico at the end of the 13th century. He gives two dates, 1272 and 1294, which could mean that there were two waves of emigrants. Leaving Tlapallan, that is, Europe, the Templars crossed the ocean and reached the shores of America. They stopped in the Chalco area and a few years later received reinforcements in the form of another group of settlers.
Over the course of several centuries they subjugated or conquered, one by one, by force of arms, more than twenty tribes of Indians, who occupied most of the territory of the modern Mexican states of Mexico City, Morelos, Puebla and Tlaxcala.
By the beginning of the 15th century, there were no knights or priests of the Knights Templar left in America. Even the youngest were long dead, leaving no offspring due to a vow of celibacy. The sergeants of the order, those who made up the crews of the ships and could be married, of course, did not take their wives on the campaign. Their children on the American continent were only mestizos. The organizational structure of the state, functions and titles remained, but the thinking of its inhabitants was already different, since the ethnos itself was already different. Their language was replaced by the Nautl language, in which only some of the old words remained.
In 1407, an invasion began from the north of nomadic warlike tribes, among which were the Aztecs. They captured the cities and lands of the Tekpantlaks and … adopted elements of their civilization.
By the time the conquistadors appeared, the country of the Templars had been under the yoke of conquerors for more than half a century. The tribes rebelled from time to time against the oppressors, entering into alliances with the enemies of Mexico City. In 1519, the chalki welcomed Cortes in a friendly manner. They called him their god and told him that their ancestors said that bearded people from the east would come to rule them. Spanish chroniclers noted that the chalks immediately sided with the conquistadors and actively participated in the capture of Mexico City.
We are now in a position to answer all three questions before us. We have seen that the silver used by the Templars to finance the construction of Gothic cathedrals in Western Europe was mined in South America. The port of La Rochelle on the Atlantic coast of France served to import metal from across the ocean. And, finally, ships with the Templars, who escaped arrest in 1307, and, possibly, with the secret archives of the order, found refuge in Mexico.
It remains to be understood why the Templars decided to opt for Mexico. That they knew of the existence of Central America does not surprise us. For more than one hundred and fifty years, there has been a delivery of silver bars from South America to Europe. The Templars maintained close contact with the descendants of the Vikings. And it is possible that they did in 1194 year reconnaissance campaign in the area. But since they did not find enough precious metals there, which was their main goal in America, they no longer renewed their attempts.
The situation began to change when the alliance between the King of France and the Pope began to threaten the very existence of the order. The Templars, unlike the Order of the Hospitallers, throughout their history did not acquire a completely autonomous territory in Europe, where they could be protected from pressure and threats from both secular and spiritual authorities. The case could end badly at any moment. The knights began to think about a safe haven in case of retreat. The Vikings, trading with the Templars, nevertheless did not promise them a warm welcome on their territory. So up to 1290 years attempts to settle in South America were not made. And after 1290 they would have been doomed to failure: the Tiahuanaco empire was destroyed by savage tribes. There was Mexico.
There can be no doubt that, going to America, the Templars thought that it was a temporary refuge. But their calculations were not justified. The Order is gone forever. Isolated across the ocean, the Templars could quench their thirst for conquest and spread their faith, which in Europe bordered on heresy, among the semi-savage tribes of the Indians, but time passed, and no one took the place of the departed Templars. Fifty years after the arrival of the last of the Templars, not a single white man remained in Mexico.
Portuguese heritage
Let’s plunge into the atmosphere of the European Middle Ages, which is very different from the one that historiographers paint for us starting from the 18th century. It was an era of incredible intellectual flourishing, with difficulty restrained by the Church within the limits, much less rigid than those allowed by the Holy Inquisition. Priests and bishops married or simply lived with women, and no one found this reprehensible. German mythology and the Gospel apocrypha inspired artists no less than the plots of the Old Testament. Fairies and dwarfs from fairy tales were mixed in the minds of the people with dragons from the description of the lives of the saints. Theology developed in different directions, which were similar only in their dissent. Philosophy competed with it, feeding on ancient Greek and Latin texts, which were again open to study. In the area directly related to the topic of our study, cosmography was reborn from the ashes. The knowledge of Arab geographers began to arrive in Europe. The crusaders carried the wealth accumulated by the ancient eastern sages from Byzantium and the Holy Land. All who were educated knew that the earth was round, and its circumference was calculated with great precision. Ptolemy’s “Geography” guessed the story of the journey of the Greek navigator Alexander, who in the 1st century AD crossed the Pacific Ocean and reached the shores of America. From the works of Plutarch, Theopompus, Makrab, medieval scholars learned about the existence of wonderful lands and paradise islands beyond the gloomy seas. All this evidence could not pass by the learned monks of the Knights Templar. They were closely associated with the traditions of the enlightened East during their stay in Jerusalem.
All this explains why the Templars sent their ships into the ocean in search of a land whose existence was beyond doubt. But, based on the data received, they should have gone north or to the central part of the New World. However, they ended up in South America, where the metal they were looking for was located. To South America, where 150 years ago the Danish Vikings founded their empire of Tiahuanaco. We can put aside the whims of a stormy ocean. In this case, they would land on a deserted coast and, even if they miraculously returned to Europe, they would not be able to bring back any information about the silver mines located far from the coast. Or they would fall into the hands of the Vikings, who knew no mercy.
On the other hand, it is difficult to imagine that, having established themselves in South America and completed the establishment of the empire, the Vikings did not feel the desire to establish contacts with their homeland. It is quite realistic that their ports of Santos Bay and St. Catherine’s Island and the roads leading from the hinterland to the ocean served just this purpose. Probably, it was the Vikings who established contact with Europe and not in 1250, but a hundred years earlier.
Why and how the Vikings ended up in Dieppe, we do not know, but it is not difficult for us to imagine it, since the relations between England, the homeland of their ancestors, and Normandy, whose main port is Dieppe, were very close. Be that as it may, the Normans in 1250 began to export timber from the Amazon jungle. A map was also drawn up in Normandy showing both Vinland and South America. Information about them, received from the Danish and Norwegian Vikings, could only be combined in Dieppe. The Tiahuanaco people had no reason to contact the Templars, although they could not be unaware of their existence. Most likely, the secret services of the Templars themselves received information about overseas lands, watching the Vikings from their port of San Valeri. With a powerful fleet, the templars could use intelligence more profitably than the fishermen of Normandy. Only a hundred years later, the Dieppe sailors were able to engage in trade with the New World. But they did not dare to compete with the Templars in the transportation of precious metals and limited themselves to importing timber in exchange for horses and cows.
The geographical data that formed the basis of the map from Dieppe could not be obtained by either the Normans or the Templars. Both those and others were limited only to coastal voyages. The map shows not only the full contour of the subcontinent, that is, South America, but also its main rivers and the location of the main mountain ranges. The only ones who could do this would be the sailors, who had deep geographical knowledge and were in this region of the planet for a long time. Portuguese?
In Portugal, as elsewhere, the Knights Templar had full sovereignty, but its influence was much stronger than in other states of Western Europe. The king of Portugal owed the Templars not only the liberation of his lands from the Moors and the throne itself, but also needed constant military assistance to protect against the continued Muslim threat. In a word, the king could rely on the order, as well as the order on royal power.
When the French king Philip the Handsome began the destruction of the Order of the Temple, all the monarchs of Western Europe supported him, with the exception of one king of Portugal. Gratitude? This virtue is little appreciated in politics. Most likely, the king believed that the disgraced knights no longer posed a danger to him, but could still serve him.
Or maybe the king already knew that the ships of the Templars were taking precious metal from distant lands, the main source of their wealth and power?
However, time passed and nothing happened. Were the templar brothers themselves silent, waiting for the repeal of the measures taken against them by Pope Clement V? Or was Portugal not ready to use the information received? Be that as it may, only a hundred years later, active preparations for ocean campaigns began. Infante Henry the Navigator, Grand Master of the Order of Christ, founded the Academy of Sagres, where he gathered Arab and Jewish scholars who understood ancient mysterious books and maps. A service was organized that questioned the captain of every ship that came to Portuguese ports. The shipyards built new modern ships. The improved naves of the Templars served as a model for them. In 1460, Portuguese ships reached Madeira and the Azores and were already exporting ivory and the first black slaves from Senegal. The development of events accelerated. In 1484, Diego Kahn reached the Congo Delta, and two years later Bartholomew Diaz passed by the Cape of Good Hope. A new route to India was opened, along which Vasco da Gama soon set off.
How much of the success of a tiny country of only one and a half million people in these incredible discoveries belongs to the Templars? We do not know. But we know that the ships that went out into the ocean carried the red cross of the Order of the Temple on their sails.
March 4, 1493, Columbus arrived in Lisbon, returning from his first trip, during which he discovered only the Antilles. On May 3, Pope Alexander VI, a Spaniard by nationality, issued the first bill, which assigned to the kingdom of Castile the lands discovered by Columbus, and those that would still be discovered. And the second bill, which divided the globe in a line from pole to pole, cut the Atlantic Ocean a hundred miles west of the Azores and Cape Verde. The lands, still no one’s, to the west of this line went to Castile, and to the east to Portugal. The Portuguese court at first agreed, but almost immediately protested vehemently. Negotiations began, and in 149In the year 4, the demarcation line was moved three hundred and fifty miles from Cape Verde. Who cares? Just Brazil began to enter into the possession of Portugal. However, in 1494, no one had yet officially recognized the existence of the South American subcontinent, and Columbus reached only the islands. What happened in Lisbon? Why did they change their attitude towards the papal decree so quickly? Obviously, the Portuguese consulted a map of the New World. A card that the Spaniards did not have, since they, without realizing it, ceded to their competitors half of the lands that the pope had endowed them with in South America.
This map actually existed. Columbus secretly got acquainted with her in the treasury, where the secret archives of the Portuguese king were kept, before setting off in search of new lands. A copy of it was also seen by Magellan before offering his services to Emperor Charles V. This map was published in the Vozgen gymnasium in 1507 by René II, Duke of Laurence. This map shows the “unknown” continent, and it includes not only Vinland North America, but also the contours of South America, along with the strait. This map allowed Columbus to assert, against the arguments of all geographers, that the land of “Central Asia” was much closer to Europe and was in fact, although he was careful not to say so, the New World. With a map in hand, Magellan was able to convince the king and his ministers that there was a strait that allowed sailing to the other side of America. According to the papal ambassador who was with him on the voyage, Magellan knew not only his approximate location, but also the smallest topographical details.
This map – we are quite sure of it – was drawn in Dieppe, in Normandy. Only there, in the Middle Ages, it was possible to put together the geographical information obtained by the Norwegian Vikings, who colonized Vinland, and the data of the Danish Vikings, who built an empire in South America. Only there and in other ports of Normandy were ships unloaded at the same time, which brought cod from the coast of North America and timber from Brazil. In this port, an Amiens monk boarded a ship, who decided to go to America to carry the teachings of Christ to the Vikings and Indians.
But how did the map from Dieppe fall into the hands of the Portuguese? There is nothing surprising. There was a close relationship between the Knights Templar and the Portuguese kingdom. Portugal was indebted to the Templars for their help in the war against the Moors.
Best Playa de las Americas (Tenerife) All Inclusive Resorts from 44 EUR/night in September 2022 — Booked.net
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View on map1000 m from City Center200 m from Piramide de Arona convention centre
Located next to Golf Las Americas, the venue comprises 535 rooms with sea views.
Very good11151115 reviews
From
€ 143
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View on map1000 m from City Center200 m from Papagayo Beach Club
This comfortable property near Chayofa pampers its guests with a private pool as well as steam baths, facials and massage treatments.
Very good384384 reviews
From
€ 167
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Cleopatra Palace HotelHotel
1000 m from City Center100 m from Piramide de Arona convention centre
The hotel offers a year-round outdoor pool, a top-quality restaurant and a sports bar.
Great10211021 reviews
From
€ 161
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Hotel Best TenerifeHotel
800 m from City Center200 m from Safari Shopping Centre
Offering a large pool along with a seasonal outdoor pool and a sun deck, the hotel boasts location in the centre of Playa de las Americas.
Great308308 reviews
From
€ 163
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Not available
Palm Beach – Excel Hotels & ResortsAparthotel
1. 1 km from City Center300 m from Papagayo Beach Club
Featuring a furnished balcony with views of the islands, this quiet apartment is set near Lava Lounge & Bar.
Great511511 reviews
From
€ 113
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Sol TenerifeHotel
800 m from City Center300 m from Papagayo Beach Club
The venue is set only 1.7 km from Aqualand, offering an outdoor restaurant along with archery, lawn tennis and ping pong.
Very good12181218 reviews
From
€ 107
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Alexandre Hotel GalaHotel
800 m from City Center300 m from Papagayo Beach Club
Centrally set close to Veronicas Strip, the venue offers a health club, a spa area and a solarium.
Very good284284 reviews
From
€ 153
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Not available
Gran Oasis ResortHotel
1. 2 km from City Center800 m from Golf Las Americas
Located adjacent to Chayofa in Playa de las Americas, this hotel offers 198 rooms and a fantastic view of the river.
Very good264264 reviews
From
€ 163
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Not available
Spring Hotel VulcanoHotel
800 m from City Center200 m from Safari Shopping Centre
Located close to Golf Las Americas, this venue has to offer a private pool onsite plus archery, lawn tennis and mini golf in the area.
Great151151 reviews
From
€ 183
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Kn Aparthotel ColumbusAparthotel
300 m from City Center600 m from The Patch
Guests can spend their days relaxing by a swimming pool or try bowling, volleyball and tennis which can be arranged by the hotel.
Very good406406 reviews
From
€ 194
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Not available
Sir AnthonyResort
1. 1 km from City Center300 m from Piramide de Arona convention centre
Located close to Siam Park and Safari Shopping Centre, this hotel welcomes guests since 1988 and offers steam baths and various massages.
Great127127 reviews
From
€ 331
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Not available
Green Garden Resort & SuitesHotel
600 m from City Center200 m from Golf Las Americas
The hotel includes a private swimming pool, boasting a spectacular location close to Veronicas Strip.
Very good291291 reviews
From
€ 216
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Not available
Catalonia Oro NegroHotel
300 m from City Center600 m from Golf Las Americas
An outdoor pool and a sundeck, an indoor heated swimming pool and a tennis centre are provided at the property, located in a leisure area next to Veronicas Strip.
Very good584584 reviews
From
€ 129
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Not available
Tigotan Lovers & Friends Playa De Las Americas – Adults OnlyHotel
500 m from City Center400 m from The Patch
Centrally located in Playa de las Americas, a few steps away from Siam Park, this hotel offers you a spa area and a Jacuzzi onsite along with a panoramic view of the mountain.
Great20002000 reviews
From
€ 192
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Aparthotel Udalla ParkAparthotel
600 m from City Center700 m from Piramide de Arona convention centre
A 24-hour restaurant is available in this hotel that boasts a magnificent location close to Veronicas Strip.
Very good555555 reviews
From
€ 100
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Not available
Hotel Zentral Center (Adults Only)Hotel
600 m from City Center400 m from Safari Shopping Centre
Featuring a rooftop pool, this excellent venue gives access to Veronicas Strip.
Very good307307 reviews
From
€ 86
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Not available
Spring Hotel BitacoraHotel
800 m from City Center300 m from The Patch
Located 1 km from the center of Playa de las Americas, the hotel offers a snack bar plus cots, child care and a playroom for children.
Great8484 reviews
From
€ 217
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Not available
Alexandre Hotel La SiestaHotel
Guests can dine in the barbeque restaurant or enjoy a saltwater pool of the hotel conveniently set in a south area.
Very good246246 reviews
From
€ 164
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Not available
h20 ConquistadorHotel
1. 1 km from City Center400 m from TIBU Tenerife
Guests of this charming hotel can enjoy an indoor swimming pool and light drinks at the coffee bar.
Very good483483 reviews
From
€ 213
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Not available
Europe Villa CortesResort
1.1 km from City Center400 m from Safari Shopping Centre
A summer terrace, an outdoor pool area and tennis courts are offered to guests of the deluxe hotel located in the centre of Playa de las Americas.
Great307307 reviews
From
€ 281
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The Best All-Inclusive Resorts in Playa de las Americas, Tenerife
Take a look at the best all-inclusive resorts in Playa de las Americas.
See All Playa de las Americas Hotels
1
Playa de las Americas, Arona, Tenerife
The antithesis to the showy high-rise hotels that dominate this part of Playa de las Americas, the all-inclusive, upper-middle-range Parque Cristobal Tenerife is more like a rustic gated community, with low-lying structures, open spaces, and lots of grassy grounds. All 151 rooms are one- and two-bedroom bungalows, each with front yards, kitchens, living rooms, and free Wi-Fi; some have air-conditioning, but not all. Kid Suites come with beanbag chairs, PlayStations, and bottle warmers. There are four pools, a pool bar, a tapas bar, and a buffet restaurant serving all meals. A multi-use sports court, kids’ club, underground disco, and animation team are evidence of the hotel’s upbeat nature, but the vibe around the outlying bungalows is peaceful. All this, and the extremely family-friendly property is a three-minute walk from the beach. Travelers who are willing to swap personal outdoor space for rooms with ocean views could try h20 Conquistador.
2
Playa de las Americas, Arona, Tenerife
The 210-room upper-middle-range Gran Oasis Resort is located on the far edge of Golf Las Americas, about a 10-minute drive from the beach. The upscale and beachy apartments were all renovated in 2014 and 2015, and include full kitchens, living rooms, two flat-screen TVs, air-conditioning, and balconies or verandas (those with golf-course views have both). The hotel has three heated pools, three dining options, a huge game room, and a grocery store, plus it offers free shuttles to Siam Park and the beach. Travelers who don’t want shuttle rides or car drives to stand between them and the ocean could try the beachfront Parque Santiago III, but the rooms there are smaller and less fresh.
3
Playa de las Americas, Arona, Tenerife
The upper-middle-range, family-friendly Green Garden Resort and Suites is an all-inclusive optional property packed with charm and character. Its 121 apartments are attractive and spacious, all equipped with fully equipped kitchens, private balconies or terraces, and flat-screen TVs. The resort’s two restaurants — one buffet and one a la carte — are a cut above the norm, and there’s a well-stocked market on-site for self-catering guests. Extensive features for both adults and kids include three pools, a playground, daily entertainment, a small gym, and a Thai-style spa. The property is surrounded by the Las Americas golf course, but it’s a 30-minute walk from the beach, restaurants, and shops — the hotel does offer a free shuttle. Travelers looking to be closer to the action should check out the Parque Cristobal Tenerife, which is a 10-minute walk to the beach.
4
Playa de las Americas, Arona, Tenerife
The quiet and friendly budget-friendly Marola appeals to easygoing families, couples, and friend groups in need of a pleasant and favorably located hideaway. The 72 rooms consist of studios and one- and two-bedroom apartments, each equipped with a kitchenette, sleeper sofa, and private balcony overlooking either the pool or the lively street below and mountains in the background. The low-key pool scene features a heated pool, separate kids’ pool, snack and drink bar, white sun loungers, dwarf palms, and flowering plants — but no poolside animation or music. A game room with free Wi-Fi, a simple buffet restaurant with street terrace seating, a small fitness room, and laundry facilities are also found on-site. It’s worth comparing rates with next door sister property Marola Portosin, where the pool is slightly larger and rooms are a touch more modern.
5
Playa de las Americas, Arona, Tenerife
The 217-room, upper-middle-range Marylanza Suites & Spa is a low-key, family-friendly all-inclusive next to Golf Las Americas, about a 15-minute walk from the adrenalized beach zone. Its two-story buildings form a rectangular enclosure around two large pools, plus a separate kids’ pool and a poolside bar and grill. All rooms are air-conditioned apartment-style suites — some overlooking the pool or golf course — with kitchens, flat-screen TVs, and private patios or balconies. The hotel offers a buffet restaurant with a 15-day dinner program that prevents redundancy, as well as an a la carte restaurant, a lobby bar with local tapas and wines, and a disco with light entertainment at night. Notable are the excellent hydrotherapy spa and fitness facility, both of which incur extra fees. HD Parque Cristobal provides a similarly relaxed environment for families, but is just a three-minute walk from the beach.
6
Playa de las Americas, Arona, Tenerife
Spring Hotel Bitacora is a busy, family-friendly, mid-range resort hotel right in the bustling center of Playa de las Americas. The 314 rooms here come in two main categories: Standards and Superiors; the latter have a few perks such as bathrobes and pool/sea views, but the categories are otherwise more or less the same, with neutral decor, sofa beds, and balconies. It’s the amenities that really shine here, and the hotel features two huge pools (one for kids and one for everyone), a huge kids’ club with all sorts of slides and ball pits, and unusual nightly entertainment including acrobatics shows and regular performances by a popular local Eagles cover band. All-inclusive rates are available at the singular buffet restaurant. However, it’s noisy and hectic overall and those without kids will probably find it unbearable. If you fit into that category, consider checking out the slightly quieter Hotel Gala instead.
7
Playa de las Americas, Arona, Tenerife
The mid-range Hotel Olé Tropical offers contemporary rooms and leisure facilities outside of central Playa de las Americas, a 10-minute walk from the nearest beach. Numerous restaurants and bars are within walking distance, but past guests have complained of late-night noise — light-sleepers should request a room not facing the street. The 189 rooms are clean and up-to-date, outfitted with monochrome decor, air-conditioning, mini-fridges, and outdoor spaces, some with distant sea views. Features include an outdoor pool and separate kiddy pool, kids’ club, entertainment team, and spa services. A buffet restaurant and two bars are available, as are all-inclusive packages. Couples wanting something more romantic should consider the adult-only Hotel Sunprime Ocean View.
8
Playa de las Americas, Arona, Tenerife
The upscale, beachfront h20 Las Palmeras was one of the first hotels in the area, but thanks to a 2015 renovation, it’s also one of the freshest, with a bright, retro-modern look that is a major deviation from what is commonly found at Playa de las Americas hotels. But there’s substance as well as style. In addition to trendy decor, the 519 rooms have mini-fridges, air-conditioning, flat-screen LED TVs, and balconies or terraces — many with ocean views. Plus, Las Palmeras has so many features (three pools, five eateries, three bars, an exhaustive entertainment program…), you’d think it was in the middle of nowhere, not in the smack-dab center of town on a prime beachfront piece of land. Travelers looking for less of a big-resort experience could check out Aparthotel El Duque, a scaled-down all-inclusive that’s a short walk from Costa Adeje’s best beach.
9
Playa de las Americas, Arona, Tenerife
h20 Conquistador’s monstrous concrete exterior commands the coastline, but the 485-room upscale resort makes up for its unsightly bulk with a surprisingly fresh and contemporary interior design, warmhearted service, and a considerable set of features. Three pools, a gorgeous spa, seemingly endless buffet, and three distinct a la carte restaurants are standouts among the substantial offerings, not to mention direct beach access. Rooms are a squeeze, but come with mini-fridges, flat-screen TVs, and balconies, many overlooking the ocean. In all, the property has across-the-board appeal for all sorts of guests — families, couples, even the rare business traveler — but those looking for a quieter vibe (and the same killer location) could check out Parque Santiago IV.
10
Playa de las Americas, Arona, Tenerife
The 221-room, budget-oriented Aparthotel Parque de la Paz is a well-loved apartment-style hotel in central Playa de las Americas, a short walk from the beach. The complex has two buffet restaurants, a three-leaf-clover-shaped pool, a kids’ pool, and a pool bar, plus a full activities and entertainment schedule (year-round) and a popular all-inclusive option. Tidy one- and two-bedroom apartments are extremely basic and lack air-conditioning, but they cater well to guests on longer stays with kitchenettes and private balconies or terraces; most have ocean views. Travelers who want to be directly on the beach could consider Parque Santiago III, a property with similar accommodations and atmosphere, but no all-inclusive rates.
11
Playa de las Americas, Arona, Tenerife
The mid-range Park Club Europe Hotel is a family-friendly property located a 10-minute walk from two beaches, one of which is Playa de las Americas. There are numerous restaurants, bars, and shops nearby, yet the property remains largely quiet. The 241 rooms have either dated decor or contemporary stylish, though standard amenities include modern mosaic-tiled showers, flat-screen TVs, mini-fridges, and furnished balconies. Unfortunately, only upgraded units have air-conditioning and free Wi-Fi is limited to the lobby. Features are extensive, including a big pool, daily activities and nightly entertainment — which is reportedly mediocre — various sports facilities, and some animals for kids to feed. All-inclusive rates cover all meals and accompanying wine, beer, soft drinks, and water, but food receives mixed reviews. Couples may prefer the adult-only and more contemporary Hotel Sunprime Ocean View.
12
Costa Adeje, Adeje, Tenerife
The 354-room mid-range Hotel Troya has a prime location steps from the sand, overlooking Troya and El Bobo beaches. Rooms types and views vary, but all units have air-conditioning, soundproofing, private balconies, and free Wi-Fi. Shared features are abundant and appealing: a large pool with a shallow kids’ end, a buffet restaurant, a pool bar, a stylish solarium, and an enormous spa center — a somewhat rare commodity at Playa de las Americas hotels — with a hot tub, hydromassage pool, and thermal cabins. Note that Troya will close for three months in 2017 to complete renovations it began in 2013; this time, the hotel will completely redo the pool area and add an entire new floor of rooms. It’s worth comparing rates with Troya’s nearby sister property, Hotel Gala, which is slightly set back from the beach, but has equally impressive spa facilities.
13
Playa de las Americas, Arona, Tenerife
The mid-range Kn Columbus Aparthotel is a large hotel complex with generally attractive rates and a solid location a short walk from the beach. Its 580 studios and apartments are divided between the dated non-renovated rooms and the crisp, bright renovated ones with kitchenettes, though all have private balconies. The vast pool courtyard features two freshwater pools, a hot tub, and a kids’ wading pool, and a bar. There is also a main buffet restaurant serving all meals, as well as a pizzeria, plus the hotel is located next to a grocery store, making it easy for guests in rooms with kitchenettes to self-cater. Kn Columbus’ spa, several solariums, kids’ club with outdoor playground, arcade, and business center make it a decent pick for its residing families, couples, and groups of students on break. Travelers looking for more personal space could try one of Parque Cristobal Tenerife’s bungalows, all with yards and kitchens.
14
Playa de las Americas, Arona, Tenerife
La Siesta Hotel is a mid-range resort in the heart of Playa de las Americas, a five-minute walk from the beach. The 282 rooms come in two main categories — Standard and Club Alexandre — the latter of which have updated decor and pool views, while the former are dated and overlook the street. Amenities are plenty and include a huge restaurant with thematic dinners, a large central lagoon pool, a fitness center, a spa with a hydrotherapy circuit, and all sorts of indoor and outdoor games and activities, like air hockey and archery. While it’s a solid three-pearl choice, the lack of free hotel-wide Wi-Fi may put some travelers off; those who like to spend a lot of time online may want to consider Spring Hotel Bitacora, which offers free Wi-FI and iMacs in the lobby.
15
Playa de las Americas, Arona, Tenerife
The family-focused, three-pearl Compostela Beach Golf Club is a popular 156-apartment hotel with all-inclusive options. Though the resort’s name may lead travelers to believe otherwise, both the beach and entrance to the neighboring golf course are a 10-minute walk away. On-site there’s a decent-sized pool with a kiddy section, plus a bevy of kid-friendly amenities such as a kids club, game room, and daily entertainment program. Spacious and bright apartments have fully equipped kitchens but some dated furnishings; all except loft studios come with small private gardens or balconies. The buffet eatery’s food receives many negative reviews, but there are plenty of bars and restaurants within a few blocks. The resort offers good value overall, but it’s worth comparing rates with the similar Parque Cristobal Tenerife.
The Best Playa de las Americas All-inclusive Resorts – All-inclusive Resorts in Playa de las Americas
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HD Parque Cristobal Tenerife
3 out of 5
Rafael Puig Lluvina, 15, Playa de las Americas, Adeje, Arona, Tenerife, 38660
Fully refundableReserve now, pay when you stay
The price is $252 per night from Sep 14 to Sep 15$252
per night
Sep 14 – Sep 15
∞ Verified all-inclusive room rates! What’s included? Buffet meals and local beverages and soft drinks. Onsite entertainment and dance classes. The hotel also features free in-room WiFi, 2 outdoor pools, and a restaurant.
4.4/5 Wonderful! (183 reviews)
Hd Parque Cristobal
“Great hotel with plenty going on. Ideal location, helpful staff and very clean. We will definitely be back – the bungalow was great, all on the one level with sunbeds.”
Reviewed on Jul 8, 2022
HD Parque Cristobal Tenerife
Green Garden Resort & Suites
4 out of 5
Calle Landa Golf, 1, Playa de las Americas, Arona, Tenerife, 38650
The price is $159 per night from Oct 3 to Oct 4$159
per night
Oct 3 – Oct 4
∞ Verified all-inclusive room rates! What’s included? Buffet meals and local beverages and soft drinks. The aparthotel also features free in-room WiFi, 2 restaurants, and 2 outdoor pools.
4.4/5 Excellent! (99 reviews)
Perfect for family trip
“Excellent resort. Great for family with young children. Could not fault food or activities. Staff were all very friendly. The resort could benefit from a separate bar or restaurant as you end up eating breakfast, all dinners and having drinks and entertainment in the same room. A minor issue though. …”
Reviewed on Jun 8, 2022
Green Garden Resort & Suites
Coral Suites & Spa
4 out of 5
Calle Noelia Afonso Cabrera, 10, Playa de las Americas, Arona, Tenerife, 38660
∞ Verified all-inclusive room rates! What’s included? À la carte meals and local beverages and soft drinks. All onsite activities and use of facilities and equipment. The aparthotel also features free in-room WiFi, 2 outdoor pools, and a restaurant.
4.3/5 Excellent! (133 reviews)
Great Stay
“Hotel overall was great. The rooms were a decent size, a safe was included but you had to pay €15 for the week with a €6 deposit. The pool area was a great size, there wasnt any day time music which was a shame this would have made it perfect. The drinks were reasonably priced. The communal areas …”
Reviewed on Oct 7, 2021
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Coral Suites & Spa
Gran Oasis Resort
4 out of 5
Calle Meandro, s/n, Playa de las Americas, Arona, Tenerife, 38650
The price is $158 per night from Oct 2 to Oct 3$158
per night
Oct 2 – Oct 3
∞ Verified all-inclusive room rates! What’s included? Buffet meals and local beverages and soft drinks. Mini golf. Onsite entertainment. Beach shuttle. The aparthotel also features free in-room WiFi, 2 outdoor pools, and a restaurant.
4.3/5 Excellent! (167 reviews)
“The property itself was great, clean and comfortable beds and good facilities. The rooms were huge and well equipped with self catering needs. The location of the hotel was quiet and only a walking distance into Playa de las Americas. Would definitely like to stay here again.”
Reviewed on May 8, 2022
Gran Oasis Resort
Iberostar Bouganville Playa
4 out of 5
Calle Eugenio Dominguez, 23, Playa de las Americas, Adeje, Tenerife, 38679
Fully refundableReserve now, pay when you stay
The price is $194 per night from Sep 28 to Sep 29$194
per night
Sep 28 – Sep 29
∞ Verified all-inclusive room rates! What’s included? Buffet and à la carte meals, plus all beverages. The resort also features free water park access, free in-room WiFi, and 2 restaurants.
4.2/5 Excellent! (748 reviews)
Summer Hols.
“Fantastic hotel and the most friendly of staff. Absolutely spotlessly clean throughout and great food and drink selection. Will definitely be returning. We had a 12 night stay but decided to extend it a further 2 nights as we enjoyed it so much.”
Reviewed on Sep 10, 2022
Iberostar Bouganville Playa
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16 Best Hotels in Playa de las Américas. Hotels from $22/night
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Laguna Park 2
6.9 Good
$45+
$45+
Parking
Free Wi-Fi
Pool
Hotel Best Tenerife
7.9 Good
$134+
$134+
Free Wi-Fi
Pool
Spa
h20 Conquistador – Playa de las Américas – Living room
h20 Conquistador
7. 9 Good
$208+
$208+
Parking
Free Wi-Fi
Pool
Spa
Alexandre Hotel Gala – Playa de las Américas – Pool
Alexandre Hotel Gala
7.9 Good
$141+
$141+
Free Wi-Fi
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Spa
Alexandre Hotel Troya – Playa de las Américas – Pool
Alexandre Hotel Troya
7.6 Good
$157+
$157+
Free Wi-Fi
Pool
Spa
Hotel Zentral Center – Playa de las Américas – Pool
Hotel Zentral Center
7.8 Good
$81+
$81+
Free Wi-Fi
Pool
Spa
Gran Oasis Resort – Playa de las Américas – Patio
Gran Oasis Resort
8.4 Excellent
$168+
$168+
Free Wi-Fi
Pool
Spa
h20 Gran Tinerfe – Playa de las Américas – Pool
h20 Gran Tinerfe
8.5 Excellent
$198+
$198+
Pool
Spa
Alexandre Hotel La Siesta – Playa de las Américas – Pool
Alexandre Hotel La Siesta
7. 8 Good
$161+
$161+
Parking
Pool
Spa
Spring Hotel Vulcano – Playa de las Américas – Bedroom
Spring Hotel Vulcano
8.3 Excellent
$194+
$194+
Parking
Free Wi-Fi
Pool
Spa
Garden City – Playa de las Américas – Bedroom
Garden City
8.3 Excellent
$75+
$75+
Parking
Pool
Spring Hotel Bitacora – Playa de las Américas – Restaurant
Spring Hotel Bitacora
8.3 Excellent
$206+
$206+
Free Wi-Fi
Pool
Apartamentos Vista Sur – Playa de las Américas – Pool
Apartamentos Vista Sur
9 Excellent
$149+
$149+
Free Wi-Fi
Pool
Aparthotel Udalla Park – Playa de las Américas – Lobby
Aparthotel Udalla Park
7.7 Good
$117+
$117+
Parking
Free Wi-Fi
Pool
Marola Park – Playa de las Américas – Lobby
Marola Park
8. 4 Excellent
$86+
$86+
Pool
Spa
Marola Portosin Apartments – Playa de las Américas – Bedroom
Marola Portosin Apartments
8.3 Excellent
$92+
$92+
Parking
Pool
Playa de las Américas hotels near Veronicas Strip
Show all
h20 Las Palmeras
8.1 Excellent
$159+
$159+
Parking
Free Wi-Fi
Pool
Olé Tropical Tenerife
8.2 Excellent
$114+
$114+
Parking
Free Wi-Fi
Pool
Spa
Kn Aparthotel Columbus – Playa de las Américas – Pool
Kn Aparthotel Columbus
7.6 Good
$118+
$118+
Free Wi-Fi
Pool
Spa
Palm Beach Tenerife – Playa de las Américas – Dining room
Palm Beach Tenerife
7.7 Good
$106+
$106+
Free Wi-Fi
Pool
Go to map
2 stars3 stars4 stars
6+ Okay7+ Good8+ Great9+ Excellent
$40 – $71$71 – $102$102 – $133$133 – $164$164+ per night
Free cancellationFree breakfastFree parkingFree internet
How much is a Playa de las Américas hotel?
Here are our most popular & best value hotels
2 stars and below
3 stars
4 stars and above
When to book a hotel in Playa de las Américas
Price per night / 3-star hotel. Prices are not fixed and may vary with time.
Average nightly price per month
Average nightly price
Top tips for finding Playa de las Américas hotel deals
If you’re looking for a cheap hotel in Playa de las Américas, you should consider visiting during the low season. You’ll find cheaper hotels in Playa de las Américas in April and May.
Hotel room prices vary depending on many factors but you’ll most likely find the best hotel deals in Playa de las Américas if you stay on a Sunday. The opposite is true for, Thursday, which is usually the most expensive day.
Book at least 45 days before your stay begins to get the best price for your Playa de las Américas hotel.
The cheapest 3-star hotel room in Playa de las Américas found on KAYAK in the last 2 weeks was $50, while the most expensive was $249.
How long should you stay? KAYAK users usually book their hotel in Playa de las Américas for 22 days.
Enjoy a great vacation at the Playa de las Américas and have fun splashing in the sea and the great water parks like Siam Park and Aqualand. The Iberostar Bouganville Playa Hotel is only a 14-minute walk to Aqualand and Malibu Park Hotel is right opposite the water park. Siam Park is on the other side of the city with the Ponderosa Apart Hotel and the Olé Tropical Tenerife Hotel about 18 minutes by foot or a 3-minute drive away.
If you want to relax and unwind, choose one of the many resort hotels with wellness facilities, like the Hotel Las Madrigueras Golf Resort & Spa with a golf course, pool and bar. Bear in mind that this hotel is adults only. Alternatively, you can choose the Europe Villa Cortes GL, which hosts a spa and wellness area and a beach club and is within 5 minutes’ walking distance of the beach.
For a vacation suitable for the entire family, choose the Catalonia Oro Negro hotel which includes a playground, outdoor pool and is only 8 minutes from the beach where you can build sandcastles. The Sol Tenerife hotel even features a Kids’ Club and a supermarket on site – and if your children annoy you too much, the hotel also offers massage services.
If you cherish a close proximity to a great selection of restaurants, the Hotel La Siesta Tenerife is nestled amidst a wide array of eateries from all over the world, may it be tapas, Indian food or Italian cuisine. Another choice with close-by restaurants is the Cleopatra Palace Hotel which also contains its own nightclub.
To be close to hot nightclubs like the Tramps Tenerife or the Papagayo discoteca, choose hotels like the Tigotan Lovers & Friends Hotel (adults only), or another option such as the Hotel Troya, which has tropical gardens and a fitness centre.
FAQs when booking a hotel in Playa de las Américas
The Vanilla Garden Hotel is just for adults and is only a 1-minute walk from the beach. Additionally, it features an outdoor pool and sun terrace. Another adults-only hotel is the Zentral Center. It is just a 7-minute walk from the beach and also includes an outdoor pool, sauna and on-site restaurant.
With the stunning sea just in front of the door, beachfront hotels like Sir Anthony hotel have clear views of the ocean. This hotel also includes a spa and outdoor pool. The h20 Las Palmeras also offers rooms with sea views and includes 4 restaurants, 3 pools and a tennis court on site.
If you want to party until late into the night or need to get up extra early to catch a flight or train, stay at a hotel with a 24/7 front desk, such as the Gara Suites Golf & Spa, which is also only 1 km from the city centre and features a swimming pool, fitness centre and on-site restaurant. Alternatively, stay at the Hotel Best Tenerife, about 400 metres from the centre, which offers a 24-hour reception desk as well as a pool, spa and bar.
You don’t want to skip your workout while on holiday? The Park Club Europe resort offers their guests a well-equipped fitness centre among tennis courts, pools and free parking. It is also only 12 minutes from the beach. Alternatively, you can work out in the Mediterranean Palace, which also includes a restaurant on site as well as a bar; or go for the 4-star Regency Country Club, which also offers airport shuttle services as well as massages.
Playa de Fañabé being one of the most popular landmarks in Playa de las Américas, many travelers enjoy staying close by. h20 Las Palmeras, Laguna Park 2, and Kn Aparthotel Columbus are recommended hotels on KAYAK within walking distance.
The average price of a double room in Playa de las Américas is $130, but it varies considerably depending on location, facilities, and seasonality. In the last 3 days, KAYAK users have found double rooms for as cheap as $22.
Hotels are safe environments for travelers as long as they properly implement sanitary measures in response to coronavirus (COVID-19). However, we recommend getting in touch with the local authorities regarding safety procedures for hotels in Playa de las Américas. For more advice, please view our information page on what to know about coronavirus (COVID-19) and travel.
Looking to spend the weekend in Playa de las Américas? Here are the best deals found by KAYAK users within the last 72 hours: 3-star hotels from $56 and 4-star hotels from $58. The cheapest deal overall was for $22 per night.
After you launch a hotel search on KAYAK, you can refine your research by neighborhood, which allows you to pick the central Playa de las Américas districts. You can also do a search using the city map to choose a specific location, like Playa de las Américas city center.
Take a look at our extensive hotel map to find the best hotels near you.
Where to stay in Playa de las Américas?
Landmarks in Playa de las Américas
Veronicas Strip
Piramide de Arona
Playa de Troya
All hotels in Playa de las Américas
Find Playa de las Americas, Tenerife Island, Canary Islands, Spain Hotels- Downtown Hotels in Playa de las Americas- Hotel Search by Hotel & Travel Index: Travel Weekly
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Should I Visit Los Cristianos or Playa de las Americas for Vacation? Which is Better? Which is Cheaper? Which is More Expensive?
Should you visit Los Cristianos or Playa de las Americas?
Which is cheaper to visit? Which is more expensive for vacation?
Which city should you visit? Read on to compare the activities as well as the prices of travel for Los Cristianos and Playa de las Americas. We’ll break down costs for accommodation, food, transportation and more to help you learn more about these two destinations. Then, you can figure out if either of these two places are accessible based on your travel budget, schedule, and interests. So, let’s dig into it.
Los Cristianos
Picture your ultimate beach vacation. It probably consists of sand, sun and the most pristine resorts to pamper and spoil you. You’ve just dreamed up a place that actually exists – Los Cristianos. Located in the south of the Canary Island of Tenerife, Los Cristianos is one of the most popular tourist centers in this area, and for good reason. This area knows how to treat vacationers. The sea is a way of life in this area of the world, and that’s apparent everywhere you look. Harbor tours, fishing trips and dolphin watching excursions are being advertised everywhere you look – all ready to give you the Los Cristianos experience.
Playa de las Americas
If you are looking to escape your life – to relax on a modern day pleasure island, then you need to book a trip to the Playa de las Americas resort. Located on the south coast of Tenerife, this party capital never goes to sleep. Packed with nightclubs, bars, live music, shops and restaurants, Playa de las Americas is the stuff Hollywood movies are made of.
Which city is cheaper, Playa de las Americas or Los Cristianos?
These are the overall average travel costs for the two destinations.
Average Daily Cost
Per person, per day
Los Cristianos
€100
Playa de las Americas
€156
The average daily cost (per person) in Los Cristianos is €100, while the average daily cost in Playa de las Americas is €156. These costs include accommodation (assuming double occupancy, so the traveler is sharing the room), food, transportation, and entertainment. While every person is different, these costs are an average of past travelers in each city. What follows is a categorical breakdown of travel costs for Los Cristianos and Playa de las Americas in more detail.
Accommodation
Accommodation
Hotel or hostel for one person
Los Cristianos €45
Playa de las Americas €92
Accommodation
Typical double-occupancy room
Los Cristianos
€90
Playa de las Americas
€184
Local Transportation
Local Transportation
Taxis, local buses, subway, etc.
Los Cristianos €39
Playa de las Americas €45
Is it cheaper to fly into Los Cristianos or Playa de las Americas?
Prices for flights to both Playa de las Americas and Los Cristianos change regularly based on dates and travel demand. We suggest you find the best prices for your next trip on Kayak, because you can compare the cost of flights across multiple airlines for your prefered dates.
Food
Food
Meals for one day
Los Cristianos €30
Playa de las Americas €36
Entertainment
Entertainment
Entrance tickets, shows, etc.
Los Cristianos €18
Playa de las Americas €24
Tours and Activities in Los Cristianos
For Los Cristianos, here are a few prices for actual activities, tours, and tickets provided by various companies:
3-day Tenerife & la Gomera Sightseeing Tour:
$151
Costa Adeje: Round-Trip Coastal Buggy Tour:
$91
Full-Day Private Minibus Tour trough Tenerife Highlights:
$256
Tenerife Adrenaline Experience, Quad, Jetski and Paragliding:
$319
Tenerife Highlights Full Day Tour with Guide:
$102
Tenerife Turtles by Kayak and Snorkeling Adventure 5+ groups discounts:
$55
Tenerife: Dolphins by Kayak Tour:
$55
Viking Adventure with Lunch & Local Pickup from South Tenerife:
$36
Tours and Activities in Playa de las Americas
Also, here are some specific examples of entertainment, tickets, and activities for Playa de las Americas.
4-Hour Walking Tour to Masca:
$66
4h Forest Quad Tour on Polaris 500cc Quad:
$102
BEST BUGGY SAFARI TOUR, Super sandy off-road fun!:
$224
Guachinche 6-hour Gastronomic Tour in Tenerife:
$139
Skip the Line: Medieval Show Castillo de San Miguel – Ticket:
$58
The Terraces of the North (Island Tour / Private):
$99
The Terraces of the North (Island Tour):
$81
Alcohol
Alcohol
Drinks for one day
Los Cristianos €5. 71
Playa de las Americas €6.86
About these numbers
When we compare the travel costs of actual travelers between Los Cristianos and Playa de las Americas, we can see that Playa de las Americas is more expensive. And not only is Los Cristianos much less expensive, but it is actually a significantly cheaper destination. So, traveling to Los Cristianos would let you spend less money overall. Or, you could decide to spend more money in Los Cristianos and be able to afford a more luxurious travel style by staying in nicer hotels, eating at more expensive restaurants, taking tours, and experiencing more activities. The same level of travel in Playa de las Americas would naturally cost you much more money, so you would probably want to keep your budget a little tighter in Playa de las Americas than you might in Los Cristianos.
Playa de las Americas
Spain Resorts >> Canary Islands >> Tenerife Island >> Tenerife Resorts >> Playa de las Americas
PLAYA DE LAS AMERICAS
By the beginning of the 70s of the past century, it became quite clear that the north of the island – a traditional holiday destination for Conan Doyle’s contemporaries – could not cope with the ever-increasing number of tourists. And the requests of the guests of Tenerife have changed somewhat: the European public, not spoiled at home by the sun and the ocean, now wanted not only to breathe the sea air and walk gracefully along the promenade, but also to swim all year round. And this has always been a problem in the north…
The choice of location for the new resort seemed obvious. The mountain range that crosses the island does not let in the cold trade winds blowing from the northeast, so the south of Tenerife is naturally protected from all sorts of outrages of nature. And if in the humid north the air temperature is usually several degrees lower, the ocean is restless, and cloudiness and precipitation are unpredictable, then the dry south, according to the plan of statesmen, is simply obliged to please heat-loving holidaymakers in every possible way.
Despite the fact that only a few tens of kilometers separate the south of Tenerife from the north, the difference in climate is as if you are in two different countries. No wonder Tenerife is called “the island with two faces”.
The north is covered with lush vegetation, while in the south it rains several times a year, so the natural landscapes resemble a semi-desert.
By this time, the southern coast of the island was a rather dull sight. There was nothing at all here. Well, almost nothing. Several small settlements of fishermen and bushes of Canary milkweed – a relative of cacti that has learned to survive without moisture among the stones. Not only hotels, but the entire infrastructure had to be created from scratch. A large-scale project to transform a desert strip of coast into a modern resort attracted Spanish and foreign investors, and in just two decades the city grew from scratch. A city of hotels, restaurants and bars, shops and entertainment venues. A city built specifically for tourists: locals live mostly outside of it and flock to work in Las Americas from all over the island. In 1978, twenty kilometers from the future main resort of the island earned an international airport. Queen Sophia was present at its opening, after whom it was named.
Well, Playa de las Americas (“America’s Beach”) itself received such a name not in order to please the United States, but in order to once again celebrate the feat of Columbus and his comrades.
Costa Adehe
today is administratively divided into two districts, and the conditional border is divided into two districts. The western part is called Costa Adeje. East – directly Playa de las Americas. Since this is actually one resort, we will everywhere on the site call “America’s Beach” the entire stretch of coast from the village of La Caleta in the west to the border with the neighboring resort – Los Cristianos – in the east.
By the way, Los Cristianos could also be “attributed” to Las Americas for convenience: these two resorts have long merged into one. Where one ends and the other begins, no one can say for sure. For reference, the role of the boundary pillar separating Playa de las Americas and Los Cristianos is played by a small mountain Chaiofita.
Aerial view of Playa de las Americas
Las Americas is Tenerife’s largest and most popular tourist resort. Every year, millions of tourists come here from all over Europe, attracted by the comfortable climate and developed infrastructure. Our compatriots also mainly stay in Las Americas: here we offer the largest selection of hotels and excursions in Russian.
Although there are relatively few tourists from Russia (no more than 3% of the total number of holidaymakers in the high season), hotels and shops are increasingly accepting Russian-speaking staff, and Russian-language menus in restaurants are almost the norm. In general, even without knowledge of foreign languages, you will not be lost.
Resort plan with hotel locations
More convenient plan, but only the western part of the resort
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Columbus in the port of Puerto Colon points his finger towards America
“, and the style of rest. The western part of the resort is quiet and respectable. The central one – around the Sol Tenerife hotel (squares B7, B8, C8 on the panoramic plan) – is the busiest. Discos and clubs are concentrated here, there are many young people on the streets until late at night. In the eastern part, it is crowded during the day and in the evening, there are many shops and restaurants, but closer to midnight, all establishments are closed, gentlemen vacationers disperse to the numbers of the surrounding “fives” and “fours”, and the area falls asleep.
Most of the hotels in Playa de las Americas were built relatively recently – this is another argument in the treasury of the resort’s merits. The local “grandfather” is the Gran Tinerfe hotel, the very first on the coast. It was erected back in 1971. Nevertheless, it is still a very worthy “four”.
0018
The number of restaurants and bars in the resort cannot be accurately counted. They are located literally at every turn. True, you should not look for traditional Canarian dishes here: the resort is dominated by international cuisine, adapted to the usual tastes of tourists from European countries. Pizza, steaks, sandwiches… Yes, and these establishments, for the most part, belong to foreigners. And here’s where to taste freshly caught fish or local rabbit stew – see the section “Canary cuisine”.
Relatively expensive restaurants with “author’s” cuisine work, as a rule, at good hotels. For example, the El Patio restaurant at the Jardin Tropical Hotel deserves attention.
Well, the best friend of economical tourists – McDonald’s – in different parts of the resort sells “set meals” for only 6 €. For the same money, a buffet is offered in Chinese restaurants. Of course, it is wrong to come to rest in Tenerife and eat in fast food. But in case of an unplanned visit to the casino (only for reference – it is in the “grandfather” of Gran Tinerfe), this information may come in handy.
In addition to jet skis and other bananas, boat trips and fishing, tourists in Las Americas are entertained by two water parks (one of them – Siam Park, square A7 – opened only in 2008), jousting tournaments, Spanish ballet, variety performances, gambling, karting and quad bikes, communication with exotic animals, spa centers and sporting events. So there will be no time to be bored.
In almost every restaurant and pub in the evenings there is a cultural program in the form of singing and music clones of Elvis Presley or Freddie Mercury, and in hotels there are simple evening shows. But spending the evening in a hotel bar while living in Las Americas is a blatant bad manners and the lot of German pensioners. Instead, buy a ticket to the “Pyramid of Arona” – get a lot of positive emotions.
Emblem of the Merkadona supermarkets
; relaxation: from mineral water and chips to air mattresses and beach towels. As a rule, these are small department stores, proudly called “supermarkets”. In the central part of the resort, it is not difficult to find those who work at night. There are also real supermarkets (pay attention to Mercadona), where the choice of goods is disproportionately larger, and prices are lower.
For more serious shopping, it is better to go to the capital of Tenerife – Santa Cruz. It also makes sense to buy consumer electronics there, without contacting the cunning Indians who own all the “electronic” outlets of the resort.
And, finally, like any self-respecting resort, Las Americas is equipped with a pedestrian promenade: along it you can take a leisurely walk along its entire six-kilometer coastline. Better – in the evening, to keep in memory and then remember the dramatic Tenerife sunsets for a long time. And they are especially good in Las Americas.
The bus station, from where there is a regular bus service to all corners of Tenerife of tourist interest and the airport, is located in square A7 on the panoramic plan of the resort. More details in the “How to get there” section.
Distance from Las Americas to: Santa Cruz de Tenerife – 80 km; cities of Puerto de la Cruz – 110 km; South Airport – 20 km; North Airport – 89 km.
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Tenerife island
Playa de las Americas
Hotels
Hotels
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Playa de Las Americas is the most popular and youngest resort in Tenerife, famous for its magnificent sandy beaches.
Sandy beach of Playa de las Americas, Tenerife
Boat trip along the coast of Playa de las Americas
Picturesque coast of Playa de las Americas
Most of the hotels here are built in accordance with the latest European standards and are located within the city in close proximity to shops, bars and restaurants. Most resort hotels are classified as 4 * and have a high level of comfort. In almost all hotels, animation teams work throughout the day, sports competitions are organized, aerobics classes, various contests and games for adults and children are held, and children’s mini-clubs are opened at hotels in summer. Nightlife in hotels is no less rich and varied: discos, performances, themed shows, live music.
Adjacent to the resort is the Jungle Park Zoo, which is unique for its eagle shows. Also from Playa de las Americas, it is convenient to get to the San Miguel Marina, where a submarine is based, on which tourist safaris are organized.
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Playa de las Americas – Resort photo and description
Tenerife has long been known as the “island of eternal spring” – greenery, ocean, sun, an abundance of magnificent landscapes surround you, as soon as you set foot on the land of this extraordinary island. And one of the most popular resorts not so long ago was Playa de las Americas – a bright, daring and modern city.
When you get to Playa de las Americas, you immediately begin to understand why the island is called “islands with two faces”.
If its northern part is lush vegetation, high humidity, cooler temperatures, sometimes unpredictable precipitation, then in the south, separated from the north with its windy mountain ranges, it is an arid area and almost no rain.
It is this resort that is the most suitable for especially heat-loving travelers – all year round you will find sunny weather and ideal conditions for sunbathing and swimming in the ocean.
Do not forget about the “convenience” of its location – the fact that the city is located less than eighty kilometers from the capital of the island and that from here some fifteen to twenty minutes drive to the southern airport.
Actually, to say that the resort “became” popular recently would not be entirely true – it appeared here not so long ago, literally twenty years ago. In the early 70s, the authorities decided to develop the southern regions of the island (at that time, the northern part was the most populated and visited by tourists). At that time, the land, which today has become one of the most attractive resorts, was a very dull sight: almost a complete lack of greenery and a couple of fishing villages. However, the project to build a new resort interested investors from different countries. And now, twenty years later, on a once empty (or rather, even deserted) place, there was a city – with all the “attributes” put in this case: hotels and bars, shops and restaurants and, of course, all kinds of entertainment venues. In a word, a real resort in which the bulk of the population is made up of visiting tourists.
The city got its name not at all thanks to America, as one might assume – it was named so only in order to once again perpetuate the feat of famous fellow countrymen, Christopher Columbus and his “colleagues” in navigation Amerigo Vespucci.
The six-kilometer coast of the resort is divided into two parts (a dry riverbed became the conditional boundary of the division):
the western part is Costa Adeje,
the eastern part bears the same name with the city.
There are eight safe and comfortable sandy beaches with developed infrastructure on the coast.
On each of them you can use:
rental of sun loungers and umbrellas,
go for water activities (banana, jet ski),
go for a walk on a yacht or catamaran,
go deep sea fishing on a boat (boats depart from the sports port),
go on an underwater safari on a submarine
Given that this is a very young resort built from scratch, it is easy to assume that almost all the hotels here are modern, with excellent infrastructure.
There are a lot of accommodation places here – more than six dozen.
These are mainly three-four-star hotels, but there are also five-star hotels, apartments and residential complexes. Among them, you can pick up those that are perfect for relaxing with a child, and those that will appeal to young people. And there is no doubt that the service in any of them, whichever you choose, will be, if not ideal, then very good (according to the degree of stardom).
Nearby you can visit one fairly well-known natural attraction of the island – the central park of Arona. Here you will see a large collection of all kinds of exotic plants.
There is also an eagle park nearby, where, in addition to these birds of prey, other wild animals are also kept. Be sure to watch the bird show.
Jungle Park Zoo
Don’t forget to visit “Aqualand” – water amusement park. But if you are a big fan of water activities, it is better to spend the whole day in the large Siam Park water park.
In general, the island is not big and tourists often rent a car and drive around all the interesting places on the island. If you don’t want a car, bus trips to Loro Park, to the Teide volcano, to the capital are also organized.
More about the sights of Tenerife
The resort is famous for its pubs, bars, nightclubs, spectacular discos and other entertainment of this kind. It would be quite difficult to list all of them – they are located at almost every step. Most entertainment facilities are located in the central part of the resort.
It attracts hundreds of thousands of travelers, and it does not matter either the country from which you arrive, or your gender, or even your age: the main (and perhaps the only) condition for those who are going to Playa de las Americas is you must want and love to relax and have fun.
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Playa de las Americas resort
It stretches for several kilometers along the southern coast of the island and is a huge tourist center that annually attracts millions of tourists from all over Europe.
Our compatriots also mainly stay in Las Americas – that’s why we offer you the largest selection of hotels and apartments here.
Playa de las Americas is a city of hotels, restaurants and bars, shops and entertainment venues. A city built specifically for tourists. The locals do not live here: service personnel come to work in Las Americas from all over the island.
In just two decades, 20 km from the airport, on the once pristine and deserted strip of coast, countless hotels have appeared – from very economical to luxurious five-star complexes, which allows you to find the right accommodation option for tourists who prefer a variety of leisure styles .
most of the hotels in Las Americas were built relatively recently, they meet the highest requirements in terms of comfort and service, room equipment and the use of modern construction technologies (pictured is the best Bahia del Duque 5 * hotel on the island).
The border of “America’s Beach” (as the name of the resort is translated from Spanish) from the north is Playa del Duque beach. In the south, Las Americas smoothly flows into Los Cristianos – another, but more “compact” and quiet resort of the island.
In fact, Los Cristianos and Las Americas have long since merged to form a single whole, and it would be more correct to call Los Cristianos the area of Playa de las Americas. But while administratively these are two different resorts.
Like any self-respecting resort, Las Americas has a pedestrian promenade where you can stroll along its entire coast. And if the northern border of the resort is quite obvious, then you simply won’t notice the “transition” from Las Americas to Los Cristianos: an endless string of hotels on the left, the ocean on the right – and no visual border.
For a conditional “border pillar” separating Playa de las Americas and Los Cristianos, you can take a small mountain Chayofita (Montana Chayofita).
Las Americas is not only the largest, but also the most developed Canary resort in terms of tourist infrastructure. It offers its guests a huge selection of entertainment for every taste, age and budget.
As for restaurants, bars and fast food establishments, no one can even say how many there are.
True, traditional Canarian dishes (with the exception of the ubiquitous side dish papas arrugadas) will be quite difficult to find: the resort is dominated by “international” cuisine, designed for the usual tastes of tourists from various countries.
Eight sandy beaches of the resort are protected from waves by stone dams and allow you to comfortably swim in the ocean throughout the year.
All beaches have sun loungers and umbrellas for rent, a variety of water activities, cafes and restaurants. Yachts and catamarans go on boat trips to whales and dolphins from the port of pleasure boats, and small specially equipped boats go on deep-sea fishing.
Playa de las Americas is home to countless shops selling just about anything you might need on a holiday, from mineral water and beer to air mattresses. These are small department stores that can be found literally at every turn and are proudly called “supermarkets”.
Real supermarkets – hypermarkets are located outside the resort on the motorway. The choice of products in them is disproportionately greater, and the prices are lower.
For non-food “shopping” it is better to go to the capital of Tenerife – Santa Cruz. It also makes sense to buy consumer electronics.
And for those who have time to miss Russian products, there is a special store “Matryoshka House”, located on the lower tier of the shopping center between the embankment and the Gran Tinerfe hotel. Familiar names: “condensed milk”, “crayfish necks”, “caviar” – but for some reason, everything is “made in Germany”. It turns out that it is cheaper to bring from Germany…
Distance from Las Americas to:
Santa Cruz de Tenerife – 80 km;
of the city of Puerto de la Cruz – 110 km;
South Airport – 20 km.
Playa de las Americas, one of the most famous resorts in the world, is very popular among tourists. Various types of recreation and excursion programs are one of the main components of modern recreation. Like most resorts in the world, the Playa de las Americas Resort can provide a different level of relaxation at a variety of prices. This resort has both luxury hotels and budget hotels.
If you are tormented by the question “Where to relax?”, “Where to spend your vacation?”. Then, perhaps, the Playa de las Americas Resort will be the perfect place to relax.
Resort Las Americas (Las Americas) Tenerife, Spain – description of attractions, hotels and hotels nearby, book an excursion, address, coordinates, photos
@ Wikimedia Commons
/ CC BY-SA 4.
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Las Americas is one of the most popular resorts in Tenerife. It is located 80 km from the city of Santa Cruz de Tenerife. On one side of the resort is the city of Los Cristianos, and on the other – Costa Adeje. The cities are connected by an embankment and together form a kind of tourist complex with dozens of hotels, restaurants and bars, nightclubs and other entertainment.
People go to Las Americas to get a perfect tan on local beaches, explore volcanic landscapes and national parks, eat seafood, walk along the promenade and along the way learn the most useful phrases in Spanish.
Las Americas Beaches
Most of Tenerife’s beaches are made up of black volcanic sand, and only a few of light. One of these beaches is located in Las Americas, another one is in the neighboring city of Los Cristianos. And the most famous beach with yellow sand awaits you in the capital of the island – the city of Santa Cruz. The beach is called Teresitas. Sand for Teresitas beach was specially imported from the Sahara.
The coastline is about three kilometers long and you can swim almost everywhere. However, it is not necessary to do this everywhere. Somewhere dirty water, somewhere sharp stones, and somewhere too strong waves. We tell you where to look for the best beaches in Las Americas.
Camison Beach is the best beach in town. Most likely, wherever you live, you will come here to swim and sunbathe. It has soft sand, clear water, small waves and excellent infrastructure. The rental of sun loungers and umbrellas costs about 5 euros per day each. There are cafes and bars on the beach, which means you can drink a cooling cocktail and dine with Canarian dishes on the terrace of one of the beach establishments. There is a rental of equipment for outdoor activities, kiosks where you can buy a mask, snorkel or other beach accessories, there are grocery stores or souvenir shops near the beach. Near the beach there are children’s playgrounds. The entrance to the water is gentle and there are almost never strong waves, which means that children will like it here.
If you’re lucky, you can sit on the lawn under a palm tree or near the water, but for this you need to come to the beach before 10 am.
Las Americas Beach is not as welcoming as Camison. There are sharp stones here, and there is a large coral reef in the water, so you can get hurt. But Las Americas is fun to snorkel, you just have to be careful. This beach is not as well equipped as Camison, but fewer people come here. Therefore, if you want to sit with a book on the beach or listen to the sound of the ocean, Las Americas is ideal.
Playa de Troya is another good beach. It is located on the edge of the city. The black sand beach is fenced on both sides by breakwaters, so there are no big waves here, the sand is quite fine, which means it is comfortable to relax here. There are not as many people as on Camison, so you can easily find a place near the water. The beach is well equipped. There is a rental of sun loungers and umbrellas (about 5 euros per day), cafes and bars, toilets and showers. There is a rental of beach equipment and kiosks selling beach accessories.
The best hotels by the sea in the resort of Las Americas
The four-star Sol Tenerife is located in the first line of Las Americas beach and in the very epicenter of tourist life. Here you will find comfortable rooms overlooking the ocean and palm trees, three swimming pools, sun terraces planted with greenery, children’s playgrounds and professional animators, an excellent restaurant where Mediterranean cuisine will be prepared for you, a beauty salon, a tennis court.
The four-star h20 Las Palmeras is located near Las Americas Beach and other popular beaches can be reached within a 5-10 minute walk. It offers bright rooms with balconies and ocean and city views. The hotel has five restaurants, several swimming pools, including a children’s pool, a children’s club with animators, a fitness center, and a tennis court.
During the Great Depression, an Oklahoma farm boy and a charismatic minister learn that they are key players in a proxy war being fought between Heaven and Hell.During the Great Depression, an Oklahoma farm boy and a charismatic minister learn that they are key players in a proxy war being fought between Heaven and Hell.During the Great Depression, an Oklahoma farm boy and a charismatic minister learn that they are key players in a proxy war being fought between Heaven and Hell.
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Adrienne Barbeau
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Creator
Daniel Knauf
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Michael J. Anderson
Adrienne Barbeau
Clancy Brown
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154User reviews
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Won 5 Primetime Emmys
14 wins & 26 nominations total
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Michael J. Anderson
Samson
24 episodes24 eps • 2003–2005
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16 episodes16 eps • 2003–2005
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16 episodes16 eps • 2003–2005
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15 episodes15 eps • 2003–2005
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14 episodes14 eps • 2003–2005
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13 episodes13 eps • 2003–2005
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[Opening lines of the series]
Samson: Before the beginning, after the great war between Heaven and Hell, God created the Earth and gave dominion over it to the crafty ape he called man. And to each generation was born a creature of light and a creature of darkness. And great armies clashed by night in the ancient war between good and evil. There was magic then, nobility, and unimaginable cruelty. And so it was until the day that a false sun exploded over Trinity, and man forever traded away wonder for reason.
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This show is wonderful – and I’ve just started watching it this season. Instead of mundane HBO programming out to just woo shallow critics and the usual unimaginative American audiences, this show goes beyond this world to illustrate truth, deception, good and evil. The story is complex for some, since most story lines do not conclude in one episode (then again, it’s not a sitcom). The actors are amazing, the writers, brilliant, the creators, well I’m surprised HBO would let this one into their usual thematic dramas (you know what I’m talking about). I can’t say enough good things about this show. If you happen to catch it and have no idea what’s going on, don’t give up – just pay close attention and you’ll be utterly enthralled with the brilliance of this show. Carnivale is “out of the box” thinking, which I always love, so unless you enjoy the same old, same old programming, give Carnivale a whirl. It’s worth your viewing pleasure!
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Release date
September 14, 2003 (United States)
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United States
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La feria ambulante
Filming locations
California State University Channel Islands – One University Drive, Camarillo, California, USA
Production companies
3 Arts Entertainment
Home Box Office (HBO)
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Runtime
55 minutes
Color
Sound mix
Dolby Digital
Aspect ratio
1. 78 : 1
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3 Day Baja Mexico Cruise From Los Angeles
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🏅 HOLLYWOOD CARNIVAL 2022 | Dates, Events & More
Hollywood Carnival is a Caribbean – American carnival celebration that is colorful, chaotic and filled with revelry.
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When is the 2022 Hollywood Carnival?
The 2022 Hollywood Carnival dates have not yet been released.
Where is Hollywood Carnival?
Hollywood is a neighborhood that is located in the center region of LA. It is west and northwest of Downtown Los Angeles. Of course most people know of Hollywood because it is home to many U.S film industries and historic studios. The hub of Hollywood Carnival is the Carnival Village.
Carnival Village Address
6800 Hollywood Blvd.
Hollywood, LA 90028
What is carnival in Hollywood?
During carnival, Hollywood transforms into the epic center of multicultural marvels. The Hollywood Carnival is all about promoting a deeper appreciation and understanding for different culture’s amongst the Los Angeles community. The Hollywood Carnival embraces and celebrates the different cultural traditions through food, dance, art, craft, music and costumes.
Hollywood Boulevard transforms into a street extravaganza carnival with parade-goers, masquerades and musicians all dressed in incredible costumes dancing the weekend away to music from around the world like soca, reggae, samba and more.
Thousands of locals and tourists come out to experience Hollywood Carnival which is a fun day for the whole family. And because this is Hollywood, you will even see appearances from several popular celebrities! Including tv stars, movies stars and musical icons.
Hollywood Carnival Events
This year’s Hollywood Carnival promises to be more exciting than ever before! The Hollywood Carnival Village and the CarnivalParade is guaranteed to take the HollywoodCarnival to the next level. For more information please click here https://www.hollywoodcarnival.com/
Carnival Culture Village
The Carnival Village is the hub for Hollywood Carnival. It is an explosion of cultural fusion that features a Grand Sound Stage that has a variety of performers from all over the world. As well as delicious food, drinks, Arts & Crafts vendors from all over the world. There is also a dance area, a liquor garden and facilities.
Hollywood Carnival Parade
The Hollywood Carnival Parade is an incredible event that features performers, dancers and musicians. The streets are filled with masquerades dressed in the most stunning costumes representing different cultures from all around the world, celebrating Los Angeles’ multi-cultural community. It is a lively and vibrant event that will attract thousands of spectators who crowd along the parade route.
Hollywood Carnival Parade Route
The Hollywood Carnival parade route will begin at the intersection of Hollywood Boulevard and Normandie Avenue. The parade will continue for 3 miles and finish on Highland Avenue at the Carnival Village.
Hollywood Carnival Bands
Can I be a part of the Hollywood Carnival? Yes of course you can! The best way to enjoy Hollywood Carnival is to join in and play mas! There are several carnival bands that you can take part in and each offer their own unique carnival experience. All you have to do is pick a mas band, buy a costume and march with your band on the day.
Where do I purchase tickets to Hollywood Carnival?
You can purchase tickets from the https://www.hollywoodcarnival.com/
What to wear to Hollywood Carnival?
Hollywood Carnival is one of LA’s most legendary events. A celebration of cultures from all around the world. The parades are colourful AF, with women dressed in colourful and elaborate feather headdresses and bejewelled bras. You don’t need to dress like the people in the parade but why not wear some playful pieces that will help you stand out from the crowds. Its the time to let your imagination one wild and get creative and wear something fun, you can check out some cool outfit ideas on Amazon. Remember though to wear comfortable shoes as you will be on your feet all day long!
How to get to Hollywood Carnival?
There is plenty of public transportation that you can catch to get to the carnival or alternatively take a Lyft, Uber or local taxi. If you are not a local you can always fly to LAX which is a massive airport that has lots of both international and domestic flights daily.
Where to stay for Hollywood Carnival?
Los Angeles is a huge tourist destination so you have no shortage of accommodation options! From hotels to private rentals it really comes down to your budget and level of comfort. Of course if you wish to be close to the carnival we recommend staying in Hollywood. Check out some accommodation options here.
For more information about tours, things to do, sightseeing tours, day trips and more click here. For a longer tour check out Tour Radar here.
Book your Hotel and Flight for the Hollywood Carnival
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Melding Fiction and Reality in HBO’s Carnivàle
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Résumé | Index | Plan | Notes de l’auteur | Texte | Notes | Citation | Auteur
Résumés
Carnivàle, created by Daniel Knauf, portrays a travelling carnival wending its way through the Dust Bowl during the unsettled period of the Great Depression, while the overarching story depicts the epic battle between good and evil. The show was cancelled by HBO after two seasons (2003-2005) not only because viewing rates had dropped significantly but also for financial reasons. The present article explores how fiction and reality interact in the show’s complex narrative pattern, which disrupts the formulaic structure of traditional TV series. The constant oscillation between both realms disorientates the viewers as they venture into a world where dreams and reality conflate, creating its own fictional reality, while the narrative’s complex pattern and subtext induce greater involvement on the viewers’ behalf as the unfolding story requires their complete attention in order to decipher its meaning. The fusion between history (the Dust Bowl and the Great Depression) and fiction enhances the viewer’s sense of confusion. The numerous cultural, historical and geographical references create a blurred area located between fiction and reality.
Carnivàle, crée par Daniel Knauf, représente une fête foraine itinérante qui chemine dans le Dust Bowl pendant la période instable de la Grande Dépression, tandis que le récit plus large dépeint une bataille épique entre le bien et le mal. HBO a annulé la série après deux saisons (2003-2005), non seulement parce que les taux d’audience avaient baissé de manière importante, mais aussi pour des raisons financières. Cet article explore comment la fiction et la réalité interagissent dans le récit complexe de la série, qui rompt avec les formules d’une série télévisée traditionnelle. L’oscillation constante entre la fiction et la réalité désoriente les téléspectateurs lorsqu’ils s’aventurent dans un monde où les rêves et la réalité se confondent, et elle crée une réalité fictive propre, pendant que la structure complexe du récit et des thèmes sous-jacents induisent un engagement croissant chez le spectateur puisque le développement de l’histoire demande toute son attention pour déchiffrer sa signification. Le mélange entre l’histoire (le Dust Bowl et la Grande Dépression) et la fiction augmente la confusion du spectateur. Les multiples références culturelles, historiques et géographiques produisent un espace flou entre la fiction et la réalité.
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Entrées d’index
Mots-clés :
Carnivàle, fiction, réalité
Keywords:
Carnivàle, fiction, reality
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Plan
1. “When TheGrapes Of Wrath meets David Lynch”
2. Historical realism and fiction in Carnivàle
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Notes de l’auteur
This paper is an improved version of the one I gave during the Journées d’études: Séries d’élites, culture populaire: le cas HBO, organised by Sciences Po Paris and the University of Picardie, in Paris on 7 and 8 June 2010 and I would like to thank Marjolaine Boutet for her kind invitation. The Wikipedia article on Carnivàle proved of great help in my research not to mention Series Concept & Background by Daniel Knauf, <http://c.ymcdn.com/sites/www.harvardwood.org/resource/resmgr/hwp-pdfs/carnivale_pitch_document. pdf>, April 15, 2011.
Texte intégral
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“It’s a carnival. Things are never what they seem.” Clancy Brown (Brother Justin Crowe)
2 “Carnivàle Fans Besiege HBO with E-mails”, ZAP 2 it, zap2it.com, July 19, 2005.
3 “TV Guide Weighs in on HBO’s cancellation of Carnivàle”, TV Guide, June 1, 2005.
1Carnivàle, created by Daniel Knauf and aired on HBO, ran for two seasons between September 14, 2003 and March 27, 2005. HBO’s president Chris Albrecht decided, despite critical acclaim, to cancel the show at the end of the second season not only because the ratings had fallen but because of the production cost: each episode was running on a budget of approximately $3.5 million. The decision resulted in angry fans besieging the network sending up to 50,000 e-mails2 in one single weekend while TV Guide opined that HBO had merely acted like just any average TV network: “[f]or a network that brags, ‘It’s not TV. It’s HBO’, that was a real TV kind of thing to do3”.
4 “Dan Knauf Interview”, The Bally, February 15, 2005, <http://www.carnycom/bally/dan.html > April 11, 2011.
5 See Henry Jenkins’s book Fans, Bloggers and Gamers. Explore Participatory Culture, New York & Londo (…)
6 Discussing Twin Peaks, Mark Jancovitch and James Lyons suggest in the introduction of their study o (…)
2Carnivàle is a dark and eerie period drama set in the United States during the Dust Bowl at the heart of the Great Depression of the 1930s. The show follows the uncanny errands of a nomadic sideshow from Oklahoma to California, while the overarching story depicts the epic battle between good – the young Ben Hawkins (Nick Stahl) – and evil – the Methodist preacher Brother Justin Crowe (Clancy Brown). The show’s narrative structure was, as Daniel Knauf avers, “designed to operate on more than one level4” encouraging a new mode of viewer engagement5. Besides being melded into historical reality, the intricate subtext, which had been subtly woven into Carnivàle’s plot, made it, at the time, one of the most disconcerting and abstruse shows on television since Twin Peaks (ABC, 1990-1991)6. The plot revolves around two parallel storylines, which slowly converge toward one another to conflate into one single plot during the show’s last two episodes.
3The purpose of this paper – while parsing out the web of sub-textual references embedded in the narrative – will be to show how, through filmic strategies and narrative structures, the recurrent eruption of dreams and visions in the “narrative reality” constantly transgresses the limits between fiction and reality. I will then examine the way in which fiction is subtly enmeshed into the historical template of the Thirties, thus creating a world in which both realms collide.
7 See Jason Mittell, “Narrative Complexity in Contemporary American Television”, The Velvet Light Tra (. ..)
8 In an interview concerning the main title sequence Scott Boyajan explained: “Our goal was to create (…)
9 David Marc, “Carnivàle. TV drama without TV genre” in It’s not TV. Watching HBO in the Post-Televis (…)
10 Each card figures a famous painting, which changes anamorphically into a news reel.
11 Peter Brueghel the Elder’s Fall of Rebel Angels (1562) and Peter Brueghel the Younger’s The Peasant (…)
12 The news reels show historical footage of the Bonus Marchers approaching the Capitol, Mussolini, Ro (…)
13 Hélène Duccini lays emphasis on the importance of music, which signals the switch from reality into (…)
4I shall only examine here some of the most prominent features illustrating Carnivàle’s highly complex narrative structure7 and which contribute to blurring the boundaries between fiction and reality. During the opening title sequence8 the viewer is literally drawn into the world of Carnivàle as the camera zooms into a deck of Tarot cards immediately gesturing “the viewer toward the occult9” realm of the narrative. As the camera moves into one of the cards10, the viewer is transported through a fictional world of paintings11, which transitions seamlessly into the real world, denoted by historical footage of the Thirties12. The camera then moves back out before entering another card, and so on. The camera’s constant oscillation between fiction – the paintings – and reality – the news reels – conveys a sense of confusion among viewers as it questions the boundary between both realms, while the haunting score enhances the hypnotic effect of the opening title sequence13.
14 Daniel Knauf noted in an interview: “I’m a big fan of Tolkien”, in “The Making of a Magnificient De (…)
5The pilot – Milfay – opens with a prologue told by Samson (Michael J. Anderson), the carnival’s dwarf manager. The prologue not only evokes that of J.R.R. Tolkien in The Lord of the Rings (1954)14, but immediately captures the viewer’s attention as it presents him/her with the plot’s narrative framework:
Before the beginning, after the Great War between Heaven and Hell, God created the Earth and gave dominion over it to the crafty ape he called Man; and to each generation was born a creature of light and a creature of darkness; and great armies clashed by night in the ancient war between Good and Evil. There was magic then, nobility, and unimaginable cruelty; and so it was until the day that a false sun exploded over Trinity, and Man forever traded away wonder for reason.
15 As Gilles Deleuze notes, “the close-up extracts the face […] from all spatio-temporal co-ordinates” (…)
16 Daniel Knauf, “Magic and Myth. The Meaning of Carnivàle”, Carnivàle. The Complete Second Series, HB (…)
17 “Dan Knauf Interview”, The Bally, February 15, 2005, <http://wwwcarnycom/bally/dan.html >, April 11, 2011.
6The close-up on Samson’s face, which is accentuated by the dark background surrounding him, highlights the timeless dimension of the epic15 informing it with a universal dimension. Immediately after the prologue there is a brief and abrupt flash of light. The viewer is then suddenly plunged into Ben Hawkins’s nightmare: a world saturated with cryptic clues and symbols. A detailed study of this nightmare reveals that all the key elements of the series are already present, as Daniel Knauf explains, “for me the thesis was set out at the very first episode16”. Consequently, the viewer is given a number of hints to help him/her wade through Carnivàle’s complex narrative maze. Moreover, the economy of the dream segments enabled Knauf to pile up information in a condensed narrative form. There is undoubtedly a Lynchean colouring to this dream segment, which is reminiscent of FBI Special Agent Dale Cooper’s surreal “red room dream” in Twin Peaks (1, 3). Indeed, as in Dale Cooper’s dream in which the evil character of Bob appears through flashes of light, the Tattooed Man, whom we see running through the fields in Ben’s nightmare, is glimpsed at through flashes of lightning conferring an almost subliminal effect to the dream’s imagery. Consequently, the viewer is left with the impression he/she has just awoken from a nightmare, which he/she only remembers fragmentarily. As Knauf explains, “it’s done in flashes, and it’s done almost to an abstraction” to “start a clue going17”. The dream ends almost as abruptly as it began with Ben waking up in his home. The opening scene of Carnivàle clearly mirrors the opening title sequence as we move from the world of fiction (Samson’s prologue and Ben’s dream) to the tragic reality of Ben’s mother’s death in a dust-ridden Oklahoma farm.
18 The way in which this scene is filmed is reminiscent of the atmosphere depicted in Edward Hopper’s (…)
19 Samson tells Ben: “I reckon Henry Scudder is your daddy”,The River, season 1, episode 7.
20 Daniel Knauf notes that Justin and Iris are “the children of Belyakov” in “Magic and Myth. The Mean (…)
7The dream and vision segments also enable Knauf to stage the remote battle waged between Ben Hawkins and Brother Justin, laying emphasis on the parallel structure of the narrative. The second episode, After the Ball is Over, opens on Ben Hawkins and Brother Justin’s first shared dream from which both characters will awake simultaneously. This brief segment18 gives the viewer further information on the show’s narrative pattern. We can see Ben and Brother Justin sitting side by side at a counter in an empty diner as they are greeted by the waitress’s cryptic words “Every Prophet in his House”. Facing them is a mirror in which they can both see Henry “Hack” Scudder and Lucius Belyakov. This scene functions as a visual chiasmus in which Scudder, Ben’s father19, wearing an evening jacket and a top hat, can be seen seated behind Brother Justin while Belyakov20, Justin’s father, dressed in a Russian uniform, is sitting behind Ben.
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21 In the series the Avatars are portrayed as human-like beings with supernatural powers. Each generat (…)
8Not only does this scene stress the parallel structure of the narrative, highlighting the forthcoming battle between good and evil, but the visual chiasmus while restoring both Avatars’21 ascendancies through the reflection in the mirror, also indicates the double-crossing intrigue and the way in which the parallel plotlines will constantly overlap during the two seasons to finally conflate into a single plotline in which both Avatars will confront one another as prefigured by the final explosion that brutally ends the dream.
9In Insomnia (season 1, episode 9) and Hot and Bothered (1, 10) Ben is fighting off sleep so as not to have to face his nightmares. In Hot and Bothered, as soon as Ben dozes off, the figure of the Tattooed man reappears before him. Ben’s momentary lapses of consciousness denote not only the collapsing boundaries between fiction and reality – which are recurrent throughout the show, highlighting the fissures in the narrative pattern – but they also work as signals addressed to the viewer to help him/her remain fully aware of the narrative’s unfolding and its significant details.
10The dreams and visions function both analeptically and proleptically as they provide links between the different episodes of the narrative, as well as between the past, present and future. A role also embodied by characters such as the carnival’s blind mentalist, Lodz (Patrick Bauchau), who acts as a link between the carnies and the Avatars (Management, Ben Hawkins). He will also link the living and the dead in the show’s second season notably when he takes over Ruthie’s body to communicate with Lila, the Bearded Lady. Yet dreams are also a means to reflect the uncertainty and the fear of the period, as Ruthie, the snake charmer, tells Ben in Hot and Bothered: “Everyone has bad dreams. It’s the times we live in. It’s hard to feel safe…”
11Hence, dreams convey in Carnivàle a sense of doubt and indeterminacy as they become the locus of hidden and mysterious meanings. Yet, by deciphering the dream and vision segments, the viewer will probably enjoy a clearer view of the narrative’s cryptic meaning as Lodz tells Ben in Insomnia: “you must listen to what your dreams tell you. They will guide you”. A piece of advice which may well be understood here as an oblique address to the viewers.
12However, dreams are only one example of the links between the diegesis and the supernatural events which occur regularly throughout the show. In After the Ball is Over (1, 2) Clayton Jones, (a.k.a. Jonesy), assigns a task to the roustabouts while he asks Ben to clean the baggage trailer:
Jonesy. You’re in charge of the baggage trailer. Ben. The what? Jonesy. Baggage trailer ’round back. Run down trailer with a big ole roof on her. Can’t miss it.
22 Daniel Knauf, “Behind the Scenes. The Making Of Carnivàle”, Carnivàle. The Complete First Series, H (…)
13Ben obeys and as he walks away from the carnival’s encampment he comes to the trailer, which is located under a tree on the outskirts of the encampment. As he enters the trailer he notices a fœtus in a jar, he then opens an old case in which he finds an evening jacket, a top hat and an old dusty box, which contains the picture of a young woman standing in front of a truck bearing the “Big Sky Farms” sign. As he looks at the back of the photo he sees the following initials “H. S. [Henry Scudder] and FLO [obviously his mother Flora]”. The trailer’s door suddenly slams shut, leaving him in the dark, enhancing the underlying tension and unsettling atmosphere of the scene. As he leaves the trailer, the eyes of the fœtus open suddenly – “a great moment22” according to Knauf – warning the viewer about the uncanny and eerie aspect of the story, maybe also a way for the director to tell the viewer: “keep your eyes wide open”. When Ben tells Samson he has just come from the baggage trailer, the latter retorts: “We don’t got no baggage trailer. Nobody’s got a baggage trailer. It’s an old carnie gag, like hunting for snipe.” When Ben brings Samson to the place where the trailer was it has, to his great surprise, disappeared. But there is an uncanny feeling when Ben shows Samson the photo he found “[i]n the trailer that ain’t there”.
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23 Roland Barthes, “The Reality Effect” (1968), in The Novel: An Anthology of Criticism and Theory, 19 (…)
24 Ibid.
14This lapse in the interstices of the narrative fabric illustrates how insignificant objects, which stand for “concrete reality23”, induce what Barthes referred to as the Reality Effect. These details convey a sense of realism to the narrative. Ben’s photograph illustrates the “need to authenticate the ‘real’: [as] the photograph [is] ([an] immediate witness of ‘what was here’)24”, shedding light on the flaws and cracks of reality through which surreal events slip into the narrative, enhancing not only the weird atmosphere which imbues the show, but also the lifelike features which characterize the entire series.
15Furthermore, the parallel and circular structures of the narrative pattern carefully tread lines between fiction and reality, enhancing the viewer’s puzzlement. The importance of the various opposing groups of characters portrayed throughout the series shed light on the plot’s parallel structure as well as on the way in which both plotlines interact: Sofie and Apollonia; Brother Justin and Norman Balthus; Brother Justin and Clayton Jones and Brother Justin and Ben Hawkins, etc. I will only examine here three of these couples.
25 Brother Justin, “I have journeyed into the wilderness”, 1, 10. In the same episode Brother Justin i (…)
26 Michael Strang, Fan and Carnivàle mythologist in “Magic and Myth. The Meaning of Carnivàle”, op. ci (…)
27 In the mythology of Carnivàle, the Omega is, like the Alpha, a female who is the only other known e (…)
16The relationship between Brother Justin and Norman, who took Justin and his sister Iris in when they were only children and nurtured them, will progressively deteriorate notably because of Justin’s deep belief that he has been chosen by God to carry out some mysterious mission. At the beginning of season 2, Norman is left paralysed and mute after undergoing a stroke in Los Moscos (2.1). The stroke was probably caused by the revelation of Justin’s true nature. A change in character which occurs during his errand25 on the roads of California and his stay at the Sherwood State Hospital’s psychiatric ward: “Justin Crowe, the man, died in the wilderness”. Not only does Norman act as the revealer of Justin’s true nature – “my greatest evil: saving your life!” – but he is there to witness the event of the Creature of Darkness within Justin (“Justin there is a demon within you”, The Day that Was the Day (1.12). Yet he is unable to kill him in cold blood when Justin pleads with him to do so, and as such he remains Justin’s “last link to humanity26”. It is only when Justin fully reveals his evil nature that Norman will try to assassinate him during one of the preacher’s public rallies (Lincoln Highway, UT, 2.9,). Norman’s failure to kill Justin, the Usher of Destruction27, may illustrate, in a certain way, man’s inability to prevent the Armageddon.
17Although both characters do not meet during the first season, the personal evolution of Brother Justin and Jonesy clearly contribute to emphasize the narrative’s parallel structure. Halfway through the first season in Pick a Number (1.6), Brother Justin loses his faith in God after the mysterious fire that destroyed Chin’s brothel killing six homeless children, and decides to leave Mintern. While sitting one evening with a group of hobos around a campfire he tells the undercover reporter Tommy Dolan: “I lost my God”. This episode signals his progressive switch over to the “dark side of the Force”. Meanwhile, Jonesy loses his faith in Samson, having discovered while visiting Management’s trailer (Black Blizzard, 1.4) that there was no one behind the curtains. The segment’s chiaroscuro lighting establishes a visual tension enhanced by the haunting score, while the contrasting interplay between light and dark signal the uncertainty and ambiguity of the scene warning the viewers against any reliance on what they and Jonesy see.
18The parallel structure is also enhanced by the Doppelgänger motif and the recurrent use of mirrors. In Los Moscos (2.1) Sofie is filmed from behind, wandering all alone on a dusty road. The viewer catches a glimpse of two shadows stretching behind her and walking side by side: Sofie’s and that of a female veiled figure, whom we suppose to be her mother. In the final episode, Sofie, who is locked up in the cabin off Brother Justin’s house, confronts a black female figure dressed in a funeral veil whom the viewer believes once more to be Apollonia. As the figure nears Sofie, she lifts up her veil revealing not Apollonia’s face but Sofie’s who tells her “This… is… your… house”: thus giving shape to the cryptic sentence “Every Prophet in her House” uttered to Sofie by a young girl she passes by as she is walking along the road leading her to New Canaan (The Road to Damascus, 2.6). This scene is a perfect illustration of the show’s puzzle-like pattern in which all the pieces seem to fall into place retrospectively.
28 Daniel Knauf, “Magic and Myth. The Meaning of Carnivàle”, op. cit.
19While discussing the two main protagonists, Daniel Knauf argued that Ben “[is] the mirror image of Brother Justin28”. This is perfectly illustrated in the peeling scene in Alamogordo, NM (2. 2), when Brother Justin has one of his visions while combing his hair in front of a mirror. The comb suddenly sticks and yanks a piece of flesh from his scalp. Another piece comes and another, until his entire face is peeling off as he finally shreds the mask of skin from his head revealing Ben Hawkins’s face. “Who are you?” asks Justin while gazing at the ghoulish sight. This segment is a nod to Lynch’s TV series, notably the episode (Lonely Souls, 2.14) in which Leland Palmer, while looking at himself in the mirror, sees the reflection of Killer Bob’s face – the demonic entity hosted in Leland’s body – smirking back not really at him but at the viewer.
29 Ben is told by Management in The Day that Was the Day (1, 12): “To restore a life, you must take a (…)
30 “Albrecht tells reporters that the second season of Carnivàle was originally supposed to conclude w (…)
20Another main feature of the narrative lies in its circular pattern. If we consider the first (Milfay) and last episodes (New Canaan, CA) of the show, we cannot avoid noticing the obvious circularity of the plotline. The close of the first episode ends with Ben healing Maddy, the young disabled girl. While performing his cure on the young girl’s legs the surrounding nature withers of life, the flower petals fall, the grass wilts and blackens progressively. To cure the little girl, Ben has had to sacrifice the surrounding nature29. This scene is mirrored during the show’s final cliffhanger as we see Sofie entering the cornfield. As she begins healing Brother Justin the surrounding corn ears blacken and wither progressively row after row. The circular pattern of the narrative tends to corroborate Chris Albrecht’s claim that the second season of Carnivàle was to end so as to propose a satisfactory close-ended conclusion to the viewers and it seems, therefore, possible to believe that the series’ creator, who introduced the cliffhanger, was hoping to pressure HBO into pursuing the show30.
31 “Dan Knauf Interview”, The Bally, February 15, 2005. <http://www.Carnycom/bally/dan.html>, April 11, 2011.
32 Ibid.
21As a result, we may note how both the holistic dimension and fragments of the narrative convey a puzzle-like impression to the show. The fragments and the overall framework are closely intertwined; as Daniel Knauf explains, “[i]f you’re going to deconstruct the show, you have to start from the big and work your way down to the small31”. Each episode plays, just like in a puzzle, a pivotal part in the overall structure as each detail contributes to the depiction of the whole picture, suggesting a more dynamic role of the viewer. However, Knauf warns us against reading too much into the show: “like I said […] sometimes a cigar is just a cigar32.”
22Hence, the eruption of dreams into waking experience transgresses the limits between dreams and narrative reality as it refers to a reality located beyond the limits of dreams conveying a feeling of otherworldliness. By disrupting the linearity of the narrative process, the dreams and visions introduce an unstable verisimilitude, which not only puzzles the viewer, but leads him/her to the discovery of an apparently unknown reality. Moreover, the binary and circular patterns of Carnivàle’s narrative deviate from the traditional narratological canons, greatly contributing to the show’s constant interplay between fiction and reality. Another prominent aspect of Carnivàle I wish to explore now is the way in which Daniel Knauf wove fiction into historical reality by notably altering historical chronology, creating once again confusion and disorientation as the narration manipulates time and space.
33 Daniel Knauf in “The Museum of Television & Radio’s William S. Paley Television Festival. Carnivàle(…)
34 The historical setting of Carnivàle required significant research and the presence of a historical (…)
35 Daniel Knauf explains that he “wanted to do something with the aspect of more long ago and far away (. ..)
23Carnivàle is set at the core of the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl; Daniel Knauf claims he chose that particular historical period because “the Depression just seemed such a pivotal time in American history when anything could have happened and there were so many awful things happening back then. It seems almost a reasonable […] proposition that the devil was there33”. I shall therefore delve into the way in which the storyline is embedded into history and examine how both are intricately interwoven. The historical setting34 depicting America amid the throes of the Depression contributes to the portrayal of a period of despair, war fears and political tensions. Furthermore, setting the plot in the past clearly gives an impression of remoteness35 while contributing to its epic dimension.
36 See this segment on YouTube, <http://www.youtube.com?v=WSLFXzjhEM8>, January 10, 2012.
37 Management to Ben in Los Moscos 2. 1).
24The historical template of the plot comprises a period going from the First World War to the Trinity Test, which took place on July 16 1945, 210 miles south from Los Alamos on the Alamargodo Bombing Range. The recurrent visions of the trenches in which Henry Scudder crosses paths with the Russian infantryman Lucius Belyakov, an opposing Avatar, may well be viewed as an omen of the Second World War, which will reach its climax with the use of the atomic weapon. While their encounter heralds the forthcoming battle between their offspring – Ben Hawkins and Justin Crowe – the nuclear explosion Ben envisions in his dreams, in Los Moscos (2, 1)36, not only symbolizes the Apocalypse, “[a] weapon, a full sun wrought by the hands of men. It is the last link in a chain of events unfolding even as we speak […]37” but also marks the end of the Age of Wonder and the beginning of the Age of Reason mentioned by Samson’s prologue.
25I will, therefore, chart out how the historical context of the depression and the Dust Bowl, the numerous cultural references, the radio and the circus all partake in creating the subtle cultural and historical subtext of the series. However, the chronological and geographical discrepancies question the show’s realism.
26From the outset the atmosphere of the period informs the show. As Ben Hawkins is about to bury his mother, who has just died of dust pneumonia, a bulldozer moves into the frame. Ben steps in between his mother’s body and the bulldozer, frantically trying to prevent the destruction of his home, but the driver tells him he has been appointed by the bank to expropriate him and destroy his farm: “This is the property of First Merchants Trust. Now you’ve been warned. Law’s on its way.” Because of the Great Depression many farmers failed instalment payments as a consequence of which banks repossessed their farms throwing them and their families onto the roads in search for a better life. This type of situation was, at the time, an everyday occurrence. Numerous stories recount similar dramatic cases. One example is to be found in Studs Terkel’s book, Hard Times (1970):
38 Studs Terkel, Hard Times. An Oral History of the Great Depression (1970), New York-London, The New (…)
One morning a giant tractor came in, like we had never seen before. My daddy used to do all his work with horses. So this huge tractor came in and began to knock down this corral, this small corral where my father kept his horses. We didn’t understand why. In the matter of a week, the whole face of the land was changed […]. We all of us climbed into an old Chevy that my dad had. And then we were in California, and migratory workers38.
39 Studs Terkel, op. cit.: “I think the Depression had some kind of human qualities with it that we la (…)
40 See Pierre Borhan, Dorothea Lange. Le cœur et les raisons d’une photographe, Paris, Éditions du Seu (…)
27Meanwhile, the side show caravan appears and the carnies, who will pick up Ben, help him bury his mother. This particular scene underlines the sense of mutual aid, which, according to some of Terkel’s witnesses, has disappeared nowadays39. The ubiquity of poverty at the time is made clear from the very first episode of the series as we see Ben walking along the railroad tracks where the poor migrants have set up their encampment recalling the photos taken, at the time, by Dorothea Lange40 who chronicled the lives of the migrants and displaced people during the Dust Bowl.
41 “The wind grew stronger, whisked under stones, carried up straws and old leaves, and even little cl (…)
42 Woody Guthrie, Country & Folk Roots, London, Sanctuary Records Group Ltd, 2003.
28In the fourth episode entitled Black Blizzard, the Dust Bowl is the main character of the plotline and bears a strong resemblance to the description of the storms in the opening chapter of The Grapes of Wrath41 and in Woody Guthrie’s song entitled The Great Dust Storm (Dust Storm Disaster)42 in which he portrays the storm which occurred on April 14 1935.
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29Because of the storm, the protagonists are held in camera, therefore inducing moments of great tension creating at times a stifling and claustrophobic atmosphere as is the case for the trio: Samson, Osgood and the prostitute, Miss Jolene. Not to mention the duo: Lodz, the blind mentalist, and Ben Hawkins who find refuge from the storm in an abandoned house. Lodz takes advantage of the situation to test Ben’s powers. For others the storm provides a moment of rest and relief as it does for Sofie and Harlan, the café owner. Yet the Dust Bowl may also be read as something supernatural and viewed, from a religious viewpoint, as a punishment from God, which is exactly how Brother Justin views it in Milfay:
Latter days version of the vile plagues that rained on Egypt, the fires that consumed Sodom and Gomorrah, scourges of the Old Testament, yes, but even now brothers and sisters, even now, droughts and pestilence fester in the very heart of this great land […] Titanic sandstorms, the likes of which man has not seen since the days of the prophets. And I ask myself, what are these things? What are they if not evidence of God’s fury? What are they if not harbingers of the Apocalypse?
30A network of cultural references also contributes to conveying the atmosphere of the Thirties enhancing the show’s realism. The names of Theda Bara, Caruso, Dempsey, Valentino and Bela Lugosi mentioned by Samson and Jonesy are all evocative of the period.
31Some historical events are mentioned now and then during the show. In Babylon, Lila, the Bearded Lady, reads the newspaper headlines to Lodz and informs: “Austrian Chancellor, Engelbert Dolfuss, was assassinated last night by nazi insurgents” – consequently locating the events in July 1934. In Alamogordo, NM (2, 2) the camera lingers on one of the roustabouts sleeping, his face covered by TheDaily Chronicle whose headlines inform us of the Italian annexation of Tripoli, also situating the action in 1934. But in Creed (2, 5), while arriving at their destination the rousties are discussing the upcoming “fight of the century” between Joe Louis and Max Baer in September 1935. Thus, while these historical events anchor the fictional narrative into historical reality, by distorting them so they fit the narrative pattern, the producer blurs once more the boundaries between fiction and reality. Yet, while fictionalizing history the show creates its own fictional reality.
43 Robert J. Brown, Manipulating the Ether. The Power Of Broadcasting Radio in Thirties America, Jeffe (…)
44 Matthew Teorey “Metadrama in Old Time Radio: ‘Abbott…What Page Are You On?’”, The Journal of Americ (…)
32The other main feature of the series I would now like to dwell on is the radio. The radio was a social and cultural force which dominated America in the Thirties, a period which has often been referred to as the “Golden Age” of radio. As Robert J. Brown notes, by “the mid-1930s [the] radio became a pervasive influence in American life43”. The radio’s great popular appeal was partly due, as Matthew Teorey avers, to the fact that “its fictional characters entered the listener’s world44” in the same way that, nowadays, the heroes of Carnivàle enter our own world. Hence, while contributing to what Barthes termed the Reality Effect, the radio will also provide for the show’s meta-fictional aspect.
45 The mp3 recording of this programme can be found on the following website: <Erreur ! Référence de l (…)
33Although the radio played a major role in making the country more homogeneous, it was also used by some as a pulpit to spread venom throughout the ether. So, despite the atmosphere it contributes to creating throughout the show notably by playing Ruth Etting’s song “Love Me or Leave Me” as well as music by Duke Ellington, Cab Calloway and Tommy Dorsey, it is used as a pivotal element of the show’s narrative structure. In Milfay the radio denotes the contrapuntal function of objects in fiction as it provides us with a narrative counterpoint to Brother Justin’s nightmare. As Justin awakes, the radio is broadcasting the famous radio show The Shadow, and we can hear the popular radio character addressing his opponent, Joe Brecker, a convict who is about to be executed: “So you weren’t expecting me, and yet prisons are filled with shadows, shadows in the minds of men walking in the shadow of death itself. ” Brother Justin, like The Shadow’s foe, is a prisoner of his own dreams and visions, which recurrently come to haunt him at night, bestowing upon his shadowy character an aura of mystery. It is, however, worth noticing here again the anachronistic feature of this scene. The Shadow was a famous radio show all throughout the Thirties. However, the episode used in this short segment is entitled The Silent Avenger45, and was broadcasted on March 13, 1938. Yet, Carnivàle is supposed to take place in 1934. This throws light once more on the way in which the authors manipulate and distort historical facts to suit the narrative pattern.
34During his errand as he wanders the roads of California Justin will become the hero of a radio show entitled True Tales on the Road, a show produced by Tommy Dolan on KZAK radio station. The radio creates a mise en abyme effect in the narrative structure, as the fictional character of Brother Justin becomes the hero of a fictitious show within the diegesis. His errand is punctuated by the recurrent question raised at the end of each broadcast: “And what about Brother Justin? Where is he? Where are you, Brother Justin?” This mise en abyme effect is enhanced in Pick a Number (1.6). As we hear Tommy Dolan’s recurrent question, an old garage owner is sitting listening to the radio. Meanwhile, the viewer sees through the open garage doorframe Brother Justin walking by in the distance and disappearing into the night, signalling to the viewer the beginning of his dark and solitary errand into the wilderness.
46 The programme was broadcasted in the evening on October 30, 1938.
47 Robert J. Brown, op. cit., p. 238.
35In Hot and Bothered (1.10) Iris convinces her brother of the fantastic potential of the radio: “100,000 people listen to his show every week and those listeners could be the backbone of your new church”, while Dolan insists on the great advantages he could have spreading his word thanks to the new medium: “30 million people have radios in this country Brother Justin. It’s a new age.” It is to be noted that his programme is an evening show: as Robert J. Brown argues, while discussing the reason for which Orson Welles’s broadcast “War of the Worlds46” was so conclusive in inciting panic among the listeners, “tuning late was a strong conditioning factor47”.
48 For a more detailed study on Roosevelt’s use of the medium see Robert J. Brown, op. cit.
49 We may perhaps draw a parallel here between the character of Brother Justin who claims to be “the l (…)
36Therefore, at the end of the first season and all during the second one the radio will become the instrument through which Brother Justin will mould and manipulate people’s minds, underlining the major influence of the medium in the Thirties. Franklin D. Roosevelt was probably the first American politician to recognize the radio’s full potential48 notably through his “fireside chats” as the medium gave him direct access to the people. Yet Roosevelt was not the only talented radio orator who understood the power of the new medium. Such was also the case of one of America’s most potent radio demagogues, the so-called Radio Priest, Father Charles Edward Coughlin, who greatly inspired the character of Brother Justin. The radio progressively becomes the medium through which Justin will manipulate minds and convert his flock of listeners to his cause with his religious evening programme: Brother Justin’s Church of the Air49. The radio’s potent influence is illustrated by the way in which Justin enrols Varlyn Stroud – Los Moscos (2.1) – who is in prison, while his radio show is being broadcasted. We hear Justin’s voice in a subliminal message call on Stroud – “You will be my apostle” – as he sets him free, a way of demonstrating the radio’s hold over the listeners and the power exerted by those who mastered that medium.
50 Ibid., p. 18.
37Let us now consider Brother Justin’s rhetoric in his fire-and-brimstone sermons. Justin’s rhetoric owes much to that of Roosevelt who would routinely refer to himself in the first person and address the American public as “you” allowing for his words to come over as a friendly conversation50 conveying a sense of close interaction with the public: “And though I am alone in this studio I can sense your presence. You are with me and I am with you” (Los Moscos, 2.1).
51 Donald Warren, Radio Priest. Charles Coughlin the Father of Hate Radio, New York, The Free Press, 1 (…)
52 Ibid., p. 63. This is an excerpt of a speech given on January 27, 1935.
53 Ibid., p. 60. Coughlin was the first to coin the word “banksters”, p. 54.
54 See Brown, op. cit., “Sam Rosenman admired the ‘attractiveness’ of his voice; its fine shadings and (…)
38Yet, the rest of his speech clearly recalls the rhetoric and themes developed by Father Coughlin whose speeches mingled politics and religion which would rivet public attention by creating what Donald Warren terms “an ecumenism of discontent51”: “This land, your land, has been stolen. Stolen by the international bankers. Stolen by the crooked politicians. Stolen by cheap immigrant labour” (Los Moscos, 2.1). This sermon clearly echoes some of Father Coughlin’s: “Keep America safe for Americans and not the hunting ground of international plutocrats!52”; “the international bankers of ill repute53”, which highlight both features of anti-semitism and populism. Both Roosevelt54 and Coughlin had outstanding voices, which proved a significant asset for an aural medium like the radio. Yet, Justin’s warm, enthralling and mesmerizing voice, which has an almost sexual tone to it, seems closer to that of Coughlin’s than of Roosevelt’s. Donald Warren quotes the writer Wallace Stegner’s detailed description of Father Coughlin’s voice in 1935:
A beautiful baritone… his range was spectacular. He always began in a low rich pitch, speaking slowly, gradually increasing in tempo and vehemence, then soaring into high and passionate tones… His diction was musical, the effect authoritative.
39Hence, the character of Brother Justin, who will progressively ensnare the impoverished masses in his spiritual web as the plot unfolds, stands as a subtle blend of two major historical figures of the Thirties – Franklin D. Roosevelt and Father Coughlin – emphasizing once more the interplay between fiction and reality.
55 Knauf was vying for creating a new form of television viewing in which the viewers would involve th (…)
40The last aspect I would like to focus on is that of the circus which had, as Sofie tells Ben, an important role to play at the time: “The people in these towns, they’re asleep. All day at work, at home, just sleepwalkers. We wake them up55” (Milfay). The circus motif symbolises illusion. While illusion is conjured up for the circus spectator, this illusion rests on the following paradox: to be effective it must be denied yet considered real in itself. Thus (like the circus spectator) the viewer, while escaping into the realm of illusion, must accept the show’s deceptive illusionary totality. The way in which Knauf mingles historical and fictional reality in Carnivàle subtly outlines this tacit agreement between the producer and the viewers.
56 Charles Philip Fox and Tom Parkinson, The Circus in America (1969), Santa Monica, Hennessey + Ingal (…)
57 Janet M. Davis, The Circus Age. Culture and Society under the American Big Top, Chapel Hill & Londo (…)
58 Ibid., p. 27-28.
41As Fox and Parkinson note, excitement and anticipation permeated the towns and cities when sideshows or circuses would arrive in town56, “coming from nowhere and vanishing into nothing57”, while time would be suddenly set in abeyance as a world of fantasy and illusion sprung up into the real world. As Janet M. Davis contends: “[d]uping was a central part of the circus; consequently audiences were always vulnerable as they unwittingly became part of the ‘show’58”, establishing, therefore, a link between the audience and the show.
59 Lincoln Highway, UT (2.9) opens as we see Brother Justin looking straight ahead at a spider web spa (…)
42The way in which the sideshow, and particularly the ten-in-one (Milfay, 1.1), is shot by hand-held camera suggests unrehearsed filming of reality and conveys an impression of dizziness and disorientation. The audience feel as though they are part of the scene rather than viewing it from a detached and remote position, which contributes to engulfing the viewer in a world of confusion and doubt, hence entrapping him/her in the carnival’s spider web symbolized by the Colossus Ferris Wheel just in the same way it eventually ensnares Brother Justin59.
60 Davis explains that, at the time, a lot of the circus people “were social outsiders”, op. cit., p. (…)
61 The Man Eating Chicken plays on the double-entendre of the expression illustrating carny promotiona (…)
43The sideshow also encompasses the themes of errand, estrangement, alienation and marginality60. The eerie and murky atmosphere of the series focuses on the dark side of the human experience. The mysterious Management, the real freaks (Samson and Sabina the Scorpion Woman) and the fake ones (Turtle Boy and The Man Eating Chicken61), contribute to the show’s unsettling atmosphere while inviting the viewer to reflect on human nature.
62 David J. Skal and Elias Savada note that “[f]reakishness, deformity, and disability had taken root (…)
44If the show62 inevitably brings to mind Tod Browning’s famous movie Freaks (1932), the oneirological, dark and disturbing atmosphere reminds us of two other of Browning’s movies: The Unholy Three (1925) and The Show (1927). In The Show the persuasive voice of Cock Robin, the spieler of the Hungarian freak emporium called The Palace of Illusions, draws the crowds to his bally stand while their insatiable curiosity keeps the tents filled. Most of the attractions are fake freaks, especially women with lower-body anomalies: Arachnadia the human spider, Neptunia the phony mermaid and Zela the truncated half-girl. The sideshow’s main attraction depicts Salome’s dance of the seven veils, which reminds us of the Cooch show performed by the Dreiffus women in Carnivàle.
63 Charles Philip Fox and Tom Parkinson, op. cit., p. 165.
64 Ibid.
65 Janet M. Davis, op. cit., p. 41.
45If the sideshow is fraught with references to the fictional world created by Tod Browning, it is also rooted in historical reality, giving once more credibility to the diegesis. Fox and Parkinson argue that the “truck shows63” first appeared in 1918, almost at the time when Henry Scudder found refuge with the Hyde & Teller Co. travelling circus (Insomnia, 1, 9), when Management bought it out – “just after that Scudder took the power” (Samson, 1.9). Consequently, the roving circus becomes the means through which Belyakov begins trailing Scudder. With its capacity to move about, the sideshow has complete freedom: “the truck circus was free to go as it chose64”, making “the country a chess board, [as it] move[d] [its] attractions from one point to another65”. However, as soon as Ben arrives on the scene, the side-show’s circuit is disrupted:
Ben. Do you have a regular circuit? Jonesy. Circuit? Ben. Yeah. Jonesy. Used to. Now it’s just town by town, catch as catch can, and that ain’t hardly nothing! Ben. Since when? Jonesy (a beat). Since you showed up.
46A point confirmed, in the same episode, by Lodz who tells Samson: “The circuit’s just an excuse. You know that” (Tipton, 1.3).
66 Brian Jarvis underlines the link between geography and history in postmodern American culture: “Giv (…)
67 Daniel Knauf in an interview, “Something Cryptic this Way Comes”, by Pam Casellas, The West Austral (…)
47Thus, although the plot is embedded within history, the topographical and geographical reality is of utmost importance66, as Daniel Knauf explains: “I had to take something logical and figure out the topography and in venturing into the unknown as they move from one ‘crappy little town’ […]67” to another. By anchoring the narrative into spatial and territorial reality, Knauf enhances the plot’s credibility.
68 The only living creatures the carnies meet in Babylon, Stangler, tells them “there’s a lot of souls (…)
69 However, the only clear geographical indication is that of Lincoln Highway also known as the “Main (…)
48Fourteen episodes out of 24 bear either a geographical indication or the name of a real or fictitious town (Milfay, Tipton, Babylon, The River, Lonnigan, Los Moscos, Alomogordo, Ingram, Creed, Damascus, Lincoln Highway, Cheyenne, New Canaan), underlining the importance of space while also mirroring the oscillation between wilderness, small towns and the open space. Indeed, most of these towns are either like Milfay (Oklahoma) a small unincorporated community, or like Babylon an eerie Texas mining ghost town68, which the Navarro county maps do not even show and which is located on an unnumbered county road somewhere between Dawson and Purden, or Cheyenne (another Texan ghost town). Other towns like Creed are not even mentioned on any map of Oklahoma. New Canaan, the carnival’s final destination, is a small town located in San Benito County, south of Salinas. One soon gets lost in this geographical maze69 and begins to lose track of the route followed by the wandering sideshow as it becomes impossible to map the space represented by the lines and nodes of the towns, which appear and disappear in the fissures and fault lines of the landscape. Yet, when the sideshow reaches Lincoln Highway (Lincoln Highway, UT, 2, 9) the unfolding of events suddenly picks up speed, accelerating the narrative’s rhythm as both plotlines finally merge.
70 Daniel Knauf, “The Making of a Magnificient Delusion”, op. cit.
49To conclude, the narrative reality of Carnivàle is filled with cracks and flaws through which surreal and mysterious events find their way, disrupting the narrative pattern yet enhancing its complexity, leaving the viewer at times disoriented and dazzled. While embedding fiction into the historical template of the Thirties, Daniel Knauf deliberately adds a layer of confusion as he distorts and conflates the chronological course of events. Hence, while the realms of history and fiction collide, “TheGrapes of Wrath meets David Lynch”70.
71 See Jane Feuer, “The MTM Style”. Feuer gives an insightful definition to what is implied by the exp (…)
72 Brian L. Ott, “Introduction: The not TV text”, in It’s not TV. Watching HBO in the Post-Television (…)
73 Pierre Bourdieu, Contre-feux. Propos pour servir à la résistance contre l’invasion néo-libérale, Pa (…)
50Like OZ, The Wire, or John from Cincinnati, Carnivàle is a perfect illustration of HBO’s Golden Age. This hybrid show whose themes and numerous subtextual references may have seemed surprising at first clearly corresponds to what critics have termed “quality television71”: the cinematic quality, the costumes, the detailed historical reconstruction but especially its intricate narrative structure in which fiction subtly melds into reality, “demanded an intertextual literacy and activeness not typical of television viewers72” which contributed to the making of a true work of art. Carnivàle contributed to the advent of new type of viewer which Pierre Bourdieu ironically defined as a kind of “post-modern hermeneutist73”.
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Notes
2 “Carnivàle Fans Besiege HBO with E-mails”, ZAP 2 it, zap2it.com, July 19, 2005.
3 “TV Guide Weighs in on HBO’s cancellation of Carnivàle”, TV Guide, June 1, 2005.
4 “Dan Knauf Interview”, The Bally, February 15, 2005, <http://www.carnycom/bally/dan.html > April 11, 2011.
5 See Henry Jenkins’s book Fans, Bloggers and Gamers. Explore Participatory Culture, New York & London, New York University Press, 2006. Henry Jenkins, who explores the concept of the active audience and fan culture notes that “[t]he past decade has seen a marked increase in the serialization of American television, the emergence of more complex appeals to program history, and the development of more intricate story arcs and cliffhangers. To some degree, these æsthetic shifts can be linked to new reception practices enabled by the home archiving of videos, net discussion lists, and web program guides”, p. 145.
6 Discussing Twin Peaks, Mark Jancovitch and James Lyons suggest in the introduction of their study on “quality television” that the show “was instrumental in provoking television producers to rethink their relationship to fans and cult audiences” thus underlining the growing importance of interplay in recent television shows. Mark Jancovitch & James Lyons, Quality Popular Television. Cult TV, the Industry and Fans, London, B.F.I. Publishing, 2003, p. 2.
7 See Jason Mittell, “Narrative Complexity in Contemporary American Television”, The Velvet Light Trap, November 58, Fall 2006, p. 29-40. Mittell gives an extremely convincing definition of narrative complexity: “At its most basic level, narrative complexity is a redefinition of episodic forms under the influence of serial narration – not necessarily a complete merger of episodic and serial forms but a shifting balance. Rejecting the need for plot closure within every episode that typifies conventional episodic form, narrative complexity foregrounds ongoing stories across a range of genres”, p. 32.
8 In an interview concerning the main title sequence Scott Boyajan explained: “Our goal was to create a title sequence that grounded viewers in the mid 1930s, but that also allowed people to feel a larger presence of good and evil over all of time”, “A52 Masters Fate in New Main Title Sequence for HBO’s Carnivàle”, darnellworks.com. September 15, 2003, <http://www.darnellworks.com/a52/nr0052.html>, April 15, 2011. The influence of Carnivàle’s opening title sequence can also be traced in the opening title sequence of Showtime’s series Huff (2004-2006).
9 David Marc, “Carnivàle. TV drama without TV genre” in It’s not TV. Watching HBO in the Post-Television Era, edited by Marc Leverette, Brian L. Ott and Cara Louise Buckley, New York and London, Routledge, 2008, p. 101-107, p. 101.
10 Each card figures a famous painting, which changes anamorphically into a news reel.
11 Peter Brueghel the Elder’s Fall of Rebel Angels (1562) and Peter Brueghel the Younger’s The Peasant Dance (1568), Michelangelo’s fresco The Last Judgement, Saint Michael Vanquishing Satan by Raphael, War in Heaven by Hieronymus Bosch (c. 1500), Gustave Doré’s The Archangel Michael and his Angels Fighting the Dragon (1865-1866)…
12 The news reels show historical footage of the Bonus Marchers approaching the Capitol, Mussolini, Roosevelt, Molotov and Stalin, Jesse Owens and Babe Ruth and the Ku Klux Klan.
13 Hélène Duccini lays emphasis on the importance of music, which signals the switch from reality into fiction in opening title sequences, just in the same way it does in television commercials: « La musique des génériques d’émission joue un rôle analogue [à celui du spot publicitaire]: prévenir les téléspectateurs, peut-être éloignés du récepteur, que l’émission commence ; c’est un signal d’appel. » In Hélène Duccini, La télévision et ses mises en scène (1998), Paris, Armand Colin, 2010, p. 17.
14 Daniel Knauf noted in an interview: “I’m a big fan of Tolkien”, in “The Making of a Magnificient Delusion”, <http://www.hbo.com/carnivale/behind/daniel_knauf.shtml>, April 11, 2011. See also David Knauf’s interview by Kate McCallum, « The Great Idea. HBO’s Carnivàle », Scriptmag.com, May/June 2004, <http://www.bridgeartsmedia.com/img/Carnivale.pdf >, April 15, 2011: “I loved The Lord of the Rings. I loved epic fantasy […]”, p. 32.
15 As Gilles Deleuze notes, “the close-up extracts the face […] from all spatio-temporal co-ordinates”. Gilles Deleuze (translated by Hugh Tomlinson and Barbara Habberjam), Cinema 1 The Movement-Image (1983), Minneapolis, The University of Minnesota Press, 2009, p. 108.
16 Daniel Knauf, “Magic and Myth. The Meaning of Carnivàle”, Carnivàle. The Complete Second Series, HBO Home Video, 2006.
17 “Dan Knauf Interview”, The Bally, February 15, 2005, <http://wwwcarnycom/bally/dan.html >, April 11, 2011.
18 The way in which this scene is filmed is reminiscent of the atmosphere depicted in Edward Hopper’s painting Nighthawks (1942).
19 Samson tells Ben: “I reckon Henry Scudder is your daddy”,The River, season 1, episode 7.
20 Daniel Knauf notes that Justin and Iris are “the children of Belyakov” in “Magic and Myth. The Meaning of Carnivàle”, op. cit.
21 In the series the Avatars are portrayed as human-like beings with supernatural powers. Each generation gives birth to a Creature of Light and a Creature of Darkness.
22 Daniel Knauf, “Behind the Scenes. The Making Of Carnivàle”, Carnivàle. The Complete First Series, HBO Video, 2004.
23 Roland Barthes, “The Reality Effect” (1968), in The Novel: An Anthology of Criticism and Theory, 1900-2000, edited by Dorothy J. Hale, Oxford, Blackwell Publishing, 2006, p. 229-234, p. 233.
24 Ibid.
25 Brother Justin, “I have journeyed into the wilderness”, 1, 10. In the same episode Brother Justin is filmed walking down the church’s central aisle revealing some of the darkest secrets about certain members of his congregation. This scene seems to echo ABC’s miniseries Storm of the Century written by Stephen King and produced in 1999. The evil character, Andre Linoge (anagram of the demon Legion), is seen walking slowly up the church aisle revealing the town folks’ darkest secrets, creating havoc within the island’s small community.
26 Michael Strang, Fan and Carnivàle mythologist in “Magic and Myth. The Meaning of Carnivàle”, op. cit.
27 In the mythology of Carnivàle, the Omega is, like the Alpha, a female who is the only other known exception to the male restriction in Avatar succession and because of the allusion to “the Beginning and the End” in naming, the Omega is commonly accepted as the last Avatar. The Usher of Destruction is a harbinger of the End of Times to usher in the Armageddon.
28 Daniel Knauf, “Magic and Myth. The Meaning of Carnivàle”, op. cit.
29 Ben is told by Management in The Day that Was the Day (1, 12): “To restore a life, you must take a life… That is the way of our kind.”
30 “Albrecht tells reporters that the second season of Carnivàle was originally supposed to conclude with a satisfying and close-ended conclusion […] but that producers decided to add a cliffhanger, leaving the show’s small, but passionate legion of devotees at a loss”, “Carnivàle Fans Besiege HBO with E-mails”, ZAP 2 it, July 19, 2005. Yet, in an interview, Daniel Knauf notes that he understood Chris Albrecht’s decision; see “Dan Knauf Speaks about Carnivàle’s Cancellation”, Wednesday, May 11, 2005. <http://savecarnivale.blogspot.com/2005/05/dan-knauf-speaks-about-carnivales.html>, April 11, 2011. There is another piece of evidence underscoring the circular structure of the narrative. During the first episode Jonesy seats Maddy and her brother in the Colossus Ferris Wheel and in the final episode he will make sure that both Iris and Justin are firmly seated in the wheel. This could possibly be read as parable of the fall from innocence (childhood) to sin (adulthood), from the Age of Wonder to that of Reason. This is corroborated by the fact that the atomic bomb also stands for a metaphor of this dramatic change, as Daniel Knauf explains, “[t]hat event marked the end of man as a child. That’s when man entered his adulthood”.
31 “Dan Knauf Interview”, The Bally, February 15, 2005. <http://www.Carnycom/bally/dan.html>, April 11, 2011.
32 Ibid.
33 Daniel Knauf in “The Museum of Television & Radio’s William S. Paley Television Festival. Carnivàle”, March 16, 2004, in Carnivàle. The Complete Second Series, op. cit.
34 The historical setting of Carnivàle required significant research and the presence of a historical consultant who greatly contributed to reviews praising the show’s depiction of the period.
35 Daniel Knauf explains that he “wanted to do something with the aspect of more long ago and far away. I think [the show] would have lost a certain amount of its mystique if it were [set in the present]”, Scriptmag. Com, op. cit., p. 33.
36 See this segment on YouTube, <http://www.youtube.com?v=WSLFXzjhEM8>, January 10, 2012.
37 Management to Ben in Los Moscos 2.1).
38 Studs Terkel, Hard Times. An Oral History of the Great Depression (1970), New York-London, The New Press, 2005, p. 53. See also of course The Grapes of Wrath: “The tractor cut through again; the uncut space was ten feet wide. And back he came. The iron guard bit into the house-corner, crumbled the wall, and wrenched the little house from its foundation so that it fell sideways, crushed like a bug. And the driver was goggled and a rubber mask covered his nose and mouth. The tractor cut straight line on, and the air and the ground vibrated with its thunder. The tenant man stared after it, his rifle in his hand. His wife was beside him, and the quiet children behind. And all of them stared after the tractor.” John Steinbeck, The Grapes of Wrath (1939), New York-London, Penguin Books, 2006, p. 38-39.
39 Studs Terkel, op. cit.: “I think the Depression had some kind of human qualities with it that we lack now”, p. 53; “The farmers were almost united. We had penny auction sales. Some neighbour would bid a penny and give it back to the owner”, p. 218.
40 See Pierre Borhan, Dorothea Lange. Le cœur et les raisons d’une photographe, Paris, Éditions du Seuil, 2002, p. 54 et p. 94. See also Studds Terkel, op. cit., “Here were all these people living in old, rusted-out car bodies. I mean that was their home. There were people living in shacks made of orange crates. One family with a whole lot of kids were living in a piano box. This wasn’t just a little section, this was maybe ten-miles wide and ten-miles long. People living in whatever they could junk together”, p. 51.
41 “The wind grew stronger, whisked under stones, carried up straws and old leaves, and even little clods, marking its course as it sailed across fields. The air and the sky darkened and through them the sun shone redly, and there was a raw sting in the air”, John Steinbeck, op. cit., p. 2. See also Studs Terkel, op. cit.: “Oh, the dust storms, they were terrible […]. These storms, when they would hit, you had to clean house from the attic to ground. Everything was covered in sand. Red sand, just full of oil”, p. 46.
42 Woody Guthrie, Country & Folk Roots, London, Sanctuary Records Group Ltd, 2003.
43 Robert J. Brown, Manipulating the Ether. The Power Of Broadcasting Radio in Thirties America, Jefferson, North Carolina and London, McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers, 2004, p. 2. My study owes much to Robert J. Brown insightful study on the major influence of the radio during the Thirties in America.
44 Matthew Teorey “Metadrama in Old Time Radio: ‘Abbott…What Page Are You On?’”, The Journal of American Culture, Volume 34, Issue 4, December 2011, p. 357-371, p. 357.
45 The mp3 recording of this programme can be found on the following website: <Erreur ! Référence de lien hypertexte non valide>. March 11, 2011.
46 The programme was broadcasted in the evening on October 30, 1938.
47 Robert J. Brown, op. cit., p. 238.
48 For a more detailed study on Roosevelt’s use of the medium see Robert J. Brown, op. cit.
49 We may perhaps draw a parallel here between the character of Brother Justin who claims to be “the left hand of God […] I am no longer his servant” (1, 8) and the main character of Flannery O’Connor’s novel Wise Blood, Hazel Motes, whose church “is the Church Without Christ”. Flannery O’Connor, Wise Blood (1952), London, Faber and Faber, 2008.
50 Ibid., p. 18.
51 Donald Warren, Radio Priest. Charles Coughlin the Father of Hate Radio, New York, The Free Press, 1996, p. 29.
52 Ibid., p. 63. This is an excerpt of a speech given on January 27, 1935.
53 Ibid., p. 60. Coughlin was the first to coin the word “banksters”, p. 54.
54 See Brown, op. cit., “Sam Rosenman admired the ‘attractiveness’ of his voice; its fine shadings and nuances, [and] the infinite variety he knew how to give it – strength, sarcasm, humor, volume, charm, persuasiveness”, p. 20.
55 Knauf was vying for creating a new form of television viewing in which the viewers would involve themselves in the ongoing process of the story. See “Freaking Hell”, December 16, 2004, in which Knauf argues that “[a]udiences are just starving for something different. If we think about sleepwalkers, there’s sleepwalker TV […]”, <http://www.theage.com.au/news/TV–Radio/Freaking-hell/2004/12/14/1102787083353.html>, April 11, 2011.
56 Charles Philip Fox and Tom Parkinson, The Circus in America (1969), Santa Monica, Hennessey + Ingalls, 2002, p. 10-21.
57 Janet M. Davis, The Circus Age. Culture and Society under the American Big Top, Chapel Hill & London, The University of North Carolina Press, 2002, p. 45.
58 Ibid., p. 27-28.
59 Lincoln Highway, UT (2.9) opens as we see Brother Justin looking straight ahead at a spider web sparkling with droplets of water. The web progressively materializes into the carnival’s Ferris Wheel as the centre of the web/Wheel glows. An obvious ill omen as Justin’s brutal awakening attests to. The Ferris Wheel also symbolizes the magical atmosphere of those kind of fairs.
60 Davis explains that, at the time, a lot of the circus people “were social outsiders”, op. cit., p. 26.
61 The Man Eating Chicken plays on the double-entendre of the expression illustrating carny promotional strategy: as the curtain is drawn the viewers discover a man eating chicken. See Lonnigan, Texas (1.8).
62 David J. Skal and Elias Savada note that “[f]reakishness, deformity, and disability had taken root as a staple of American entertainment in the years following World War I”, in David J. Skal and Elias Savada, Dark Carnival. The Secret World of Tod Browning. Hollywood’s Master of the Macabre, New York, Anchor Books, 1995, p. 89.
63 Charles Philip Fox and Tom Parkinson, op. cit., p. 165.
64 Ibid.
65 Janet M. Davis, op. cit., p. 41.
66 Brian Jarvis underlines the link between geography and history in postmodern American culture: “Given the structural inseparability of space/place/landscape and social relations there can be no geographical knowledge without historical narrative. In other words, all spaces contain stories and must be recognised as the site of an ongoing struggle over meaning and value”, in Brian Jarvis, Postmodern Cartographies. The Geographical Imagination in Contemporary American Culture, New York, St Martin’s Press, 1998, p. 7.
67 Daniel Knauf in an interview, “Something Cryptic this Way Comes”, by Pam Casellas, The West Australian, Perth, December 15, 2004.
68 The only living creatures the carnies meet in Babylon, Stangler, tells them “there’s a lot of souls in Babylon”.
69 However, the only clear geographical indication is that of Lincoln Highway also known as the “Main Street Across America”.
70 Daniel Knauf, “The Making of a Magnificient Delusion”, op. cit.
71 See Jane Feuer, “The MTM Style”. Feuer gives an insightful definition to what is implied by the expression “quality television”: “Intertextuality and self-reflexivity operate both as the normative way of creating new programmes and as a way of distinguishing the ‘quality’ from the everyday product.” In Jane Feuer, Paul Kerr and Tise Vahimagi (eds.), MTM “Quality Television”, London, British film Institute Publishing, 1984, p. 32-60, p. 44.
72 Brian L. Ott, “Introduction: The not TV text”, in It’s not TV. Watching HBO in the Post-Television Era, op. cit., p. 97-100, p. 98.
73 Pierre Bourdieu, Contre-feux. Propos pour servir à la résistance contre l’invasion néo-libérale, Paris, Éditions Raisons D’Agir, 1998, p. 84.
Jean Du Verger, « Melding Fiction and Reality in HBO’s Carnivàle », TV/Series [En ligne], 1 | 2012, mis en ligne le 15 mai 2012, consulté le 13 septembre 2022. URL : http://journals.openedition.org/tvseries/1504 ; DOI : https://doi.org/10.4000/tvseries.1504
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Auteur
Jean Du Verger
Jean Du Verger enseigne actuellement l’anglais à l’ENSMM à Besançon après avoir enseigné à Paris V – René Descartes et Paris XI – Orsay. Il a aussi enseigné à l’université de Paris IV – Sorbonne où il a donné des cours sur le théâtre britannique contemporain (Harold Pinter et Tom Stoppard). Il est l’auteur de trois article sur l’œuvre de Shakespeare intitulés: « Hamlet and Melancholy » dans Hamlet (CNED-Didier Erudition, 1997), « Shakespeare’s Anatomy of Madness in Context » dans « The true blank of thine eye ». Approches critiques de King Lear (Presses de l’université Paris-Sorbonne, 2009) et « Influence and Resurgence of Cinema and Cinematic Motifs in Two French Stagings of Antony and Cleopatra » dans Shakespeare on Screen: The Roman Plays (Presses Universitaires de Rouen et du Havre, 2009). Il est aussi l’auteur d’un article intitulé « Géographie et cartographie fictionnelles dans l’Utopie de Thomas More » publié dans la revue Moreana (décembre 2010). Il a par ailleurs écrit un article portant sur les séries télévisées « So many traps to set »: Subversion and Subversiveness in Profit » (GRAAT On-Line issue no. 6 December 2009 http://www.graat.fr/tv15duverger.pdf) ainsi que d’un article portant sur la contre-culture « Sex, Drugs and Protest: The Film Industry and the Counterculture » à paraître dans la revue électronique EOLLE. Il prépare actuellement une thèse sur la parodie dans le théâtre de Tom Stoppard sous la direction d’Elisabeth Angel-Perez.
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Photo: Carnival is back in Notting Hill after a two-year break
Photo credit, PA Media
Photo caption,
The first day of the carnival is family-friendly, many children take part in the processions
The legendary Nottinghill Carnival has returned to the streets of London for the first time since 2019. The giant costume parade will last for two days and is expected to attract millions of visitors.
Traditionally, this is the largest street festival in Europe and the second largest carnival in the world after Rio. Its goal is to unite society by bringing together people of different views and ages.
Photo copyright, Anadolu Agency
Photo caption,
Thousands of people gathered for the first carnival after the pandemic
This celebration of loud music, colorful costumes, dancing and food with Caribbean roots has more than 50 years of history. It takes place on the last weekend of August in Notting Hill, West London from 1966 years old, but had to take a two-year break in 2020-2021 due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Image copyright, PA Media
Image caption,
No carnival for two years due to the pandemic
Notting Hill’s first street party was foreshadowed by an event called “Caribbean Carnival”, organized in 1958 by a Trinidadian human rights activist Claudia Jones.
Photo copyright, Dan Kitwood
Photo caption,
Both adults and children participate in carnival processions
She wanted to unite the local community in the aftermath of racist attacks on Caribbean Islanders who, at the invitation of the government, immigrated to Britain en masse in the post-war era. The first carnivals were held under the slogan “Freedom of the people gives birth to its art.”
Image copyright, Getty Images
Image caption,
Carnival actually starts at dawn – with paint and talc fights
Sunday festivities begin at dawn – before the official start of the carnival. As in previous years, people impromptu gathered on the streets of west London to dance, throw paint and talc on each other in the Caribbean tradition.
Image copyright, Reuters
Image caption,
Notting Hill and surrounding area closed to traffic during Carnival
Notting Hill has 39 mobile sound systems and two live music stages this year.
Notting Hill Carnival: Can you party near Grenfell Tower?
All roads in the Notting Hill area are closed to all traffic and there are thousands of police on the streets.
Image copyright Reuters
Image caption,
Many locals and shops took precautions before the carnival by protecting their windows with plywood
Many shop windows in the area were covered with thick sheets of plywood in advance, and the authorities asked the authorities not to sell bottled drinks.
Image copyright Antony Jones
Image caption
DJs have their own platforms
The local government, along with Age UK, a charity that helps the elderly, sent 40 local pensioners to the seaside town of Eastbourne during the carnival to protect them from the noise and crowds.
Photo copyright, EPA
Photo caption,
Organizers say the goal of carnival is to bring society together
“Carnival is a wonderful celebration and we’re thrilled to have it back on our streets this year, but we also recognize that that sound systems and crowds are not for everyone,” said local council spokeswoman Emma Will.
Photo copyright, Dan Kitwood
Photo caption,
Spectators also do not spare paint
As in 2017, 2018 and 2019, at 15:00 each day of the carnival, its participants honor the memory of the victims in silence fire at the Grenfell Tower. Silence lasts 72 seconds – so many people died in a high-rise building in June 2017. Grenfell Tower is located in North Kensington, neighboring Notting Hill.
“Stay where you are.” There may have been significantly fewer deaths at London’s Grenfell Tower
Photo credit: Dan Kitwood
Image caption
These are not real cops, but a child doesn’t care who they get candy from
“We ask everyone who plans to attend the festival this year, all musicians and all sound systems to help us as organizers and members of the local community and pay tribute to the dead together,” the organizers of the carnival wrote on Twitter.
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90,000 performances of the “Workshop” in the Carnival TKK
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Viewer reviews
Victoria
The best theater in the city. The troupe is the students of one Master, the guys understand and feel each other and the director from half a breath, half a look. The repertoire is so diverse and multifaceted that it will not leave anyone indifferent.
Masterskaya is indeed the best theater in St. Petersburg, so lively and real. You want to watch each performance more than once and at the same time feel the energy of goodness, life, humor, light, love, talent.
This is a real, absolutely pure theatre, without hypocrisy, artificiality, vulgarity, insincerity. This is how THEATER should be! This is a breakthrough! Thanks a lot to Grigory Kozlov and his pupils! It’s a miracle!!!
Victor
Undoubtedly the best theater in St. Petersburg today. The best of Russian theaters founded in the 21st century. They don’t “serve” here, they live here. It seems that the “Workshop” is a real family. They play like they breathe. Such organicity and naturalness have never been seen before.
Svetlana
What happened on stage is beyond words. Such power and energy that the audience was afraid to move! The hall gave a standing ovation. The lump in my throat did not let me shout bravo, but my heart was bursting with emotion! BRAVO!!!!!!
What a theater!!! Fiction!!! You forget that this is a performance, that these are actors, you live and breathe with them in unison, you dissolve in this atmosphere … I thought that there was no such theater anymore … This is the real, high art of theater. Thank you!
Violetta
I think that an event-theatre was born before our very eyes, a theater that will be remembered years later as a Sovremennik of the 1960s, as a BDT of the Tovstonogov period, a theater-phenomenon, a theater-miracle. It really surprises, amazes, delights – how is it done?? Thanks to everyone involved in this miracle!
Evgenia
Such immersion in the process, such professionalism, I believed everything that happened on the stage, every action, every word. A whole stream of emotions gushed out, here is laughter and grief, and fear and disgust, and tears and love! Bravo to the master, actors and everyone who worked on the production. Thanks a lot!
Absolute delight! I cried, laughed, suffered with the characters. The acting is amazing! Trust them and their feelings 100%. Such complex destinies, such vivid characters, such important topics! The aftertaste is indescribable!
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90,000 carnival, reviews for the performance, setting Mariinsky Theater-Poster Theaters
An evening of ballets by Mikhail Fokine at the Mariinsky Theater
An evening of ballets by Mikhail Fokine is a small but expressive example of how fat years at the Mariinsky Theater were replaced by skinny ones. And it’s not about the money. Previously, the theater was not lazy (for which, I believe, ordinary workers cursed the dismissed head of the ballet Makhar Vaziev). This year is a double anniversary. One hundred years of “Russian Seasons”, the cradle from which the entire modernist ballet of the twentieth century emerged, starting with this very choreography by Fokine. Well, and so, one might say, on trifles: eighty years since Sergei Diaghilev died in Venice, the man who invented The Seasons, launched and supported on the go for two decades. So these eighty years are also from the date of the death of the enterprise as a whole. Considering how ballet rushes about with its history and myths, how it loves to celebrate anniversaries, at least something was expected from the Mariinsky Theater. So what? Look: as if nothing had happened, we are shown a collection that has been accumulated for a long time, so that many of the exhibits are still not very cleaned. Where is the premiere? Where is the reconstruction of some archival issue, since in twenty years Diaghilev’s entreprise has produced dozens of hours of excellent ballet spectacle?
In general, the fact that the modern theater does not care about some guy who whooped a few years ago, rather speaks of mental health. But for some reason it makes me sad. The former ballet manager Mahar Vaziev had many shortcomings, but they had something to forgive. And the current theater and forgive nothing. There is nothing to complain about, however, either: he is impeccably boring. It is somehow especially evident that the choreography of the early twentieth century – unsteady, fluid, flirting, spicy, like the conversations of poets in Stray Dog or Vyacheslav Ivanov’s Tower, the Mariinsky Theater is probably not worth dancing at all now. The girls of the Mariinsky Theater are famous for the fact that they honestly close their heels with a toe in the fifth position, twist all the tours, stretch their knees – this is ideal for the classical choreography of the industrial 19th century. For modern ballet, their honesty is too straightforward. And even a little dumb. Like a person who first tells a joke and then explains why it’s funny.
And now – why do you have to get up early on December 6 and drag Fokine’s choreography to the unsuitable Mariinsky Theater at an inconvenient time, because the performance is scheduled for everything in the morning. There are two reasons. The first is Daria Pavlenko, and she is the soloist in Chopiniana, a pseudo-classical vignette arranged in the fashion of the 1840s (Fokine was curious to do something in the Parisian romantic style). Daria is a ballerina uneven and nervous. But when you’re in the mood, it seems that you see the incarnation of Tamara Karsavina, the legendary Diaghilev prima, a black-eyed peri with languid grace, gloomy temperament and elegant laziness. And the second reason is Irma Nioradze. She is from the older generation, but the Swan is now dancing in the program, and all ages are submissive to this miniature – as the example of Maya Plisetskaya shows. Is it a matter of the Georgian breed, but such a decorative effect is usually unusual for transparent northern fairies. Irma dances Fokine’s birds – a dying swan or a blazing Firebird – so that you see a panel of Alphonse Mucha in front of you, with its tints of orange, gold and pink. How she manages to do this by wearing a white tutu is a mystery.
November 24, 2009
The best reviews about the performance “Carnival”
1
Katrin Filippova
8 reviews, 8 ratings, rating 6
7
Continuation of the Carmen Suite no less bright and colorful! The costumes are incomparably beautiful and clear. Acting on stage in ballet is quite interesting and unusual. Funny production, short, as it should be! Very right balance of music and dance.
November 9, 2011
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The Venice Carnival is the world’s most famous and oldest festival of masks and reincarnations.
The history of the Venetian carnival
Masquerade has its origins in the pagan traditions of worshiping deities and idols. The word “carnival” itself is translated by some researchers from Latin as “ceremonial cart”. This indirectly confirms the origin of the tradition at the time of idolatry and pagan deifications of inanimate objects.
It was on the chariots that the figures of idols were carried, in every possible way begging for various life realities: so that the year would be fruitful, people would not die from epidemics and cataclysms would not fall on the earth. At the same time, the pagans accompanying the wagon dressed as brightly and funny as possible so that the idol had a good mood, and he condescended to their requests.
Other versions of the origin suggest that the word “carnival” means farewell to animal products, which refers the holiday to religious festivities on the eve of Great Lent. One way or another, the carnival today has a rolling schedule and directly depends on the dates on which the seven-week fast days begin.
Not a day without a mask
Masquerade costumes themselves were invented by the ancient Romans. And this is connected not only with the game of “guessing”. In the days of worship of the god of fertility Saturn, Roman high-ranking persons organized large-scale festivities, which were attended by both the elite and the poor. It was believed that the equalization of the rights of the poor with the rich on such days had a positive effect on achieving the goal for which the celebration was held. And so that the masters themselves would not be embarrassed and did not embarrass their slaves, carnival costumes were invented.
Thanks to the free painted robes and masks covering the face, the inhabitants of ancient Rome reveled at the same table and did not make out where the rich man was and where the beggar was. Carnival costumes were especially in the hands of the “cream” of society, because they did not have the opportunity to behave so freely in ordinary life.
Since carnivals began to be held in Venice, the idea of the mask of the Romans has firmly entered first into the paraphernalia of the holiday, and then into the everyday life of the townspeople. Judge for yourself, even today Venice is not such a big city, but in ancient times everyone knew each other by sight. The mask served as a good protection from prying eyes and possible gossip. After all, many are wondering why you came home so late and with whom you spent tonight. And the mask did its job, hiding the face and still equalizing the poor with the rich, the famous with the unknown.
The masks became so popular that chaos and disorder gradually began to reign in the city. Hiding under a fictitious image, one could easily and with impunity commit illegal acts and create various lawlessness.
When the city authorities and representatives of the church realized that further encouragement of masquerade paraphernalia would not lead to good, they issued a law. This decree provided for the punishment for wearing masks outside of carnival events.
The types of punishments were very severe. The men faced a fine and a two-year prison term. And women were supposed to be whipped in public, which also did not give much pleasure. In connection with the repressions introduced, the daily tradition of wearing masks gradually outlived itself, remaining allowed only on carnival days.
Varieties of masks
If we look at old engravings and reproductions depicting participants in carnival processions, we can see that the most popular was a wide narrow-nosed and elongated white half-mask, which completely hid the face. Such a mask was called Bauta, it gained popularity not only during the days of the carnival, but also in everyday life, when the wearing of masks by the townspeople was not yet forbidden.
Considering that Bauta was often complemented with a wide-brimmed hat, and for women – with a transparent cape that went down to the shoulders, it was almost impossible to recognize its owner.
The narrow nose configuration on the bauta mask was made for a reason. Thanks to such a cunning move, the wings of the owner’s nose were squeezed. This gave his voice a special distorted “nasal” timbre, which increased the mystery and inaccessibility of the image.
It is also common to see the participants wearing a round black mask with the same round slits for the eyes. This mask was called Moretta, it was very light, and it was worn exclusively by the fair sex. The peculiarity of the mask is the complete absence of devices for fastening on the face or head. How did she manage, you ask? With the help of … a button sewn to the base, which the owner of the mask clamped with her teeth. That is why Morettas were made of a very light material so that their mistresses would not get tired, doomed to walk with clenched teeth all day.
This method of wearing masks, which is rather risky for health (after all, a button could be accidentally bitten off, swallowed and accidentally choked on it), nevertheless, made ladies especially popular. A mysterious silence for a long time ignored the questions and proposals hanging in the air from the men. Such behavior gave the female image an impregnability that inflamed passions and desires.
When the first carnival took place
There is no less controversy about the time and place of the first carnival in Venice than about the interpretation of the word. There are three main versions today:
One of them takes the events back to the beginning of the second millennium, when trade cooperation between the Venetian Republic and the Byzantine Republic took shape. A mutually beneficial “blow on the hands” could well have been marked by large-scale festivities with fireworks of costumes and other paraphernalia.
The second sees the root of events that happened a whole century earlier. Then the young Venetian women were taken away by pirates, and the girls’ suitors managed to rescue them and return them home. The happy event was marked by massive city festivities.
The third asserts that the first masquerade, which marked the solemn victory of Venice over Patriarch Ulrico, was accompanied by stormy fun and was held precisely in Piazza San Marco.
Be that as it may, the very last day on the eve of Lent has been declared a lifelong holiday in Venice for many centuries. And the carnival gradually became an integral part in the life of the city. For a couple of centuries, the holiday turned out to be a very popular event, gradually spreading around the world.
But the Venetian masquerade still remained the main masquerade, so the authorities even created its fund, which accumulated charitable contributions. This money was intended to support the popular event and keep it alive.
Carnival and modernity
At the end of the 18th century, Venetian festivities were canceled by decree of Napoleon. For the city, this was a real tragedy, because for many centuries the holiday has already acquired the status of a national one. However, carnivals were forgotten for a century and a half. The Venetians did not remember them so often, when in the middle of the last century, with the development of the Italian tourism business, the idea arose to revive the popularly beloved holiday.
Venetian sights were in great demand in summer, but during the cold season, the city’s entertainment establishments, cafes and restaurants suffered losses. In addition to gondolas and unique buildings, another idea was needed that would attract a large number of tourists to the city in the winter. And this idea was the revival of the carnival, which took place in the 80s.
Since then, tourists have been flooding Venice every year to become participants in masquerade events for ten days. Considering that the majority of guests arrive in advance and do not leave the hospitable city immediately, then the noisy fun stretches for almost a month.
The first day of the carnival is marked by the Festa delle Marie, in honor of memorable medieval events. A whole performance is played out in front of the guests with the release of seven Marys – the most beautiful girls in the city. In addition, a colorful football match is held on one of the days of the festival. The Venetians are very fond of football and are ready to include it even in the carnival program.
On the last day, on the eve of Great Lent, an effigy is burned in St. Mark’s Square and mass processions and festivities are held.
Carnival closes to take participants and guests under its wing again in a year. You can visit Venice to participate in a festive event on your own, but if you want to be free from organizing your leisure time, book a carnival tour of Venice on our website.
Avoski, sneakers, bell-bottoms and other signs of Soviet fashion in the film “Carnival”
T
Style in the film: “Carnival”
TEXT: Anna Bashtova
which to this day remains one of the most significant and beloved Soviet films. What the success of the film consists of, how Muravyova was “rejuvenated” and where the costumes went after filming, we understand below.
The film was directed by Tatyana Lioznova, who at that time already had the popularly beloved, but rather serious Three Poplars on Plyushchikha and Seventeen Moments of Spring on her track record. Perhaps that is why at the time the filming of Carnival began, no one could have imagined that the picture would become one of the most successful Soviet films. A musical comedy from the director of Seventeen Moments of Spring sounded at least strange.
As a result, “Karnaval” became one of the leaders of the Soviet film distribution. As of 1982, the tape was watched by more than 30 million people. In the same year, Irina Muravyova, who played the main role, was recognized as the best actress in a poll of readers of the Soviet Screen magazine, and the song Call Me, Call was the absolute hit of the year. But, of course, the main indicator of people’s love was the phrases from the film, which immediately came into use: “Do you want coffee?” The picture undoubtedly owes such instant popular recognition to its unpretentious, close and understandable story to many – a perky, energetic, slightly clumsy, but very sweet provincial girl goes to the capital to enter the theater and become a star. And, as is usual in such stories, with songs and tears, fire, water and copper pipes pass.
Director Tatyana Lioznova came up with the idea for the film “Carnival” at the moment when Anna Rodionova’s story about a provincial girl who came to conquer Moscow caught her eye in the magazine Art of Cinema. This uncomplicated plot immediately hooked Lioznova, as he was very close to her. “I realized that many, including myself, can recognize themselves in the main character. For the film, I almost completely rewrote the text, came up with a scene with rollers in the circus and, in general, the whole path of the main character Nina Solomatina to her dream of becoming an actress. I added many moments from my own life. For example, the episode in which Nina drinks ice-cold water from a pump in the cold. The house where I once lived had the same speaker, and my girlfriends and I did the same. The picture turned out to be autobiographical to some extent.”
Much of what happens to the main character in the film was experienced by the film director as well. Tatyana Lioznova, who graduated with honors from VGIK, was fired from the Mosfilm film studio “due to staff reductions.” In order to somehow make ends meet, she had to work as a cleaner and sew costumes. Therefore, Lioznova eventually added several autobiographical episodes to the picture. “Carnival” is very close to me. I made a film about myself, about my life, in which I had to make wild efforts, overcoming poverty, unemployment, loneliness, many difficulties that young people endure even now. Remember, Nina, my heroine, has a sick mother? It is also biographical. During the filming of the film, my mother was very ill, and I, like Nina, had to work.”
Unlike the director Tatyana Lioznova, the lead actress Irina Muravva believes that she and the heroine are completely different: “In life, I don’t look like Nina at all. I am a native Muscovite, absolutely a domestic girl. She studied well and did not seek to conquer the capital. Moreover, she never left home anywhere in her life. I never wanted to achieve anything. I am not a leader, but rather a follower.”
At the time of the film’s creation, the lead actress Irina Muravyova was 18 years old according to the script, and 32 years old according to her passport. “Everyone understood that it would not be difficult for Muravyova to play a young girl,” Lioznova recalled. “It was just a matter of acting technique: she was not the first, she was not the last to play heroines younger than herself.” It was decided to smooth out the age discrepancy with make-up, hair and costumes. So, plaid skirts and white stockings appeared in the heroine’s wardrobe, freckles on her face, and ponytails on her head. These same ponytails, along with the blue rim, eventually run through most of the film. Even when Muravyova imagines herself dancing in a musical troupe, her outfits, regardless of genre, are invariably accompanied by ponytails and a headband. But perhaps the most important element of the “rejuvenation” of the heroine is the videos. Their actress wears almost the entire first part of the film and takes it off only at the moment of moving to Moscow. Thus, as if symbolically parting with childhood. By the way, before filming in Carnival, Muravyova did not know how to roller skate, so all the scenes of the fall in the frame, as well as the bruises on her knees, are quite real.
The second no less important component of the picture’s success, along with vitality, is its musicality. Thanks to bright pop numbers performed by the Rhythms of the Planet dance group and songs by Maxim Dunaevsky based on verses by Robert Rozhdestvensky, Carnival remains a film to this day that, despite a sometimes dramatic plot, gives a sense of celebration. By the way, all the songs in the film are performed not by Irina Muravyova, although the actress has good vocal abilities, but by Zhanna Rozhdestvenskaya, “the main voice-over singer of the Soviet Union”. As Maxim Dunaevsky recalls, after the release of the picture, Alla Pugacheva turned to him with a question why she was not invited to perform “Call me, call”, and admitted that both the picture and the song were emotionally very close to her.
As for the costumes, when working on them, the main emphasis was on outfits for pop numbers. Perhaps that is why the main characters of the picture change two sets of clothes at most every time, in contrast to the Rhythms of the Planet dance group, which changes clothes for a ribbon at least a dozen times. “All the costumes for the film were specially made,” says costume designer Mariam Bykhovskaya. – Both for the main characters and for the team. True, in some numbers the ensemble performed in their own outfits. But the dancers liked the costumes that we made for filming so much that they bought them for their own concerts. A red dress and a top hat, in which a roller-skating bear flaunted, were also presented to the shaggy artist – already after filming, during one of the circus performances with a full hall of spectators.
Work on the painting was carried out at the turn of the 70s and 80s, as a result, the trends of the Soviet 70s are actively visible in her clothes: midi skirts, turtlenecks, berets, colorful dresses with a white “naive” collar, T-shirts with a triangular neckline , flared jeans, shirts with massive collars, sneakers and shopping bags. By the way, the latter have recently fully returned to fashion and are present, for example, in various collections from Zara and Mango to Vetements and Michael Kors. In the second part of the film, the heroine does not change clothes at all, remaining all the time in a voluminous gray turtleneck, gray midi skirt, gray coat and gray hat with earflaps, thereby emphasizing her difficult everyday life. An interesting detail is that a bag with the inscription “Aeroflot” is hanging on the heroine’s shoulder. Why the choice of the costume designer fell on this particular accessory, history is silent, but given the global fashion for the Cyrillic alphabet, such a bag could easily appear in the new collection of Vetements or Balenciaga.
Venice Carnival 2022 – when the Island is Dressed in Rainbow Colors
Venice Carnival – the history of the holiday
The history of the Venice Carnival in the painting by Giandomenico Tiepolo “Minuet”
Like all popular festivals, the Venetian carnival was not always the way we know it today. Its origins date back to the times of the Roman Empire, but only with the birth of the Venetian Republic does the tradition of the Venetian carnival begin to take on a unique character. The first official document that refers to a public holiday is dated 1296, although the first written mention was as early as 1094 .
History of the Venice Carnival was suspended for two centuries from the fall of the Republic of Venice in 1797 until 1979 , when the traditions of the past were revived. To this day, the Venice Carnival has become one of the most famous carnivals in the world, including the traditions of medieval holidays!
In 1996, the famous Parisian couturier Pierre Cardin , born near Venice and in love with the city on the water, became the producer of the anthem song for the carnival. He invested a decent amount for its production: text, music and performance – Guido Monge accompanied by several musicians from the Paris Opera. In this way he expressed his true love for the city.
Venice Carnival 2022: dates and tips, don’t miss the highlights
Venice Carnival. Fat Thursday – The custom of “Cutting off the head of a bull.” Photo by Anna Krasikova
Let’s start with the basics: when does the Carnival in Venice start and what are the most important dates on the island? The dates change every year as they follow the liturgical calendar: starting forty days before Easter, you can already see people in fancy dress, confetti-covered streets and donuts (frittelle) in confectionery display cases. But only in 15 days , preceding Ash Wednesday, does a real holiday take place. In 2022, the Venice Carnival takes place during the period from February 12 to March 1, .
Follow the calendar carefully and try to get to the carnival on the weekend if you don’t want to miss the most spectacular events – most performances and masquerade parties are organized on Friday and Saturday evenings. AT Fat Thursday ” and “ Fat Tuesday ” are also interesting to visit the carnival! After the last day of carnival, Lent begins.
Carnival in Venice: 2022 schedule
The schedule of carnival events is very busy, below we tell you the most important ones that should be, on the official website of the Venice Carnival you will find updated information:
Angel Flight. Photo by Anna Krasikova
Sunday 13 February: Venetian feast on the water – from 10.30 and then from 13.00 on the Cannaregio Canal – water parade of rowing associations from Cape Customs, performances and gastronomic stands;
Saturday 19 February: procession of the most beautiful girls of Venice – Festa delle Marie , starting from San Pietro di Castello at 14.30 and arriving at St. Mark’s Square at 16.00;
Sunday 20 February: “ Flight of the Angel ” from the Campanile of San Marco at 11.00;
Sunday 27 February: “ Flight of the Eagle ” from the Campanile of San Marco at 12. 00;
Tuesday 1 March: awarding the most kind and graceful Mary of the Venice Carnival 2021 in Piazza San Marco at 16.00 and “ Flight of the Lion ” at 17.00.
From Thursday, February 24 to Tuesday, March 1 at 11.00 and 15.00 every day on the main stage of the carnival in St. Mark’s Square – competition for the most beautiful carnival costume . The final of the competition is on March 1 (the last day of the carnival) at 14.30.
Carnival on the island Burano will be held from 15.00 to February.
Also follow the program Mestre Carnival Street show : jugglers, stilt walkers, theatre, music and other street performers bring the center of Mestre to life! At the weekend during the carnival – exciting performances suitable for all ages! The culmination of the celebration will be Donkey Flight on February 27 in the main square of Ferretto. Carnival processions will also take place in the neighboring areas of Marghera, Zelarino, Campalto, as well as in Lido di Jesolo.
Carnival of Venice dates: balls, masquerade parties and exclusive cruises on the lagoon
During the Carnival of Venice, not only outdoor events are held, but also spectacular balls and evenings in palaces when it’s cold outside!
It’s very popular these days to take part in the Masquerade Ball – it’s really a unique opportunity! We do not tell you about it just because it is a tribute to fashion. There are many private evenings in palaces and not all of them are the same, but in general you can see really impressive performances in an exclusive place: jugglers, fire eaters, dance groups, live music in luxurious Venetian palaces. Even just for the sake of getting into the building (usually closed) it is worth participating in the evening!
We also advise you to go on a carnival mini-cruise on the Venetian lagoon: an amazing panorama overboard and a celebration that is in no way inferior to the splendor of masquerade balls in the historic center . .. with the only difference that it takes place in a more private setting away from the city hubbub and fun.
Our advice – read carefully about the dates of the Venice Carnival and choose an event on the main square or a masquerade ball to your liking in order to unforgettably and brightly participate in the most spectacular celebration, famous all over the world!
Venetian carnival costume and Venetian masks
Harlequin, Pantaloon, Colombina at the Venice Carnival. Photo by Anna Krasikova
If you really want to immerse yourself in the atmosphere of the holiday, it is very important to disguise yourself. Feel free to leave the house already prepared and wearing a mask and costume, a wig, a cape, decorated with wings, and armed with a sword and confetti – the holiday is already starting on the streets of the city!
The most famous Venetian masks made of papier mache, of course, those that are part of the magnificent costumes of the 18th or 16th century on the heroes of the Italian commedia dell’arte playwright Carlo Goldoni (Pantalone, Colombina, Harlequin, Dr.
This data the coastal Lanzarote ocean water temperature today, tomorrow and the upcoming days. Besides, you can also get information about the weather and surf forecast, as well as the data on sunrise / sunset and moonrise / moonset at a given point on any given day.
Water temperature in Lanzarote today is 22.8°C. Based on our historical data over a period of ten years, the warmest water in this day in Lanzarote was recorded in 2012 and was 24.4°C, and the coldest was recorded in 2017 at 22.3°C. Sea water temperature in Lanzarote is expected to rise to 23.2°C in the next 10 days. September average water temperature in Lanzarote is 23.1°C, the minimum temperature is 21.9°C, and the maximum is 25.2°C.
The swimming season in Lanzarote lasts from May to January. During those months, Lanzarote water temperature does not drop below 20°C and therefore suitable for comfortable swimming. The average water temperature in Lanzarote in winter reaches 19. 2°C, in spring 18.8°C, in summer the average temperature rises to 21.5°C, and in autumn it is 22.6°C.
Lanzarote water temperature now
Sea temperature
Tides
Sunrise and Sunset
12 September 2022
today temp
22.8°C
11 September 2022
yesterday temp
22.7°C
Surf Forecast in Lanzarote for today
Another important indicators for a comfortable holiday on the beach are the presence and height of the waves, as well as the speed and direction of the wind. Please find below data on the swell size for Lanzarote. We calculate the swell size based on the mean wave height (trough to crest) of each third highest wave. For more information on surf forecasts for the next ten days, please visit sea state forecast Lanzarote. Data in table shown for 13 September 2022, time in GMT 0 format (you can change the time zone on the sea state forecast page)
0-3 h
3-6 h
6-9 h
9-12 h
3′ 0″
3′ 5″
3′ 10″
4′ 3″
0. 92 m
1.04 m
1.17 m
1.3 m
12-15 h
15-18 h
18-21 h
21-24 h
4′ 9″
5′ 3″
5′ 11″
6′ 7″
1.44 m
1.6 m
1.81 m
2.01 m
Current temperature and weather
Data in a table show Lanzarote temperature today (13 September 2022). For more information and forecast for a few days, go to the weather forecast Lanzarote
0-3 h
3-6 h
6-9 h
9-12 h
21.7°C
21.8°C
21.4°C
22.3°C
12-15 h
15-18 h
18-21 h
21-24 h
24.2°C
24.4°C
23.5°C
22.6°C
Lanzarote water temperature by month
These figures shows the average, minimum and maximum monthly sea temperature in Lanzarote. In addition to the table values, the graph below displays of changes average surface temperature during the year. Values are calculated based on the data over the past 10 years. Using them, you can check the water temperature in Lanzarote on any day of this period that interests you. Click on the month link and you will see a table for each day, or alternatively you can view the temperature curve of the month and select 2 different years you want to compare, either in a table or as a curve
Month
Avr
Min
Max
January
19.1°C
17.8°C
21°C
cold
Ocean water temperature in Lanzarote in January
February
18.4°C
16.7°C
20°C
cold
Ocean water temperature in Lanzarote in February
March
18.2°C
16.6°C
19.8°C
cold
Ocean water temperature in Lanzarote in March
April
18. 7°C
17.3°C
20.4°C
cold
Ocean water temperature in Lanzarote in April
May
19.6°C
17.8°C
21.3°C
cold
Ocean water temperature in Lanzarote in May
June
20.7°C
18.6°C
23.6°C
warm
Ocean water temperature in Lanzarote in June
July
21.4°C
19.8°C
23.5°C
warm
Ocean water temperature in Lanzarote in July
August
22.3°C
20.7°C
23.8°C
warm
Ocean water temperature in Lanzarote in August
September
23.1°C
21.9°C
25.2°C
warm
Ocean water temperature in Lanzarote in September
October
23°C
21°C
24.7°C
warm
Ocean water temperature in Lanzarote in October
November
21. 6°C
19.2°C
24.1°C
warm
Ocean water temperature in Lanzarote in November
December
20.2°C
18°C
21.6°C
warm
Ocean water temperature in Lanzarote in December
Where is the warmest sea water in the world?
Planning a vacation on the beach and want to enjoy the warm sea, choose the day of the year, region and the minimum comfortable sea/ocean temperature that interests you. As a result, you will get a list of countries and cities in which the average sea temperature on this day over the past 10 years exceeds your chosen value
Region: AfricaAsiaAustralia and OceaniaCentral America and the CaribbeanEuropeMiddle EastNorth AmericaSouth America
Date (day and month): 12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031
JanuaryFebruaryMarchAprilMayJuneJulyAugustSeptemberOctoberNovemberDecember
Water temperature: >=16°C>=17°C>=18°C>=19°C>=20°C>=21°C>=22°C>=23°C>=24°C>=25°C>=26°C>=27°C
Average temperature
Maximum temperature
What is the ideal temperature for swimming?
Nearby beaches and cities
The nearest beaches and cities from Lanzarote with the water temperature today, as well as the air temperature and the state of the weather during the day and the average wave height for today
Water
Weather
Wave
Tenesar
22. 6°C
28°C
1.41 m
La Santa
22.6°C
28°C
1.41 m
El Golfo
22.9°C
23°C
1.25 m
Caleta de Caballo
22.6°C
25°C
1.41 m
La Hoya
23.1°C
23°C
1.25 m
Caleta de Famara
22.5°C
25°C
1.41 m
Playa Chica
22.9°C
24°C
0.74 m
Playa Quemada
23°C
24°C
0.46 m
Los Pocillos
22.7°C
24°C
0.46 m
Puerto Calero
22.8°C
24°C
0.46 m
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Our report for Lanzarote is compiled using satellite data together with in-situ observations to get the most reliable daily data of sea surface temperatures, surf forecasts, current temperatures and weather forecasts.
Water temperature in Lanzarote in Atlantic Ocean now
The most detailed information about the water temperature in Lanzarote in Atlantic Ocean (Canary Islands, Spain). Forecast of changes in water temperature for the next 10 days. Statistics by months for recent years.
Information about the neighboring resorts. Weather forecast in Lanzarote for a week.
Analysis and forecast
The water temperature today roughly corresponds to the average value on this day in recent years. Its value has rise both over the past 20 days and over the past week. Exactly a year ago, on this day, the water temperature in this location was 23°C. Water temperature range in Lanzarote in September is from 21 to 24 degrees.
According to our forecast, the water temperature in Lanzarote will move in different directions, in the coming days the water will become warmer, but after 10 days it will still get a little colder to 22.5°C.
Table of water temperature values in Lanzarote
Day
Fact*
Average**
Forecast***
Sep 6
22.7°C
22.5°C
Sep 7
22.8°C
23.3°C
Sep 8
23.0°C
23.0°C
Sep 9
22. 4°C
22.8°C
Sep 10
22.4°C
22.5°C
Sep 11
22.2°C
22.8°C
Sep 12
22.5°C
22.3°C
Sep 13
22.5°C
22.8°C
Sep 14
22.5°C
22.2°C
Sep 15
23.0°C
22.7°C
Sep 16
23.3°C
23.0°C
Sep 17
22.5°C
22.2°C
Sep 18
22.8°C
22.5°C
Sep 19
23.3°C
23.0°C
Sep 20
22.3°C
22.0°C
* Fact – Actual value of water temperature ** Average – Average water temperature on this day in past years *** Forecast – Our forecast for the water temperature
Actual nearshore temperatures may vary by several degrees from the indicated values. This is noticeable after heavy rain or after prolonged periods of strong winds. Some downstream winds cause cold, deep waters to replace surface waters that have been warmed by the sun.
To develop a forecast, we use our own mathematical model, which takes into account the current change in water temperature, historical data and the main weather trends, wind strength and direction, air temperature in each specific region. We also take into account data for other resorts in Spain.
Annual graph of average water temperature change in Lanzarote
Water temperature in Lanzarote by month
Lanzarote located in the northern hemisphere, at latitude 29 degrees. The comfortable water temperature for swimming is set here in June, usually at the beginning of the month. During a year in Lanzarote there are 197 days of swimming. In general, the swimming season ends In December. Average annual water temperature on the coast in Lanzarote is 20. 2°C, by the seasons: in winter 19.2°C, in spring 18.5°C, in summer 21.1°C, in autumn 22.2°C. Minimum water temperature (17.3°C) in Lanzarote it happens in March, maximum (23.3°C) in October.
You can find out detailed data on how the water temperature in Lanzarote changes in each specific month:
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
Lanzarote: general information and map
Original name
Lanzarote
Continent
Europe
Country
Spain
Region
Canary Islands
Reservoir
Atlantic Ocean
The local time
08:05
Timezone
UTC+1
Sunrise
07:38
Sunset
20:07
Length of the day
12 hours 29 minutes
Neighboring cities and resorts
City
Water*
Distance**
Caleta de Famara
22. 8°C
11km
Arrecife
22.2°C
13km
Puerto Del Carmen
22.4°C
13km
Costa Teguise
22.0°C
16km
Arrieta
22.0°C
20km
La Graciosa
22.8°C
26km
Playa Blanca
22.4°C
27km
Corralejo
22.2°C
40km
Majanicho
22.7°C
44km
El Cotillo
22.0°C
54km
Puerto Del Rosario
22.0°C
64km
Puertito de los Molinos
22.6°C
69km
* Water temperature in this place today ** Straight line distance in kilometers
The warmest water today in Spain recorded in Sant Elm, its value is 29.3°C. Lowest – in Pontevedra, there water temperature now 16.9°C. Average water temperature in the country today – 23. 3°C.
Water temperature data in Lanzarote and neighboring towns and resorts collected from various sources, using buoys, using satellite maps of sea, river and lake surfaces of the NOAA agency.
We use data from various local authorities in each specific location of the world to more accurately reflect temperature values.
The nearest airport is located in a 11 kilometers. This is Lanzarote (ACE) airport. We have no information as to whether it is valid and what flights it receives or sends.
Lanzarote: weather forecast
The weather forecast is shown in local time in Lanzarote
Arrieta Water Temperature (Sea) and Wetsuit Guide (Lanzarote, Spain)
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Today’s Arrieta sea temperature is 23. 1 °C.
Statistics for 13 Sep (1981–2005)
– mean: 22.8 °C,
range: 21.5 °C
to 23.5 °C
Sunny with pleasantly warm air temperatures (feeling like 23 °C once we account for wind), and similar sea temperatures (23 °C). Wear boardshorts or a shorty, or better still a thin summer wetsuit to keep the UV off.
Map of current Spain (Africa)
Surface Water Temperatures based on measurements from oceanographic satellites
Map of current Spain (Africa) Sea Water Temperature Anomalies (compared with long term averages at this time of year)
(click thumbnails to expand)
Below is a graph of Historical Sea Surface Temperature for Arrieta. This has been derived from analysis of two decades of oceanographic satellite measurements of nearby open water. We have calculated the average water temperature variation around the year as well as the extremes that have been observed on each date.
All of the graphs for the surf breaks presented on Surf-Forecast.com are on the same scale to enable comparison between locations around the world.
Arrieta sea temperatures peak in the range 22 to 24°C (72 to 75°F) on around the 12th of September and are at their minimum on about the 19th of February, in the range 17 to 19°C (63 to 66°F). Arrieta sea temperatures are always warm reach their maximum in the second week of September. You’ll need a 2mm neoprene top or a shorty at dawn/dusk or if it’s windy. The minimum seasonal sea temperatures at Arrieta in the third week of February lend themselves to a 4/3mm wetsuit or a 3/2mm suit and 3mm neoprene boots.
Actual sea surface water temperatures close to shore at Arrieta can vary by several degrees compared with these open water averages. This is especially true after heavy rain, close to river mouths or after long periods of strong offshore winds. Offshore winds cause colder deep water to replace surface water that has been warmed by the sun. Air temperature, wind-chill and sunshine should also be considered before deciding on the kind of wetsuit needed to stay warm when surfing at Arrieta. Refer to our detailed weather forecasts for this information.
La Santa – El Quemao Water Temperature (Sea) and Wetsuit Guide (Lanzarote, Spain)
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Today’s La Santa – El Quemao sea temperature is 23. 2 °C.
Statistics for 13 Sep (1981–2005)
– mean: 22.9 °C,
range: 21.6 °C
to 23.6 °C
Sunny with pleasantly warm air temperatures (feeling like 23 °C once we account for wind), and similar sea temperatures (23 °C). Wear boardshorts or a shorty, or better still a thin summer wetsuit to keep the UV off.
Map of current Spain (Africa)
Surface Water Temperatures based on measurements from oceanographic satellites
Map of current Spain (Africa) Sea Water Temperature Anomalies (compared with long term averages at this time of year)
(click thumbnails to expand)
Below is a graph of Historical Sea Surface Temperature for La Santa – El Quemao. This has been derived from analysis of two decades of oceanographic satellite measurements of nearby open water. We have calculated the average water temperature variation around the year as well as the extremes that have been observed on each date.
All of the graphs for the surf breaks presented on Surf-Forecast.com are on the same scale to enable comparison between locations around the world.
La Santa – El Quemao sea temperatures peak in the range 22 to 24°C (72 to 75°F) on around the 12th of September and are at their lowest on about the 25th of February, in the range 17 to 20°C (63 to 68°F). La Santa – El Quemao sea temperatures are always warm reach their maximum in the second week of September. You’ll need a 2mm neoprene top or a shorty at dawn/dusk or if it’s windy. The lowest seasonal sea temperatures at La Santa – El Quemao in late February lend themselves to a 4/3mm wetsuit or a 3/2mm suit and 3mm neoprene boots.
Actual sea surface water temperatures close to shore at La Santa – El Quemao can vary by several degrees compared with these open water averages. This is especially true after heavy rain, close to river mouths or after long periods of strong offshore winds. Offshore winds cause colder deep water to replace surface water that has been warmed by the sun. Air temperature, wind-chill and sunshine should also be considered before deciding on the kind of wetsuit needed to stay warm when surfing at La Santa – El Quemao. Refer to our detailed weather forecasts for this information.
Lanzarote Sea Temperature | Water Temperature in Lanzarote, Spain
Looking to find out what the sea water temperature in Lanzarote is for today and the next few days? Below are data and charts that will give you information about sea temperatures in Lanzarote and nearby locations.
Water temperature in Lanzarote right now
Below is the current sea temperature for Lanzarote, Spain on 13th September 2022.
23.62° C
(74.52° F)
yesterday: 23.41° C (74.14° F)
a week ago: 23.19° C (73.74° F)
Water at this temperature is very pleasant to swim in and if you tend to wear a wetsuit when swimming, you might consider removing it now to avoid the body overheating.
The average sea temperature for Lanzarote on September 13th over the last 10 years is 23.42° C (74.16° F), with a low temperature of 22.48° C (72.46° F) and a high of 24.7° C (76.46° F).
Analysis and forecast for Lanzarote water temperatures
The water temperature in Lanzarote today is higher than the average temperature of 23.42° C (74.16° F) and the temperature on this day last year, 13th September 2021, was 23.64° C (74.55° F).
The chart and table below shows the change in water temperature in Lanzarote over the last 30 days:
Date
Temperature (Celsius)
Temperature (Fahrenheit)
September 13
23.62° C
74.52° F
September 12
23.41° C
74.14° F
September 11
23.5° C
74.3° F
September 10
22.79° C
73.02° F
September 9
22.8° C
73. 04° F
September 8
22.7° C
72.86° F
September 7
22.8° C
73.04° F
September 6
23.19° C
73.74° F
September 5
23.05° C
73.49° F
September 4
22.93° C
73.27° F
September 3
22.75° C
72.95° F
September 2
22.86° C
73.15° F
September 1
22.74° C
72.93° F
August 31
22.96° C
73.33° F
August 30
22.87° C
73.17° F
August 29
23.12° C
73.62° F
August 28
22.92° C
73.26° F
August 27
23.05° C
73.49° F
August 26
23.14° C
73.65° F
August 25
23.06° C
73.51° F
August 24
22. 82° C
73.08° F
August 23
22.75° C
72.95° F
August 22
22.87° C
73.17° F
August 21
23.04° C
73.47° F
August 20
23.1° C
73.58° F
August 19
22.93° C
73.27° F
August 18
22.89° C
73.2° F
August 17
23.02° C
73.44° F
August 16
22.97° C
73.35° F
August 15
22.73° C
72.91° F
August 14
22.44° C
72.39° F
The actual nearshore temperatures may vary by several degrees and this can also be heavily affected by weather. Strong winds can cause cold, deep waters to replace the surface waters that had been warmed by the sun, and heavy rain can also reduce the temperature of the sea surface temperature as well.
Water temperature in Lanzarote by month
The chart below shows the monthly average water temperature in Lanzarote.
For more detailed information on how the sea temperature in Lanzarote changes for each month of the year, choose from the months below.
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
Lanzarote map and nearby water temperatures
Locations near Lanzarote
Caleta de Famara
Spain, Europe
5.14 miles away
Caleta de Caballo
Spain, Europe
5.71 miles away
Arrecife
Spain, Europe
6.03 miles away
La Santa
Spain, Europe
6.18 miles away
Playa Honda
Spain, Europe
6.42 miles away
Las Caletas
Spain, Europe
6.46 miles away
The highest temperature in Spain today is 26.83° C (80.3° F) in Cala Mayor. The lowest is in Aguino, where the temperature of the water is 16.38° C (61.49° F).
Why measure sea surface temperatures (SST) in Lanzarote?
The ocean covers about 71% of the Earth’s surface, and scientists record the sea surface temperature (SST) of locations such as Lanzarote because they want to understand and learn how the ocean communicates with the atomosphere of Earth.
SST is one measure that provides information on the global climate, and it can be used to predict the weather in Lanzarote as well as atmospheric model simulations and to study marine ecosystems in the area.
Data source and citation
Raw data for the calculations made to find the sea surface temperature in Lanzarote comes from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and their 1/4° daily Optimum Interpolation Sea Surface Temperature.
The water temperature data is constructed by combining observations from different platforms (satellites, ships, buoys, and Argo floats) on a regular global grid. A spatially complete sea surface temperature map is then built by interpolating to fill in gaps in the data.
If you’d like to use any of the information above in the format it is presented, please use the citation tool below.
Lanzarote Sea Temperature. SeaTemperatures.net. Retrieved from http://seatemperatures.net/europe/spain/lanzarote/.
Lanzarote weather and climate ☀️ Water temperature 💧 Best time to visit
Lanzarote is the closest to Africa and its favorable location makes it, along with Fuerteventura, one of the warmest Canary Islands. Here you are assured of a sunny vacation. The weather of Lanzarote is characterized by plenty of sunshine! It hardly rains during the year and the whole island is always warm. There is always wind on Lanzarote, so you may need to wear a cardigan in the evening. These trade winds ensure that it doesn’t get blisteringly hot here.
Lanzarote is known for its volcanic landscape with more than 300 volcanic cones. You get the idea here as if you were in a whole other world. There are also beautiful beaches, interesting sights and plenty of choice in restaurants and hotels.
The government is busy improving the hiking trails and the number of overnight accommodations along these trails has increased in recent years. So for both the beach and hiking enthusiast, this is a good place to be. The weather is excellent all year round.
Best time to visit Lanzarote
The best time to visit Lanzarote, Spain is January through December. In this period you have a pleasant temperature and almost no precipitation. On the island of Lanzarote, the warmest month is August with 74°F and the coldest is January with 65°F. The highest water temperature is 75°F and at its coldest the water is 68°F.
Offers for Lanzarote
Booking.com
h20 Hotels
In the table below you can quickly find the average weather per month in Lanzarote, the monthly temperatures or the most rain. Our average monthly climate data is based on data from the past 30 years.
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Temperature (°F)
65
65
65
66
68
70
72
74
74
74
71
68
Water temperature (°F)
70
68
68
68
70
72
73
73
75
73
73
70
Precipitation (inch)
2
3
2
1
2
1
1
4
2
11
5
3
Weather data from: Arrecife
Travel and stay Lanzarote
If you are planning on visiting Lanzarote, check out these well-known travel agencies. They have been rated as the best by travelers and offer great prices for any budget.
Booking.com
h20 Hotels
IBEROSTAR La Bocayna Village
view price
£861
IBEROSTAR La Bocayna Village
view price
£861
Airline tickets
Looking to book a flight to Lanzarote? Hop on one of these airlines.
Skyscanner
TAP Air Portugal
KLM
Lanzarote weather
The weather for Lanzarote over the next 14 days will be 75°F till 77° with a couple of days chance of light rain showers. The water temperature will be 72°F.
The weather forecast for Lanzarote is based on the weather in Arrecife.
5-day weather forecast Lanzarote
View the 14 day weather forecast for Lanzarote
Climate Lanzarote
The island Lanzarote has a desert climate. The daytime temperature is warm to hot, while it can also be cold at night. You won’t have rain here anytime soon. The average annual temperature for Lanzarote is 40° degrees and there is about 36 inch of rain in a year. It is dry for 277 days a year with an average humidity of 76% and an UV-index of 6.
Lanzarote
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Day temp. (°F)
65
65
65
66
68
70
72
74
74
74
71
68
Night temp. (°F)
63
62
63
64
66
68
70
71
72
72
69
66
Water temp. (°F)
70
68
68
68
70
72
73
73
75
73
73
70
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Precipitation (inch)
2
3
2
1
2
1
1
4
2
11
5
3
Days with rain
5
5
5
5
2
2
2
3
3
6
7
5
Dry days
26
23
26
25
29
28
29
28
27
25
23
26
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Sun hours per day
8
8
9
8
9
10
9
9
9
8
7
7
Wind force (Bft)
4
4
4
4
4
4
5
4
4
3
4
4
UV-index
5
5
5
5
5
6
6
6
6
6
6
5
Weather data from: Arrecife
Lanzarote weather by month
What is the average Lanzarote weather like in a given month? Let’s find out! Click on a month to check all the monthly averages for sunshine, temperature highs and lows, percentage chance of rain per day, snowfall accumulation and number of rainy days.
January
66°FView more
February
64°FView more
March
66°FView more
April
66°FView more
May
68°FView more
June
70°FView more
July
72°FView more
August
73°FView more
September
73°FView more
October
73°FView more
November
72°FView more
December
68°FView more
Lanzarote weather experiences
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Frequently asked questions
Where is Lanzarote?
Lanzarote is an island belonging to Spain. It lies in a straight line 3,449 miles from New York. Lanzarote is part of the Canary Islands.
The coordinates of Lanzarote are:
Latitude: 29.046854
Longitude: -13.589973
The GPS coordinates are 29° 2′ N, 13° 35′ W
How long is the flight to Lanzarote?
The flight time from Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) to Lanzarote is approximately 13 h. 10 min.
Airline tickets
Skyscanner
TAP Air Portugal
KLM
What are the airports on Lanzarote?
These are the airports on Lanzarote:
Lanzarote Airport (ACE) in Arrecife
How many inhabitants does Lanzarote have?
Lanzarote has 145,084 inhabitants.
How big is Lanzarote?
The surface area of Lanzarote is 526 mi². It is 463x smaller than United States.
What is the capital of Lanzarote?
The capital of Lanzarote is Arrecife.
What is the currency of Lanzarote?
On Lanzarote, the Euro (EUR) is used for payment.
Exchange rates on 13 September 2022
1 US dollar = 0.84 Euro
1 Euro = 1.19 US dollar
100 US dollar = 84.21 Euro
100 Euro = 118.75 US dollar
What is the area code of Lanzarote?
The area code to call Lanzarote is +34.
Seen a mistake?
Email us. We are grateful to you.
Lanzarote Ocean Water Temperature Today
This data shows the water temperature in Lanzarote. In addition to water temperature, you can also get information about air temperature, weather for today, tomorrow and in the coming days, surf forecast, as well as sunrise / sunset and moonrise data for a given location.
Sea water temperature in Lanzarote today is 22.8°C. Based on our historical data over a period of ten years, the warmest sea in this day in Lanzarote was recorded in 2012 and was 24.4°C, and the coldest was recorded in 2017 at 22.3°C. In the next 10 days, the sea temperature in Lanzarote is expected to rise to 23. 2°C. September average sea water temperature in Lanzarote is 23.1°C/68.9°F, the minimum temperature is 21.9°C°C and maximum 25.2°C.
The beach season in Lanzarote starts in May and ends in January. During those months, Lanzarote water temperature does not drop below 20°C/68°F and therefore suitable for comfortable swimming. The average water temperature in Lanzarote in winter reaches 19.2°C, in spring 18.8°C, in summer the average temperature rises to 21.5°C, and in autumn it is 22.6°C.
Air temperature in Lanzarote and weather conditions for today (13 September 2022). To view the weather forecast for the next few days, go to the weather forecast for Lanzarote
0-3 h
3-6 h
6-9 h
9-12 h
21.7.7 21.4 ° C
22.3 ° C
12-15 h
15-18 h
21-24 h
9ATHER 24.2°C
24.4°C
23.5°C
22.6°C
Monthly sea water temperatures in Lanzarote:
The minimum, maximum, and average monthly water temperatures in Lanzarote are shown below. In addition to the table values, a graph of changes in the average water temperature during the year is shown. Temperature data are calculated from observations over the past 10 years
Month
Avg.
Min.
Max.
January
19.1°C
17.8°C
21°C
cold
Sea water temperature in Lanzarote in January
February
18.4°C
16.7°C
20°C
cold
Water temperature in Lanzarote in February
March
18.2°C
16.6°C
19.8°C
Water temperature in Lanzarote in March
April
18.7°C
17.3°C
20.4°C
cold
Water temperature in Lanzarote in April
May
19.6°C
17.8°C
21.3°C
cold8
Water temperature in Lanzarote in May
June
20.7°C
18.6°C
23.6 ° C
Warm
The temperature of the water on the island of Lansarot in June
July
21. 4 ° C
° C
23.5 ° C
TIALE
TIAI
TIAI In July
August
22.3 ° C
20.7 ° C
23.8 ° C
Warmi
Lansarot temperature in August
September
September
0028
23.1 ° C
21.9 ° C
25.2 ° C
Warm
Water temperature in September
23 23 23 ° C
900.23 900.23 ° C
900.23
Warm
The temperature of the water on the island of Lansarot in October
November
21.6 ° C
19.2 ° C
24.1 ° C
LAMS Temperates0028
December
20.2 ° C
18 ° C
21.6 ° C
WREMICAL
LANSAROT temperature in December
9000 9000 9000
Search for yours rest on the beach and want to enjoy the warm sea, select the day of the year, the region and the minimum comfortable water temperature.
As a result, you will receive a list of countries and cities in which the average water temperature on this day over the past 10 years exceeds the value you selected
Region: Australia & OceaniaAsiaAfricaMiddle EastEuropeNorth AmericaCentral America & CaribbeanSouth America
Water temperature: >=16°C>=17°C>=18°C>=19°C>=20°C>=21°C>=22°C>=23°C>=24° C>=25°C>=26°C>=27°C
Medium temperature
Maximum temperature
What is the ideal water temperature for swimming?
neighboring beaches and cities
The next beaches and cities with water temperature, air temperature, weather and medium waves today
water
Weather
waves
23°C
27°C
2. 23 m
La Santa
23°C
27 ° C
2.23 m
9002
2.23 m
La oyya
23.4 ° C
20 ° C
2 m
Calet Famara
227
9ATHER 23 ° C
9ATH
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This place has a Blue Flag award This place has rip currents Beach type: sandy or pebbly
Water Temperature Widget
The water temperature in Lanzarote is calculated using satellite data together with the results of observations at ground stations. Water temperature, weather forecast and sea conditions are updated daily. Temperatures in shallow areas near the shore may be slightly higher than those shown here.
Weather on about. Lanzarote for 7 days (week) and now, weather forecast by months and water temperature Lanzarote from hydrometeorological center and hysmeteo
Weather now
22°C
Clear
Feels: 25°C
Forecast: 22-27 °C
Water temperature: 23°C/70↑
h,
Pressure: 1012 mbar
Humidity: %
Cloudiness: 20
Sunrise: 07:38
Sunset: 20:02
Data for:
W.
09/13/2022
min 22°
max 27°
↑
8 km/h
0 mm;
0:00
23°C
3:00
22°C
6:00
22°C
9:00
23°C
12:00
25°C
15:00
27°C
18:00
27°C
21:00
23°C
Wed.
09/14/2022
min 21°
max 27°
↑
9 km/h
0 mm;
0:00
22°C
3:00
22°C
6:00
21°C
9:00
23°C
12:00
26°C
15:00
27°C
18:00
26°C
21:00
23°C
Thu.
09/15/2022
min 21°
max 26°
↑
15 km/h
0 mm;
0:00
22°C
3:00
22°C
6:00
21°C
9:00
22°C
12:00
26°C
15:00
25°C
18:00
23°C
21:00
22°C
Fri.
09/16/2022
min 22°
max 26°
↑
23 km/h
0.1 mm;
0:00
22°C
3:00
22°C
6:00
22°C
9:00
23°C
12:00
25°C
15:00
25°C
18:00
25°C
21:00
22°C
Sat.
09/17/2022
min 22°
max 25°
↑
29 km/h
0.1 mm;
0:00
22°C
3:00
22°C
6:00
22°C
9:00
23°C
12:00
25°C
15:00
25°C
18:00
24°C
21:00
22°C
Sun.
09/18/2022
min 22°
max 24°
↑
17 km/h
0 mm;
0:00
22°C
3:00
22°C
6:00
22°C
9:00
23°C
12:00
23°C
15:00
24°C
18:00
24°C
21:00
23°C
Mon.
09/19/2022
min 22°
max 25°
↑
3 km/h
0.1 mm;
0:00
22°C
3:00
22°C
6:00
22°C
9:00
23°C
12:00
25°C
15:00
25°C
18:00
25°C
21:00
23°C
Lansarot for months
Average temperature
January
February
March
April
May
July
August
9000
19°C
21°C
21°C
22°C
23°C0003
25 ° C
22 ° C
21 ° C
16 ° C
15 ° C
17 ° C
17 ° C
18 ° C
19 ° C
20 ° C.
20 ° C
21 ° C
21 ° C
19 ° C
18 ° C
The average SUMMAL WATERS per day
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
6 hours
7 o’clock
8 hours
10 o’clock
11 a.m.
12 noon
1 pm
12 noon
10 o’clock
8 hours
7 o’clock
6 hours
Precipitation (mm/day)
January
February
March
April
May
June
July 90
02 September
October
November
December
21
39
8
10
11
6
3
9000 36
113 9000 9000 9000 17000 17
17
11
12
17
13
6
10
11
13,0003
17
11
Water temperature per О.
Lanzarote
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
9000 9000 ° C 9000 ° C 9000 ° ° C 9000 ° C 16 Since
17 ° C
19 ° C
20 ° C
21 ° C
22 ° C
23 ° C
23 ° C
22 ° C
20 ° C
Lights
to Spain 2022 to the resort of Fr. Lanzarote Check the weather in the resort of Lanzarote before the trip. The information provided on the current temperature and forecast data for 7 and 10 days will help you choose the right wardrobe for you.
Weather forecast for 7 days.
For about. Lanzarote this week has an average daily temperature of around 25.7°C , with a peak of 27°C on Tuesday.
The minimum temperature of 21°C is expected on Wednesday The expected sea temperature on the island. Lanzarote at least 23 C.
Weather in other resorts in Spain
FuerteventuraPlaya Blanca
Weather in Lanzarote in April. Sea water temperature in April. Weather by months.
Sea weather / Spain / Lanzarote weather / APRIL weather
March
April
May
Daytime average temperature
+19°C
+21°C
+22°C
Average temperature at night
+17°C
+17°C
+19°C
Sea water temperature
+18°C
+19°C
+20°C
Number of sunny days
17 days
17 days
17 days
Daylength
11. 6 – 12.4 hours
12.4 – 13.3 hours
13.3 – 13.9 hours
Number of rainy days
0 days
0 days
0 days
Rainfall
10.4 mm
6.4 mm
5.8 mm
Average wind speed
6.9 m / s
6.3 m / s
6.8 m / s
Weather on Lansarot by month
January
February
March
April
May
July
July 9000
Weather in Lanzarote now •
Weather forecast for 14 days •
Sea water temperature •
Air temperature •
Weather by month •
Weather in the resorts of Spain
Air temperature in Lanzarote in April
The graph below provides detailed information about the daytime and nighttime temperatures in Lanzarote in April.
Select the year you are interested in to see daily April temperatures for that year.
The average air temperature in April over the past 5 years is 20.5°C during the day and 17.5°C at night.
To get data on the air temperature in Lanzarote for other months, go to the “Weather by months” section.
Data for:
April 2020
2022
2021
2020
2019
2018
The graph below provides detailed information about the water temperature in Lanzarote in April.
Select the year you are interested in to see daily April temperatures for that year.
The average sea surface temperature in April for Lanzarote is 18.7°C for the last 5 years.
To get water temperature data for other months, go to the “Weather by months” section.
Data for:
2022
2021
2020
2019
2018
Sunny days in Lanzarote in April
The graph below shows the number of sunny, cloudy and overcast days you can expect in Lanzarote in April.
The forecast is based on information about the weather in this resort, collected over the past five years.
However, such a forecast cannot be accurate and should only serve as a rough guide.
Rainy days in Lanzarote in April
The graph below shows the probability of rainfall of varying strengths in Lanzarote in April.
The forecast is based on rainfall information for this resort collected over the past five years.
However, such a forecast cannot be accurate and should only serve as a rough guide.
Windy days in Lanzarote in April
The chart below shows information on how strong winds you can expect in Lanzarote in April.
The forecast is based on information about the strength of the wind at this resort, collected over the past five years.
However, such a forecast cannot be accurate and should only serve as a rough guide.
Weather on Lansarot by month
January
February
March
April
May
July
July
August
September
October
Lensero
December December December. WEATHER NOW
Tuesday September 13
Time: 08:05
SEA WATER TEMPERATURE: 23°C
Search
10 DAY WEATHER FORECAST
September 13
26°C
3 m / s
September 14
27°C
4 m / s
September 15
25°C
8 m / s
September 16
27°C
10 m / s
September 17
25°C
9 m / s
September 18
25°C
3 m / s
September 19
25°C
3 m / s
September 20
25°C
2 m / s
September 21
26°C
5 m / s
September 22
24°C
6 m
January
+19 ° C
+19 ° C
+18 ° C
9ATHER
9ATH ° C
+19 ° C
April
+19 ° C
+21 ° C
May
+20 +20 ° C
+
Июнь
+21 °C
+23 °C
Июль
+21 °C
+25 °C
Август
+22 ° C
+26 ° C
September
+23 ° C
+26 ° C
OKTYABRICH October +October. 25 °C
9002
Alikante
+29 ° C
Barcelona
+23 ° C
9ATHER
9ATH0003
August
Average daytime temperature:
+26°C
Maximum:
+34°C
Minimum:
+19°C
WARMEST WATER IN THE SEA
September
Average water temperature:
+23°C
Maximum:
+25°C
Minimum:
+22°C
THE MOST SUNNY MONTH
August
Number of sunny days:
21 days
Average cloudy:
24.2%
Day length:
13h 8m
DRIEST MONTH
June
Probability of rain:
0. 0%
Monthly precipitation:
2.8mm
Average cloudiness :
30.5%
Weather and water temperature 🌊 in Lanzarote now, today at “365 Celsius”
Sea water temperature now
+22°
Average sea water temperature:
+23.9°C
Sea at the beginning of the month:
+22.9°C
Sea at the end of the month:
+23.7°C
Air temperature during the day:
+26°C
Number of sunny days:
20 days
Rainy days: Rainfall:
1 day 4. 5 mm
Comparison of water temperature forecast and observation history
Lanzarote weather forecast
for 14 days / for a month
Wed tomorrow
Sep 14
Clear
+28° daytime
+22° water
Thu Sep 15
Rain in places
+26°
+22°
Fri
Sep 16
Rain in places
+26°
+22°
Sat
Sep 17
Rain in places
+25°
+23°
sun 9Sep 18 ‘0002
Rain in places
+25°
+23°
Mon
Sep 19
Clear
+24°
+23°
Tue
Sep 20
Clear
+25°
+23°
Wed
Sep 21
Clear
+26° daytime
+23° water
Thu Sep 22
Clear
+26°
+23°
Fri 9Sep 23 ‘0002
Rain in places
+24°
+23°
Sat
Sep 24
Rain in places
+27°
+22°
Sun
Sep 25
Rain in places
+27°
+22°
Mon
Sep 26
Clear
+28°
+22°
Tue Sep 27
Clear
+27°
+22°
Sea holidays now
4
.
9
The weather and water temperature in Lanzarote today and now in September are excellent according to the hydrometeorological center and hysmeteo. The water is cold, it warms up to +23.9°C. We rate the comfort of a seaside holiday this month at 4.9 points. As for other factors, there is almost no precipitation up to 4.5 mm and 1 rainy day per month. At this time, the high season, a lot of tourists because. the weather is very comfortable.
Detailed weather information
Atmospheric events temperature °C
feels like °C
Probability precipitation %
Pressure mmHg
Wind speed m/s
Air humidity
Water temperature °C
Wednesday,
14 September
Morning
+22°
+22°
0%
761
2
85%
+22°
Clear
Day
+27°
+29°
0%
761
four
71%
+22°
Clear
Evening
+26°
+29°
0%
762
5
78%
+22°
Clear
Night
+22°
+25°
0%
761
2
83%
+22°
Clear
Atmospheric phenomena temperature °C
feels like °C
Probability precipitation %
Pressure mmHg
Wind speed m/s
Air humidity
Water temperature °C
Thursday,
15 September
Morning
+21°
+21°
0%
763
5
84%
+22°
Partly cloudy
Day
+25°
+27°
0%
763
7
66%
+22°
Clear
Evening
+24°
+26°
0%
762
eight
80%
+22°
Clear
Night
+22°
+25°
0%
763
four
86%
+22°
Clear
Atmospheric phenomena temperature °C
feels like °C
Probability precipitation %
Pressure mmHg
Wind speed m/s
Air humidity
Water temperature °C
Friday,
September 16,
Morning
+22°
+22°
0%
761
7
86%
+22°
Partly cloudy
Day
+26°
+28°
0%
762
eight
72%
+22°
Clear
Evening
+23°
+25°
0%
761
9
83%
+22°
Clear
Night
+22°
+22°
0%
762
7
89%
+22°
Partly cloudy
Atmospheric phenomena temperature °C
feels like °C
Probability precipitation %
Pressure mmHg
Wind speed m/s
Air humidity
Water temperature °C
Saturday,
17 September
Morning
+23°
+25°
39%
760
eight
78%
+21°
Partly cloudy
Day
+25°
+26°
43%
760
eight
71%
+22°
Clear
Evening
+23°
+26°
0%
759
5
79%
+23°
Partly cloudy
Night
+22°
+22°
0%
761
eight
86%
+22°
Partly cloudy
Atmospheric phenomena temperature °C
feels like °C
Probability precipitation %
Pressure mmHg
Wind speed m/s
Air humidity
Water temperature °C
Sunday,
18 September
Morning
+22°
+22°
0%
758
one
86%
+22°
Cloudy
Day
+24°
+26°
73%
758
3
76%
+21°
Rain in places
Evening
+24°
+26°
80%
758
four
79%
+23°
Rain in places
Night
+22°
+25°
0%
758
3
86%
+22°
Cloudy
Atmospheric events temperature °C
feels like °C
Probability precipitation %
Pressure mmHg
Wind speed m/s
Air humidity
Water temperature °C
Monday,
19September
Morning
+22°
+25°
0%
759
2
85%
+22°
Clear
Day
+24°
+26°
22%
761
four
75%
+23°
Rain in places
Evening
+23°
+25°
41%
761
one
78%
+22°
Partly cloudy
Night
+23°
+25°
55%
759
2
85%
+21°
Clear
Atmospheric phenomena temperature °C
feels like °C
Probability precipitation %
Pressure mmHg
Wind speed m/s
Air humidity
Water temperature °C
Tuesday,
20 September
Morning
+22°
+22°
0%
761
one
84%
+21°
Clear
Day
+25°
+27°
0%
761
2
74%
+21°
Clear
Evening
+24°
+26°
0%
762
four
77%
+22°
Clear
Night
+22°
+25°
0%
761
one
85%
+21°
Clear
Details
for 3 days
for week
for 10 days
for 14 days
for the month
for the weekend
water for 14 days
for 5 days
for 7 days
2 weeks
today
tomorrow
water now
by month
seasons
Monthly Lanzarote water temperature
Throughout the year, water temperature monthly in Lanzarote and average monthly figures range from 17. 4°C to 23.9°C. The difference between the coolest and warmest months is 6.5°C.
Detailed weather and water temperature information by months:
December
Sea temperature in Lanzarote in september
Sea temperature in Lanzarote in october
Water temperature in Lanzarote in august
4
.
9
air: +27. 5°C rain: 1 day sea: +23.9°C sun: 20 days
4
.
9
air: +27.8°C rain: 0 days sea: +23.7°C sun: 18 days
4
.
6
air: +26.8°C rain: 0 days sea: +22.3°C sun: 20 days
Weather in Lanzarote in June 2022-2021 🌊 and water temperature at “365 Celsius”
According to our rating system, which is confirmed by the reviews of tourists who have visited Spain, the weather is good in Lanzarote in June, this month’s rating is 4.2 out of five.
Temperature in Lanzarote in June
Average temperature during the day:
+25. 0°C
Average temperature at night:
+20.2°C
Sea water temperature:
+20.4°C
Number of sunny days:
17 days
Rainy days: Rainfall:
0 days 7.3 mm
Monthly weather comparison in Lanzarote Water temperature in Spain in June
Should I go on vacation in June?
4
.
2
The climate in June is good and tourists come to have a rest. According to our data, the weather in Lanzarote in June and the water temperature is good. At this time, the cold sea has an average temperature of +20.4°C. There is practically no rain, about 0 days per month, 7.3 mm of precipitation falls. Sunny weather lasts at least 17 days. According to the reviews of tourists who have visited Spain, it is worth going on vacation to Lanzarote in June.
Please note:
Weather in Lanzarote in May:
rating 4.2 (out of 5),
air +23.8°C , sea: +19.4°C,
rain 1 day
Weather in Lanzarote in July:
rating 4.5 (out of 5),
air +25.2°C , sea: +21.3°C,
rain 0 days
Details
for 3 days
for week
for 10 days
for 14 days
for the month
for weekend
water for 14 days
for 5 days
for 7 days
2 weeks
today
tomorrow
water now
9, 2020, 2021: the maximum air temperature reaches +27. 4°C, the minimum recorded values are +22.3°C. At night, the temperature in Lanzarote in June drops to +21.4°C…+18.8°C. On average, the difference between day and night is 4.8°C. What is the weather forecast for Lanzarote at the end of June and the beginning of the month indicated on the chart, in Spain almost everywhere the situation is similar.
Water temperature in Lanzarote in June
Weather forecast and sea water temperature in Lanzarote in June ranges from +19.3°C to +21.6°C. At its lows, it can be considered not comfortable for swimming adults and children. In the previous month, the sea is colder by about 1°C. Next month the water is 0.9°C warmer. In June, according to tourists in Lanzarote, the climate is not very suitable for recreation, also due to the uncomfortable temperature of the water in the sea almost anywhere in Spain.
Rating, rainy days and precipitation in June and other months.
The rating in a period of five months fluctuates from 4.0 to 4.6 points. The number of rainy days in June is 0, and it ranks 1st for this indicator for the year. Precipitation is 7.3 mm, which is the 6th place among all months. At the same time, in the previous period, by 0.9mm more rain, next month 7.3 mm less. The weather in Lanzarote in June in the first and second half of the month is shown in the summary table for 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021.
Wind speed
The average speed in June is 7.1 m/s with maximum wind gusts up to 10.1 m/s.
Climate summary
Day
Temperature air day
Water temperature
1
+23. 1°C
+19.5°C
2
+23.8°C
+19.4°C
3
+23.3°C
+19.3°C
4
+22. 4°C
+19.4°C
5
+23.2°C
+20.0°C
6
+22.6°C
+20.2°C
7
+24. 1°C
+20.2°C
8
+22.9°C
+20.2°C
9
+23.3°C
+20.6°C
10
+23. 6°C
+20.1°C
11
+23.6°C
+20.4°C
12
+25.2°C
+20.3°C
13
+27. 4°C
+20.4°C
14
+26.8°C
+20.7°C
15
+24.8°C
+20.4°C
16
+23. 1°C
+20.5°C
17
+22.9°C
+20.6°C
18
+22.3°C
+20.7°C
19
+23. 2°C
+20.8°C
20
+23.8°C
+21.2°C
21
+24.1°C
+20.9°C
22
+24. 2°C
+21.4°C
23
+24.1°C
+21.6°C
24
+24.7°C
+21.5°C
25
+22. 9°C
+21.0°C
26
+24.2°C
+21.0°C
27
+24.3°C
+21.1°C
28
+24. 1°C
+20.8°C
29
+26.4°C
+20.3°C
30
+26.8°C
+20.3°C
Weather now
Lanzarote
+22°
felt: +25°C
SZ 2m/s
Precipitation: 0%
10 day forecast / 14 day forecast
Pay attention to other cities:
La Orotava weather in June
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria weather in June
Weather in Lanzarote in December.
Sea temperature in Lanzarote in december Weather by months.
Weather by months/Spain/Lanzarote/December
Resorts in Spain
All resorts
Lanzarote on the world map
Other countries
All countries
Monthly weather
Month
Temperature
at night
afternoon
January
+17°C
+20°C
February
+16°C
+19°C
March
+16°C
+20°C
April
+18°C
+21°C
May
+19°C
+24°C
June
+20°C
+25°C
July
+22°C
+27°C
August
+23°C
+28°C
September
+23°C
+27°C
October
+22°C
+27°C
November
+20°C
+24°C
December
+19°C
+22°C
According to our observations, as well as reviews of tourists who visited Spain, we can say that the weather in Kemer in September is expected to be quite good. The average daily air temperature in December is 21.7 °C, while the sea water temperature will be 20.6 °C.
Weather in December
Daytime average temperature Nighttime average temperature
+21.7 °C +19.0 °C
Sea water temperature
+20.6 °C
Number of sunny days Length of daylight hours
22 days 10 hours 19 minutes
Rainy days Rainfall
0 days 9 mm
Average wind speed
25.4 m/s
Is it worth going to Lanzarote for a holiday in December?
Comfort
64. 3%
Taking into account all available data on the weather in Lanzarote in December (air and water temperature, amount and intensity of rains, cloudiness, day length and wind strength), we calculated the comfort level at this resort, which was 64.3 %. Please also note that the comfort level in January will be lower and will be 59.0 %
Comfort level by months
On the graph below you can see the comfort level in Lanzarote calculated by us for each month. The most comfortable months for a holiday in Lanzarote are September, October and August. Months with the minimum level of comfort are March, January and February.
Monthly comparison of weather in Lanzarote
Select the month you are interested in from the list below if you want to receive detailed information about the weather in Lanzarote at other times.
December
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
Air temperature in Lanzarote in December
During the day, the air temperature in December ranges from 20. 2°C to 23.8°C, at night from 17.6°C to 17.6°C, respectively. At the same time, the average air temperature is 21.7 °C during the day, and 19.0 °C at night. The difference between daytime and nighttime air temperatures reaches an average of 2.7°C per month.
Water temperature in Lanzarote in December
In December the water in Lanzarote is suitable for swimming. The water temperature in the sea does not fall below 19.9°C, while the maximum figure can reach 21.1°C. The average water temperature in December is 20.6 °C, which is 1.5°C lower than in November and 1.5°C higher than in January.
Rainy days and precipitation in December
On average, in December Lanzarote receives 9 mm of precipitation. This amount of precipitation is insignificant, and you will not notice rainy days. According to our observations and hysmeteo data, the probability of rainy weather is 2.2 %. In this case, most often it will be a light drizzle.
Sunny, cloudy and overcast days
In Lanzarote in December there are usually about 22 sunny, 7 cloudy and 2 overcast days. The length of daylight hours (from dawn to dusk) is 10 hours and 19minutes. The number of hours of sunshine when the sun’s rays reach the earth’s surface, taking into account the average cloud cover for the month, is 8 hours and 4 minutes per day.
Wind in Lanzarote in December
The graph below shows the probability of winds of different strengths during the month. The average wind speed in Lanzarote in December is 25.4 m/s.
Weather in December in other resorts in Spain
We bring to your attention a summary of the weather in other popular resorts in Spain in December. Select the resort you are interested in to get more detailed information.
Top 10 BEST Beaches in Gran Canaria for a Great Holiday
Puerto Rico de Gran Canaria has one of the best beaches on the island
Gran Canaria has many amazing beaches, all very different in terms of atmosphere, natural conditions, type of sand and location, so there’s something great to discover for each taste.
10 Most Beautiful Beaches in Gran Canaria
1. Amadores beach
2. Puerto Rico
3. Anfi del Mar
4. Playa de Mogan
5. Maspalomas beach
6. Playa del Ingles
7. Playa Las Canteras
8. Playa de Las Nieves
9. Playa Hoya Del Pozo
10. North Beach Sardina
In our opinion, when it comes to beautiful beaches in the Canary Islands, Gran Canaria and Fuerteventura are the absolute winners.
We love the variety among the beaches in Gran Canaria and this is the reason why we prefer it as a destination for a beach holiday if we were to choose between Tenerife and Gran Canaria.
10 Most Beautiful Beaches in Gran Canaria
Did you know that in 2020 Gran Canaria has 15 Blue Flag Beaches? It’s the Canary Island with the largest number of beaches awarded with the Blue Flag distinction.
From small coves and secluded beaches to large beaches with all the amenities for a comfortable day in the sun, Gran Canaria has something for everyone’s taste. Just look through our list to see where you’d like to spend your next holiday in the sun.
Great beaches for a family holiday in Gran Canaria
The south of the island has many great hotels and beaches suitable for family trips, with lots of facilities, plus bars and restaurants nearby.
1. Amadores beach
Playa Amadores, Gran Canaria
Playa de Amadores looks almost postcard-perfect, with fine white sand and crystal clear water. This beach is “fairly new”, as it was purposely built to accommodate the growing number of tourists in Puerto Rico.
Amadores beach is an ideal destination for families with children, as the water is always warm and calm. Plus, there’s a great choice of restaurants near the beach, which makes it easy to grab a quick lunch before returning to your sunbed.
Playa Amadores has all the modern facilities you need: sunbeds, umbrellas and lifeguards and it’s only a short stroll away from neighboring Puerto Rico.
2. Puerto Rico
Puerto Rico de Gran Canaria has a really popular beach
Puerto Rico beach is probably one of the most crowded beaches in Gran Canaria but for a good reason: the weather is sunny and perfect almost all year round and the entire place has a Caribbean feel (just like its name).
Puerto Rico is buzzing with British tourists and one the best places to stay in Gran Canaria: it is a white-sand beach, calm water, ideal for families, lots of restaurants, beautiful promenade with palm trees and a great feeling in general. It’s not for those who want a quiet beach all to themselves though.
3. Anfi del Mar
Anfi del Mar beach with sand brought over from the Caribbean
Anfi del Mar is a man-made beach and if we were to compare it to some other beach it would be Las Teresitas, in Tenerife.
This is one of the nicest white sand beaches in Gran Canaria, located just behind the Anfi del Mar hotel complex. There are restaurants around, sunbeds and umbrellas and you can even rent jet skis here. This beach becomes extremely crowded during the summer months when locals, as well as tourists, come here to enjoy the perfectly warm water, ideal for swimming.
Anfi del Mar is also great for a family holiday, as the water is pretty shallow near the shoreline and the kids can go in safely.
Best beaches for a romantic couple’s holiday in Gran Canaria
This is our favorite beach for a romantic getaway and with guaranteed sunshine.
4. Playa de Mogan
Mogan beach (Playa de Mogan)
Playa Mogan is a golden sand beach, situated right next to the marina.
This beach has a more chilled vibe and often times people come here to spend time at the beach as well as walk through the beautiful streets of Puerto de Mogan. We love the vibe of the town, with pretty streets and windows decorated with colorful flowers.
The beach is smaller than the ones previously mentioned, but it has a certain charm and is a bit quieter.
5. Maspalomas beach
Explore the dunes and the beach in Maspalomas
A visit to Gran Canaria just wouldn’t be complete without a stroll on the Maspalomas dunes and beach. This is a unique landscape in Gran Canaria, similar only to the Corralejo dunes in Fuerteventura.
The Maspalomas dunes are one of the main attractions in Gran Canaria and they stretch for around 6 km, so there’s room for everyone and here you’ll find gay couples, as well as families with children and naturists who come to enjoy the warm sun of the Canaries. Just find your spot on this fabulous and majestic beach and enjoy some of the best views Gran Canaria has to offer.
What to do in Maspalomas – places to visit & attractions
6. Playa del Ingles
Another popular beach in Gran Canaria is Playa del Ingles beach.
Playa del Ingles is probably the Mecca for nightlife and partying in Gran Canaria, so it’s a beach popular among the younger crowds visiting the island. This beach can sometimes be a bit windy, but it’s still considered one of the best in Gran Canaria, also popular among naturists visiting the island.
There are hotels and apartments nearby, good restaurants and bars, plus all the facilities you can think of. Give it a go if you want to take the island’s pulse and spend your time on the beach and your nights partying in the various clubs.
Best city beach in Gran Canaria
Did you know that Gran Canaria is home to one of Spain’s best urban beaches?
7. Playa Las Canteras
Las Canteras beach is without a doubt one of the top beaches in Gran Canaria
Located in the island’s capital, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Las Canteras beach was often named as Spain’s best city beach and often times mentioned as one of the best city beaches in Europe and in the world.
Las Canteras stretches for around 3 km and has golden sand, calm water and is ideal for swimming. You have easy access to bars and restaurants and although it has a city feel, it’s a really nice beach and it’s that a city like Las Palmas has such a beautiful beach. You can even come to the capital for a short city break and you can still enjoy time on this beautiful beach, no need to go to the south for that.
As you can see, there are plenty of amazing and beautiful beaches in Gran Canaria and you can be adventurous and discover them one by one, to see what makes all of them great.
8. Playa de Las Nieves
Las Nieves is one of the best beaches in the north of Gran Canaria – Source: Ayuntamiento de Agaete Facebook Page
Situated on the northwest coast of Gran Canaria, Playa de Las Nieves is situated next to Puerto de Las Nieves in the municipality of Agaete.
Although the beach itself is pebbly, this place is really nice for swimming, since the beach is very protected from big waves and rip tides. The atmosphere is very authentic, with many restaurants serving fresh fish and seafood since Agaete is known as a fishing village in Gran Canaria. Nowadays, the fast ferry from the company Fred Olsen connects Gran Canaria from the port of Agaete with the island of Tenerife.
9. Playa Hoya Del Pozo
A blue flag beach in the municipality of Telde.
Playa Hoya Del Pozo has black volcanic sand and is really beautiful and clean, with a very different vibe compared to the touristy beaches in the south of Gran Canaria. It’s also located close to Bufadero de la Garita, which is another place that we recommend to visit in the area.
10. North Beach Sardina
Playa de Sardina del Norte beach is located in a small coastal town in the very north of Gran Canaria, in the municipality of Galdar. North Beach Sardina is great for diving and here you’ll meet a lot of local divers, which is always a good sign.
Top 10 Gran Canaria Beaches
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Gran Canaria is rightly celebrated for the quality of its beaches. Serene settings of white sands, crystal blue waters and exotic trees. There are many untouched coves to enjoy. It presents a perfect beach holiday for both friends and families. Here’s our guide to ten of the best.
Anfi del Mar
Tenerife’s prettiest man-made beach, Playa de las Teresitas, is a slice of paradise. Gran Canaria’s artificial Anfi del Mar, in the south-west of the island, is of similar style. With its overlooking palm trees and floral displays, along with the tranquil, turquoise waters make it a calmer part of the Atlantic Ocean. Start with this one and then explore the other fabulous beaches on the Island, choose one of these rentals in Gran Canaria.
Güigüi
Güigüí is a great place to visit if you want to give naturism a try on your trip. That’s mainly because you could well have the whole place to yourself, given how difficult it is to reach what are in fact two beaches. Located, as they are, at the bottom of (a) Grande ravine.
Las Canteras
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, a large cruise ship port, was the island’s original resort. It’s not difficult to see why when you glance at the 2.8km which make Las Canteras the longest beach on Gran Canaria. Enjoy a mixture of beach and Spanish city living. A great destination for your next trip, see information for rental apartments in Las Palmas.
Maspalomas
Part desert, part nudist zone, Maspalomas is one of Gran Canaria’s most iconic beaches. It is made up of large sand dunes and contains various ecosystems. The area is a protected nature reserve too which stopped the resort taking over the beach. Meaning that no matter how many tourists flock to the beach, there always seems to be plenty of room for everybody.
Mogán
Another man-made beach, this playa adorns charming Puerto de Mogán. A world away from the sleepy-town delights of the municipal capital, this resort’s nicknamed Little Venice because of its network of canals. Puerto de Mogán’s one of the classiest places to stay on the island and its beach is always pristine and serene. See for information on villas and apartments in Mogan.
Playa del Inglés
Playa del Ingles, also known as the English Beach, but why is anybody’s guess. Especially as its adjoining resort also houses German, Scandinavian, and, indeed, Spanish bars. With a length of 2,700 metres long, it’s 10 metres shorter than neighbouring Maspalomas, making it the island’s third-longest beach. Staying in one of our Playa del Ingles holiday apartments located close-by will allow regular visits to this popular beach.
Puerto Rico
Like the country of the same name, there’s very much a Caribbean flavour to Gran Canaria’s Puerto Rico. Maybe it’s the palm trees. Maybe it’s the azure sky and golden sunshine. Or it could have something to do with the laid-back feel of the place. For a relaxing beach break in a Puerto Rico apartment, see more information here.
Sardina del Norte
Not to be confused with Sardina del Sur which is located closer to Vecindario, Sardina del Norte’s crystal-clear waters are popular with divers. Along with fishermen. With sardines as a fixture on local restaurant menus, served with oil and fresh lemon.
Tauro
At 440 metres long, Tauro is the longest beach in the municipality of Mógan. Which is reassuring, given its popularity. A gentle surf softens the dark sand of the playa which is kept meticulously clean. Browse some of the Tauro Villas here to make your beach break complete.
Amadores
Situated in the south-west of Gran Canaria, Amadores beach is 20 minutes walk from Puerto Rico alongside a picturesque clifftop path. The sunniest beach on the Island, each year the sun warms up the shallow turquoise waters and white sand creating a glorious environment to sunbathe. There are many restaurants that line the promenade, and water facilities which make it perfect for Families. Go snorkelling, diving or rent a pedelo along the east side of the beach. Take advantage of holiday apartments located close to Playa Amadores.
Gran Canaria Info – The Top 20 Best Beaches in Gran Canaria
Gran Canaria has dozens of beaches, from the Saharan splendour of Maspalomas to the tiny patch of sand at Sardina del Norte. Some are packed with sun loungers and parasols, while others are hours away from the nearest Full English Breakfast. Whatever your taste, the island has the perfect beach for you.
Gran Canaria’s biggest beach and one of its most popular, Maspalomas is so vast that it rarely feels crowded. Along with adjacent Playa del Inglés beach it is is over 6 kilometres long with calm water and huge golden dunes stretching back for kilometres. The famous nudist section is in the middle of the beach next to the biggest dunes. Snack stands and
The famous nudist section is in the middle of the beach next to the biggest dunes. Snack stands and lounger hire at regular intervals and food at the lighthouse end of the beach.
Maspalomas beach is a safe place to swim but please swim close to the lifeguard towers: The lifeguards do a great job but have a lot of water to watch. Montaña de Arena
Montaña de Arena
A hidden beach close to Maspalomas resort and a local favourite, especially amongst the island’s many nudists. Montaña de Arena has no facilities and is about 10 minutes walk down a track from the GC 500 road, between Maspalomas and Arguineguin. It is hard to find, hard to get to, and hard to forget. The beach is a thin strip of sand at the base of a huge sand dune. At high tide to have to sit on the dune itself.
To get to Montaña de Arena, drive from Maspalomas along the GC500. It is about 5 minutes past Pasito Blanco Marina. Park in one of the two patches of ground that pass as car parks, and then either walk along the coast, or down the dune itself. The locals are happy to share their beach with tourists but some of them object to cameras and video cameras! The area behind the beach is going to be developed into a new resort. The developers have promised to respect Montaña de Arena, but nobody is quite sure what that means!
The locals are happy to share their beach with tourists but some of them object to cameras and video cameras! The area behind the beach is going to be developed into a new resort. The developers have promised to respect Montaña de Arena, but nobody is quite sure what that means.
A half-moon of white Caribbean sand with a fringe of bars, shops and restaurants; Amadores Beach looks like it was invented by the tourist industry. That’s because it was.
Amadores was built from scratch about 15 years ago when Puerto Rico’s beach got overwhelmed. It has warm, sheltered water, lifeguards and lots of loungers. Amadores is a great, safe beach for families with kids, but isn’t the place for people who love their sand wild and unspoilt.
Get to Amadores from Puerto Rico Beach by walking for 15 minutes along the safe cliff-top path that runs from the marina. Or take a bus or taxi. It’s about five minutes away from Puerto Rico by road.Choosing a restaurant at Amadores beach is tricky because there’s so much choice.
Choosing a restaurant at Amadores beach is tricky because there’s so much choice. The Ciao Ciao pizza restaurants are always good value, and we love the Happy Valley Indian.
Anfi is another gorgeous artificial beach and was built by the company behind the enormous Anfi Timeshare complex that overshadows it. Originally Anfi Beach was meant to be a private beach for Anfi customers but Spanish law forbids private beaches so everybody can use it. Coming from Maspalomas and Arguineguin, Anfi is just before Puerto Rico resort on the GC 500 road. Park in the carpark on the opposite side of the road and walk down to the beach. It has shops, bars and restaurants.
Las Canteras Beach is probably the island’s most underrated beach. It is 3.5km long and sits right in the middle of the city of Las Palmas. Sheltered by a lava rock reef, it is safe for swimming and made of gorgeous golden sand. The snorkelling here is great because the whole beach is a marine reserve.
We can’t recommend Canteras enough: loads of space, local bars and restaurants, surfing at its southern end, and a completely local feel. If you fancy getting out of the resorts but still fancy a day on the beach, Las Canteras is the place for you.
Melenara Beach is the local beach for the Town of Telde. It is dark yellow in colour, and well maintained, with local restaurants on its promenade. Next door is another, similar beach called Salinetas. If you are staying in Las Palmas and it’s cloudy, Melenaras is the first beach you get to that is likely to have sunshine.
To get to Melenara and Salinetas, turn off the motorway at the old Ikea, head down to the coast, and then head north until you get to the beaches.
El Confital is Las Palmas’ most pristine, natural beach. It used to have hundreds of illegal houses but they have been removed, and the beach and surroundings left to return to nature. Confital is mostly rocky, with a few patches of golden sand. It is nudist from the end of the wooden boardwalk.
El Confital is also home to one of the best tube waves in Europe but don’t jump in without some experience as the wave breaks shallow over a lava reef and the locals don’t like grommets getting in their ways.
San Agustin beach is in front of the low-key resort of the same name and tends to be quieter and more local than Maspalomas /Playa del Ingles. The beach can be windy at times and the sea is a little wavier than more sheltered beaches such as Anfi and Amadores. However, San Agustín is a top beach and a great place to visit with older kids.There are several restaurants just by the sand, including the famous El Capitán; local food and fresh fish on a lovely beachfront terrace.There are several restaurants just
There are several restaurants just by the sand, including the famous El Capitán; local food and fresh fish on a lovely beachfront terrace.
The beach where the have-yachts and the have-nots share the sand. Access to Pasito Blanco beach is from within the posh Pasito Blanco marina. You can only drive in if you own a boat or a property in the harbour but you can park outside the gate and walk in, or get a bus.
The beach is a long stretch of pale sand and is one of the emptiest in south Gran Canaria. Snorkelling at the east end is excellent and the water here is almost always safe for swimming.
Taurito resort is a little world of its own in south Gran Canaria. With lots of palm trees and a water park just behind the beach, it’s the island’s most complete mini-resort.
Its beach, made of dark, natural sand, is a bit wavier than others in the area but has a fringe of palm trees and restaurants right on the sand.
Somehow it feels wilder than other south Gran Canaria beaches and has a rugged, Caribbean feel.
Puerto de Mogán’s golden beach, a few paces from the famous marina, is as sunny and sheltered as it comes and a great family option. There are plenty of places to eat right by the sand or you can walk over the canal to the marina for lunch by the boats.
The water at Playa de Mogán is warm and calm and there are pedalos and SUP boards to rent on the sand.
For snorkelling, head to the far end of the beach and jump in off the shingle.
Guayedra is north Gran Canaria’s locals’ local beach. Set in a valley full of palm and mastic trees and just one farm, it’s one of the island’s most pristine spots.
The beach is a mix of pebbles and volcanic sand and is just past Agaete on the amazing West Coast road. It’s hard to get to as you have to drive down a track, park up, and then walk down to the beach. During the week, you’ll probably have it all to yourself, except for the odd group of nudist campers. At the weekends, it fills up people from Agaete, Galdar and Guia.
Guayedra beach changes depending on the waves and currents. Some days there’s big sandy patches, others it’s all pebbles. Take care in the water if the waves are big.
Puerto Rico beach is buzzes almost every day but is pretty enough to get away with being crowded thanks to its promenade and beachfront restaurants.The sand is safe, calm and clean and there are plenty of loungers and parasols to rent.
This is the resort beach experience and is sunny almost every day of the year. For a quiet Puerto Rico beach experience, stay on the sand as the sun sets and you’ll be left alone.
Right next to Maspalomas beach (they are actually the same stretch of sand) Playa del Ingles beach is probably Europe’s busiest but is so long that you can always find a peaceful place to sit.
The area at the end by the big dunes is nudist and the water sports centre is tucked into the east corner.
For food, head to thew Annexo II strip of restaurants just behind the north end of the beach.
This is the south Gran Canaria beach that the Scandinavians quietly keep to themselves. It’s just a few minutes walk along the shore from Anfi beach but is natural and doesn’t get the crowds.
With golden sand, a pretty promenade with restaurants looking out over the beach and a laid back feel, Patalavaca is always worth a visit. Look out for the tiny little beach in the central rocky section: It’s great for photo.
Meloneras is Maspalomas’ other beach. With golden sand and a few pebbles, it’s a lovely spot that gets overshadowed by its big brother just along the coast.
The beach is right at the west end of the Meloneras promenade that goes past the big hotels like the Costa Meloneras and Villa del Conde.
Meloneras beach is rarely busy, but has loungers, plenty of sand, and restaurants. If Maspalomas beach is windy there is a good chance that Meloneras won’t be.
Puerto de Las Nieves is a little fishing village in the north west corner of Gran Canaria. It has some lovely fish restaurants and is the departure point for the fast ferry to Tenerife. It has two beaches, both pebbly. One is in the harbour and the other is the far side of the village’s old quay. The harbour beach as the best atmosphere.
Sadly for Puerto de Las Nieves, its iconic Finger of God lost its finger during a big storm a few years ago. You can still see the remaining knuckle of god by looking towards the cliffs from the quay.
Gui Gui or Guigui Beach is Gran Canaria’s most famous remote and unspoilt beach.
It’s a three-hour hike across pristine countryside from the nearest road and is nudist.
If hiking sounds like too much hard work you can take a boat trip from Puerto Rico that includes a stop at Gui Gui. You won’t get long on the sand but at least you’ll have seen the legend.
Most beaches on Gran Canaria’s east coast are black volcanic sand but pretty Aguadulce is golden. It’s only small but the golden sand, pristine condition and turquoise water make it a special spot.While it can be windy during the summer, it’s idyllic on calm days. Despite the sand crystal clear water, Aguadulce only gets a few bums on towels on an average day.
While it can be windy during the summer, it’s idyllic on calm days. Despite the sand crystal clear water, Aguadulce only gets a few bums on towels on an average day.
Aguadulce is clothing optional and nudists tend to cluster by the little cliff at the east end of the beach.
Little Sardina del Norte fishing village in north-west Gran Canaria is famous as a dive site but it’s little golden-sand beach is a stunner. It faces south and gets the same sunny weather as the Agaete Valley so it’s always a good bet for sunshine.
Sardina is home to several excellent local seafood restaurants (Canarians divers thing nothing of admiring the marine life and then eating it straight afterwards).
Discover the best beaches in Gran Canaria for your beach holiday
Although the island’s unique attraction is its golden sandy beaches, it also has natural volcanic rock pools and hidden coves, only accessible by boat or on foot. If you fancy a swim, here’s a list of the best bathing spots in Gran Canaria, Spain Dropdown content.
Best Sandy Beaches in Gran Canaria’s South
The unique UNESCO protected nature reserve of Masplomas Dunes, covering 400 hectares, is the iconic feature of Gran Canaria in the southernmost point of the island. Sand, from the bottom of the ocean, was blown onto the land during the last ice age to form a unique mix of desert and oasis including a freshwater lagoon. You’ll find dynamic sand dunes surrounded by some of the best beaches in Gran Canaria, including the justly famous Playa del Inglés. However, you’re really spoilt for choice so it’s worth exploring further.
Maspalomas and Meloneras
On the Western side of Maspalomas lighthouse, the newly developed stylish Meloneras stretches for 2 km and includes luxury 4 and 5 star hotels, a casino and a conference centre. The promenade is crammed with bars, cafés and restaurants offering cuisine from all over the world. It’s attractive, trendy and affluent.
There are two beaches to choose from at each end of the promenade – Maspalomas and the smaller Meloneras, each with long stretches of sand, perfect for taking a dip in the clear waters of the Atlantic. Discerning locals come here for the tranquillity, so you know it’s good.
At night Meloneras comes into its own with a unique kind of nightlife, different to the main resorts. Chill out with a glass of wine while the sun goes down, or kick back and enjoy the live music playing in the background.
Tip: golfers will enjoy the beachfront’s 18 hole course but may get their balls wet.
Anfi del Mar and Arguineguín
Further west, Anfi Beach, fringed with coconut palms, has 11,000 tons of fine white sand. Originally known as Playa de la Verga, this resort was built in the 1990s by a Bjørn Lyng, a Norwegian businessman. He wanted to recreate the look and feel of a Caribbean beach on Gran Canaria and he certainly achieved that.
It’s located in a protected lagoon, flanked on one side by a pier and on the other by a heart-shaped island and the marina. The waters are so calm that it’s safe for children, great for snorkelling and ideal for water sports. You can rent kayaks, paddle boards, jet skis and small boats or take a tour on a glass bottom ferry and discover the highlights of the area.
Thrill seekers can try parasailing to get an unforgettable aerial view of the resort or take a Fly board to be thrust into the air by a water jet and flip back into the sea. Check out a first-timer’s guide to the Canary Islands for more activities in Gran Canaria
Tip: Try Beach Club Maroa, on the island, for your evening cocktail, and enjoy the sunset.
Amadores
Still going west, Amadores Beach is in a beautiful curved bay with turquoise sea and white sand, overlooked by stark cliffs. Created in 2002, this resort is a welcome respite from the busier Puerto Rico de Gran Canaria.
Since it’s situated in a cove, the waters are calm and well-protected from the rough waves of the Atlantic. This makes it an excellent place for swimming and paddling. The coral sand means people can lie on the beach all day without getting burned, although you still might want to hire a sun lounger.
There’s a ban on loud music and boisterous beach games and, since it’s almost a kilometre long, it never gets crowded. In 2004, Amadores was awarded the Blue Flag certification for the quality of its services.
Tip: take the 3 kilometre ocean front walk along the cliff between Amadores and Puerto Rico for stunning views.
Puerto de Mogán
The most westerly resort on the southern coast, this coastal village lies at the mouth of a steep sided valley, its charming white buildings contrasting with the mountain landscape behind.
As well as a fishing port and yacht marina, there’s a sandy beach, protected by the port and a breakwater. This makes it perfect for families, as the waters are calm, there are no stones and the sand is fine and golden.
It’s also great for snorkelling as the sea is shallow and clear. For larger marine life, go to the marina and head beneath the waves in a yellow submarine or take a whale watching trip. Keen anglers can set out on deep-sea fishing expeditions.
Tip: explore the resort’s “Little Venice”, a scenic network of canals and bridges with colourful subtropical blossoms and blooms.
Best Gran Canaria Beaches on the West Coast
Explore the area’s isolated coves and natural rock pools.
Güi Güi
This is Gran Canarias’s Shangri La. The two beaches here on the west coast, dominated by high cliffs, are so remote they’re almost always deserted. The only way of getting there is on foot or by boat. It’s a tough two and a half hour hike from Tasartico, or persuade a fisherman to take you from Mogán or La Aldea.
Güi Güi Grande is the first you get to and is small, only 350 m long. It’s named after the size of the barranco or canyon, rather than the beach. Güi Güii Chico is just south of its little neighbour and is almost twice as big. You reach it by scrambling over the rocks but be careful as it gets cut off at high tide.
You’re rewarded by a refreshing swim in cool crystal clear waters, surrounded by pristine water, and some of the best sunsets in Gran Canaria, The beaches are at their sandiest during the summer months as, in winter they can disappear completely.
Tip: take plenty of walker and snacks as you’re unlikely to find any supplies here.
Agaete Natural Pools
North of Güi, and far more accessible is the tiny fishing village of Puerto de Las Nieves, a cluster of attractive blue and white Canarian houses. From the harbour, the Paseo de los Poetas, lined with restaurants, craft shops and galleries, leads along the shore, to the natural pools of Las Salinas.
For centuries, they were used to harvest salt, but now make the perfect bathing spot. Swimmers are protected from the crashing waves by rock barriers and it’s an exhilarating experience as the sea water rushes in. The three pools are connected by volcanic tubes and there are flat areas for sunbathing. The lush green pine forest mountainside makes for an attractive backdrop.
After your swim, visit the nearby Maipés Archaeological Park, situated on a great lava flow at the foot of the Pinar de Tamadaba. This is where the Guanches, Gran Canaria’s original inhabitants, choose to honour their dead. There are over 700 tombs of various types and sizes, including huge burial mounds constructed with volcanic stones, dating from around 1300 years ago.
Tip: try the local speciality – caldo de pescado, a delicious fish soup.
Best Gran Canaria Beaches on the East Coast
Las Canteras
The capital, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria is home to Las Canteras, one of the best urban beaches in Europe Dropdown content. It stretches for almost 4km and starts in the north at La Puntilla, the golden sand fringed with coconut palms and fishing boats. At La Cicer, the southern end, surfers ride the crashing breakers in a haze of sea mist.
In between, a natural offshore lava reef acts as a wave break, calming the waters and protecting the marine life that makes Las Canteras a top snorkelling spot. It’s a good place for families as children can bathe in the shallows, overseen by lifeguards, while parents take the sun from their hammocks. The more sportive can enjoy a variety of beach games including volleyball and football.
Alongside, the lively Paseo de las Canteras promenade has amenities including showers and spas. It’s also packed with shops, open-air restaurants, snack bars and ice cream parlours. Sit and enjoy some tapas, people watch over a cool drink and be amused by the street entertainers.
Tip: Watch locals jump into the sea from the rock, Peña La Vieja, and dare to try it yourself.
This article was written in partnership with Visit Gran Canaria.
San Juan Beach, Puerto Rico de Gran Canaria – Updated 2022 Prices
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Vacation Home Info & Price
Facilities
House rules
Guest reviews (29)
Whole house
120 m²
Size
Kitchen
Ocean view
Garden
Washing machine
Free WiFi
Located in Puerto Rico de Gran Canaria, a few steps from Playa de Puerto Rico and a 13-minute walk from Amadores Beach, San Juan Beach offers a garden and air conditioning. This vacation home has free private parking, a 24-hour front desk and free WiFi.
The vacation home is fitted with 3 bedrooms, 1 bathroom, a flat-screen TV with satellite channels, a dining area, a fully equipped kitchen, and a terrace with sea views.
Playa de Tauro is a 20-minute walk from the vacation home, while Playa de Amadores is 2.9 km from the property. The nearest airport is Gran Canaria, 46.7 km from San Juan Beach, and the property offers a paid airport shuttle service.
This is our guests’ favorite part of Puerto Rico de Gran Canaria, according to independent reviews.
San Juan Beach has been welcoming Booking.com guests since Aug 28, 2018
Located in the top-rated area in Puerto Rico de Gran Canaria, this property has an excellent location score of 10.0!
Free Private Parking Available On Site
Reliable Info
Guests say the description and photos for this property are very accurate.
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Sleeps
Three-Bedroom Townhouse
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Closest beaches
Property questions and answers
Browse questions from guests for anything extra you want to know about the property
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When is the best time to visit your property for the perfect beach holiday?
In Puerto Rico we have wonderful weather all year around, so any time would be good!!
Kind regards
Answered on September 15, 2019
Is it 3 bedrooms or is is 2 bedrooms and a sofa bed
Good morning,
The house has three bedrooms and is suitable for 6 persons.
With kind regards,
Chantal
Answered on January 29, 2022
Good evening could you please tell me if you have English channels on you TV also how far away is the closes mercadona please.
thansk dan
Yes we have some English channels on TV.
The Mercadona is 5 minutes by car, 20 minutes walking distance.
Answered on June 1, 2022
Or do I share with other people
What is the difference between room ?
The house will be only for your own use, you don´t share it with anybody.
Answered on March 24, 2021
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Most popular facilities
Free WiFi
Free parking
Beachfront
Airport shuttle
Facilities for disabled guests
Terrace
Parking
Free private parking is available on site (reservation is needed).
Parking garage
Internet
WiFi is available in all areas and is free of charge.
Kitchen
Freedom to eat when you want
Dining table
Toaster
Kitchenware
Electric kettle
Kitchen
Washing machine
Refrigerator
Bedroom
Wardrobe or closet
Bathroom
Toilet paper
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Private Bathroom
Toilet
Hairdryer
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Living Area
Space for everyone to be together
Dining area
Sofa
Sitting area
Media & Technology
Fun for everyone under one roof
Flat-screen TV
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TV
Room Amenities
Extra comfort
Fold-up bed
Private entrance
Ironing facilities
Iron
Accessibility
Entire unit wheelchair accessible
Entire unit located on ground floor
Outdoors
Sit back and relax
Beachfront
Outdoor dining area
Terrace
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Beach
Outdoor & View
Enjoy the view
Ocean view
Transportation
Airport shuttle (additional charge)
Front Desk Services
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Languages Spoken
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San Juan Beach takes special requests – add in the next step!
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4:00 PM – 10:00 PM
Check-out
8:00 AM – 11:00 AM
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Refundable damage deposit
A damage deposit of EUR 150 is required. The property charges this 7 days before arrival. This will be collected by bank transfer. You should be reimbursed within 7 days of check-out. Your deposit will be refunded in full by bank transfer, subject to an inspection of the property.
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Child policies
Children of all ages are welcome.
Children 4 and above are considered adults at this property.
To see correct prices and occupancy info, add the number and ages of children in your group to your search.
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No cribs or extra beds are available.
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Parties
Parties/events are not allowed
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Guests need be quiet between 11:00 PM and 7:00 AM.
Top 10 most beautiful beaches in Gran Canaria for holidays
Where are the most beautiful beaches in Gran Canaria? This charming holiday destination boasts some of the top Canary Island beaches. Dive in.
Situated 150km off the coast of Africa, Gran Canaria offers a delicious choice of more than 80 stretches of white sand, pebble and black volcanic beaches with glittering turquoise waters so stunning that it lays claim to many of the top Canary Island beaches.You’ll discover beautiful beaches in Gran Canaria to suit very activity and mood, from family-friendly sands patrolled by lifeguards enabling you to let your kids splash around without any worries, to romantic secluded coves, urban beaches within striking distance of chic shops and cool restaurants and bars, to watersports hubs and party beaches where DJs play summertime tunes on the sands.There’s another good reason to the love the best beaches in the Canary Islands – the sun is pretty much always shining, with temperatures between 19º and 25º year-round. Question is which ones will wow you the most? To whet your appetite, check out our round up of ten of the most beautiful beaches – and book a hotel like Occidental Margaritas in Gran Canaria for summer 2018…
Fancy sitting on the dock of a bay, watching boat bob and the world go by? Located in the charming resort of Puerto de Mogán, its eponymous golden sand beach runs adjacent to a fabulous marina and port. Here, you can enjoy a spot of fishing or lounge on a sunbed. There’s also canoes and pedaloes for hire and some great beach bars.
If you love city beaches, you’ll simply adore Las Canteras, which is widely regarded as one of Europe’s best urban beaches. Situated bang in the centre of the island’s capital, Las Palmas, here you’ll find 3.5km of golden sands stretching around a beautiful bay and a wealth of sporty and hedonistic delights.As the entire beach is a marine reserve, Las Canteras is the island’s top hotspot for snorkelling and whether you plan to dive into the calm waters or flop on the sand the sheltered bay ensures windless weather practically all year. You’ll find a great choice of bars and restaurants on and close to the sands, and the top haunts of the city centre are within easy reach.
If Amadores Beach with its soft white powder sands reminiscent of the Caribbean strikes you as looking palpably different from its neighbours, there’s a good reason why – it’s beautiful but man-made. Situated near Puerto Rico, you can get here via the clifftop walks that run from Puerto Rica beach to the marina. This is also a great spot for dinner as there’s a fabulous choice of restaurants and bars.
If you prefer your beach off the beaten tourist track and seek a thoroughly authentic Canarian beach experience, simply follow the locals to their favourite playground by the sea. Guayedra beach is a pristine mix of pebbles and black volcanic sand, located in a lush valley studded with palm trees on the northern coast.
Famous for its vast, undulating dunes, Las Maspalomas is picture perfect – in fact, images of its rolling landscape often grace the covers of travel guide books and tourism ads for Gran Canaria. Along with its adjoining sister beach of Playa del Ingles, it stretches more than 6km and its calm, shallow waters make it a top choice for swimming and snorkelling. The sand dunes are protected ecosystems but you can explore them by following the designated and signposted walking routes. To avoid any surprises, be aware that there is a famous section of sand for nudists located amongst the biggest sand dunes in the middle of this beach.
Looking for a peaceful hotspot to lay your towel far from the madding crowds? Aguadulce is a little peach and a stretch of golden rather than black volcanic sands. Situated on the east coast of the island it’s generally sparsely populated making this a good choice for those who want to chill out with a book or snooze on the sand.
But if an ‘away from it all’ beach that also feeds your thirst for active pursuits is what you’re after, then Güigüí Beach, the island’s most unspoilt and remote beach is guaranteed to impress you the most. And when we say remote we’re not exaggerating – you’ll have to be up for a three-hour hike through a countryside path to get here – or, if that sounds like hard work, jump on one of the boat tours that run from Puerto Rico.
Who’s up for scuba? If diving is your big passion, make your way to this stunning golden sand beach – and Gran Canaria’s best diving site – situated in a pretty little fishing village on the north-west coast. Sun-splashed throughout the year, Sardina del Norte is also blessed with great little restaurants serving up freshly-caught and grilled sardines.
Fancy a bit of Scandi drama? Head to this golden sand beach on the south of the island and you’ll discover a hotspot favoured by Scandinavian tourists that’s largely unknown to Brits. You’ll soon see the attraction: it’s small yet perfectly ‘styled’ with charming restaurants dotted along a pretty promenade.
If glam factor is top of your wishlist, then come and rub shoulders with the beautiful people at the exclusive Pasita Blanco beach, which can only be accessed from within the chic yacht-filled marina of the same name. If you own a gin palace or luxury home in the marina complex, you can drive in – if not, then you’ll have to make a not-so-swish entrance by bus to the main gate. Its exclusivity means this beach rarely gets busy and as an added bonus, the conditions for snorkeling here are excellent.
90,000 Puerto Rico-Grand Canarius-Guide to Russian
View of the resort from a height of
Contents
About the resort
Weather
Bus
Taxi
9000 Communication
Video
Beaches
Puerto Rico Beach
Los Amadores Beach
Hotels
Attractions and Activities
Shopping
Restaurants
On the map
About the resort
Puerto Rico de Gran Canaria (Spanish: Puerto Rico de Gran Canaria ) is a resort in the southwest of the island. This small resort town used to be a fishing village. Now its entire infrastructure is aimed at receiving and servicing tourists, and only the presence of a port reminds of the past, but it has changed its purpose and now accepts pleasure boats, yachts and catamarans. The resort town surprises and amazes with the beauty of nature, gentle sea and excellent weather.
This is Gran Canaria’s second largest resort after Maspalomas, but boasts better weather conditions. In winter, the temperature difference between Maspalamos and Puerto Rico can reach 5-7 degrees in favor of the latter. The town is well located, it is protected by mountains from the winds that are typical for other local resorts.
Seaport
There are not many local residents in Puerto Rico – about 3 thousand people, during the season the resort can receive up to 30 thousand tourists at the same time.
The resort was built in the 80s of the past
centuries, this is confirmed by the architectural
the style in which almost
all hotels and apartment complexes in
city. Similar snow-white buildings
located on the hills around the natural
bays. This is another feature of the resort.
– to many hotels and apartments you can
access only by stairs.
Weather
Climate in Puerto Rico de Gran Canaria
due to the proximity of the coast of Africa,
Canary current and relief of the island.
The climate in Puerto Rico has been named the most
auspicious in the world, so high
the estimate is explained by the even temperature
mode without significant fluctuations,
stable humidity and
atmospheric pressure. Even in the most
cold winter months temperature
air during the day does not fall below + 20-21 ° С,
and the ocean water does not cool below +18°C.
Summer in Puerto Rico is also not very hot, in the daytime the air usually warms up to +27-28°C, the water heats up to +22-23°C. The hottest month in Puerto Rico is August and the coldest month is January.
All year weather in Puerto Rico
sunny, almost never in the sky
clouds.
Transport
You can get to the resort of Puerto Rico by plane, but there are no direct flights from Russia, Ukraine, Belarus to Gran Canaria. You will have to fly with a transfer, most of all inexpensive offers with a transfer in Madrid or Barcelona. The flight from Moscow will take about 8 hours, not counting the waiting time for the next flight.
Flights to Gran Canaria
Gran Canaria Airport is located in
capital of Las Palmas. From airport to
Puerto Rico can be reached by shuttle
by bus number 91, by taxi, shuttle or by taking
car for rent.
The distance between the airport and Puerto Rico is 64 km.
Bus
Regular buses Global Las Palmas is easy to recognize, they are bright green. Bus number 91 stops (see the schedule) opposite the entrance to the international terminal. That is, having received luggage, you must go up one level to the departure area.
Bus number 91 is an express bus, its first stop on the road in the village of Argentina, after which it stops at any place requested by passengers. To stop the bus, you must first press a special button at the exit. The fare is 3-9 euros, in Puerto Rico – 5 euros. You can buy a ticket from the driver. Travel time is about 50 minutes. The bus is comfortable and air conditioned. A great option to quickly and inexpensively get to the place of rest.
The second option is bus number 1 (see the schedule), but it does not call at the airport, its stop is located across the street from it and it stops at all stops along the way. The journey will take about 2-3 hours. This bus is convenient if you want to go to another town or get to local attractions on your own.
Taxi
If you want to get there faster, you can
take a taxi. You don’t need to call a car
parking is located at the exit of the airport.
Taxis are metered as well.
additional charge of 2 euros for
landing at the airport. On average, cost
a taxi from the airport to Puerto Rico will be
50-60 euros.
Type
Time
Landing
Price per 1 km.
Waiting hour
Tariff 3
Working days from 6:00 am to 10:00 pm
3.15 €
1.10 €
15.05 €
Tariff 3
Working days from 22:00 to 6:00, Sunday and holidays
3.45 €
1, 26 €
15.05 €
Taxi charges an additional fee for entering the airport or port of 1.70 €, and calling by phone 0.50 €.
Taxi phone number: +(34) 928-154-777
Shuttle
You can also pre-order a shuttle transfer, it is cheaper than a taxi, great for large companies and allows you to inexpensively get to your vacation spot at any time days. Shuttle bass or shuttle service can be ordered through website ShuttleBus or Intui , where it is possible to order a transfer both in a group and individually. Below are the prices from the airport.
SHUTTELUS
In the group: from 5.41 euros
Individually: from 40 euros
Order Shuttlebus
prices Intui
in the group: from 6.20 euros
Individually: from 53.32 euro
Order Intui
Rent a car
For those who plan to travel around the island, renting a car will be an excellent solution. You can arrange a rental in advance, this guarantees that the car will already be waiting for you. If you rent a car in Gran Canaria spontaneously, you should contact the car rental office at the airport. Below is a link to find the lowest prices in the aggregator.
Cheap car rental
Communications
Internet access in Puerto Rico
there will be no problems. If network access
needed occasionally, you can use
free WI-FI,
it is available in most hotels, cafes and
restaurants. Also during the holidays you can
buy a prepaid mobile package
communications of one of the operators. Worth it
from 8 to 15 euros for 10-15 GB mobile
internet 4G. package also
includes some free
sms and minutes to call in spanish
numbers.
In Puerto Rico, you can buy a Vodafone, Orange, Movistar, Lebara, Lyca Mobile SIM card. You can buy a starter pack at the airport, supermarket, operator’s office. To do this, you will need to provide a passport and sign an agreement.
You can replenish your account via the Internet,
at the supermarket checkout, in the mobile office
operator.
If the priority is large
stock of Internet traffic worth paying
attention to Orange tariffs.
This mobile operator focuses on
Internet, it is most often chosen in
as a home provider
the Internet. Monthly traffic is
limited, but after 50 GB speed
connections are significantly reduced.
Guide in Russian recommends you the best rate in Spain with Orange. Here you save, and all the more so because you can buy or order a SIM card while in Russia, that is, in advance. You do not need to look for an office in Europe and study the proposed rates. To get a 10% discount from our travel site, use the coupon:
Coupon 10% discount: tenerife-orange
Order a SIM card
Beaches
There are two beaches in Puerto Rico: Playa de Puerto Rico and Playa de Amadores. Both beaches are artificially created and are located in bays.
Puerto Rico Beach
Playa Puerto Rico Beach
Playa de Puerto Rico – City beach located at the port where yachts and pleasure boats moor. Such proximity does not violate the comfort of vacationers and makes it possible at any time to go on a boat trip or indulge in your favorite sports.
The beach is covered with imported white sand
from the Sahara and has a gentle entry into the water.
On both sides there are breakwaters,
so the ocean is always calm. He is comfortable
for holidays with children.
Beach length: 280 m.
Width: 80 m.
Lots of cafes and restaurants where you can
have a delicious lunch.
The resort is known as the center of water sports and entertainment in Gran Canaria, on the beach there are surfing and diving clubs, kayak rentals, jet skis. Nearby is the water park “Atlantis”. Boat trips on catamarans and yachts are organized, sport fishing competitions are also regularly held.
The beach is well equipped, you can rent
take a sunbed and an umbrella (3-3.5 euros), they work
showers (2 euros) and toilets (0.60 euros).
Los Amadores beach
Photo – Los Amadores beach
Playa de los Amadores – the second beach of the resort, considered one of the best in Gran Canaria. It is located some distance from the city center, but it is connected to Playa Puerto Rico by a boardwalk, along the way you can enjoy magnificent views of the ocean.
sand and has a gentle entrance to the water. Length
beach about a kilometer. Next to him is
free parking. Great fit
for a relaxing holiday with children, for them
There is a small playground for children.
infrastructure, hammocks for rent,
umbrellas, showers and toilets.
The cost of services is the same as on the beach
Puerto Rico.
It is adapted for people with disabilities
opportunities.
Lovers of outdoor activities and water
entertainment can ride a banana,
hydrocycle, catamaran.
Nearby there are several restaurants and cafes where you can eat inexpensively and tasty. The cost of a complex breakfast is 7-10 euros, lunch from 8 euros.
Hotels
Puerto Rico has hotels for every taste
and a wallet, but it’s better to book them
in advance, the most interesting options
often busy for the whole season as early as January.
Which hotel to choose? How much is the room
in Puerto Rico hotels? It all depends on
stardom, distance from the beach and
offered services.
Near Playa de los Amadores is one of the best hotels in the resort Gloria Palace Royal Hotel and Spa 4* . It is perfect for a relaxing holiday and offers high quality service.
Another popular hotel Riu Vistamar 4 * , the hotel offers holidays on the concept of All inclusive . It is located on the top of a hill with great views of the city and Amadores beach.
Servatur Puerto Azul Hotel 4* is a family hotel operating under the All Inclusive system. Located near the city beach.
Altamadores is a hillside hotel overlooking Amadores Beach. The hotel is small, only 95 rooms, works on an all-inclusive basis. Not far from the hotel is the shopping center “Europe”.
Gloria Palace Amadores 4* overlooking the ocean is another great hotel on the coast. This hotel operates the only one in the resort Thalasso Spa . Guests of the hotel also like the infinity pool, which offers great views of the ocean.
Aparthotels are also popular in the resort, where you can rent rooms with a separate kitchen and without additional service. One of the best complexes Altamar is located between the two beaches of the resort. The complex has 257 apartments and two swimming pools with sun loungers and umbrellas.
Apartment Gran Amadores is located just 200 meters from Los Amadores Beach. Rooms on higher floors offer ocean views.
Terraza Amadores is located just a short walk from Amadores Beach. This self-catering accommodation is ideal for those looking for a quiet and relaxing holiday.
Terraza Amadores has a supermarket, an adult pool and a children’s pool.
Attractions and activities
The resort offers entertainment for
children and adults. If you are tired of the beach
rest, you can have fun playing big
tennis, mini golf or go to
a nightclub or bar where they play all night
music and the fun never stops.
Angry Birds Activity Park
The main place for children’s entertainment Angry Birds Activity Park , where young visitors will find 25 different attractions created based on their favorite computer game and cartoons. Park Angry Birds Activity Park occupies 5 thousand square meters. meters and is able to simultaneously receive about 1200 visitors. The entrance ticket costs 15 euros.
The park is open from 10-00 to 23-30, the entrance ticket is valid all day.
Mini golf
Neptuno
For only 5 euros you can have a great time in Mini Golf Neptuno . This is a great mini-golf course with a nautical theme. 18 holes are available, it is interesting to play, the difficulty level is medium. The game usually takes about 1-1.5 hours.
Dolphin Sea Tour
Dolphin Sea Trip
From the sea port you can go looking for dolphins to watch them in their natural environment. Usually the trip is not burdensome and takes 2-3 hours. The boat for a walk has a glass bottom and allows you to see the dolphins very close. You can also observe the diversity of the underwater world. Daily on board Spirit of the Seas going to sea.
What’s included in the tour:
Pickup from: Puerto de Mogán, Taurito, Playa del Inglés, Maspalomas, San Agustin and Baia Feliz.
Alcoholic drinks
Cost: 35 euros for adults and 20 euros for children. It is better to buy tickets in advance, at least two days in advance.
Getting there:
Address: Puerto Base Puerto Base, justo frente a la barrera de paso, 35130 Puerto Rico de Gran Canaria, Las Palmas, Spain
Coordinates: 27.782504, -15.711550
Book an excursion
Nightlife
The resort is famous for its nightlife,
so if you like good music
and inexpensive drinks, worth a go
at the Puerto Rico Mall, located
in the center. There are a lot of people working there
bars where you can see professional
shows and live performances by artists, and
also dance until the morning in discos.
Another place for evening and night entertainment – Europa Center offers quieter options such as family bars with karaoke, children’s entertainment and quiet cafes and bars where you can listen to good music and have a drink. In the Europa Center you can also play billiards, tennis, mini-golf, jump on trampolines.
Submarine
Submarine in Gran Canaria
In the neighboring resort of Puerto de Mogán, 15 km away, there is a modern submarine in the port. Every day, underwater excursions are made on it to the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean, to a depth of 30 meters. If you want to get acquainted with underwater marine inhabitants and you are interested in what is under water, then be sure to visit this type of service. It is interesting. You are on the ship for 40 minutes.
Submarine
Shopping
Puerto Rico continues to develop, delighting tourists and shoppers. One of the most popular places for shopping and leisure is the Europa Center Shopping Center, which brings together the best restaurants, bars, nightclubs and shops on the island.
Second largest mall in
Puerto Rico is located in the very center
resort. It employs branded
shops of popular brands Mango and Charol, and
also discount shops, souvenir
shops, pharmacies, Internet cafes, restaurants,
cafes and bars. Also in the mall
there are two large supermarkets, where
You can buy food and fruits. McDonalds , Starbucks and others. There is also a large SuperDino supermarket.
At the beginning of 2019, a new market opened at the resort, it is located on the main road from McDonald’s, past the Puerto Rico Mall, opposite the Mega Mall.
This is not a market in the usual sense, this is a place where it is pleasant to wander, leisurely shopping, alternating shopping with visiting cafes and restaurants. The market area is decorated with vertical gardens and fountains. You can leave your car in the underground parking.
The market has the second largest supermarket in Gran Canaria Spar .
Restaurants
The choice of restaurants is huge, the only
the problem you are facing is
it’s a choice issue.
Most restaurants, cafes, bars are concentrated in Puerto Rico Mall, Europe Center and The Market Puerto Rico , as well as near the beaches.
The Mall of Puerto Rico has restaurants with a variety of cuisines: Chinese, fast food, Indian, Mexican. There are also buffet restaurants where you pay a certain amount and eat as much as you want. The best restaurants in this place are Balcon Canario and San Miguel serving traditional Canarian cuisine.
Choice of restaurants in the Europa Center
smaller, but there are quite interesting
establishments such as a Chinese restaurant
with a buffet at a price of 6 euros with
person.
Grill lovers should visit the restaurant Grill Costa Mar located in the harbor.
Video
Video: walk
Location on the map
What to see in Gran Canaria?
The beaches of Gran Canaria – Arrivo
1 review
Playa de Las Canteras
This is a huge strip of golden sand, located in the heart of Las Palmas. It stretches for more than 3 kilometers and is popular with tourists and residents of the city.
Ideal conditions for all water sports, volleyball.
Lots of shops, outdoor restaurants, snack bars and cafes.
Sunbeds and umbrellas for rent: 09:00 – 17:00. Average water temperature: 20 – 21 degrees.
Las Canteras beach is one of the best in Gran Canaria.
Address: Paseo de las Canteras,35008 Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Las Alcaravaneras (Playa de las Alcaravaneras)
The beach, 1000 meters long and 85 meters wide, is located in the capital city of Las Palmas. Whatever day of the week you come to this golden strip of fine sand, it will not be difficult for you to find a great place where you can relax in peace.
Refreshments are sold at the kiosks and there is an excellent selection of cafes and bars nearby. There are also sunbeds and showers on the beach.
Cheap buses run from most major resorts to the beach. If you need to park your car, look for the appropriate road sign. Car parking here is relatively inexpensive.
Address: LasPalmasdeGranCanaria
Playa de San Agustin
The beach stretches for approximately 670 meters, it has a slight slope and is well protected from the waves.
You will love this dark sandy beach. Here you will have plenty of space in order to properly settle down, and in addition, you will rest in peace and quiet.
On the promenade you will find several excellent restaurants, as well as a range of cafes, bars and shops. There are showers right on the beach. Buses run to this resort, and in addition, there is parking for cars.
Address: San Agustin, Gran Canaria, San Bartolomé de Tirajana
Playa del Inglés
The 2.7 km long beach of Gran Canaria is extremely popular throughout the year and is the busiest tourist route in all of Spain .
This beach is full of sunshine and activities, offering a wide range of leisure and sports activities including jet skiing, sailing, windsurfing, water skiing and more.
Along the beach there are a large number of public toilets and showers, as well as kiosks selling chilled drinks, ice cream, etc. For the disabled, there are several ramps that descend directly to the sand.
Address: Playa del Ingles, San Bartolomé de Tirajana, Gran Canaria
Playa de las Burras
Playa de las Burras is located next to Playa del Ingles.
To the east of Playa de las Burras, you will find the sand dunes of Maspalomas.
Next to the dunes there is an area where nudists gather, as well as another special area near “Bar 7”, popular among homosexuals.
Playa de Maspalomas
This is just a beautiful place. You have to see it with your own eyes to believe it exists!
Wind-sculpted sand dune sculptures of fine white sand and the blue sea in front. This is indeed an amazing sight.
Maspalomas beach is divided into four zones: the first is great for families with children, the second and fourth are for nudists, and the third is popular among homosexuals.
Sports and entertainment facilities are available here, including showers and a variety of beach bars, restaurants and shops.
Buses drop off passengers next to the dunes. Nearby there are many places where you can park your car for free right on the street, as well as special parking lots.
This is one of the most popular beaches in Gran Canaria.
Playa de Puerto Rico
The beach is famous for being the sunniest place in Gran Canaria.
There is always a gentle breeze blowing here and the sea is calm – ideal conditions for taking a dip in the warm waters of the Atlantic.
Numerous bars and cafes are open along the beach. There is convenient parking, sunbeds, awnings and a number of showers are always at your service.
The beach is wheelchair accessible. There are inexpensive buses from all major tourist spots.
Address: Mogán, Gran Canaria
Playa de Amadores
The beach is located on the southwest coast of Gran Canaria.
On the shore of a large bay, perfectly protected from the elements, there is an 800-meter strip of golden sand, which is washed by crystal clear waters.
This calm and quiet place has become a favorite for those who would like to be together in a romantic setting and spend a day in the sun. It is not surprising, therefore, that the very name Playa de Amadores means in Spanish “Lovers’ Beach”.
There is a large selection of bars and restaurants.
Recommended Playa de Amadores is a great place to watch the sun go down behind the volcanic peak of Teide on the neighboring island of Tenerife. This sunset is a truly breathtaking sight.
Address: Puerto Rico, Dunas Amadores, 35130MOGAN
PLAYA-de MOGANA, PLOSOSED POLOSTIONS, PERFECTIONAL, well-defended, well-defended, well-defended, well-defended, well-groomed, well is popular with family vacationers.
The clear waters are calm and the sea around the breakwater is a great place for snorkeling as there is a wide variety of fish.
The beach offers sunbeds, awnings, pedal boats and canoes for rent. The kiosks sell chilled drinks and snacks.
Parking places are located along the road, and in addition, there is a parking lot next to the beach. Buses run frequently and there is a taxi rank.
Playa de Mogan is recognized as one of the best beaches in Spain.
Playa Taurito
A beach between Puerto Rico and Puerto Mogan on the south coast of Gran Canaria.
Soft sand and sparkling water – that’s what you’ll find on the picturesque beach. A wonderful opportunity to escape from the hustle and bustle and enjoy the intimate atmosphere of an oasis of peace and tranquility.
Near the beach there are a number of cafes, restaurants, shops and snack bars.
A wide range of water sports and activities are available, including fishing, jet skiing, scuba diving, as well as boat trips and walks.
Buses run to Playa Taurito from many places on the island. At the beach there is a large underground parking and a taxi rank.
Playa de Meloneras
Beautiful beach located in the south of Gran Canaria. The water here is warm and calm, great for swimming. The sand underfoot is golden and soft.
Near the beach there are a number of restaurants, bars and cafes offering cold drinks, snacks and international cuisine to choose from. Among others, a fine Spanish restaurant stands out here, famous for its paellas.
Buses are frequent, there are several car parks. There are good conditions for disabled access.
Playa de Guigui
The most beautiful “wild” beach of the island of Gran Canaria.
Fine sand, golden yellow, it stretches for hundreds of meters in length and tens of meters in width. The water is crystal clear, turquoise. Brown-red rocks contrast with green algae. This paradise is located at the exit to the coast of two mountain gorges. You can get here only through the mountains or by sea; the journey on foot is tiring and dangerous. Delivery by water will be expensive, in addition, you will have to swim to the shore. Of course, the place is worth the sacrifice. The main thing is not to forget about sun protection, the beach is “wild”, and there is nowhere to hide from the scorching rays.
A marked mountain trail to the beach starts about 1 km from the village of Tasartico on the west coast. You will need sports shoes, drinking water and 5 hours of free time.
Address: Tasartico, La Aldeade San Nicolás, LacPalmas
All the beaches of Gran Canaria will delight you with a beautiful coastline and good infrastructure. Have a nice holiday!
Puerto Rico Playa, Mogan – Updated 2022 Prices
Information on the apartments and cost
Employes and services
Conditions Conditions
Reviews of guests (13)
Square
Washing machine
Free Wi-Fi
Free parkovo
Air conditioning
Non-smoking rooms
Heating
Parking (on site)
Featuring air conditioning, Puerto Rico Playa is located in Mogán, 1. 6 km from Playa de Tauro. It offers a balcony, free private parking and free Wi-Fi.
The apartment features 2 bedrooms, a flat-screen TV with cable channels, an equipped kitchenette with a microwave and a fridge, a washing machine, and 1 bathroom with a bidet.
Offers a terrace.
Couples especially like the location – they rated accommodation in the area for a trip as a couple at 9.6 .
Puerto Rico Playa has been welcoming Booking.com guests since Oct 28, 2019 2019.
Great Location: Highly rated by recent guests (9.6)
Free private parking on site
Please select dates to see availability and prices.
Type of accommodation
Holds
Two-Bedroom Apartment
Show prices
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The closest beaches
Plaiya-de-Puerto-rico beach
8.4 Very good beach
100 m from the option of accommodation
AMADORES
8.8 Stunning beach
1.000 m of the option accommodation
La Playa de Tauro beach
8.3 Very good beach
1.6 km from accommodation
Anfi Beach
8.7 Stunning beach
2.3 km from the option of accommodation
Losfrales beach
8.3 Very good beach
2.6 km from the placement option
Playa de Patalavaca
8. 2 Very nice beach
2.9 km from the property
FAQ about property
See what other guests are asking to learn more about this property.
No, there isn’t
Reply July 30, 2020
*
All distances are measured in a straight line. Actual distance may vary.
Most Popular Amenities & Services
Free WiFi
Free parking
Beach (first line)
Parking
Free private parking on site (reservation required) .
Electric vehicle charging station
Street parking
Secure parking
Internet
Wi-Fi is available in the entire hotel and is free of charge.
Eat when it suits you
Dining table
Cleaning products
Plate
Oven
Kitchenware
Washing machine
Microwave
Refrigerator
Kitchenette
Bedroom
Wardrobe or wardrobe
Bathroom
Toilet paper
Towels
Bidet
Additional toilet
Toilet
Shared bathroom
Hair dryer
Shower
Seating area
Here everyone will be together
Dining area
Sofa
Seating area
Media and technology
Fun for everyone under one roof
Flat screen TV
Cable channels
TV
Amenities in the room
Extra comfort
Socket next to the bed
Sofa bed
Clothes dryer
Clothes hanger
Tiled/marble floor
Iron
Availability
Access ladder to upper floors
outdoors
Time to unwind
Beach (first line)
Balcony
Terrace
Sports and recreation
Beach
Diving
Beyond the territory
Additional charge
Canoe
Beyond the territory
Additional charge
Windsurfing
Beyond the territory
Additional charge
Golf course (within 3 km)
Additional charge
outside
enjoy the view
View of the courtyard
Pool view
Building characteristics
Private apartment in apartment building
Reception
Invoices issued
Express check-in/out
Miscellaneous
Air conditioner
Non-smoking throughout
Heating
Non-smoking rooms
The staff speaks these languages
English
spanish
Italian
Sustainability Initiatives
Special measures are taken here to make travel conscious and environmentally friendly.
Accommodation conditions
Puerto Rico Playa takes special requests – add in the next step!
check in
15:00 – 00:00
Departure
00:00 – 12:00
Cancel/ prepayment
Cancellation and prepayment policies vary by apartment.
Please enter your dates of stay and review the booking conditions for the requested room.
Beds for children
Child Policy
Children of all ages are welcome.
To see exact prices and availability, please enter the number of children in your group and their age when searching.
Crib and extra bed policy
Baby cots or extra beds are not available.
Age limit
Minimum entry age: 18 years old
Payment system through Booking.com
Booking.com accepts payment from you for this booking on behalf of the property, but asks you to bring cash with you in case of additional charges on site.
Smoking
No smoking.
parties
No parties/events allowed.
“Quiet Hours”
“Quiet hours” for guests (when you can not make noise): from 14:00 to 17:00.
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Top 27 Best Beaches in Gran Canaria for a pleasant stay
The beaches of Gran Canaria are varied and numerous. You can relax on the sea here at any time of the year. Gran Canaria ranks third in area among the islands of the Canary archipelago. Tourists are attracted here by numerous sights, entertainment centers and original local culture.
The best beaches in Gran Canaria.
Contents
Features of the beaches of Grand Canarius
Canarius beaches
Maspalomas
Amadores
Puerto Rico
Lasanteras
ANFO-DAMAR
MELNARA
9000 9000
Mogan
Taurito
Guadra
Maranuls
Plai-delGles
Puerto de La-Neva
Patalavak
Gi-Gi
Aguaduls
000 9000 Sardina 9000 Sardin0006
El-kabron
Las Burraras
Las Alcaravanans
Kochino
Puertillo
Burier
Pasito Blanco
9000
9000 9000
Channel 9000
Reviews of vacationers
Features of the beaches of Gran Canaria
The beaches on the island have a number of distinctive features:
due to the climate, you can swim on the island all year round;
all beaches are owned by local authorities, there is no entry fee;
urban coastal zone has a developed infrastructure, including showers, changing cabins.
Beaches of Gran Canaria
The total length of the coastline suitable for swimming is more than 60 km. In total, Gran Canaria has dozens of beaches that differ in conditions and infrastructure.
Maspalomas
Maspalomas is located in the south of the island and covers about 4 km of coastline. Conventionally, the territory is divided into 4 zones: the 1st part is chosen by vacationers with families, the 2nd and 4th are a haven for nudists, and the 3rd are the representatives of non-traditional orientation.
Dunes of Maspalomas.
The most famous natural attraction of Gran Canaria, the Dunes of Maspalomas, adjoins the beach directly. Nudist areas are marked with special posters.
You can get here by car or regular bus.
Address: 35100 Maspalomas, Las Palmas, Spain
Map coordinates: 27.736, -15.583
Amadores
Amadores stretches for 800 meters near the resort of Puerto Rico in the southwestern part of the island. Popular with families and couples. This is a peaceful place for a relaxing holiday. Since 2004, Amadores has been awarded the Blue Flag every year.
Amadores family beach.
The beach is artificial, stone breakwaters protect the lagoon from the waves. There is a promenade along the coast. It is easy to find free car parking.
In the evenings it is quiet and peaceful here. Fans of noisy nightlife and active entertainment should go to Puerto Rico. It is located just a 15-minute leisurely walk from Amadores.
Address: Calle San Borondón, 1, 35130 Mogán, Las Palmas, Spain
Map coordinates: 27.790, -15.723
Puerto Rico
City beach is artificial. Beautiful golden sand was brought from the Sahara. Puerto Rico stretches along the main street of the city, which is always noisy and crowded.
Sand on the beach of Puerto Rico brought from the Sahara.
There are especially many tourists from Germany and England. Nearby are 2 small bays, where excitement is observed infrequently. Picturesque cliffs protect the lagoon from the ocean.
Address: Paseo Marítimo, 83, 35130 Mogán, Las Palmas, Spain
Map coordinates: 27.784, -15.713
Las Canteras
This is the main city beach of the capital of the island, Las Palmas. Las Cantares has a length of about 3 km and is covered with fine golden sand. Marked with the Blue Flag. The Las Cantares lagoon is protected by a sandstone breakwater. Swimming with children is safe and comfortable. Nearby you can find a large number of cafes and shops.
Las Canteras main beach.
Address: Paseo las Canteras, 35010 Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Las Palmas, Spain
Map coordinates: 28.143, -15.432
Anfi del Mar
Playa Anfi del Mar is a picturesque beach located in a bay protected from the waves. Located in the south of the island. The coast is covered with imported white sand and surrounded by palm trees. Nearby there is a resort complex with swimming pools, gardens, golf courses, shopping center and cafes.
White sand on Anfi del Mar beach.
Address: Calle Anfi del Mar, 2, 35129 Mogán, Las Palmas, Spain
Coordinates on the map: 27.77, -15.695
Melenara
A small coastal area with black sand of volcanic origin. It is located in the resort village of the same name in the northeast of the island. Popular with locals who value this place for its beauty and privacy. Nearby is the reef Bufadero de la Garita. You can get to the beach by bus or car.
Melenara beach with black sand.
Address: Las Palmas, Spain
Coordinates on the map: 27.987, -15.375
San Agustín
San Augustin is located in the resort area of Maspalomas in the south of the island. The length is about 2 km. The coast is covered with dark sand. In the northern part there are beautiful rocks. The entrance to the water is gentle. Not far from the beach there is the only casino in Gran Canaria.
San Agustin Beach.
Address: Calle las Acacias, 1, 35100 Maspalomas, Las Palmas, Spain
Map coordinates: 27. 769, -15.541
Playa de Arguineguin
Playa de Arguineguin is located next to the fishing village of the same name in the southwest islands. The place is popular with tourists from Norway. Residents of this country love to come here on vacation in the winter. The beach is covered with dark sand.
Cozy beach Playa de Arguineguin.
Address: Calle Juan Juana, 1, 35120 Arguineguin, Las Palmas, Spain
Map coordinates: 27.756, -15.681
Mogan
Mogan is one of the most beautiful beaches in the entire Canary archipelago. Located next to the new part of the fishing village of Puerto de Mogán in the southwest of Gran Canaria.
Mogan beach with golden sand.
Here you can find many picturesque canals and bridges, so the resort is often called the “Canary Venice”. The coastal area is covered with golden sand, imported from Africa, and has a length of about 200 m.
Nearby is the yacht port, shops, cafes and restaurants. From the city can be reached by bus or car. This place is suitable for a relaxing family pastime.
Address: Calle Alcalde Miguel Marrero, 19, 35139 Lomo Quiebre, Las Palmas, Spain
Map coordinates: 27.818, -15.763
Taurito
A small artificial beach located in a small bay between Puerto Rico and Puerto Rico. The coast is covered with dark volcanic sand, occasionally there are large stones.
The man-made beach of Taurito.
There are bars, cafes and shops. Fishing, boat trips, scuba diving are offered for tourists. Nearby is a taxi rank and paid underground parking.
Address: 35138 Taurito, Las Palmas, Spain
Coordinates on the map: 27.814, -15.753
Guayedra
Guayedra is located near the village of Agaete in the north of Gran Canaria. You can get there by walking along a mountain path or by boat by sea. There are very few people on Guaedra. There is no infrastructure nearby.
Guayedra rocky beach.
The beach is located in a beautiful rocky bay. Waves are rare here.
Guayedra beach is often visited by nudists. In clear weather, you can see the top of the Teide volcano on the neighboring island of Tenerife from here.
Address: 35489 Agaete, Las Palmas, Spain
Map coordinates: 28.086, -15.709
Maranoulas
Las Marañuelas is located in the village of Arguineguin on the southwest coast. The coastal line is covered with yellow-gray sand. The length of the beach is more than 350 m. The mountains protect Maranulas well from the winds. Entry into the water is smooth, waves are rarely observed.
Maranoulas with a length of 350 m.
Address: Av. del Muelle, 35120 Arguineguin, Las Palmas, Spain
Map coordinates: 27.759, -15.682
Playa del Inglés
The beach is located south of the dunes of Maspalomas. The beach is covered with fine golden sand. Entry into the sea is smooth. Good facilities are available including changing cabins, rinsing showers, sun lounger and umbrella rentals. There are free parking spaces nearby. Vacationers can visit cafes and bars, shops located in Maspalomas.
Playa del Inglés with a smooth entrance to the sea.
Address: 35100 Maspalomas, Las Palmas, Spain
Map coordinates: 27.755, -15.566
Puerto de las Nieves
The beach is located in the northwestern part of the island. Puerto de las Nieves is covered with small pebbles and gray sand. There are many palm trees on the shore. This is a picturesque and sparsely populated place, well suited for a peaceful holiday.
Puerto de las Nieves beach.
Address: Ctra. al Puerto de las Nieves, 0, 35489Puerto de las Nieves, Las Palmas, Spain
Map coordinates: 28.100, -15.708
Patalavaca
Patalavaca is located in the village of Patalavaca on the southwest coast. The beach is covered with gray sand of natural origin. Tourists can rent umbrellas and sun loungers. Nearby there is a cafe where you can have a bite to eat and drink a cocktail.
Patalavaca with gray sand.
Address: 35129 Patalavaca, Las Palmas, Spain
Map coordinates: 27. 77, -15.688
Gigi
One of the most beautiful beaches of Gran Canaria is located on the west coast of the island. Gigi is remote from the best resorts, so few vacationers visit it. You can get to the beach by boat from Aldea, Puerto de Mogan or Puerto Rico.
Gigi Beach – Surrounded by rocks.
Another way is to walk across rough terrain for up to 2.5 hours. The beach is covered with gray sand and surrounded by picturesque cliffs of bizarre shapes. There is no developed infrastructure on Gi-Ki.
Address: de Güigüí Chico, Barranco, Las Palmas, Spain
Map coordinates: 27.948, -15.827
Aguadulce
The beach area of Aguadulce is located in a small bay surrounded by cliffs, near the village of Tufia on the east coast. Clear water with excellent visibility attracts divers. The coastline is covered with golden sand. Entry into the water is convenient, without boulders and pebbles. The length of Aguadulce is about 150 m.
Aguadulce beach in the bay.
Address: Paseo Marítimo, numero 7, 04720 Aguadulce, Almería, Spain
Coordinates on the map: 27.96, -15.381
Sardina
Playa de Sardina del Norte is located in the northwest of the island, near the town of Galdar. Sardine is divided into 2 zones: on the right is a section covered with brown sand, on the left is a rocky beach. Rocks protect the bay from the waves. In windy weather, windsurfers often come here.
Sardina Beach is protected by rocks.
Address: Spagna, Av. Alcalde Antonio Rosas, 67A, 35469 Gáldar, Las Palmas, Spain
Map coordinates: 28.151, -15.696
El Cabron
El Cabron is located on the territory of a marine reserve. There are no boats or sightseeing boats here. The nearest town is Arinaga. The beach is covered with beautiful golden sand. The water near the coast is clean and transparent, there are many species of fish and other representatives of the marine fauna.
El Cabron beach with clear waters off the coast.
Address: Calle Playa Cabron, 15A, 35118, Las Palmas, Spain
Map coordinates: 27.870, -15.386
Las Burras
Las Burras is a small beach covered with gray and golden sand of natural origin. It is located in the village of San Augustin in the south of the island. There are necessary amenities – showers, toilets, changing cabins. YUPI shopping center is nearby.
Las Burras with gray sand.
Address: Av. Playa San Agustín, 49, 35100 San Bartolomé de Tirajana, Las Palmas, Spain
Map coordinates: 27.766, -15.551
Las Alcaravaneras
Las Alcaravaneras – the urban beach of Las Palmas, located in the east of the city. Nearby there are cafes, bars and restaurants for all tastes. There are amenities for vacationers, including sunbed rentals, rinsing stations, changing cabins. Yacht clubs are located in the southern and northern parts. Regular buses run along the coastal territory, there are several car parks.
Las Alcaravaneras – city beach.
Address: 35006 Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Las Palmas, Spain
Coordinates on the map: 28.130, -15.429
Cochino
A small cozy beach with gray sand is located in the resort area of Maspalomas, not far from Las Burras. Playa de Cochino is located in a closed bay, so the waves at sea are not often observed here. You can get there by car or bus.
Cochino Beach.
Address: Las Palmas, Spain
Coordinates on the map: 29.03, -13.815
Puertillo
The sandy beach stretches for 360 m on the northern coast of the island. There are good conditions for diving, so the place is popular with snorkellers. Playa de Puertillo has a developed infrastructure and is equipped with everything you need to relax. On the adjacent promenade, you can find numerous cafes and restaurants serving freshly caught fish.
Playa de Puertillo on the north coast of the island.
Address: 35414 el las, Paseo Marítimo del Puertillo, 11, 35414 El Puertillo, Las Palmas, Spain
Coordinates on the map: 28. 151, -15.534
Buriero
Playa de Burrero is located in the vicinity of the airport in the east of the island. The nearest settlement is the town of Buriero. The coastline has a length of 400 m and is covered with dark sand and volcanic stone.
Buriero beach with warm yellow sand.
Address: Calle Barlovento, 35240 Ingenio, Las Palmas, Spain
Coordinates on the map: 27.910, -15.386
Faneroke
A small bay in which Faneroke hides is located in the east of the island, not far from Agaete. The coast is covered with black volcanic sand. You can get here on foot from the town of Agaete or by car.
Faneroke wild beach.
Expert opinion
Marina
I have been living in Spain for 7 years.
The beach is wild, there are no amenities. Often there are strong waves at sea. You need to enter it with caution.
It is safer to swim with children in the calm, warm pools that have been naturally formed among the coastal rocks.
Address: 35489 Agaete, Las Palmas, Spain
Map coordinates: 28.107, -15.709
Pasito Blanco
Pasito Blanco is sparsely populated and secluded on the north coast. The coastline is covered with gray fine sand. Playa de Pasito Blanco is located near the marina.
Pasito Blanco’s sparsely populated beach.
No free entry. To enter the harbor area by car, you must own a property in the immediate vicinity or a yacht moored in the port of Pasito Blanco. If you leave your cars outside the gate, it’s easy to walk to the beach.
Address: 35106 San Bartolomé de Tirajana, Las Palmas, Spain
Map coordinates: 27.749, -15.621
Meloneras
Meloneras is located in the south of the island. It extends along the coastline northwest of the Maspalomas lighthouse. Due to the rocky entrance to the water, there are few people here. The place is suitable for sunbathing and relaxation. A promenade stretches along the coast, where you can find restaurants, bars and shops.
Meloneras rocky beach.
Address: C/Mar blanco, Paseo de las Meloneras, 35100 Maspalomas, Las Palmas, Spain
Coordinates on the map: 27.738, -15.605
Beaches of Gran Canaria on the map
Location of beaches in Gran Canaria.
Recommendations from tourists
For accommodation on the island, it is more convenient to book an apartment rather than a hotel. The presence of a kitchen will allow you to prepare dishes from fresh local seafood. The difference in the cost of housing is not significant. It is better to buy products in large supermarkets. There are similar stores in major cities.
Gran Canaria has a large number of attractions that are scattered throughout the island. You can travel by regular buses. Routes connect large settlements.
A more convenient option is to rent a car. The rental price is low. If you have transport, you can independently visit interesting places in Gran Canaria. In high season it is better to book a car in advance.
Guest reviews
Igor
36 years old, Nizhny Novgorod
“We love to visit Gran Canaria in autumn. Unlike neighboring Tenerife, it is not so crowded here. Favorite resort on the island – Amadores. A beautiful place where you can relax and swim in the sea.”
Anastasia
52 years old, St. Petersburg
“Last year we flew to the Canaries. Lived in Puerto Rico. The coastline is well maintained. Clean sand. Regularly cleaned and cleared of debris. Rest was great.”
Evgeny
42 years old, Kaluga
“We visited the island on our own. We rented a car, it was cheap. We traveled all over the island. Most of all I remember the dunes of Maspalomas and the secluded Gi-Ki.”
Watch video reviews of the best beaches in Gran Canaria, one of the main Canary Islands.
Gran Canaria beaches for children?
Playa Anfi del Mar, Playa de los Amadores, Playa de Mogan.
White sand beaches of Gran Canaria?
Playa Anfi del Mar, Puerto Rico, Playa de los Amadores.
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Puerto Rico in Europe – TripMag It’s like a gambling game. And the most interesting thing is that being at approximately the same distance, having a similar formation, each island opens up to us in different ways. Or maybe we see the features and differences, I don’t know for sure, but that an interesting journey comes out of this, then this is a fact !!! This time we will be looking for something unusual in Gran Canaria.
I noticed a certain pattern when choosing our trips. And this applies to both the choice of housing and the road. This is a mandatory observance of two characteristics, namely, comfortable and inexpensive. So, hostels and 5-star hotels are not our option. But simple but bright apartments are what you need. And in the Canary Islands (Las Islas Canarias) there are plenty to choose from. As for where and how to get to Gran Canaria, taking into account our above stated requirements, the following photos explain everything.
And we chose cozy accommodation through Booking.com, which has been checked for a long time. When I was looking for a city in Gran Canaria where we could spend our vacation, my attention was drawn to a long promenade over the ocean, which connected two excellent beaches. In addition, the promenade is built in such a way that walking along it, you can see the vast expanses of the Atlantic and every time you feel the refreshing salty breeze while walking.
So it was decided we were going to Puerto Rico. Transportation on the islands is quite convenient and understandable, therefore, using the regular GLOBAL shuttle bus from the airport to Puerto Rico, economically and comfortably, in about forty minutes, we were already dragging our suitcase up the stairs up the mountain, where our Montesol apartments were located Gran Canaria.
As for Spain as a whole, the apartments we have chosen are quite well maintained and recently renovated.
Owners, two brothers, young guys. And one of them is studying the Russian language. So a linguistic exchange is inevitable. The hotel is located on an elevated position, like many apartments in Puerto Rico. It may be difficult for someone to go up and down the stairs every time, but it was a pleasure for us to arrange such walks with obstacles during the day. In the end, there is no hurry. It’s not like running to work from lunch. You just need to remind yourself more often that you are on vacation. You can safely walk, pumping up your “fifth point”, and enjoy! By the way! the most favorable climate in the Canary archipelago. Yes, thanks to the unique combination of many climatic zones, Gran Canaria is called a miniature of all the Canary Islands. Warm winds, a tributary of the Gulf Stream and a mountain range that divides the island into two parts, allow you to enjoy sunny comfortable days and a warm ocean for more than 350 days a year. *0505 But back to the apartments.
This is the view from our balcony.
And in the other direction
As you can see, almost all hotels have windows overlooking the ocean. And the reverse side of the houses is turned into rock. Puerto Rico is located in a small valley between two mountains. Well warmed by the sun, a holiday in this city allows you to start the day with a cup of coffee under the soft sunlight and end the evening with a glass of wine under the gentle sunset.
I strongly advise you not to be lazy and take a look at Puerto Rico from the observation deck on Av. Roque del Este. Of course, you will have to walk well up the mountain, so it is better to do it in the evening, but the view of the ocean and the surrounding area is amazing from here.
But we got such interesting miniatures of the shopping and entertainment part of Puerto Rico.
Since everyone has a different attitude to entertainment, I can note that for us this “entertainment zone” had a purely specific purpose – a walk for groceries in local DINO and SPAR supermarkets. And of course free WI-FI at McDonald’s, just don’t tell anyone!!! In general, there are a lot of bars, cafes, eateries with different cuisines of the world. So, if you do not like to cook, then you will not be left hungry here. There are shops for cosmetics, perfumes, swimwear and more. But it was a little disappointing that only MANGO was branded. Although our apartment was “high above sea level”, the evening musical accompaniment reached our bedroom. So disco lovers will find their dance floor here. We are more interested in natural relaxation. So we move closer to the beach. We’re actually going down.
At first glance it may seem that the beach is quite far away, but it is not at all. Due to the steep descents and ascents, the main attractions are located close. Moreover, you can walk along a safe sidewalk along the road or up the stairs. Well, as for the “weight of lifting”, I’ll say that some even arranged a morning run on this “track” and felt good at the same time.
On the way to the beach there is a bus stop with a timetable and a tourist information point where you can buy tickets for various trips on the spot. By the way, a bus from the airport arrives here and then runs around the island. So it is convenient and close to those travelers who take a break from the steering wheel.
Not far from the roundabout with a fountain, there is a small square where you can relax on the benches, as well as a children’s area and the Angry Birds theme park. Here you can also play mini-golf for a fee. As far as we noticed, in the evening, the place is very popular, especially for companies. And for those who do not want to lose precious minutes of rest while waiting for a green traffic light on the way to the beach, there is an underground passage.
But do not forget about the natural decoration that accompanied our walks every day. Tall palm trees, bright flowers, all kinds of fruits, the sonorous singing of birds, the gentle sun …
In front of the beach there is a SPAR grocery store and a green park where, under the shade of southern trees, you can eat ice cream or watch dogs walk.
Puerto Rico is not as big as it might seem. But everything is compact and convenient in it. And the presence of two beaches within walking distance, and as we later discovered, and one more, makes the rest in this city very diverse. So, the first beach, which is called “Puerto Rico”, is located near the port.
The beach is landscaped, umbrellas and sun loungers are installed, but at the same time there is enough space to just lie on the sand.
On both sides, the beach is surrounded by breakwaters, where you can also sunbathe. And in the evening, watch the fishermen or go fishing for crabs on your own, but not with a fishing rod, but with the help of a flashlight and a net. The last one is a must buy. Chasing numerous fish is great fun for both adults and children.
Among other things, all kinds of water and underwater sports are available, it remains only to choose what exactly suits your taste.
We really liked the beach, and we spent a lot of time on it. First, close; second, it’s clean. No algae or dirt was observed. Before sunset, they swam, dived, played … And with the onset of darkness, with a glass of wine, they counted the stars.
But it is worth going a little forward, and the ocean will open before you all its infinity and color delight. I don’t know who came up with this promenade, but this is really the perfect place for it. It is hardly possible to describe the delight from the opening views. Just like taking your eyes off the blue abyss. And the most observant can see the underwater world. We managed to make out a standing of long thin fish and a turtle.
There is a motor road along the promenade, and the sheer cliffs are dotted with hotels. I can imagine the views from there, and how sweet it is to sleep to the sound of the surf!
The promenade leads to the famous Amadores beach “Playa de Amadores”, which is located between Puerto Rico “Puerto Rico” and Puerto de Mogan “Puerto de Mogan”. Apart from walking, there is a bus to the beach, just one stop and YOU are in a serene blue lagoon of tranquility. But why deny yourself such an amazing walk, where life blooms and “moves” around.
I can’t tell you anything about the cafes, shops and other infrastructure of Amadores Beach, as we just came and enjoyed the white sand and turquoise water.
At first glance, it seems that there are too many people, but the beach is long enough, just take a walk and find your “place in the sun”. You can also sit on the sunbeds that are installed on the breakwaters. It’s also good to watch the fishermen. And there are enough fish in the lagoon, and not small ones, although the beach is smaller compared to Puerto Rico. The only downside on Amadores Beach was the occasional “afternoon” algae. And since the water in the bay is calm, they accumulated near the shore and delivered not very pleasant sensations when entering the water. But when we found another great, but a bit dangerous place for a beach holiday, we just tried to visit Amadores in the morning.
So, about the “secret place”!!! We walk along the famous promenade, admire the ocean, take pictures and get the next photo.
I was very interested in how a couple of young people got there, and most importantly, how to get there and swim in the open ocean. And here is the answer!
This steep staircase leads straight to where the ocean meets the rock that holds the entire boardwalk. The place is dangerous, and therefore it was first opened for public use, and then the passage was concreted. So, if you want thrills, you will have to remember a couple of stretching exercises and overcome the obstacle.
If you do not pay much attention to some debris, here the perception of the ocean is much sharper. You can decompose on boulders and enjoy the unity with nature.
How many bright fish are there and how reverently it is to swim in the open ocean! But when resting and taking in the heat of the gentle rocks, the falling of small stones is very often heard. So, be careful, I advise.
there is another wonderful place where the sea walks begin, where the boats and yachts are “resting”, this is the port of the city. If we translate the name of the city of Puerto Rico from Spanish, we get “Rich Port”. It is located near the beach and is open for walking.
In addition to sea transport, a lighthouse and huge breakwaters, here you can buy a “fishing ticket” from ordinary fishermen who, for a fee, will take you on board, provide you with a fishing rod and natural conditions for “hunting for big fish”. We, of course, also could not pass by such an offer, but I will talk about it more picturesquely in the next series :). The only thing to buy fresh fish in Puerto Rico, except in the supermarket, there is nowhere. And we didn’t search badly, but indeed, for some reason, there are no fish markets. This was also confirmed by the fishermen, with whom we talked a little on this topic. But in the neighboring city of Puerto de Mogan (Puerto de Mogan), about visiting which I will tell a little later, in addition to numerous fish cafes and restaurants, you can buy fish “first hand” right on the shore.
But back to the port of Puerto Rico.
The water here is transparent blue, which allows you to see different fish.
Hiking on the Canary Islands ‘La Gomera’ and ‘Tenerife’ – walking womad
Hiking in Europe
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CanariesCanary IslandshikingLa GomeraTenerife
In an attempt to flee from the European winter we decided to jump on a plane to the Canary Islands and go on a 2 week hiking trip through Tenerife and La Gomera. The Canary Islands are located in the Atlantic Ocean, west of Morocco and the Sahara and most of all: they’re having a mild climate year round. It was our best (and at the same time affordable) chance to get some sun in the dark european February.
For the first time in years I decided not to journal. I needed time off. Off media. Off. Just off! So I didn’t bring my phone, didn’t bring a journal. I only brought some small blank papers for a “just in case” bright aha-moment (which indeed happened once. Oh it was wonderful to write something down underneath the pine trees… just for me.) While hiking the PCT I experienced some pressure in “having to” journal, “having to” blog and something that I loved turned into something that I felt like I “had to” do. Not journaling on this trip through the Canary Islands took away a bit of the pressure and that one time I wrote something down I really really enjoyed it and it felt like a relieve.
As for gear, we brought our regular lightweight set up. This time bringing a Zpacks cuben fiber camo tarp though instead of a tent and I used the Gossamer Gear Pilgrim backpack, cause my Base Pack Weight was some 3,5 kg, sub 10 pounds and there was no need to bring the bigger Gossamer Gear Gorilla. (Loved the Pilgrim by the way… I’m gonna try to do a little gear review about it soon ;c)
Anyways. This is gonna be a small trip report. Not too much details, mostly pictures :cP Those who want more infos on hiking on Tenerife and La Gomera are welcome to get in touch and ask. As you know I’m always happy to help.
Also I’ll add some tips and infos for hiking on the Canaries. You can find them below the day by day trip report and pics ;c)
Here we go:
The first 5 and a half days of our trip we spent on La Gomera. Gomera is THE hiking island. It’s small, pretty quiet compared to Tenerife, hitching is soooo frikkin easy (the mostly german tourists all have a rental car and they will pick you up the moment you get your thumb out), and the hiking paths are really well marked.
We arrived (both kinda seasick because of the crazy sea) in San Sebastian de Gomera around noon and immediately started hiking along the GR 132, a hiking trail that goes around the island. After only 15 minutes you leave the city behind you and you’re in untouched (well almost untouched) wilderness with views off the steep cliffs on the Atlantic Ocean. We weren’t lucky in seeing whales and dolphins. But we could have been cause La Gomera is the place to be for whale and dolphin spotting.
Here’s an overview of the stretches we hiked along the GR 132 / on La Gomera:
O ya, what I want to remind you of: Forget about hiking big miles on the Canaries. The trails goes either up or down, mostly steep. Lots of scrambling and some boulder hopping. There are no flat stretches what so fucking ever!!! We mostly didn’t even get 12 miles a day under our belts.
Day 1: GR 132: San Sebastian de Gomera – Barranco de Machal – Playa de la Guancha – Barranco de la Guancha. Instead of going down to El Cabrito via the GR 132 we took the trail down northwest to Barranco Juan de Vera and back up on the other side. We slept in a goat cave almost up on the Barranco.
Day 2: GR 132: Cave up in Barranco Juan de Vera- Seima – Baranco de Chinguarima – Playa de Santiago. We were already 3 km north of Playa de Santiago when we wanted to make camp. A bad storm (even the airport got closed) however forced us to go back down and search for a place to stay in Playa de Santiago. Day 1 and 2 are actually one section if you walk the sections as given. I can however say that is a pretty long one and I’d split it.
You won’t often find me NOT smiling. But I was in soooo much pain that day that I could hardly move. I can no longer go sit down without assistance, let alone get up without assistance. Each morning HQ had to pull me up from my sleeping pad like a potato sack and hold me for a few seconds till my legs/hips could carry my weight (good thing I’m lightweight just like my pack ;c)
Day 3: GR 132: Back up a few km to the airport from where we hitched up to Alajero. By hitching we skipped a section, which didn’t seem very interesting to us. In Alajero we picked back up the GR 132 – Barranco de la Negra (this was our absolute favorite Barranco and hiking section in La Gomera) – Arguayoda – La Dama – Barranco de Iguala – Playa de Iguala. Playa the Iguala can only be reached by foot or boat and we had the whole beach to ourselves! It was absolutely amazing. We slept in some kind of cave underneath the rocks. Our own private beach. Damn what more can one ask for right?!!!
Day 4: GR 132: Playa de Iguala – Gerian – Crossing the Barranco de Argaga on the upper part (we decided not to go down there as it is known as a huge scramble… A scramble I’d rather go up than go down… Next time) – decending into Valle Gran Rey via the GR 132. Next time I’d skip this section. The climb up from Playa de Iguala is nice but then the stretch till the descent into Valle Gran Rey is a bit boring. The decent into Valle is beautiful but absolutely steep and exhausting and it killed my knees and hips. I’d rather walk out of the Valle this way then down into it. As everyone says you shouldn’t try to camp wild in Valle Gran Rey, we found a cheap room in La Callera (30€ a night for two persons – Ask for a room in the Zumeria next to the church down in La Callera. That was a tip given to us by hikers we met and luckely the old lady had a room left for us.)
Day 5: Hitch up to Pajarito – hike up the Garajonay (highest mountain on La Gomera) with great views of Tenerife and the Teide following the Route 18 – onward through the National Park and the El Cedro forest along Route 18 till the only official camping site “La Vista” on the north side of the island. Camping for 6€ a night
Day 6: Hike down along Route 37, passing the highest waterfall on La Gomera (not veeeeeery impressive but still beautiful) till where the trail crosses the road to San Sebastian – hitch to San Sebastian – Ferry boat over to Tenerife at noon.
On Tenerife we continued along the GR 131 and some local trails.
Day 1 (=Day 6 La Gomera): Arriving in Los Christianos around 1pm. Hiking out of Los Christianos was the worst. It was hot, busy, full of tourists. We couldn’t stay here for an hour without becoming unhappy. So after resupplying and buying more sunscreen we headed up towards the mountains and the crater of the Teide. We had to walk on paved road and then some local trails till Vueltas de Adeje, then find our way till Vento (where we asked on old man for water) from where we could hike the GR 131 and found a hidden spot to camp in Barranco del Rey shortly before ascending towards the saddle. Mozzies ruined our night. Damn those fuckers.
Camo tarp ;cP
Day 2: GR 131: Barranco del Rey – Ifonche – into the Canarian Pine Tree forests till Montana de la vica (some 2 km before Villaflor). We found the most awesome beautiful campspot in the pine tree forest on top of the Montana. An absolutely beautiful day guided by the heavenly smell of fire scarred pine trees!!!
Day 3: GR 131: Montana de la vica – Villaflor (resupply food and water) – Paysaje Lunar – Campspot on the crater rim, on the saddle between the Guajara and the Morra del Rio. Crazy epic (but veeeery windy and pretty cold) campspot at 2300m with perfect view of the Teide.
Day 4: Local Trail over the mountain Morra del Rio (2529m) in alpine conditions – crazy descent with lots of snow – down the pine tree forests to a campspot on old terrasses close to El Contador.
Day 5: Local Trail PR TF 86 from El Contador – Barranco de Puento – Ortiz (sports climbing and boulder canyon) – Villa de Arico – Last 4 km to where HQ’s aunt lives (about 150 m above sea level)
We stayed another 3 days with HQ’s aunt and uncle (they offer a great service “first and last night on Tenerife: They pick you up from the airport, offer you a room (they have supercool cave rooms) in their finca, breakfast and then bring you to the ferryboat that’ll take you to La Gomera or El Hierro…. And the other way around when you come back )and had a wonderful time just relaxing and doing nothing, spending time with the family, going out eating in El Medano, going to the beach in Abades,.
Tips for hiking on the Canary Islands:
WATER! The LACK of water is the biggest issue you will encounter while backpacking through the Canary Islands. If you have a place to stay and you’re going on day hikes it’s not a problem. Then you just take your water for the day and you’re set. If you’re backpacking and camping (“wild camping” as we call it in Europe is illegal but I’ll get to that later) then you have to act like you’re in the desert, which you kind of are. Most streams (or what used to be streams), especially in the south, are bone dry year round. We were “lucky” there was some stormy weather in the sky and we had some decent rainshowers which filled some puddles. But really expect to find no “natural” water sources along the trail. The villages is where you should fill up your water bottles. Sometimes for 2 days. So we howled lots of water. Up to 7 L. On the crater rim and on our mountain day we melted snow. It can get very hot in the desert vegetation as well as on the exposed rocks and you need lots of water!
Camping. As said “wild camping” (sleeping in a tent on public land) is illegal on the Canary Islands (as in most parts of Europe). Therefor I cannot openly encourage you here on my blog to camp. I don’t know the spanish law well enough (the Canary islands “belong to” Spain) but I know in most european countries there is something like the right to bivouac (sleep under the stars or in a not enclosed shelter -tarp- for one night. Also and very important if you bivouac: LEAVE NO TRACE. Nobody should know or see that you’ve been there. Take care of the vegetation, pack out ALL of your trash), be aware of the fauna (though there isn’t veeery much big wild life on the Canaries, there are lizards and insects and those you should consider and take care of too!), burry or pack out your human waste in a proper way, carry out all tp,… If you love hiking, if you love this planet, take frikkin good care of it. We want our children and the next generations to experience this beauty too!!!
Bring sunscreen. You’re on Sahara level here! The sun is high in the sky and is super strong. Also bring a hat and sunglasses. We also brought lightweight longsleeve clothes for protection against the sun.
We’ve hiked on the Canary islands twice now and each time we brought a tarp. This time however there was a loooot of wind (not so very uncommon for an island haha) and we could hardly sleep because of our cuben fibre tarp flutttering in the strong winds.
Both HQ and I are fans of trailrunners for footwear. This is the first time in years that we said: Maybe we should have brought sturdier footwear, like with ankle coverage. The Canary Islands are volcanic islands and are very rocky and steep. Some rocks are very loose and wobbly and in combination with the steepness sturdy footwear might be a good idea. It’s not that our trailrunners couldn’t deal with it, it’s that with sturdier footwear you’d be able to move faster and not concentrate as much with every step you take. If you wanna train your ankle and foot muscles, then go for trailrunners. You’ll have some decent training on the Canaries ;cP
Food: I dehydrated 2 kind of sauces (one tomato sauce and one thai curry sauce) and 1 dish (a veggy chili) and made my own superfood muesli bars and hummus for lunch Because of the fact that the Canaries are part of the EU it was no problem what so ever to take the dehydrated homemade food with me on the plane and across the border. We carried enough dehydrated food for 9 2person meals. In local stores we’d then buy angel hair noodles, tortillas and muesli. That made resupplying super duper easy. Cause even the tiniest stores had noodles and tortillas and some kind of cereals.
Maps and stuff. We used the Kompass maps and the Gaia GPS app. HQ brought his iPhone with the app on it and we mostly only used this app while on trail. (We brought our suntactics solar charger to make sure the iPhone woulnd’t run out of battery ;c)
We definitely had an amazing time on La Gomera and Tenerife and got the much much needed sun we were longing for. It really is the perfect hiking destination to get away from the cold depressing european winter ;c)
Cheers,
Cat
Disclaimer: A reader brought to my attention in Mai 2019 that apparently it is illegal to bivouac, quoting following law text: “Artículo 2. 1. A los efectos de esta Orden, seentiende por “acampada” la permanencia temporalen lugares situados en plena naturaleza, de gruposlibres de personas, cuyo único objetivo es disfrutardel contacto con el medio natural con o sin tiendasde campaña o albergues móviles.” Please act accordingly and only camp in designated campsites.
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A few tips for hiking in La Gomera – Hiking Is Good
TOPICS:Canary IslandsLa Gomera
Posted By: Michal
18.3.2017
Recommended guides
Maps
1:30 000 (Kompass 231)
1:35 000 (OSE 377 Toeristische wegenkaart)
1:35 000 (La Gomera Tour & Trail Super-Durable Map) – recommended
La Gomera is the second smallest island of the Canary Islands. It’s known for its pure natural environment and sparsely populated land which makes it the best island for me for hiking within the Canary Islands. Rich green laurel forest, deep red gorges (barranco in Spanish), great weather in the winter and an almost touchable feeling of old civilizations makes hiking on the island very deep experience.
You can get by with only English, but don’t expect locals to speak any language but Spanish. Therefore learning some basic Spanish phrases would be extremely useful.
The most common way of getting into the island is taking a ferry from an island with an international airport like Tenerife or Gran Canaria. There are 2 major ferry companies: Fred Olsen & Naviera Armas. Their ferries go to La Gomera a few times a day. Fred Olsen is faster and a bit more expensive, Naviera Armas is slightly cheaper and needs more time for crossing. In this case taking more time is not a disadvantage though, the journey is still quite short and the views are beautiful. In the winter, when the wind is often quite strong, Naviera Armas’s boats are not good enough to fight big waves and only Fred Olsen operates. Therefore you should check the weather, otherwise you might end up like me – waiting 2 hours in front of the Naviera Armas’s ferry and in the end it was canceled so I had to take Fred Olsen’s one.
It’s also possible to take a plane from Tenerife but it’s really close, you can literally see La Gomera from Tenerife. So please, before you decide to take a plane, think about its environmental impact.
Public transport is cheap and quite good. You obviously can’t expect a bus every 20 minutes, but I think one can quite easily get around just with the buses. You just need to adjust to bus schedules for a bit and have a bit of patience while waiting at the bus stops, because you only know time of the bus departure from the first station.
There are plenty of accommodation options in main towns. Tourism is an essential economy part for islanders and they make sure that everyone who is keen to pay for a bed gets it. It’s much harder to find accommodation in small villages so plan ahead if possible.
If you fancy a hotel, booking.com offers heaps of options. If you’re keen for a more quiet place, Airbnb.com has a good selection too. If you wanna be in a quiet place, Hotel El Cebrito is an excellent option. I haven’t stayed there but I passed it when hiking around and just seeing the hotel was quite experience. It’s directly on the wild ocean coast, surrounded by palm trees, in the mouth of deep barranco.
Wild camping is officially forbidden on the island. Beaches which are close to towns and accessible by a car are regularly checked by the local police. There is only 1 official campsite – it’s called La Vista and it’s in El Cedro in the La Garajonay National Park. It costs 3 € a night (2018) and it has a restaurant and a small grocery shop. I recommend it to everyone who travels on a budget, wants to have a safe base and be close to the trails. I spent there quite a few days and it has everything a hiker needs. There aren’t any caravans or bungalows, only places for tents.
There is a good selection of restaurants and groceries in every town along the coast. It’s a bit harder to find a place to resupply once you’re further inland. Especially water can be a big issue because the island is quite close to the equator and the sun could be very hot and rivers dry. Therefore when heading out for a hike, always make sure you have plenty of water or you know where to get it.
Pretty much anywhere. The island is quite small but the high number of hiking tracks will keep even a very keen hiker busy at least for a month. La Gomera’s nature is unbelievably diverse so you can experience very different landscapes every day.
Probably the most visited hiking area is the Garajonay National Park. There you can find plenty of day tracks. Among the most popular ones is Ruta 18 leading to Garajonay, the highest mountain of the island.
If you’re more adventurous, there are two long GR footpaths: GR 131, which crosses the island from the south-east to the north, and GR 132, which goes around the island. While GR 131 can be done in 3 days, GR 132 is much longer and the official guide divides it into 8 days. It can be done faster though and I found 6 days just enough for a fit and fully-loaded hiker.
I’ve never had a problem with navigation, the trails are well marked and there are plenty of information signs along the trails.
There is plenty of walking guides, I personally recommend La Gomera: The Finest Coastal and Mountain Walks by Rother Walking Guide, Walking on La Gomera and El Hierro by Cicerone or Walk! La Gomera by Charles Davis. All of them are excellent.
If you are more into the online world, mapy.cz offers the most compact and accurate source of hiking trail maps I could find. You can get an app for your phone too. Another great source of hiking trails with GPX is accessible at Official website of tourism of La Gomera.
Good trekking shoes, hat and sunscreen are essential.
Considering cooking, I was really struggling to find a shop with gas canisters with screw tops. You can’t take gas bottles on a plane so you have to purchase them in the Canary Islands (unless you come by a boat, of course) and this could be quite an issue. I heard that the canisters with screw tops can be bought in Decathlon in La Laguna in Tenerife but I haven’t managed to check it out (EDIT 2021: You can buy them in Ferreteria in Santa Cruz, see the message from Paolo in the comments). Therefore, if you wanna cook, I recommend you to use a liquid gas stove. I use MSR one and it’s great.
Wild camping is possible, just follow a common sense and keep your ethics extra high: avoid busy beaches, pitch a bivi just before the sunset and disappear with the sunrise, don’t leave any tracks and don’t overnight in the national park
Asking locals where you can build your tent is also possible. In that case some Spanish is necessary
I didn’t buy a guide, for me it was enough to use the mapy.cz phone app. Thanks to the strong sun I could recharge my phone with a pocket solar charger
The La Vista campsite is really good place to socialize with other hikers, charge your stuff, use wi-fi (yes, they have free wi-fi!) or use a shower (that’s the funny one by the way because it’s an open outside shower in the middle of the campsite)
Hitching is quite easy, there are not many people on the island and that’s always a good precondition for solidarity to be more common.
About the Author
Michal
I lived a pretty ordinary life for a while. I did my studies, my second studies, my third studies, my first job, my second job, and my third job. I wasn’t really sure what’s going on so, in 2014, I left my home country (Czechia) to learn about the world. I’m still not sure what’s going on but I enjoy it much more. I lived in a few countries before settling in New Zealand.
Free Campsites, Wild Camping, Tips & More!
Camping in Tenerife is a magical experience. This volcanic island is known best for its sandy beaches and blue Atlantic waters, but it’s also a campers paradise. Plus, it’s not touted as the island of a thousand experiences for nothing. Here you can explore ancient forests and climb a volcano in the morning, and be sipping a Piña Colada on the beach by afternoon.
It’s also an island which has embraced camping. Therefore whilst paid campsites exist here (we name a few of our favorites later), there are also free campsites – some situated in some of Tenerife’s most untouched locations. Wild camping in Tenerife is problematic though – we have more on that, and it’s legality, later in this article as well.
So dust down your camping tent, grab your hiking boots, and get yourself a good Tenerife walking book like this one. It’s time to plan your perfect Tenerife camping getaway!
Camping in Tenerife: Free Campsites in Untouched Tenerife
While there are several paid campsites in Tenerife, some of which we recommend (more on those later), Tenerife also has over a dozen free Forest Camping Areas.
These sites are run by the local authority, and are situated across Tenerife. Created in order to discourage wild camping, these sites are based in some of the island’s most beautiful areas – in the national parks and biosphere reserves. Some have very basic facilities (such as toilets and water), while others have cooking facilities.
Many sit within walking distance to towns that have bars, and places to shop. So you can be enjoying a starry night in the forest one evening, and eating tapas and enjoying a beer in a bar with locals the next.
However be careful to ensure your belongings are always secure, and car is locked. There have been reports of personal belongings being stolen at these campsites.
Campers are allowed to stay in the Forest Camping Areas for up to seven days in a row. But you must apply for a permit to stay at them.
The permit is free, and the process can be done online – we explain how, next.
The location of the campsites, and the application page for the permit, can be found on the website of the Island Council of Tenerife.
On that page, find the campsite you wish to stay at, then click on it. That will take you to a separate page for that camping area, and you can then use the calendar to reserve your dates and apply for a permit to camp there.
You have to apply at least seven days in advance of when you wish to stay. If you are struggling with the online application process, you can also phone to apply for a permit. The relevant number is +34922239500.
One of our favorite free campsites is Las Lajas, which is situated high up the slopes of the dormant volcano Mt Teide – Spain’s highest peak. Here you can expect stunning sunrises, and great bird-watching.
These free campsites are also a great way of wild camping in Tenerife without breaking the law. However, considering the free campsites are usually situated in wooded areas, you should avoid making campfires. Instead use a storm cooker for cooking. The Swedish brand Trangia make fantastic storm cookers that are virtually indestructible.
We have more on wild camping in Tenerife and its legality later on in this article. However, next we show you our favorite paid campsites in Tenerife!
Some of the Best Campsites in Tenerife For Fun, Views & Adventure
Whilst the free campsites are a great resource on the island, they do lack amenities.
Therefore some holidaymakers visiting Tenerife might prefer the comfort of paid campsites, where there’s guaranteed hot running showers, food options on site, and sometimes even a swimming pool!
With that in mind, here’s three of our favorite paid campsites in Tenerife:
1. Camping Nauta
Nestled in the south of the island and sitting among banana trees, this campsite is a great base if you want to spend time on Tenerife’s southern coastline.
It also has a fantastic big swimming pool on site, and the bar serves good food, and great beer. There’s also a tennis court, WiFi, and well-maintained shared facilities.
On top of that Camping Nauta is just a few minutes walk from the beach!
Price: From €13 per night
Address: Carretera TF-653, km 1,5. Cañada Blanca., 38632, Arona, Sta. Cruz de Tenerife
2. Camping Invernaderito
This super friendly campsite is located in the north of Tenerife near San Cristobal de la Laguna, and offers a tranquil pitch close to the island’s famous beaches. Expect great views, a wonderful sense of community and the opportunity to meet the ducks and chickens that live on site!
Along with the usual facilities, there’s also a fantastic entertainment room here, which includes hammocks and armchairs to relax in!
They also have a shared kitchen, a cafe, and games like darts, ping pong, football and more. So there’s lots to keep you entertained on and off site.
Price: From €12 per night
Address: Camino la Costa no 151, 38260 Tejina, Tenerife
3. Campamentos Punta Del Sordo
We’d go as far as saying this is Tenerife’s hidden gem when it comes to cheap campsite options.
This site’s pitches overlook the sea on the island’s east coast, and as such, is within walking distance of several beaches. In fact the campsite has access to its own private beach.
It’s also very cheap – costing just a few euros per person to stay here. The amenities are clean but basic.
Price: From €3 per night
Address: Tajao, B, 38588 San Miguel de Tajao, Santa Cruz de Tenerife
Wild camping in Tenerife: Everything You Need to Know
Unfortunately, wild camping in Tenerife is illegal. This is mainly due to the authorities wish to stop any threat of a forest fire.
In fact, if you are caught wild camping in Tenerife, you could be subjected to a very heavy fine. However the reality is that people do still wild camp here.
Although we don’t advise it, if you do decide to wild camp, then ensure you camp discreetly. And be careful not to damage the ground where you pitch your tent.
If you do go wild camping in Tenerife, we’d advise sticking to the following guidelines in order to be as considerate as possible:
You should camp in the same place for one night only, and pitch your tent discretely and in a remote place. Therefore don’t camp in or near settlements, someone’s farm or on cultivated land. If you think you’re on private land, always seek out the landowner and ask permission.
Campers should set up their tent at dusk, and take it down at dawn. A tent that is discreet and pitches quickly is best. Therefore a lightweight walking and hiking tent like this one would be a great investment for someone planning to camp in Tenerife.
If you are walking a main trail you should camp away from the path as a matter of courtesy.
When wild camping in Tenerife you must never make a campfire. For cooking, use a storm cooker such as the Trangia brand.
And of course, take any trash with you, and leave your camping spot the way you found it.
Below are our tips for camping in Tenerife
Tips for Camping in Tenerife
Thunderstorms and heavy rain can happen in Tenerife – even during the holiday season. Make sure you have a durable, rainproof tent that can survive heavy rain. A lightweight one-man hiking tent like this or similar would be perfect. For a good value tent that fits more than one person, this mosquito-proof one would work well too.
Remember to always have plenty of water on you when you’re walking and camping. A space-saving collapsible water bottle would be a good purchase.
If there is no toilet near your pitch, or on the campsite, then only go to the toilet far from water sources, such as rivers and lakes. Make sure to use a trowel (like this folding one) to bury any human waste – don’t just leave it out in the open.
Like many rugged and wild rural areas around the world, there are flora and fauna to be aware of. So read up and make sure you know what to expect in the region or area you are planning to wild camp in.
Recommended For Your Trip to Tenerife
Tempted to go camping elsewhere? Check out our guides to camping in,Estonia, Finland, Lanzarote, Norway, Patagonia, Pyrenees, Scotland and many others!
La Gomera GR 132 long distance hiking trail – Two Go Global
by Wayne | Nov 29, 2018 | Europe, Spain
My choice was the Atlas Mountains of Morocco, Andrea’s some winter sun in the Canary Islands, the latter winning out. This was to be a Thanksgiving break for Andrea so how could I not be accommodating! The Canaries ended up as a win-win, and although my last visit was a drunken fortnight in my twenties on this occasion the Spanish island chain showed themselves in a totally different light. Our main reason for going was hiking and with a little delving into the opportunities we discovered La Gomera, the second from smallest of the islands and apparently a mecca for endless trails – GR132 is its long distance coastal route that covers 128km and over 25,000’ of altitude gain! We now had a plan and knew there was good reason for us having lugged a tent and cooking gear around Europe for the previous six weeks.
La Gomera’s 128km GR132 coastal route
Usually we pack ziploc bags of carefully selected food for our daily rations but on this occasion after reading a couple of blogs from previous hikers decided it would be easier to stock up with a couple days as we passed through villages. It was also entirely possible that we wouldn’t be able to get hold of a screw top propane cartridge for our miniature MSR stove, hence leaving us no way of even being able to boil water! Turns out that hardware stores, ferretería’s, and some gas stations stock them, larger than what we would normally take on a weeklong hike but we had no choice. Tenerife’s only Decathlon sports store apparently stocks them in various sizes and fittings. Other than the gas cartridge we found a perfect ham and cheese delicatessen in Los Cristianos and bought enough aged ham and manchego cheese to go with the sun-dried tomatoes and hot sauce into integral wraps – this was lunches taken care of.
Our biggest concern was definitely access to drinking water, also likely to be our biggest weight culprit! We had read that most of the fountains we were likely to come across would be dry and although we had a purifier with us finding clean enough standing water probably wouldn’t work. Reluctantly, bottled water it was.
Church of our Lady of the Assumption in San Sebastian
Christopher Columbus last port of call before heading off to discover the Americas
San Sebastian de la Gomera’s pretty harbour
The Fred Olson ferry whisked us over to San Sebastian de la Gomera from Los Cristianos in a quick fifty minutes, a little too fast to justify the total $155 return price tag! Still, the service was great with onboard WiFi for Andrea and cheap espresso coffees for me. We had one night accommodation either side of the hike, both nights spent in San Sebastian which was kilometer 1 and kilometer 128, dependent on whether we walked clockwise or counter-clockwise. Prior blog authors had decided to begin at stage 8 doing it in reverse, perfect reason for us to make that our choice too.
Due to us having to wait to be able to leave all unnecessary gear, clothing and electronics at our stylish accommodation we eventually departed a couple hours later than anticipated – with no distance plan all we knew was that we needed to be back 6 days later. The circular hike would take us through most, if not all of La Gomera’s larger towns, over mostly hilly volcanic terrain, past ruins, beaches and almost all on empty trails. From the signage at the beginning it was clearly going to be well marked (as are all of the long distance hikes we’ve done in Europe), separated into 8 stages with the last or first in our case, coming in at 20km.
La Gomera terrain with well marked signage
All we had to do was follow these markers
GR132 Day 1: San Sebastian de La Gomera to Playa de Santiago Leaving town, and as we were going to discover on a regular basis the trail followed a fairly steep incline, the main reason being the shape of the island – whilst it looked pretty circular the landscape had deep cuts that headed inland from the ocean. Known as barrancos, we were going to go up and down these whilst following their contour inland and then back to the water. What usually looked like a relatively short distance was always more substantial as we could never take the route that a crow flies!
At the top of our first climb at Barranco de la Guancha we were greeted by the rugged volcanic landscape that La Gomera is known for, complete with endless walled terraces that looked like they hadn’t been tended to in many years, cacti and tropical plants, with the occasional wild looking sheep. It was already easy to see how we were going to ascend well over 20,000′ in the coming days!
Pretty soon it was back to sea level as we headed down Barranco de Juan de Vera to the isolated resort of El Cabrito. Accessible only by sea this sustainable finca would be the perfect location for a couple of chilled and relaxing nights. Apparently there’s a water fountain attached to a bar but being fully h3O loaded we completely missed it.
Once again we moved on up towards our highpoint of the day at over 1,700′, passing by the ruins of Morales and Contreras. With wild camping being off limits in the Canary Islands both of these uninhabited farming neighborhoods would be perfect places to spend the night. We chose to stop only for our eagerly anticipated lunchtime wraps. Following our third barranco of the day, Contreras, the well marked trail once again made its way towards the ocean and the small tourist town of Playa de Santiago – by now it was 4pm and we had made it 12 miles, neither of us thinking of anything more appropriate than inhaling a cold beer or two! Less than 5 Euros later and we were on our way on the days final leg.
With sunset being a little after 6pm we were on a mission to find a suitable campsite, far enough away from civilization not to be discovered, and flat enough that we’d get some sort of a decent nights sleep. Seven hundred feet of switchbacks later we ditched our packs on a stony terrace overlooking town hoping that no one would stumble across our humble abode! We were soon to find out that with the sun setting so early and darkness falling not much later we were horizontal by 7. 30pm – it didn’t get light until almost 7.30am meaning that we had far too many hours of downtime each night.
The day had gone pretty good, our legs given a good awakening to what lay ahead, a few rainy spells that would keep us guessing as to whether we should stop and add wet weather gear, and pretty spectacular scenery that would set the stage ahead.
Looking down towards Playa de Santiago from our first night campsite
The lush green oasis of Finca El Cabrito
Abandoned ruins of Contreras
GR132 Day 2: Playa de Santiago to Playa de Iguala The chance that we might get discovered and the anticipation of devouring one of our regular healthy breakfasts before a long day were enough to get us up and about an hour before sunrise. We happily left an immaculate leave-no-trace campsite as we would go on to do every morning.
Today would continue as it had left off, initially following a steadily uphill and mundane trail before a series of long switchbacks to civilization and the days highest elevation at over 2,700′. Two short hours after breaking camp and we were chowing down on warm freshly baked bread and replenishing water at Alajeró’s fairly well stocked Spar grocery store – it didn’t matter that we had to detour to the opposite end of town for these luxuries! We had already passed by an open cafe bar so knew that my daily caffeine kick, another of life’s necessities, was not too far away. If each day went like this then life would be good.
Where there’s an up theres a down and although both of our least favorite directions we were left in awe at the beauty of more barranco’s. Hiking down and along Barranco de la Negra may have been our favorite section of the entire long distance trail; full of precariously cut terraces that looked unfarmable, palm trees along the valley floor, caves etched into the walls, and the mysterious screaming from goat herds. How and why farmers chose to keep animals and try to grow anything in such terrain was unfathomable. Looking both forward and back the narrow trail was indistinguishable at more than a hundred yards as it became lost in the vertical hillside.
GR132 continued lower and lower before it finally bottomed out at La Rajita, a small stony beach in Barranco de la Rajita. The final 800′ of steep descent was mirrored by a similar ascent of 800′ to the small town of La Dama, conveniently separated by a quick refreshing swim in the crystal clear waters of the Atlantic Ocean.
Although we couldn’t find a grocery store in town we did happen to walk right past a cafe bar that happily served up a couple of cold beers and topped up our water supply. They also stocked extremely limited food items.
Leaving banana growing La Dama behind the long switchbacks wound their way back down to the ocean at Playa de Iguala – we thought about spending our second night here but the obvious cave looked a little too lived in, and the derelict graffiti covered building unwelcoming! Once again we reluctantly took the steep trail uphill surprisingly popping out at a perfectly located site overlooking touristy Valle Gran Rey. Whilst the lights of town looked close it was a good six miles away; we were happy to be once again camping far away from civilization.
Sunset from campsite number two, the island of El Hierro to the far right
Deep inside Barranco de la Negra
Our first refreshing swimming hole at La Rajita
GR132 Day 3: Playa de Iguala to Arure Day 3 and we were loving this hike; with its mixture of ups, downs, rain showers, plenty of sunshine, the occasional beer, cheap espressos, and amazing landscapes. We began today by seeing our first other hiker and a decent 2,000′ of elevation gain that took us away from the ocean and inland towards the small village of Gerian – with no grocery stores and no water fountains we plodded on through en route to La Gomera’s second most populous town, Valle Gran Rey. Even though we could clearly see the tourist town from our previous nights camp it took 4 hours of steady hiking to reach the outskirts and a further 2kms to find a decent place for brunch.
We were continuously left wondering who built these amazing trails and how much we’d like to thank them for making these hikes possible! Barrancos and terraces were once more the order of the day, then throw in cacti and a bunch of endemic plants, a cool little chapel that hosts a yearly festival, and a miserable downhill (for Andrea) into town, and that pretty much sums up through lunchtime.
Being in no rush and having access to grocery stores, cafes, and a perfect little swimming cove for some sweat removal got us geared up nicely for the big-ass climb back out of town. We eagerly took the opportunity to buy kiwi, persimmon fruit, and other fancy food items that we couldn’t get in the smaller Spar stores – next resupply point would be Alojera the following morning and being a Sunday we weren’t sure what would be open. Our biggest excitement was seeing the shower just waiting for us at the end of the small popular beach, unfortunately a shower that under closer examination had probably been disconnected for some time. Oh well, we’d just have to make do with another salt water wash. Definitely the worst thing about these refreshing swims was that so far they had been followed by a long sweaty mid afternoon hike!
The first couple of kilometres of our pm hike backtracked through town winding along narrow roads making its way to the marker indicating the end of stage 4. We had no plan for a possible place to camp, instead taking each kilometre at a time until we found something remotely suitable – this probably wouldn’t happen for the next 2,800′ of uphill. So much for the refreshing shower! The trail was no tougher than we had experienced on previous days other than the fact that we had maxed out on water supplies. My pack seemed to have weight similarities to the hefty loads carried on the JMT hike.
Taking a couple of hours to reach the days highpoint at La Mérica and with an hour or so left of daylight the hunt was on to find a sleeping place. Our vicinity to Valle Gran Rey meant we had seen too many foreign tourists out hiking and decided to skip past many perfect looking campsites on virtually flat terraces, instead continuing on along comfortable trails to the small town of Arure. We would definitely preferred to have stopped before this round of human inhabited dwellings and on this occasion found that trying to keep a low night time profile wasn’t so easy.
Not much more than a kilometre from town we stumbled across a perfectly carved cave right at the side of the trail, complete with a totally smooth floor and coming in at a little bigger than our tent footprint. We were pretty beat after our biggest climbing day and neither of us had any desire to continue! There was surely absolutely no reason why anyone would be walking this trail after dark so we were happy.
Reaching the top of cliff La Mérica at 2,100′ on a picture perfect afternoon
Touristy Valle Gran Rey seafront
First night we ever spent in a cave!
GR132 Day 4: Arure to Las Rosas Not sure how well cave living could work for us as an hour after settling down for the night the centipedes that once seemed tightly fastened to the cave ceiling began dropping. Luckily for us the tent fitted perfectly without its flysheet and was promptly put up; still leaving a long night ahead but at least void from being ‘attacked’.
We left bright and early, the beginning of the day spent in low cloud, before dropping down far enough to enjoy the not-too-bad trail into Alojera. Stopping en route only to strip off our early morning clothing the surroundings took away from the fact that caffeine was still absent from the day – a small grocery store with attached cafe bar would soon see to that. The shelves had an ample supply of water, cheese and fresh bread, with the bar able to fulfil our coffee and tea needs. This was an amazing Sunday morning, our lives and views looking very good right now! The only dampener being a lonely old boy that complained to us that his friends had all died or moved away.
Leaving town was a mirror of the first hour and a half of the day, the ascent taking us back up to the same altitude we had camped. The steep cobbled path in warm early morning temps seemed to just go on and on, the only slight reprieve being a switchbacked road we had to keep crossing. At least with steep ascents altitude is gained pretty quickly and before long the sight of the only natural fountain so far came along – being on the tourist route and easily accessible by road we weren’t the only people enjoying the spring water of Chorros de Epina. This was the chance for Andrea to try and get the salt water from her hair and to top up water bottles again.
Close to the spring we also had a decision to make; do we take route 3 and descend down to the beach, Playa del Vallehermoso, or stay up in the mountains on the 6km shorter route 3.1. Both eventually merged at Las Rosas some 4-5 hours walk away. We decided to take the more mountainous option as it gave us the chance to head into the town of Vallehermoso for decent grocery dinner options. The trail downhill into town was the best descent so far, with sand underfoot and few rocks ensuring that whining from Andrea was kept at a minimum! Actually being able to enjoy the views of Mt Teide on neighboring Tenerife and Roque Cano overlooking town whilst putting one foot in front of the other was a new experience.
Neither of us having any desire for a hot or cold refreshment town was a brief visit, allowing just enough time for a quick grocery stop and snack, then immediately into the last section of the days ‘W’ descent, ascent, descent, ascent profile. The second 2,000′ climb always had us heading up towards the impressive looking Roque Cano, a huge rock that from a distance sat precariously above Vallehermoso – up close this behemoth lost its impressiveness and just became another huge rock face that we had to follow the trail around. We had hoped that once out of sight of town we’d have a fighting chance of finding a place to camp, this not being the case, and with the narrowness of the trail things didn’t look hopeful.
Finally we found ourselves heading down towards a small lake dammed at one end, the trail having become one of the rare sealed roads that we would walk on. Having returned to civilization there was little chance of finding a place to pitch a tent, the hope now being that as we headed back into trees and up a very narrow trail an opportunity would arise – as luck would have it and not long before the sun was about to set a few hidden and unused looking terraces appeared off the main trail. We were done and no longer cared if anyone came along now!
Roque Cano towering above Vallehermoso
For such a small island the road infrastructure was impressive
Morning mist shrouds the mountains above Arure
One of the best downhill trails we traveled
A discreet campsite nicely located on an old terrace
GR132 Day 5: Las Rosas to Enchereda Having now passed the 90km mark we had two full days to make it back to San Sebastián, plenty reason enough to not depart camp until the ungodly hour of 8am! Today would end up being our longest walking day with only one long ascent. Immediately we headed down, and with another hikers blog stating that it was a slippery one we were mentally prepared for a long and slow descent – this didn’t end up being the case and we made a good pace all the way to Agulo. Surprisingly we had been walking for 2 1/2 hours and covered only 4 miles. So much so for our perceived good pace!
The sun was shining, the town looked really picturesque, and the first cafe bar we came across looked extremely welcoming… and so did whatever the couple at the adjoining table were eating. We didn’t hesitate to order a couple of the dense potato filled pancake looking things, along with coffee and tea. As usual this is exactly what these two smelly sweaty hikers needed! Another couple of kilometres downhill to Playa de Santa Catalina and we came across the first working shower of the hike (we had heard this was here and prayed that it was still connected). Not sure what the few other people milling around thought of us stripping naked to don beachwear for showering! Also we were happy that we couldn’t fully translate the sign attached to the shower post, probably stating that soap and nudity were strictly prohibited.
Feeling the most refreshed we had in 5 days it was time to start climbing again. In need of food for dinner and water a couple of kilometre detour into town was first necessary, me wrongly thinking that the onward trail was accessible by shortcut across a narrow ravine. Turns out that the route I had drawn with our trusty Gaia App was wrong for pretty much the entire day! Both back to feeling hot and sweaty we found the correct trail and plodded up a very steep 700′ zigzagging trail to the start of some of our most favorite scenery, Mt Teide showing off in its entirety.
The remainder of the day was spent following a little used dirt road that was probably just for access to the water pipeline that wouldn’t leave our side as it relentlessly followed us along the road. It was a great way for Andrea and I to communicate with when I got too far ahead; 1 bang to slow down, 2 for I’m in trouble, 3 for… On and on it went as we slowly made our way from 140′ above sea level to 2,420′ – the trail wasn’t so very steep but seemed to go on forever. Worse was that there was always a cliff on one side and a steep dropoff on the other, and no place to camp in between. Time was ticking by and with the next place name on our hike looking inhabited the latter few days of the hike, at least on our schedule, weren’t the most convenient for wild camping. Almost in the dark we rolled on past Encherada – if it wasn’t for dogs barking we would have thought it abandoned and may have camped close by. Instead we made our way off of the dirt road and back onto marked trail to what we eventually discovered would be our best campsite.
The worst part of our best campsite was the illuminated view of our endpoint, San Sebastián, looking far too close!
Our only freshwater wash, quickly followed by a sweaty uphill slog
One of the rare road sections
Our guiding pipeline went on for at least 10km
GR132 Day 6: Enchereda to San Sebastian de La Gomera Waking on our final morning, wherever we’re hiking, is always somewhat disappointing. Why does this have to be the end we ask ourselves? Still, we managed to get ourselves motivated just as we had for the last four mornings, and again we had not been discovered. We had left absolutely nothing behind and felt like class A hikers!
Pretty much the order of the day was to get from 2,200′ down to sea level in 9 kms – day 6 couldn’t be any easier. The day was amazing with blue skies and whispy clouds, perfectly adding to the continuously spectacular terrain. We meandered up and down alongside herds of goats, caves, and fauna that we’d come so used to, before heading down getting ever closer and closer to unwanted civilization. Trail soon became sealed road and for the final few kilometres we were alongside cars, houses and barber shops! In a way we were kind of happy to be back at our official finish, the kilometer 1 and kilometer 128 GR132 signage.
At 10am we got to sit down in the towns square, newly displaying banners for the Talisker Whisky Atlantic rowing challenge, and drink an ice cold beer – this was far from the first over the past 6 days but was certainly the most deserving!
We’ll be back soon for La Palma’s GR130: Camino Real de la Costa
Fauna and the final trail back towards San Sebastian
Final nights campsite tucked away under the shrubs
Our welcome back to San Sebastian de La Gomera
Daily Hiking Stats Day 1: San Sebastián de La Gomera to Playa de Santiago Distance: 22. 44 km, Ascent: 4,549 ft, Moving Time: 6 hrs 17 min Total Distance: 22.44 km, Total Ascent: 4,549 ft
Day 2: Playa de Santiago to Playa de Iguala Distance: 27.91 km, Ascent: 4,911 ft, Moving Time: 7 hrs 51 min Total Distance: 50.35 km, Total Ascent: 9,460 ft
Day 3: Playa de Iguala to Arure Distance: 22.65 km, Ascent: 5,844 ft, Moving Time: 6 hrs 54 min Total Distance: 73 km, Total Ascent: 15,304 ft
Day 4: Arure to Las Rosas Distance: 21.37 km, Ascent: 5,108 ft, Moving Time: 6 hrs 48 min Total Distance: 94.37 km, Total Ascent: 20,412 ft
Day 5: Las Rosas to Enchereda Distance: 28.85 km, Ascent: 4,743 ft, Moving Time: 7 hrs 54 min Total Distance: 123.22 km, Total Ascent: 25,155 ft
Day 6: Enchereda to San Sebastián de La Gomera Distance: 8.87 km, Ascent: 542 ft, Moving Time: 2 hrs 17 min Total Distance: 132. 09 km, Total Ascent: 25,697 ft
Camping near Las Vegas – Top10 Campgrounds + Free Campsites
Camping in Las Vegas may seem like a strange activity, given the boisterous casinos and attractions on the Strip. Yet, you can find several campgrounds in Las Vegas, as well as free camping near Las Vegas if you leave the city center.
Camping is a great alternative to staying in a hotel if you plan on taking day trips and spending more time in the surrounding areas. Besides, Sin City is close to beautiful natural places like Red Rock Canyon and the Valley of Fire, just two popular places to camp near Las Vegas.
I wrote a whole guide about Las Vegas’ best RV parks, so in this article, I’ll focus on campgrounds near Las Vegas, NV. You may be surprised by all the places where you can pitch a tent or park your pop-up trailer and camp out near Las Vegas!
RV PARKS IN LAS VEGAS
Spending a night in the desert and under the stars is an experience you’ll never forget, so let’s see the best camping sites in Las Vegas, NV!
1. Red Rock Canyon Campground, the best place to camp in Las Vegas
Visiting Red Rock Canyon is one of the best things to do outside Vegas, and it has some of the best camping near Las Vegas. The Red Rock Canyon Campground is two miles from the park’s Visitor Center and has over 60 campsites. Most of these are individual sites, but there are a few RV and large-group sites.
1. Red Rock Canyon Campground, the best place to camp in Las Vegas
The individual standard campsites have grills, fire pits, and picnic tables, and many sites have shaded areas to protect you from the desert heat. Speaking of the heat, this campground is closed during the summer between Memorial Day and Labor Day due to extreme temperatures.
Also, this campground is quite basic, and there are no hookups, dump stations, or showers. You can find vault toilets and drinking water spigots throughout the campsite. Still, you can’t beat the gorgeous red sandstone of this park because there are so many fun things to do in Red Rock Canyon.
Number of campsites: 66 (60 tent sites, 6 RV sites)
Price: $10/night
Open: September-May
Reservations accepted: Yes
Electric hookup: No
Restrooms/showers: Vault toilets/no showers
Dump station: No
Pets allowed: Yes
MORE INFO
2. Atlatl Rock Campground, one of the best campgrounds near Las Vegas
We have a complete guide to camping in the Valley of Fire, but I’d like to share more about Atlatl Rock Campground here.
There are over 40 campsites, half of which are RV sites. This is one of the campgrounds near Las Vegas, NV, that is open year-round, and the competitive nightly rates are great for families. Pets are allowed, and the RV sites can accommodate trailers up to 55 feet long.
2. Atlatl Rock Campground, one of the best campgrounds near Las Vegas
That said, you’ll be just fine at one of the individual sites, which includes a fire pit and picnic table. Atlatl Rock also has dump stations, showers, and flush toilets to make your stay more comfortable. You can easily access drinking water and BBQ grills or spend time at the group pavilion before exploring the park’s impressive sandstone formations.
Number of campsites: 44 (22 tent sites, 22 RV sites)
Price: $20/night (+$10 for utility hookup)
Open: Year-round
Reservations accepted: No
Electric hookup: Yes (at half the sites)
Restrooms/showers: Yes
Dump station: Yes
Pets allowed: Yes
MORE INFO
3. Arch Rock Campground, another great place to camp near Las Vegas
There are tons of things to do in Valley of Fire, including staying overnight. Arch Rock Campground is smaller than Atlatl Rock, but it’s still one of the top places to camp near Las Vegas.
3. Arch Rock Campground, another great place to camp near Las Vegas
You can camp at Arch Rock in a tent, trailer, or RV. Each site includes a shaded picnic table and fire pit, and there are spigots and vault toilets on the grounds. Just be mindful that there aren’t utility hookups here, but you can access the dump station at the Atlatl Rock Campground.
You can stay at Arch Rock on a first-come, first-served basis, but if you can’t find a spot, check Atlatl Rock Campground next door.
Number of campsites: 29 (tent/RV sites)
Price: $20/night
Open: Year-round
Reservations accepted: No
Electric hookup: No
Restrooms/showers: Vault toilets/showers
Dump station: No
Pets allowed: Yes
MORE INFO
4. Las Vegas Bay Campground, a scenic place to camp near Las Vegas, NV
One of the best places to camp near Las Vegas is the Lake Mead National Recreation Area. There are several campgrounds here, but one that I recommend is the Las Vegas Bay Campground.
4. Las Vegas Bay Campground, a scenic place to camp near Las Vegas, NV
The verdant campground is a scenic change of pace from the busy Strip, and the recreation area offers lots of outdoor activities. While the campsites are a few miles from Lake Mead, you can enjoy the hiking trails in the area. Once you reach the water, you can swim, boat, kayak, and take in the lovely waterfront and views of Lava Butte Wash Wildlife Refuge in the distance.
Reservations aren’t accepted, but there are over 80 sites for RV and tent camping in Las Vegas, so you should be able to find a spot. The semi-private lots have picnic tables, fire pits, and grills, and they can accommodate trailers up to 35 feet long. A dump station and potable water are available on-site, and you can purchase firewood for your grill or fire ring from the camp store.
Number of campsites: 84 (tent/RV sites)
Price: $20/night
Open: Year-round
Reservations accepted: No
Electric hookup: No
Restrooms/showers: Flush toilets/no showers
Dump station: Yes
Pets allowed: Yes
MORE INFO
5. Calville Bay Campground, another nice place to camp in Vegas
If you’re looking for other places to camp near Las Vegas‘ Lake Mead area, consider Calville Bay Campground.
This campground is on the edge of the Boulder Basin, and it’s an affordable place to enjoy tent camping in Las Vegas, NV. The individual sites have picnic areas and fire pits, and a few have lake views. Plus, flush toilets and running water are available throughout the grounds. You can bring an RV or trailer here, but there aren’t any utility hookups.
5. Calville Bay Campground, another nice place to camp in Vegas
This scenic campground also has public grilling areas, shaded picnic tables, and interpretive panels explaining the native plants and animals in the region.
As if the location weren’t convenient enough, the campsite is next to the Calville Summit Trailhead. This 2.7-mile hike leads to gorgeous views of Lake Mead, Fortification Hill, and the Hemenway Valley. You can also walk to the Calville Bay Resort & Marina, which has restaurants, cafes, shops, and boat rentals.
Number of campsites: 52 (5 RV sites)
Price: $20/night
Open: Year-round
Reservations accepted: Yes
Electric hookup: No
Restrooms/showers: Flush toilets/no showers
Dump station: Yes
Pets allowed: Yes
MORE INFO
6. Boulder Beach Campground, one of the most inclusive campgrounds near Las Vegas
In my guide on visiting Hoover Dam, I mention all the cool things to do in the area. So, if you’d like to make the most of your time there, consider staying overnight at Boulder Beach Campground, next to one of the best beaches in Las Vegas.
This Las Vegas area campground is suitable for tent and RV camping, with over 150 individual sites. Each lot has a picnic and grilling area, and there are water spigots throughout the campground. You can camp here year-round and enjoy the refreshing shoreline along Boulder Basin.
6. Boulder Beach Campground, one of the most inclusive campgrounds near Las Vegas
Not only is this one of the most inclusive campgrounds near Las Vegas, but it’s also family-oriented. The facilities include flush toilets, showers, laundry machines, and a general store. You can walk to the marina and rent a boat or kayak, plus you won’t be far from Boulder City, where you can find dining, shopping, and other attractions.
Sites are available on a first-come, first-served basis, although you can reserve group sites. The nightly rate is $20, and, like other campgrounds in Lake Mead National Recreation Area, there is a $25 entry fee.
Number of campsites: 154 (tent/RV sites)
Price: $20/night
Open: Year-round
Reservations accepted: No
Electric hookup: No
Restrooms/showers: Flush toilets/showers
Dump station: Yes
Pets allowed: Yes
MORE INFO
7. Echo Bay Campground, a beautiful campground near Las Vegas, Nevada
If you’re willing to travel a bit further from Sin City, an excellent camping option is Echo Bay Campground. This campground near Las Vegas, NV, has nearly 150 sites in total, and over 50 of them have RV hookups.
7. Echo Bay Campground, a beautiful campground near Las Vegas, Nevada
Echo Bay boasts some of the best camping near Las Vegas, especially since it’s less than a mile from the shores of Lake Mead. Here, you can enjoy fishing, boating, kayaking, and other water activities. The campground is also close to hiking trails and other natural areas like the Valley of Fire.
The campground is divided into two sections so you can find RV and tent camping. There is a camp store on-site, spigots with potable water, and a picnic area. Your individual lot will come with a picnic table and fire ring.
Number of campsites: 146 (58 RV sites)
Price: $20/night
Open: Year-round
Reservations accepted: No
Electric hookup: Yes (at 53 sites)
Restrooms/showers: Flush toilets/showers
Dump station: Yes
Pets allowed: Yes
MORE INFO
8. McWilliams Campground, another great camping site in Las Vegas
Less than an hour outside Sin City, you’ll find McWilliams Campground in the Mt. Charleston area. Nestled within the Spring Mountains National Recreation Area, this is a beautiful place to camp near Las Vegas.
8. McWilliams Campground, another great camping site in Las Vegas
McWilliams Campground is a wonderful place to relax and enjoy the great outdoors while also having the convenience of flush toilets and drinking water. Keep in mind there aren’t any showers or RV hookups.
While staying at a single or double-family campsite, you can enjoy biking, rock climbing, and horseback riding among the ponderosa pines. This area is also home to the Bristlecone Trail, one of the best hikes in Las Vegas. McWilliams accepts reservations and allows pets, and your campsite comes with a picnic table, BBQ grill, and fire pit.
Number of campsites: 75 (tent/RV sites)
Price: $25/night
Open: May-October
Reservations accepted: Yes
Electric hookup: No
Restrooms/showers: Flush toilets/no showers
Dump station: No
Pets allowed: Yes
MORE INFO
9. Hilltop Campground, some of the best tent camping near Las Vegas
Hilltop Campground is also in the Spring Mountains National Recreation Area, although it’s smaller than McWilliams. Hilltop is great for tent camping near Las Vegas, and while it accommodates trailers up to 25 feet, there aren’t any hookups.
You can choose from a single or double-family campsite with picnic tables, fire rings, and grills. The sites sit atop a forested hill and, while it can get windy, you’ll get great views of the valley.
9. Hilltop Campground, some of the best tent camping near Las Vegas
Hilltop Campground is just ¼-mile away from the North Loop Trailhead, and there are biking trails throughout the area. Like other Mt. Charleston campgrounds, Hilltop is usually open from May to November.
Number of campsites: 38 (tent/RV sites)
Price: $23/night
Open: April-November
Reservations accepted: Yes (sites 12-38 only)
Electric hookup: No
Restrooms/showers: Vault toilets/no showers
Dump station: No
Pets allowed: Yes
MORE INFO
10. Fletcher View Campground, another campground near Las Vegas to stay at
Finally, Fletcher View Campground is smaller and slightly more expensive than the other Mt. Charleston campsites, but it’s closer to Vegas. Just a few minutes from the Spring Mountains Visitor Gateway, this camping site offers a respite from the noise of Las Vegas Boulevard.
Out of the 11 sites, two can accommodate RVs, and both single and double-family lots are available. Also, Fletcher View has electric hookups, so I recommend it if you’re trailer-camping in Mt. Charleston. Whether you camp in an RV or tent, your site will have a fire pit, BBQ grill, and outdoor tables.
10. Fletcher View Campground, another campground near Las Vegas to stay at
This Las Vegas area campsite has flush toilets, water spigots, paved roads, and a stunning location perfect for biking, wildlife viewing, and nature walks. Also, while it’s open year-round, the campground may close between mid-July to mid-September due to flooding risks.
Number of campsites: 11 (tent/RV sites)
Price: $33/night
Open: Year-round
Reservations accepted: Yes
Electric hookup: Yes
Restrooms/showers: Flush toilets/no showers
Dump station: No
Pets allowed: Yes
MORE INFO
Free camping near Las Vegas
All of these campsites are worth checking out, but if you’re looking for free camping in Las Vegas, you have some options.
You can stay at BLM campgrounds in Nevada, including the sites around Lake Mead, Sloan Canyon, Red Rock Canyon, and Valley of Fire. In the map below, you can find free dispersed camping near Las Vegas and nearby BLM sites.
Las Vegas campgrounds map
With that, you’re ready to start planning your Las Vegas camping trip! Be sure to check out the Las Vegas campgrounds map below to see the ten campsites I mentioned and free BLM campgrounds in Nevada. I’ve labeled the RV campsites in red and the free campgrounds in green.
If you have any questions about RV or tent camping in Las Vegas, leave me a comment below, and I’ll get back to you! Have a fun camping trip!
Hiking Through Garajonay National Park on La Gomera, The Canary Islands – Uncover Travel
Uncover Travel
Garajonay National Park, Hiking in La Gomera, Laurel Forest in the Canaries, Visiting La Gomera, What to do in La Gomera
The island of La Gomera is also known as ‘La Isla Mágica’ (The Magical Island), due to its changing landscapes, magical natural surroundings, rich history and legends. The only way to truly understand the reason for this nickname is to spend some time in Garajonay National Park, the heart of the island.
Garajonay National Park covers 3,986 hectares and is home to one of Spain’s most extraordinary forests. The laurel forest (or laurisilva forest) was declared a World Heritage site by UNESCO in 1986 and covers approximately 70% of the national park. The national park is often enveloped in fog and the constant moisture this provides gives life to the forest.
The southern slopes were an area of degraded vegetation and plantations of exotic trees when Garajanoy was declared a national park. Since the mid-1980s, a prolonged restoration programme has been running, with the intention of returning the national vegetation to the five hundred hectares of land. When the programme commenced, 13% of the original vegetation had been replaced by Canary Island pine trees, California pine trees and even eucalyptus. This exotic vegetation is now being gradually and carefully replaced using a technique called the ‘shelterwood system’.
We set off from Pajarito and follow the trail to Altos de Garajonay, the highest point on the island at 1,487 metres. The name Garajonay is said to come from the names of two young lovers, Gara, a young girl from La Gomera, and Jonay from Tenerife. The girl’s family opposed their relationship and, unable to be together, they escaped to the top of the peak and decided to commit suicide by placing a stick, sharpened at both ends, between them and embracing each other. On a clear day visitors can see the islands of Tenerife, La Palma, El Hierro and Gran Canaria. Today we can only see Tenerife but the view is magnificent, with Teide’s snowy peak showing above the clouds.
El Alto was one of the holy mountains of the ancient people of La Gomera. A stone building at the peak is a reproduction of the ceremonial grounds on which the aboriginal peoples of La Gomera would communicate with their god, ‘Orohan’. They used this site as they felt they were closer to heaven and therefore could communicate better. Excavations of the archaeological site, which is situated just below the ‘mirador’ (lookout point), show that the stone construction was a sacrificial altar, known as ‘pireos’. It has been dated back to the 6th century and offerings including the bones of goats and sheep and the remains of plants have been uncovered. During the invasion of the Spanish in the late 15th century, the last of the free people of La Gomera took refuge in this mountain, probably seeking divine protection.
The trail from Altos de Garajonay leads to El Contadero. It begins with a paved path leading into the park’s ecosystem. We enter the forest and find ourselves in a mystical and enchanting place. This is one of the best examples of a laurel forest, a sub-tropical forest made up of evergreen trees that are exceptional at capturing water from mist. This forest ecosystem covered the Mediterranean area millions of years ago but disappeared due to climate change. The park now shelters a large number of species, many of which are exclusive to the area and so conservation of its floral biodiversity is of high importance. We occasionally pass other hikers on the trail but for most of the time we hear nothing but the sound of the birds in the trees above us.
Soon the sound of a river breaks the silence and we find ourselves following the El Cedro stream, through the thick vegetation among some of the 2,000 plant species that can be found within the national park. We continue past the Chapel of Lourdes and around mid-way through our hike we reach the hamlet of El Cedro.
We climb a rickety staircase that leads to the small bar/restaurant and campsite of La Vista, meaning ‘The View’. At the top of the stairs the reason for the name becomes apparent. We are at the very peak of the cliff that separates El Cedro from the village of Hermigua. We enjoy a well-deserved baguette of local goat’s cheese and a ‘tapa’ of almogrote, a traditional spicy cheese paste.
Having replenished our energy we are ready to continue our hike to Hermigua. We set off on the path that leads down the cliff, towards the valley. The steps are uneven, steep and at times quite slippery. The way down is turning out to be much more complicated than the path from Garajonay to El Cedro.
Slowly and carefully we follow the hairpin bends. We stop for a moment and realise that the 200 metre-tall waterfall, El Chorro de El Cedro, that cascades from the top of the cliff has come into view. This waterfall is the highest in the Canary Islands and, although it has less water just now than at other times of the year, it is still quite spectacular.
The path continues steeply winding downwards towards the valley. The fog is lowering over the peaks behind us and the sun is beginning to set. Two hikers carrying large backpacks are climbing up the steps and stop when they see us. They look tired and ask us if they are heading in the right direction to reach El Cedro. We nod and look back up the cliff to point out their final destination only to see that the fog is about to envelop the hamlet. We are now about half way between the valley and the peak and decide that pointing out the little dot that is La Vista will not be encouragement for the couple. We wish them luck and continue on our way.
Over an hour after we set off from La Vista we finally reach flat terrain. The path remains rocky and we are still following the river, meaning that the stones are wet and slippery at some points, however we are glad to be on reasonably level ground.
We follow the trail through overgrown fauna, past wild goats and towards the town of Hermigua. In the early 20th century, a team of meteorologists defined Hermigua as the place with the most beneficial climate in the world. It never drops below 18 degrees celsius in the winter or rises above 27 in the summer. The town’s economic activity is based on banana growing, wine making and rural tourism.
The rocks of Pedro and Petra, also known as Roque Chico and Roque Grande (Small Rock and Large Rock), that were mere dots a short while ago, are now towering above us. We reach a tarmac road as our adventure comes to an end and we enter the hamlet of El Convento.
Our final challenge is to find a way back to San Sebastián de la Gomera, where we are staying. We ask in a local bar and find that we have just missed the last bus by a few minutes. We continue to walk in the hopes of passing a taxi but see none. Eventually we reach a small grocery store and are able to call a taxi. Our taxi speeds along the winding road and we watch as we leave the valley behind. Pedro and Petra shrink to the tiny stones they were when we set off from El Cedro.
Around six hours after we set off from San Sebastián we return to the Parador Hotel, exhausted but exhilarated after a wonderful hike through the prehistoric forest on ‘la Isla Mágica’.
SOURCES:
http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/380
B. Domínguez, Travel Guide La Gomera, Ediciones A.M.
Camping Montaña Roja, El Medano – Updated 2022 Prices
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carretera TF643 La Tejita 1, 38612 El Medano, Spain
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Great location – 9. 0 out of 10! (based on 515 reviews)
According to guests’ ratings, stays at Camping Montaña Roja.
Camping Montaña Roja is located in El Médano and overlooks the garden. It offers a restaurant, a shared kitchen, a bar, a garden, a year-round outdoor pool and a children’s playground. It offers free Wi-Fi and free private parking.
Towels and bed linen are available at an additional cost.
Guests can relax on the terrace at Camping Montaña Roja and go cycling.
Playa del Cabezo is 2.7 km away. Tenerife South Airport is 2 km away.
Couples especially like the location – they rated accommodation in the area for a trip as a couple at 9.1 .
Camping Montaña Roja has been welcoming Booking.com guests since Sep 2, 2019 2019.
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Great Location: Highly rated by recent guests (9. 0)
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Free private parking on site
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Nearby beaches
La Tejita beach
8.7 Stunning beach
200 m from accommodation
Nudist beach Texita
8. 7 Awesome beach
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8.4 Very good beach
1.2 km from the option of accommodation
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beach Machado
8.5 Very nice beach
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Playa la Maretas beach
7.9 Nice beach
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El Medano Beach
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2.2 km from property
Playa Chica beach
8.3 Very nice beach
2.4 km from property 9004
Playa del Cabezo beach
8.4 Very nice beach
2.7 km from property
Playa Chica beach
7.7 Nice beach
2.9 km from property 9004
Questions and answers about the property
See what other guests are asking to learn more about this property.
Do you allow camping with tents?
Good afternoon
Correct, we also have space for tents and motorhomes: it is a campsite, we offer different acommodations. If you´d like more info, I ca…
Reply October 28, 2019
When is the best time to visit your property for the perfect beach holiday?
South Tenerife is always high season, it doesn´t mean the place is crowded, but the good weather is always present.. Usually tradewinds blows strong i…
Reply September 6, 2019
Hi, camping in tents is still possible at your place now or is that camping option closed during times of Covid-19?
Hello you can camp with a tent you can see at web camping
Reply October 5, 2020
Good morning, do you offer late check-in/late check-out? We arrive to Santa Cruz de Tenerife (by ferry) at 9:30pm so wouldn’t be able to get there til. ..
Good morning!
Check-ins are from 2-8pm and check-outs are until 12 noon, but please kindly let us know if you already have a booking with us so we can…
Reply 17 December 2020
Hi, is there any bars, restaurants and supermarkets close to the site
Hola, Si hay unos que estan cerca
Reply 11 February 2022
*
All distances are measured in a straight line. Actual distance may vary.
Restaurant
Kitchen:
Spanish,
local,
European,
Grill/BBQ
Open on:
Breakfast,
Dinner,
Dinner,
cocktail time
Most Popular Amenities & Services
1 swimming pool
Free WiFi
Free parking
Beach (first line)
family rooms
Bathroom
Toilet paper
Towels
Towels/bed linen for extra charge
Bedroom
Underwear
Garden view
Outdoors
Picnic area
Garden furniture
Outdoor dining area
Outdoor furniture
Terrace
Garden
Dining table
Refrigerator
Amenities in the room
Socket near the bed
Clothes dryer
Sports and recreation
Walking tours
Additional charge
Beach
Public baths
Water park
Beyond the territory
Additional charge
Beach (first line)
Squash
Beyond the territory
Additional charge
Horse riding
Beyond the territory
Additional charge
Diving
Beyond the territory
Additional charge
Bowling
Beyond the territory
Additional charge
Cycling
Outside
Hiking trails
Beyond the territory
Additional charge
Canoe
Beyond the territory
Additional charge
Windsurfing
Beyond the territory
Additional charge
Children’s playground
Golf course (within 3 km)
Additional charge
Food and drink
Coffee house (on site)
Wine/champagne
Additional charge
Children’s menu
Additional charge
Bar
Restaurant
Internet
Wi-Fi is available in public areas free of charge.
Parking
Free private parking on site (reservation is not needed) .
Parking spaces for people with disabilities
Electric vehicle charging station
Reception desk
Invoices issued
Private check-in/out
Concierge services
Luggage storage
Additional charge
Tourist office
Cleaning services
Laundry
Additional charge
Business center services
Fax/Photocopying
Additional charge
Security
Fire extinguishers
Video surveillance in common areas
Key entry
24 hour security
Mini market (on site)
Transfer (additional charge)
Smoking areas
Non-smoking throughout
Wooden or parquet floor
Packed lunches
Family rooms
Facilities for disabled guests
Non-smoking rooms
Availability
Premises entirely located on the ground floor
Open pool
Is free!
Access to all pools is free
Open all year round
Working hours
No age limit
Chaise/beach chairs
Pool with a view
Incremental pool
Health services
Sun umbrellas
Chaise/beach chairs
The staff speaks these languages
English
spanish
Sustainability Initiatives
Special measures are taken here to make travel conscious and environmentally friendly.
check in
14:00 – 19:30
Departure
11:30 – 12:00
Cancel/ prepayment
Cancellation and prepayment policies vary depending on the type of option chosen.
Please enter your dates of stay and review the booking conditions for the requested room.
Curfew
Entrance to the territory is closed from 22:00 to 00:00
Refundable security deposit
A security deposit of EUR 50 is required upon arrival. Payment is in cash. You will receive the deposited amount at the time of check-out. Once the condition of the property has been checked, the deposit will be fully refunded to you in cash.
Beds for children
Child Policy
Children of all ages are welcome.
To see exact prices and availability, please enter the number of children in your group and their age when searching.
Cribs and Extra Beds Policy
This property does not accommodate cots.
This property cannot accommodate extra beds.
Age limit
Minimum entry age: 18 years old
Cards accepted by the property
Camping Montaña Roja accepts these cards and reserves the right to temporarily hold an amount prior to arrival.
Camping Montaña Roja accepts these cards and reserves the right to temporarily hold an amount prior to arrival.
Smoking
No smoking.
parties
No parties/events allowed.
“Quiet Hours”
“Quiet hours” for guests (when you can not make noise): from 22:00 to 09:00.
5 reasons to go hiking in the Canary Islands in the winter season + Video + Quiz!
winter trekking | canarian chronicle
Based on our experience of 5 years of trekking around different islands of the Canary archipelago + video
Canary trekking is simple and monstrously picturesque. Especially if you stock up on the right lightweight equipment that is convenient to take on a plane. And, most importantly, this is a great alternative to traditional winter snow hikes, if they do not appeal to you at all. We have been successfully replacing the romance of wet ski pants and chattering teeth in a tent at minus 20 for many years with trips to the Canary archipelago. And now I’ll tell you why.
Reason number 1 to go on a Canary hike:
trekking price
The Canaries are volcanic islands in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Africa
The Canary Islands belong to Spain. So officially it is Europe. But, in fact, they are located in the Atlantic, off the coast of Africa, literally “across the road” from Morocco. It is believed that all the sand that is on these volcanic islands was brought by the wind from the Sahara.
You can fly here from Central and Western Europe in 3-4 hours and, with a strong desire, spend only about €20 on it. But this, of course, if you take care of buying tickets three months in advance, or get on a pleasant promotion. It will be a low-cost airline, where you will have to pay a little extra for luggage. (It is better to take a backpack, then they will cheat less). Most often we fly with Ryanair. The airline is capricious and not particularly pleasant, but they have a lot of flights from Europe to Tenerife – the largest and most touristic island of Canaries, from which many begin their journey through the archipelago. Any of the islands is suitable for trekking.
The cheapest tickets are from other regions of Spain, as well as from Vienna, Budapest and Copenhagen.
As a result, such a hike still turns out to be very affordable. The price-quality ratio of the adventure here is definitely in favor of such a track.
The Canary Islands are still the Northern Hemisphere, and this is not for you. Agree, not bad conditions for a winter hike
Reason #2 to love Canarian trekking:
100500 different climates and natural diversity
Teide volcano. Screenshot from Google Maps.
Going on a hike in the Canary Islands means dooming yourself to a difficult choice, from which I am completely delighted! Even within the framework of one island, you will encounter incredible climatic and biological diversity, and now remember that there are 7 main Canary Islands (!), Plus a couple of small rocks and poor La Graciosa, which is always forgotten to be counted.
Do you want to climb higher in the mountains and play snowballs? Conquer the Teide volcano, Spain’s highest peak at 3718 m. Perfect if you’ve never been to high mountains but want to get a taste of mountain climbing. In the truest sense of the word. Even at such a low altitude, many have the first symptoms of altitude sickness.
“
Book your date for the ascent of to the summit of Teide volcano here. Permit is free , don’t be fooled by the offers of travel agencies! But during the season, book no later than a month in advance, otherwise there may be no places! Otherwise, you will have to overpay the same agencies that buy tickets in advance. You can NOT climb to the very top without any permission – just come and climb to the observation deck along the path or cable car (two-way ticket €27.00). About the very top – read below. (Oh, that’s a pun!) Dress warmly.
— GOOD ADVICE FROM THE EQUINOX 9 TRAVEL TEAM0019
That same Homeric sunset that makes one want to philosophize and/or sob. Underline whatever applicable.
Are mountains not attractive? Do you want an easy walk and the sea breeze swaying your hair? And at the same time a warm overnight stay at +18? Feel free to go down to the ocean and camp for the night at the campsite on the beach. It is always dry and warm there.
Want to freshen up? Let’s go to the island of La Gomera – the birthplace of rainbows, dense endemic forests, fogs, rains and sunsets that make you want to hug and cry.
Tired of getting wet? The deserts of Lanzarote and Fuerteventura are at your disposal.
Do you want to contact civilization more often during your hike? Densely populated Tenerife will do. There, as in Gran Canaria, you can live comfortably in civilization, and at the same time make small forays into microtravels to the surrounding forests.
By the way, bring along our 212 grams easy-to-move kitchen where you can make tea/coffee and treat yourself to a hot meal during your outings.
Western El Hierro
Are you looking for privacy and peace? El Hierro, the smallest and quietest island of the Canary archipelago, will welcome you with open arms and alternative energy. It remains only to wait for the ferry, which does not run every day.
Population – 10,000 people. Cozy campsite in the heart of the island in the Hoya del Morcillo pine forest and many, many free and almost deserted campsites along the coast.
Wild landscape. Black and sometimes scarlet rocks. Chocolate volcanic cones sprinkled with “cinnamon” sulfur.
“
We are looking for and buying tickets for all Canarian ferries through the Directferries aggregator, since several ferry companies operate on the islands at once and it is inconvenient to shovel the site of each separately. Not like tucking an ice ax into your shorts, but almost. Moreover, some of them go only to large islands. Nuance: first look at the map the name of the port city, and then drive it into the search. Searching for the name of the island is bad – you may not find anything at all.
– GOOD ADVICE FROM THE EQUINOX TRAVEL TEAM
Do you want a more or less long track? The island of La Palma is waiting. Together with its 20-kilometer volcanic caldera, in which dozens of routes have been laid. By the way, it is forbidden to make fires there, do not forget to grab a compact gas mini-burner and a lightweight titanium pot.
The natural diversity of the Canary Islands is one of the strongest arguments for going here on a winter hike. Whatever track you have planned, it will never be enough for you. Checked on myself. Once falling in love with these places, we return here again and again, every year trying to pay maximum attention to one of the islands. Three years ago it was La Palma (here is an article about the local observatory). Two years ago – La Gomera, this year – El Hierro. A video about them is still in the editing.
Observatory “Roque de los Muchachos”, La Palma, Canaries | The best starry sky on Earth!?
Video from our Youtube channel Equinox Adventure
Reason #3 why going to the Canaries is cool:
endemic
“
or flora or fauna. Endemics include species, genera, families or other taxa of animals and plants, whose representatives live in a relatively limited area, represented by a small geographical area. Endemic species of plants and animals, due to their limited range and, therefore, limited numbers, are often listed in the Red Books as rare or endangered species.
– WIKIPEDIA QUOTE
Due to its relative isolation, the Canary Islands hold the European record for the number of endemics.
If you hike not only to get physically active, but also interested in contact with the local nature in the place where you actually move, then the Canary Islands provide incredible opportunities for this.
Firstly, there are Canarian pines, endemic trees that grow only in the Canaries. Very beautiful. In addition, the laurel forests “Laurasilva”, which in ancient times covered the whole of Europe, and now remained fragments only in the North of Tenerife, La Gomera and El Hierro.
On the smallest island of the Canary archipelago, El Hierro, there are giant lizards, of which there are only a couple of hundred left on the entire planet. They live on an impregnable rock in the ocean, and a little more in a special museum-scientific laboratory Centro de Recuperación de El Lagarto Gigante de El Hierro, where they are trying to be preserved, and where you can look at them half-heartedly.
There are also a lot of birds in the Canary Islands. Laurel dove and blue finch are also endemic.
Every time I think about where to go trekking this winter, my thoughts invariably return to the Canary Islands. It is the local nature draws me here the most. Buckwheat tastes best there.
Reason #4 to go trekking in the Canary archipelago:
cheap or free camping and parking
About the European approach to camping , and without receiving any permits. At least in the central square of the city. In Central and Western Europe, this is quite strict.
Moreover, this is a whole problem. If you want to go to any track in Europe, then, exploring the route, you will be surprised to find that you will have to sleep in expensive mountain shelters, or “dive” through the bushes with your tent, risking a fine with three zeros. In Euro. We encountered a similar problem in August in the Dolomites in Italy. Soon we promise to tell you how we got out. And we did it. Subscribe to blog updates.
But why am I… Oh yes, Canarian campsites compare favorably. First, they are. Secondly, there are quite a few of them. Thirdly, they are indeed often free. It is enough to write the administration in advance to the email indicated on the site (if any), and warn that you are arriving on such and such a day, indicating your passport details and the number of days of stay. If there is no website, you can write to the Cabildo, the local government agency, something like our city council, if I understand correctly. For example, here is the website of the Tenerife Cabildo. You can also write to the local tourist center. Each island has its own, often more than one. And often tied to the same Cabildo. The address you need is very easy to find on Google.
An ode to the Canarian campsites
Free campsites are usually poorly equipped. This, by the standards of the Canarians, should include: parking for a car or a camper, cleared places for tents, stone hearths with a supply of firewood and grates for cooking, wooden tables and benches. And the toilet is in a separate building.
What then can you get for money, you ask. In addition to the above benefits of civilization, for the amount of about 4-5 euros from your nose you can get showers with hot water and the ability to recharge your devices. There may also be play areas, playgrounds and charging stations for campers and electric cars. It all depends on the specific campsite.
If you put on a little more, you can live in cozy wooden houses and not worry about having a tent. Of the things you need to grab only a sleeping bag.
That’s why hotels are needed in this situation, I’m already asking myself. Here is no need.
Reason #5 to go to the Canary Islands
with a backpack: there is a Decathlon here
Sounds weird. What’s up with Decathlon? Let’s explain. Decathlon, in case you didn’t know, is a giant tourist supermarket where you can buy your gear very cheaply. Sleeping bags, mats, clothes for the track. It turns out inexpensive, average quality tourist shopping.
Travel life hack: instead of paying extra for luggage to a greedy low-cost airline about 50 euros on the way to the Canary Islands, throwing them into the air, in the truest sense of the word. It is better to fly without luggage at all! And on the spot to buy something that did not fit into hand luggage. For example, the same sleeping bag at +10 from this video. Savings and upgrades.
My video about Decathlon dedicated to the opening of the first store of this chain in Ukraine
Video from my Youtube channel “Girl on a hike”
Bonus reason #6:
photo locations for landscape and astrophotography
Canary Islands is one of the universally recognized best places on the planet for observing the starry sky.
Sunrises, sunsets and starry skies are simply incredible on the islands of the Canary archipelago!
Less words, more photos. ..
To sum it up: is it worth it to go hiking in the Canaries in winter? Video
Already been / was in the Canary Islands and know everything about them?
Take the canary test and please us and yourself with the results!
Test yourself
How expert are you in the Canary Islands?
Start test
7
Even the Russian-language Wikipedia writes that there are 7 of them, but this is not so. There are 8 of them. Small deserted rocks do not count. The eighth island that is almost never mentioned is Graciosa (La Graciosa). The population is 734 people as of 2018. On June 26, 2018, Graciosa OFFICIALLY became the 8th Canary Island.
8
Correct! Usually everyone thinks that there are 7 of them, but the eighth island, which is almost never mentioned, is Graciosa (La Graciosa). The population is 734 people as of 2018. On June 26, 2018, Graciosa OFFICIALLY became the 8th Canary Island.
Further
9090
904 904 904 904
05
Gran Canaria
Here is the correct list of Canary Islands as their size decreases:
Tenerife
Fureteventure
Gran Canary
9000
Tenerife
Here is the correct list of the Canaries in descending order of size:
Tenerife
Fuelventure
Gran Canaria
Lansarot
La Palma
La Homer
El Yerro
La gracios
Fureteventure
FUITS FUITHER RETENRIAS:
0 9000 9000 9000 9000 9000
Gran Canaria
Lanzarote
La Palma
La Gomera
El Hierro
La Gracios
Lansarot
Here is the correct list of Canary Islands as their size decreases:
Tenerife
Fureteventure
Grand Canary
9000 Graciosa
La Palma
Here is the correct list of the Canaries in descending order of size:
Tenerife
Since 1927, both cities have been the capitals of the archipelago alternately, alternating every 4 years.
Gran Canaria (city of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria)
Since 1927, both cities have been the capitals of the archipelago alternately, alternating every 4 years.
Further
90
07
1
There are actually two of them – on the islands of Tenerife and La Palma. But they all belong to the same Canary Institute of Astrophysics.
2
Right! There are two of them – on the islands of Tenerife and La Palma. But they all belong to the same Canary Institute of Astrophysics.
4
There are actually two of them – on the islands of Tenerife and La Palma. But they all belong to the same Canary Institute of Astrophysics.
18
There are actually two of them – on the islands of Tenerife and La Palma. But they all belong to the same Canary Institute of Astrophysics.
More than 500
El Hierro has more than 500 open-air volcanic cones and about 300 more covered by later deposits.
Over 700
Oh yes! El Hierro has more than 500 open-air volcanic cones and about 300 more covered by later deposits.
Next
Check
902
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You are a lazy sausage and you still have a lot to learn about this world and about the Canary Islands. Get your butt up and let’s travel!
Read the article again carefully and you will find answers to most of the questions!
Go through again
You’ve obviously been to the Canary Islands, but they haven’t penetrated deep into you yet.
Dare, traveler!
Go through again
Hola! Congratulations! You are a true expert of this part of the world and an experienced traveler!
Cactus medal and our love are waiting for you!
Pass again
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0001
Downtown Playa del Inglés
[2]
Maspalomas city center
[3]
Gran Canaria city center
[3]
Downtown San Bartolome
[3]
Sonnenland city center
[3]
Downtown La Guirra
[4]
Downtown Poso Negro
[4]
Caleta de Fuste city center
[4]
Kindercarneval Puerto del Rosario
[4]
Parroquia Nuestra Señora del Rosario Barlovento
[4]
Fuerteventura Golf Club Caleta de Fuste
[4]
Lanzarote Arrecife Airport
[3]
Tenerife North Airport
[3]
Fuerteventura airport
[3]
Playa de San Agustin Maspalomas
[3]
Meloneras Golf
[3]
ExpoMeloneras Convention Center
[3]
Maspalomas South Park
[3]
Costa Meloneras Maspalomas
[3]
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La Gomera Island – Guide in Russian
Canary Islands, holidays in Spain
Description
La Gomera is one of the islands of the Canary archipelago, located in its western part. Island area – 369, 76 sq. km. The island is home to 21.7 thousand people.
It is located just 30 km from the southwest coast of Tenerife and is part of the province of Santa Cruz de Tenerife.
Content:
Description
History
Swist language
Geography
On the map
Population
Climate
weather for months
How to get?
Transport
Visa
Mobile communications, Internet
Resorts
Beaches
Hotels
Points of interest
Viewpoints
What needs to be done?
Cuisine and restaurants
Where can I book a tour?
Reviews and ratings
History of
Ancient map of
La Gomera has been known since ancient times,
there is mention of it in the writings of Ptolemy
(90-168).
The native inhabitants of the island are Homers, they
were tall, fair-skinned, with fair-haired
or red hair and remember how
smart and strong warriors. Homero were
pagans and worshiped their idols,
associated with the forces of nature. Among
local residents were people of great
forces, stories of their exploits were transmitted
through generations. The names of some of them
survived to the present day, many of
they died in the war with the Spaniards.
In the pre-Hispanic period, La Gomera ruled
supreme ruler, but after death
the last king at the end of the 14th century, the island
divided into 4 parts: Agana, Orone,
Mulagua, Ipalan, who led
individual leaders.
The modern stage of the history of La Gomera begins with its conquest, which began with the arrival of the Castilian expedition of Alfonso El Benigni de Aragon in the Canary Islands in 1404-1405.
Since 1445, La Gomera has been ruled by several
generations of the Peraza clan. The board was
difficult, intermittent locals
raised uprisings because of tyranny and
mistreatment of them.
The most controversial person in the history of the island is Beatriz de Bobadilla, wife of Hernán Peras El Joven, who was killed by rebels (Hautakuperche) during an uprising. The reason for the uprising was the depraved behavior of the ruler, he seduced and dishonored the princess of the Gomero people.
Beatriz de Bobadilla
After her husband was killed, Beatriz, with the help of the ruler of Gran Canaria, Pedro de Vera, crushed the uprising in the most brutal way, destroying a large number of local natives. The cruelty shown and the large number of people killed forced one of the local priests to go to Madrid to complain to the queen. But only Pedro de Vera was punished, he was recalled to Spain and imprisoned, the captive homeroes were released, and Bobadilla managed to escape punishment.
La Gomera is famous for the fact that in 1492 Christopher Columbus stopped there before his sailing to America. Other famous sailors also visited the island, such as Hernan Cortes, Francisco Pizarro, Vasco Nunez de Baalboa.
In the 16th century La Gomera repeatedly
attacked by the British and
Dutch cappers, although the worst
pirate attack in 1618
Berbers.
Gomero had to go through hard times, many locals left for America, for example at 19In 1950, 170 men went to Venezuela.
For a long time the economy of the island was
in decline, but after the introduction of modern
agricultural technology and irrigation of agricultural
cultures, it began to revive, and
population gradually
increased. grown on La Gomera
bananas, tomatoes, grapes.
Silbo Gomero whistle language
Silbo Gomero whistle language
Silbo Gomero is a whistle language that has been used since time immemorial on the island of La Gomera to communicate over long distances. This is not a series of conditional codes to which limited information can be conveyed, but a full-fledged, articulate and unusual language that allows the exchange of a wide variety of information, reproducing the sound characteristics of spoken language with the help of a whistle.
No roads, many
ravines and gorges made it difficult to move
between settlements. To quickly transfer
messages to neighbors, was invented by Silbo
Gomero. This unique language has been recognized
UNESCO intangible cultural
legacy in 2009.
The whistling language is of exceptional value, because it confirms the creative genius of a person. It also helps to adapt and survive in a particular environment. The whistling language is aesthetically and technically complex and interesting.
Silbo Gomero is part of the culture of the indigenous people of Gomero, it has become a hallmark of La Gomera and the entire Canary archipelago.
The Silbo Gomero language is passed down from generation to generation
generation as cultural heritage
people. Now the whistle language is being studied in
cultural centers of La Gomera. it
will keep it for posterity.
Book a tour
Geography
Relief
La Gomera is of volcanic origin, its highest point is the peak of Alto de Garajonay, it has a height of 1487 meters above sea level. La Gomera is a natural reserve. It is the only one in the Canary Islands where there are no traces of volcanic activity. The last volcanic eruption on La Gomera occurred more than 2 million years ago.
Capital San Sebastian with Tenerife in the background
The largest city and capital is San Sebastian de la Gomera. Despite its “capital” status, the town is very calm and small.
There are very few comfortable places to live – a significant part of the territory is occupied by mountains, but there are several cities and villages. La Gomera is divided into 6 municipalities: Agulo, Alajero, Hermigua, San Sebastian de La Gomera, Valle Gran Rey, Vallehermoso.
La Gomera on the map
La Gomera on the world map is barely
conspicuous point near Tenerife.
The area of La Gomera is very small –
only 20-25 km. If you look at the map
La Gomera, you can see that island
has an almost round shape.
La Gomera is divided by mountains, which
influence its climate and form several
microclimatic zones.
Population
According to statistics, La Gomera had 21,794 inhabitants as of 2018. The population growth is negative, since 2011 the number of inhabitants has decreased by almost 1.5 thousand people.
Main language in La Gomera is Spanish
(Castilian), but the locals speak
in a dialect that has its own specifics.
Climate
The climate of La Gomera differs little from other islands of the Canary archipelago. It is comfortable throughout the year, thanks to the trade winds and the Canary Current, there are no cold weather and sudden changes in average annual temperatures on La Gomera. La Gomera has a mild tropical climate with an average annual temperature of +26°C and an annual rainfall of 1900 mm.
Climate in the morning hours
But because of the mountains that divide the island into
two parts, climate in north and south
is different. In the northern zone, subject to
windy, much higher humidity levels
and lower air temperature. Main
part of the rain falls in the northern part,
the mountains hold back the streams of the cold
air, so in the south the rain is
an extremely rare occurrence.
The action of the trade winds and the so-called sea of clouds is concentrated on the northern slope of the mountains, where the Garajonay National Park is located, where relict forests grow.
Monthly weather
Winter on La Gomera is warm, the average temperature during the day does not fall below +21°C, at night – +15°C. The water temperature off the coast of La Gomera in winter is + 18-19 ° С. Most of the rain falls in winter. The “wettest” month is January, the average number of rainy days is 6, in February – 4, in March – 3.
Spring on La Gomera is warm with an average
daytime temperature from +22 to 24°C, at night
+15-17°C, water temperature – +18-19°C. spring
sometimes it rains, but it happens
no more than twice a month.
The most comfortable summer on La Gomera
time, the air heats up to + 25-29 ° C during the day
and up to +20-21°C at night, the water temperature in
Atlantic Ocean +22-23°С. rainy
almost never happens in the summer. Sun
shines for 9 hours.
Climate data
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
Day temperature
21
21
22
23
24
25
27
29
28
26
24
22
Temperature at night
15
15
15
16
17
18
20
21
20
19
18
16
Sun hours per day
6
6
7
8
9
9
9
9
8
7
6
5
Rainy days per month
6
4
3
2
2
1
0
0
2
5
6
7
Water temperature
19
18
18
18
19
20
21
22
23
23
21
20
Autumn on La Gomera is warm, in September
and October the holiday season continues,
the air during the day warms up to + 26-28 ° C during the day
and + 19-20°C at night, the water in the ocean is warm, it
heated to record temperatures.
From November it starts to get colder, in the afternoon already
the air is heated up to +24°C, at night – up to
+18°С. In October and November there are 5-6
rainy days per month.
How to get there
How to get to La Gomera? By plane
or by ferry. Island capital
San Sebastian de la Gomera, these are the main
air and sea gates of the island. AT
the city has a large commercial port,
which accepts cargo and passenger
court. Cruise ships arrive at the port
and ferries from neighboring Canary Islands
archipelago and from Spain.
Sea port in the capital
ferry companies Fred Olsen and Naviera Armas. They are
ply between the port of Los Cristianos
in Tenerife and San Sebastian de la Gomera.
There are also flights to Gran Canaria.
and El Hierro. Travel time to Tenerife
only 60 minutes.
Companies Fred Olsen and Naviera Armas provide a free transfer to their passengers from the main bus station (Intercambiador) in the capital of Santa Cruz de Tenerife to the port of Los Cristianos. To do this, you need to contact the offices of companies in the station building.
Get ferry prices
Book a tour
La Gomera also has its own
the airport. It is located in the south of the island
in the municipality of Alajero, 34 km from
capital Cities. This is the newest airport.
Canary Islands, it was opened in 1999
year. The airport receives flights from
neighboring islands and the mainland. Time
flight from Tenerife is 30 minutes.
Transport on the island
Public transport is well developed on La Gomera. Bus transportation on the island is carried out by the company Guaguagomera . Its comfortable green buses are easy to recognize. There are 8 bus routes in total:
Valle Gran Rey – San Sebastian de la Gomera
Vallehermoso – San Sebastian
Alachero-San Sebastian
Valiermoso-La-Dama
Valeermoso-Alocher
Val-Gran-Ray-Airport
San Sesbastyan-Airport
Valle-gran-Roy
Cost of the cost from the distance, the minimum fare is 1 euro, the maximum is 4. 5 euros.
Fred Olsen Express boats also run between the beaches of San Sebastian de La Gomera, Playa de Santiago and Valle Gran Rey, the cost of the trip is 2-2.5 euros.
Every municipality has a service
Taxi. They work on a fixed basis.
tariff, it is 0.53 euros per kilometer,
while there is a minimum cost
trip, it is 3 euros. On the weekend
and holidays the rate per kilometer increases
up to 0.6 euros and the minimum cost
trips at 3.35 euros. On trains to the airport
and from it is necessarily taken
airport tax of 1.65 euros.
Convenient way to see the island
on your own – car rental
on La Gomera. The island has
representatives of most European
car rental companies and operates
several local companies:
EUROPCAR
AVIS
OASIS
Cicar
on La Gomera have their offices
at the airport and seaport.
Visa
Those wishing to spend their holidays in La Gomera need to take care of such organizational issues as obtaining visas in advance. Do I need a visa for La Gomera? Citizens of the Russian Federation, Belarus, Kazakhstan need to apply for a Schengen visa. Citizens of Ukraine since 2016 can enter the countries of the Schengen agreement on a biometric passport.
The best way to get a Schengen visa is at the embassy
Spain, especially since it is quite
loyal to the issuance of visas to tourists,
the failure rate for it is one of the highest
low.
Visa required
the following documents:
Passport valid for more than three months at the time of completion of the trip.
Questionnaire completed in English or Spanish.
Photocopies of all pages of foreign and civil passports.
If there are visas in expired passports, their copies.
Valid travel health insurance covering at least 30,000 euros.
Bank statement on the availability of funds in the account at the rate of 57 euros / day.
Certificate of income from the employer or from the tax office.
Certificate confirming the presence of a permanent place of work.
Hotel reservation, round trip tickets.
When traveling with a child of school age, an additional certificate from the school is required.
Documents are submitted for consideration
Consulate or Visa Application Centre. Before
by submitting a package of documents is paid
visa fees and consular fees.
The term for consideration of the application is 10-14 days,
you can order urgent registration, but
it will cost more.
Mobile communications, Internet
Cellular companies
Going on vacation to the Canary Islands, any tourist is concerned about the issue of telephone communication and the availability of the Internet. Using services in roaming is not always advisable due to high tariffs. It is much more profitable to buy a SIM card from one of the local mobile operators upon arrival, especially since there are plenty to choose from.
Mobile communications on La Gomera are provided by the same companies as on other islands of the Canary archipelago. Nationwide mobile operators: Movistar , Vodafone , Orange . In addition to them, virtual mobile operators work, the most popular are: Lebara , DIGI , Lycamobile .
Minimum cost of starting
package starts from 8-10 euros, for these
money can be obtained 5-10 GB of internet
and 100 to 500 minutes for calls within Spain.
You can buy a SIM card in La Gomera at
port, tourist office, airport
or at the mobile operator’s office. For
purchases, you must present your
the passport.
Mobile communication in La Gomera has one peculiarity – the connection fee is charged from each call.
Mobile internet operators
provide fairly high quality
as a rule, the 4G standard works,
but in some places the quality drops to the level
3g.
Top up your account if necessary
you can online, the office of the mobile operator
or in supermarkets.
If the priority is large
stock of Internet traffic worth paying
attention to Orange tariffs.
This mobile operator focuses on
Internet, it is most often chosen in
as a home provider
the Internet. Monthly traffic is
limited, but after 50 GB speed
connections are significantly reduced.
Guide in Russian recommends you the best rate in Spain with Orange. Here you save, and all the more so because you can buy or order a SIM card while in Russia, that is, in advance. You do not need to look for an office in Europe and study the proposed rates. To get discount 10% from our travel site, use the coupon:
Coupon 10% discount: tenerife-orange
Order a SIM card
Resorts
small beaches with black volcanic sand or pebbles. There are several resort towns and villages on La Gomera, where the main tourist infrastructure is concentrated. Most tourists come here as part of day trips from Tenerife, but the island is becoming more and more popular as an independent resort. It is preferred by fans of silence, beautiful nature and provincial charm.
San Sebastián de La Gomera ( San Sebastián de La Gomera ) is the largest resort and capital. A significant part of tourists chooses this place for recreation. The city has many excellent hotels of various stars and a decent selection of apartments. Also, all the main entertainment, historical and architectural sights are concentrated in the capital.
Playa Santiago ( Playa de Santiago ) – the second most popular resort, located in the southern part of the island. It is located simultaneously in two municipalities: Alajero and San Sebastian. Previously, there was a fish processing plant in this village, but now it is closed and the city is developing as a resort. Playa Santiago attracts tourists with one of the largest beaches on the island and good infrastructure.
Valle Gran Rey ( Valle Gran Rey ) is the famous Valley of the Kings, where the rulers of the island used to live. The resort is located in the southwestern part of La Gomera. A picturesque road leads from the capital to Valle Gran Rey, passing through the gorge. The resort has a well-developed infrastructure, several comfortable beaches, it is ideal for family vacations and water sports. Bananas, dates, vegetables are grown in the valley, palm honey is made. In the vicinity of the resort there are several viewing platforms and architectural sights.
Valle Gran Rey
Agulo (Agulo) is a resort town located on a hill. On its streets you can see perfectly preserved buildings in the style of colonial architecture. Terraces descend from the city to the sea, on which various agricultural crops are grown. In Agulo, there is the Red Wall, which offers magnificent views of the island and the Teide volcano.
Playa de Vallehermoso
Vallehermoso ( Vallehermoso ) is a small picturesque town surrounded by mountain peaks and banana plantations. Vallehermoso has preserved many old buildings. This resort attracts travelers with sparsely populated pristine beaches, unhurriedness reigning around and beautiful nature.
Vallehermoso
Hermigua (Hermigua) is a resort in the south of the island, located next to San Sebastian de La Gomera. According to scientists, Hermigua has the best climate in the world. The city is hidden in a gorge, protected from the winds and surrounded by banana plantations. Hermigua has one of the most popular beaches of Santa Catalina and several attractions and places of interest: the Ethnographic Museum, the Gofio Museum, the Dominican Monastery. Also, it is in Hermigua that the most hiking trails for tourists are laid.
Beaches
La Negra or Black Beach is located in a place untouched by civilization in the area of Alachero. This beach can be reached on foot from La Rajita beach. The beach of La Negra ( La Negra ) is 200 m long and 10 m wide. It is covered with black volcanic sand. Moderate waves are possible on it. The beach is not well maintained.
La Cantera is a beach in the municipality of Alajero, located in a pristine isolated area. The easiest way to get to the beach is by boat or walking down the path. The length of the beach is 180 m, the width is 10 m. There is no infrastructure on the beach.
Playa de Santiago – the beach in the resort of the same name, the largest in La Gomera, has a length of 1.5 km and a width of 30 m. Adapted for people with special needs, has excellent infrastructure. There are many cafes and restaurants near Playa de Santiago. There are car parks nearby. The beach is covered with pebbles and black sand.
Playa San Marcos – the beach of the municipality of Agulo, is a small bay, 150 m wide and 10 m wide. The beach is covered with black coarse-grained volcanic sand. This beach has strong waves. There are no settlements nearby.
La Caleta de Hermigua – beach in Hermigua, covered with black coarse sand. This is a quiet, calm place, great for swimming, since there are practically no waves and there are no undercurrents. La Caleta beach is equipped with showers, has a car park. There is a restaurant near the beach.
Santa Catalina is the largest beach in Hermigua, 850 m long and 35 m wide. Santa Catalina beach is covered with fine volcanic sand. It is located in the area of the village, terraces descend to it. There are strong waves on the beach. The beach is considered quite dangerous due to its great depth.
Playa de Vallehermoso is a beach in the municipality of the same name, stretching for 200 meters along the coastline. The width of the beach is about 20 m. It is quite quiet, because due to the large waves, few people swim on it. The beach is equipped with showers and umbrellas. There is a restaurant on the coast. Near the beach there is a park popular with tourists with large saltwater pools. . There are moderate waves on the beach. Beach de la Calera has the necessary infrastructure: parking lots, showers, toilets, adapted for people with disabilities. There are restaurants and cafes near the beach.
Playa de Vueltas is a beach located on the territory of the port of Valle Gran Rey. It is 150 m long and 10 m wide. It is covered with black volcanic sand. There are practically no waves in this area, so the beach is popular with vacationers with children. There is the necessary infrastructure: showers, toilets, restaurants and cafes, parking lots.
Playa del Inglés is another beach in Valle Gran Rey covered with black sand and pebbles. The beach is 300 m long and 80 m wide. The beach is popular with nudists. Nearby there is a parking lot.
Playa de La Cueva ( Playa de La Cueva) is one of two beaches in San Sebastian de La Gomera. The beach of La Cueva is 200 m long and 85 m wide. It is covered with black volcanic sand and gravel. The ocean in this part of the coast is calm, so the beach is suitable for families with children. Adapted for people with limited mobility. The beach is equipped with everything you need, there is a parking lot and several restaurants nearby.
La Playa de San Sebastián
Playa de San Sebastian ( La Playa de San Sebastián ) – located next to the historic port of the capital, is one of the best beaches in La Gomera. It has a length of 600 m and a width of 55 m, covered with black volcanic sand and pebbles. There are no waves on the beach. San Sebastian beach has everything you need for a comfortable stay: showers, bathrooms, a first-aid post, restaurants, parking.
Hotels
On the island of La Gomera there are about 300 hotels of different price categories and stars. Most of them are located in the capital of San Sebastian de La Gomera, in the city of Valle Gran Rey and Playa de Santiago. You can also rent a villa or apartment.
The most interesting hotels of the island – Parador Nacional de La Gomera , built in the style of neo-Canarian architecture. It has been named the best hotel in the Canary Islands, and its restaurant is recommended in the best gastronomic guides. Also of interest is the Jardín Tecina hotel, located next to the municipality of Alajero and having the only golf course on the island. The hotel is close to the airport.
Cost of hotels and apartments in
La Gomera is quite high, in season it is
does not fall below 40-45 euros for the most
humble number.
Guide in Russian recommends that you choose trusted hotel booking systems. You will have the opportunity to choose the best offer from the two links below. The possibility of booking both from Russia and abroad is available from Booking.
All offers from:
Yandex Travel
Offers from:
Booking
Places of interest
Despite the proximity of Tenerife, La Gomera differs in many ways from the neighboring island. Tourism on La Gomera began to develop quite recently, this allowed to preserve the pristine nature, authentic cultural traditions and find its own way in the development of the tourism industry. La Gomera is a very small island, but it has several national parks and reserves. What to see in La Gomera? Where to start your tour?
We recommend starting with a visit to the tourist office located in the capital. There you can take diagrams and maps of the island, which mark all the interesting places of La Gomera, beaches, restaurants and other useful locations. A definite plus is that maps and information booklets are available in several languages, including Russian.
Many of the architectural and historical sights of La Gomera are located in the capital, so the tour should start from San Sebastian.
Church of the Assumption of Our Lady (Assumption of the Virgin Mary)
Iglesia de la Virgen de Asuncion
Church of the Assumption of Our Lady ( Iglesia De La Asunción ) is located in the capital on Real Street. This is the main Catholic temple of the island and a famous historical landmark of the Canary archipelago. The church is known for the fact that Christopher Columbus prayed in it before his trip to America.
The temple is located in the historical part of the city. The church is made in the architectural style – Mudéjar, Gothic and Baroque. Three doors lead inside. The church has three naves. The crucifix for her was created by the famous Spanish sculptor José Miguel Lujan Pérez .
Church of the Assumption of Our Lady
Garajonay National Park (Parque
nacional de Garajonay)
Garajonay Park
The main natural attraction of La Gomera is the Garajonay National Park, it includes a mountain range of the same name with an area of 40 square meters. km. This unique place is worth seeing, because there are practically no analogues in the world. The Garajonay National Park is declared a heritage of mankind and is under the protection of UNESCO.
The park is home to the highest point on the island, Alto de Garajonay, at 1,487 meters above sea level. Its slopes are covered with laurel subtropical forests. They are remarkable in that they look exactly the same as they did 2 million years ago. At that time, the laurel forests of Monteverde covered the entire territory of Europe, but they were destroyed during the Ice Age.
Laurel forests have a height of about 40 meters, their crowns practically do not let in sunlight, so it is always humid, cool and foggy under them. The soil around is covered with lichens and moss. Laurel trees, tree-like heather, ferns, and sesame grow on the territory of the park.
Extremely diverse in the park
fauna, on its territory lives about
1000 species of invertebrates, with
150 of them are endemic, then
are not found anywhere else in the world.
Among the 38 species of vertebrates,
Canary is considered the rarest
dove and laurel dove.
There are several hiking trails in the Garajonay National Park, which you can walk on your own or as part of an organized tour.
Garajonay National Park
Rocks of Los Organos
The rocks are located in the north of La Gomera, this is a rather unusual attraction created by nature. This basalt rock is considered one of the most beautiful in the Canaries and is officially a natural monument. Why is she so interesting? Its cliffs resemble the pipes of a large organ soaring into the sky. The height of the cliffs is 800 m, the width is 200 m.
You can see the cliffs of Los Organos from the sea during a sea excursion. Usually such excursions are offered in Playa de Santiago and Valle Gran Rey.
Los Organos Rocks
Count’s Tower (
Torre del Conde or Los Peraza )
Torre del Conde
The Count’s Tower is one of the oldest buildings on the island, an important historical landmark. The tower was built (beginning in 1447 – completed in 1450) and reconstructed in the 16th century. Used to protect the ruling elite of the island during internal uprisings. She went down in history because of Beatrice de Bobadilla, the wife of the governor, who was killed by the local population because of his cruelty. The countess hid in the tower after the murder of her husband, waiting for help from the governor of Tenerife.
The Count’s Tower has been perfectly preserved to this day. Now it houses an exhibition of old maps.
Count’s Tower
La Gomera Ethnographic Park
PEG Los Telares
Los Telares
To learn more about the history of La Gomera,
it is worth visiting the ethnographic park,
consisting of an ecological farm,
botanical garden and old mill
for making gofio. In the house,
located on the farm
contains the largest collection
antiques on the island. During
excursion, which takes place three times in
day: at 10-00, 12-30 and 14-00 you can learn a lot
about the culture of La Gomera, its development
economy, nature. The museum will tell
how the Homero lived and worked.
The ethnographic park is located in
half an hour drive from the seaport
San Sebastian. Entrance ticket price
– 3.5 euros.
Book a tour
Drago de Agalán
In the municipality of Alajero
grows the oldest on La Gomera
dragon tree. It is considered a symbol
islands and depicted on the coat of arms of Alajero.
You can find a dragon tree in the gorge
Tajonaye.
Rock of Roque de Agando
Rock of Roque de Agando
A rock that has become one of the most recognizable symbols of the island of La Gomera and a popular attraction. You can’t walk to the top of the cliffs. Previously, these rocks were popular with climbers, but now they are recognized as a natural monument, and therefore climbing is prohibited on them. There are several hiking trails near the rocks, from where you can see them perfectly. On the top of the rocks, the remains of the sacrificial sanctuaries of the Gomero have been preserved.
Video: Agando Rock
Viewpoints
Viewpoints of La Gomera worthy
special attention. On the most picturesque
25 observation decks have been equipped on the island’s locations
sites, many of them adapted
for people with limited mobility.
Examination list
Venues:
Mirador de La Lomada del Camello – offers a magnificent view of Tenerife and Mount Teide rising above the clouds.
Mirador de El Sombrero – Stepped terraces are visible from the observation deck, where locals grow their crops.
Mirador de La Laja is an observation deck on the way to the Garajonay National Park, from where you can observe a unique natural phenomenon known as the sea of clouds.
Mirador de La Curva del Queso is an observation deck from where you can see the town of Baja del Secreto, where important historical events took place. It was in this place that the locals executed the governor, Hernan Peras, because of his unworthy behavior. His wife, in order to take revenge, executed all the homeroes over 15 years old.
Mirador de La Punta – a beautiful view of the picturesque village and the sea coast.
Mirador del Almendrillo – you can see the slopes of the mountains, on which grows the endangered sabinas shrub, known for its light and very hard wood.
Mirador de La Retama – offers a view of the mountain slopes with natural terraces that were created by the action of the wind.
Mirador de Los Manaderos – view of the reservoir and Chejelipes dam. This is one of four reservoirs with a capacity of 630 thousand cubic meters. m., providing the island with water.
Mirador de Punta de Belete – overlooks the mountain slopes where goats usually herd and the local village where cheese is made.
Mirador de La Punta de Alcalá – view of the cliffs located in the south of the island.
Mirador de La Ladera de La Rama – mountain views.
Mirador de La Hila – a picturesque view of the sea and the marina, where boats and boats are moored.
Mirador de Igualero – mountain views.
Paisaje de Abrante is an observation deck in the north of the island, from where you can see amazing landscapes in red tones. Picturesque red dunes, erosion processes and vanishing sparse vegetation. The red color of the soil is due to the high content of iron oxide in the soil.
Mirador de Roque Blanco – Mountain views on the border of the Garajonay park.
Mirador de Barranco de La Palmita – view of the valley, located near the Garajonay National Park.
Mirador de Tagaragunche – observation deck on the site of the former gomero sanctuary. It used to be a place of pilgrimage for the locals. The observation deck is located next to the chapel of San Isidro.
Mirador de San Lorenzo is an observation deck at the chapel of San Lorenzo, which offers an excellent view of one of the largest mountains of the island de la Fortaleza de Chipude and the Barranco de Erque gorge.
Mirador de Las Trincheras – overlooking Playa Santiago, cliffs and sea.
Mirador de San Juan – view of the Ermigua valley, where villages and terraces are located. You can also see the church.
Mirador de La Carbonera – offers views of the Garajonay National Park.
Mirador de El Moralito – view of the mountain ranges and gorges.
Mirador de El Santo is an observation deck with a magnificent view of the coast.
Mirador de El Palmarejo – View of Valle Gran Rei and palm groves where guarapero juice and dates are harvested.
Mirador de San Antonio – mountain view.
Mirador de Abrante Mirador de Almendrillo Mirador de El Sombrero
10 things to do
to do on the island of La Gomera
Visit the observation deck Sagrado Corazon de Jesus , from where you can enjoy a magnificent view of the Teide volcano.
Take a walk along one of the hiking trails of La Gomera.
Try local cuisine and palm honey.
Walk through the Garajonay park.
Enjoy a natural bath on the beach of Vallermoso.
Visit the village of Hermigua.
Visit the restaurant Mirador de Abrante and take a photo on its glass observation deck.
Go to the observation deck of Los Roques.
Admire the cliffs of Los Organos on a boat trip.
Buy local palm honey for souvenirs.
Kitchen and restaurants
The cuisine of La Gomera has common features with
other islands of the archipelago, but has
and their own characteristics.
Watercress cream soup with salted ribs and millet. Roasted goat leg with smoked cheese toast. Palm honey. Rice with fried bananas. Gofio. Sweets. The cuisine of La Gomera contains the essence of those who lived on the island at different times and reflects their way of life.
Of particular interest is palm
honey is delicious and healthy. Represents
a well-boiled palm honey.
It is added to many local dishes.
cuisine and even alcohol – in combination
with vodka it turns out very original
cocktail.
The spicy snack is also worth trying
Almogrote, made with goat cheese
fried tomatoes and spices. If a
like it, you can buy a jar of
yourself.
Mistela liqueur prepared from white
wine made from local grapes
and palm honey. drink pretty
strong and tasty.
All this is traditional cuisine
on La Gomera, many local products,
such as almogrote sauces, palm
honey, liquor, wines, goat cheese produce
local companies on the island.
Of course, the cuisine of La Gomera includes many fish dishes.
Cheese is one of the most basic products
on La Gomera. It is made from raw
goat milk or a mixture of goat and
sheep. Cheese is used for
preparation of many dishes and served,
as a separate meal. He has
excellent taste and intense aroma.
Cheeses are made according to traditional technology,
just like centuries ago.
Gofio is another local product
which is millet flour and
wheat, sometimes mixed with barley and
other cereals.
La Gomera produces grape wines, since 2003 they have all had a denomination of origin La-Gomera . Mostly white wine is produced on the island, they have an intense aroma and a pleasant taste. Red wines are also made, they have a ruby color and a soft fruity aroma.
Some of the best local restaurants in La Gomera are Mango , La Tasca , La Cuevita , La Zula , Las Rosas , Roque Blanco , Los Chorros de Epina , Mirador del Palmarejo . Fans of sea delicacies and fish should visit the El Descansillo restaurant, which is considered one of the best. You can eat inexpensively and satisfyingly in the restaurant La Molina . Also on La Gomera there are a lot of establishments with Spanish, international cuisines, pizzerias, vegetarian restaurants.
Official website: lagomera.es
Car rental La Gomera San Sebastian Ferry Port
What you need to know about renting a car in La Gomera San Sebastian Ferry Port, Spain?
If you want to choose the best option, start your car search as early as possible. Compare options, check the required documents and study the requirements of the companies. Be sure to ask anything that’s bothering you, questions can be asked at [email protected]. When you travel, check your rental car carefully and make sure you have your rental voucher and the address of the representatives you are renting the car from. Also, be sure to specify whether you need an international driver’s license and a personalized Credit Card (It often happens that car rental companies do not accept Debit cards or cash, be careful!).
How can I get cheap car rental in La Gomera San Sebastian Ferry Port, Spain?
Avoid renting a car without comparing rental conditions, especially if demand is high, such as at airports or hotels. You need to find the best location for cheap car rentals. Of course, it’s always worth checking out a few locations and comparing them all (for example, the city center and the nearest airport). Usually car rental on holidays is more expensive.
How much is renting a car in La Gomera San Sebastian Ferry Port, Spain?
There are several reasons why a car rental price is determined. First of all, the earlier you start looking for a car before the date of receipt, the more profitable offers you will receive and the more chances there will be at least some kind of car. Don’t do it in the last minutes, and even more so don’t expect a discount if less than 1 day is left before the rental date. The second reason is the day of your arrival. This will affect the price – the lowest price will be on a weekday. Avoid additional costs that should not be hidden from you when renting a car. To do this, carefully read the voucher with the conditions for receiving the car.
What is the most popular rental car brand in La Gomera San Sebastian Ferry Port in Spain?
Of course, if you want to rent a car, in most cases you will not be able to choose the specific model that will be given to you. But in the car rental industry, there are five cars that are the most popular worldwide: Chevrolet Cruze, Chrysler 200, Nissan Altima, Toyota Camry and Toyota Corolla. Therefore, if you need to travel frequently for work or just travel for pleasure, you can choose one of them.
What is the cheapest car rental company in La Gomera San Sebastian Ferry Port, Spain?
As someone said, in life you have to try everything, especially when dealing with the particular world of car rental. To get the best deal, you have to do a lot of research from the wide variety of options and offers. See the top list of leading companies on our website, choose the best offer for you and you can get the cheapest car.
What is the best car rental company in La Gomera San Sebastian Ferry Port, Spain?
To choose one of the best car rental companies, you must compare important facts about all offers, such as security deposit, insurance cost and conditions, mileage or geography limits. After reading all the conditions, you will choose the best car rental agency. It should contain one or two great promotional offers, great prices, and offers that other vendors don’t offer. Also, if necessary, companies should have programs that allow you to rent a car for a few hours. But there is a general rule – the minimum rental period is 4 hours!
Which car rental companies will pick you up at the airport: La Gomera San Sebastian Ferry Port, Spain?
A free shuttle service is available at the airport around the clock. They pick up passengers at special stops. Usually this is a shuttle bus or a personal meeting with a sign at the airport. If you have a need, they will bring you back, and sometimes even bring the car directly to the airport. Try to find the most suitable car rental location in our long list of offers.
How can I find car rentals near me in La Gomera San Sebastian Ferry Port, Spain?
To find the best car rental partner near you, you need to compare their list. Also pay attention to the best rates for car rental in different places. Use the pages for your region to find out which car rental companies are near you. Try to work with vendors that primarily have a wide range of car rental classes.
What type of car is best for driving in La Gomera San Sebastian Ferry Port, Spain?
If you want to choose a car that exactly matches your needs, try to make a short list of your expectations. Think about your passengers, how comfortable they will be while riding. Notify the company about booking a car of a suitable class. Check out the safety and fuel economy features if that’s important to you.
La Gomera San Sebastian Ferry Port, Spain – what are the prices for petrol? What fuel policy is available?
You should be aware of the fuel policy and prices of petrol or diesel because it means that you have probably chosen the right car and will not be overloaded. You will know how much fuel you pay for using the car. Controlling everything is a guarantee that you won’t be overwhelmed by extra charges and refueling when you return your car. You can pay for services in various ways: using cash, credit card (Visa, Maestro, MasterCard), ATM or just PayPass.
Where is the best place to park in La Gomera San Sebastian Ferry Port, Spain?
Before you start driving, you need to think about which parking spaces you will use. Also take notes with parking information. There are several ways to park, such as parking or special parking on the sidewalk, because regular parking on the street is more difficult to find. Especially in tourist cities
What is the right age to rent a car? How old do I have to be to rent a car?
Many landlords make strict restrictions on the driver’s age when renting a car. They can also charge a young driver an additional fee if he is not only under 18 years old, but even if he is under 25 years old. It doesn’t matter how old you are, but it’s important to be aware of all age requirements, especially if you’re under 21. And do not forget that this can affect the cost of booking a car, even if you are under 25 years old. It often happens that different car rental companies set different age requirements and take different additional insurance amounts for a young driver.
Do I need car rental insurance?
When renting a car, pay attention to the insurance cover and do your research beforehand. This will affect your choice of insurance coverage that is best for you. Ask about your personal responsibility, find protection from damage and injury. In most cases, insurance is already included in the car rental price, but it happens that it is not included, this is always indicated in the rental voucher and when booking the car in a special information form.
Can I book with unlimited mileage when renting a car in La Gomera San Sebastian Ferry Port, Spain?
Whether you’re traveling for business or pleasure, you can benefit from car rental with unlimited mileage. Often, car rental agencies most often apply mileage limits to certain vehicle classes. Thus, this can be the determining factor in the car rental you should choose.
Can I rent a car one way in La Gomera San Sebastian Ferry Port, Spain and drop it off in another city?
Yes, most companies offer this service for an additional fee. If you want to rent a car in one location and drop it off in another city, you can pay a one-way rental fee. But be sure to find out what you need to know about this payment. For example, car rental companies charge a one-way fee to cover the cost of returning a car.
La Gomera San Sebastian Ferry Port, Spain – wonderful long journeys
If you want to be lucky enough to make one of the great road trips, you need to rent a car. All you need is to be excited about a good trip. To be able to drive on the open road, get your own car, stop and go whenever you want. Just get inspired for your next adventure and rent a car for the long haul.
Where is the best place to spend the night on a rented car?
If you’re thinking of a short trip, driving a car can be a surprisingly cheap adventure. In this case, you can spend a lot of money on a hotel or motel. If you want even cheaper – try to explore the campsite.
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«Las Palmas» redirige aquí. Para otras acepciones, véase Las Palmas (desambiguación).
Plaza de Santa Ana
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria es una ciudad y municipio español, capital de la isla de Gran Canaria, de la provincia de Las Palmas y de la comunidad autónoma de Canarias (capitalidad compartida con Santa Cruz de Tenerife). Con una población de &&&&&&&&&0381223.&&&&&0381 223 habitantes en 2020,[5] es la ciudad más poblada de Canarias y la novena de toda España.
La ciudad fue fundada en 1478, siendo considerada la capital de facto del archipiélago canario hasta el siglo XVII.[6] Es sede de la delegación del gobierno de España, así como de su correspondiente subdelegación provincial, de la presidencia del gobierno de Canarias en períodos legislativos alternos con Santa Cruz de Tenerife, de la presidencia del Tribunal Superior de Justicia de Canarias,[7] de la diócesis de Canarias (que engloba a la provincia de Las Palmas),[8] del Consejo Económico y Social de Canarias,[9] así como otras instituciones de diversa importancia como la Casa África. El carnaval de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria es uno de los eventos más importantes de Canarias, y goza de una importante proyección nacional e internacional.
Los municipios colindantes a la ciudad forman un área metropolitana de más de 600 000 habitantes, constituyendo el área metropolitana más grande de Canarias y novena de España.[10] El municipio tiene una extensión de 100,55 km² (ISTAC, 2003). Su altitud es de 8 metros sobre el nivel del mar (en la parte más meridional). El clima es de escasas precipitaciones, con una temperatura media de unos 22 °C.
La ciudad cuenta con infraestructuras de diversas épocas históricas. La catedral de Canarias, situada en el barrio de Vegueta es un edificio emblemático de la ciudad. En cuanto a edificios modernos, destaca el auditorio Alfredo Kraus, en el cual se realizan eventos internacionales y nacionales. Está situado junto a la playa de las Canteras y fue nombrado en honor al tenor Alfredo Kraus, nacido en la ciudad. También el teatro Pérez Galdós es un edificio emblemático de la ciudad, reformado recientemente. Otra muestra es la torre Woermann, un buen ejemplo de arquitectura contemporánea en la ciudad, que con sus 76 metros destaca en la ciudad como uno de los edificios más altos.
Índice
1 Geografía
1.1 Clima
1.2 Playas
1.3 Espacios verdes
2 Historia
2.1 Fundación
2.2 Ataques piratas
2.3 Historia reciente
3 Demografía
3.1 Área metropolitana
4 Administración y política
4.1 Gobierno municipal
4.2 Organización territorial
4.3 Barrios
4.3.1 Vegueta y Triana
4.3.2 El Puerto
4.4 Representación consular
5 Servicios
5.1 Educación
5.1.1 Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
5.1.2 Centros escolares internacionales
5.1.3 Institutos de educación complementarios
5.2 Sanidad
5.3 Transporte
5.3.1 Guaguas
5. 3.2 MetroGuagua
5.3.3 Bicicleta
5.3.4 Ferrocarril
6 Patrimonio
7 Cultura
7.1 Teatros
7.2 Auditorios y palacios de congresos
7.3 Museos y salas de exposiciones
7.4 Festivales
7.5 Fiestas
7.6 Bibliotecas
7.7 Patronazgo de la ciudad
7.8 Bajada de la Virgen del Pino
7.9 Ocio nocturno
7.10 Deportes
7.11 Ciudades hermanadas
8 Véase también
9 Notas
10 Referencias
11 Bibliografía
12 Enlaces externos
Clima[editar]
Según la universidad de Syracuse, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria es la ciudad con el mejor clima del mundo.[11] Este estudio, publicado en 1996, analiza 600 ciudades con popularidad como destino turístico. Se basa en variables climáticas como la temperatura media anual, que en la capital grancanaria es de 22 °C. A este benigno clima contribuye el hecho de que la ciudad se extienda linealmente entre dos franjas costeras (por un lado, el eje avenida Marítima/playa de Las Alcaravaneras; por otro, la playa de las Canteras): la doble brisa que se recibe de ambas permite una mejor limpieza de la contaminación y una mayor refrigeración ambiental.
La ciudad presenta un clima árido cálido (BWh) de acuerdo con la clasificación climática de Köppen, altamente influenciado por los vientos alisios. Debido a la variabilidad geográfica y climática del municipio de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, este presenta otros cuatro tipos de clima, dándose en el siguiente orden conforme nos alejamos del mar y por tanto se incrementa la altitud: El clima semiárido cálido (BSh), el clima semiárido frío (BSk), el clima mediterráneo (Csa) y el clima oceánico mediterráneo (Csb).[12]Los inviernos de la ciudad están justo por encima de la media para ser considerado un clima tropical (18 °C de media en enero, el mes más frío). Unido a la situación del archipiélago junto al trópico de Cáncer, estos factores proporcionan a Las Palmas de Gran Canaria temperaturas medias de 19 °C en invierno y 25 °C en verano. Los vientos alisios —llegados del norte europeo— traen aire fresco y húmedo. Las nubes procedentes del continente filtran los rayos solares y la corriente marina de aguas frías del Golfo regula las oscilaciones térmicas.
El clima de la ciudad es, según un estudio realizado por el climatólogo Thomas Whitmore en 1996, el más «agradable» de las 600 ciudades del mundo analizadas en dicho estudio.[13]
A continuación se muestran los valores climatológicos registrados en la estación meteorológica del aeropuerto de Gran Canaria en el periodo 1981-2010 excepto las extremas, que son del periodo 1951-2016. A pesar de que la estación está a unos 18 km de la ciudad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (en el municipio de Ingenio), los valores registrados en esta estación pueden tomarse de referencia para describir el clima de la ciudad.
Parámetros climáticos promedio de Observatorio del Aeropuerto de Gran Canaria (municipio de Ingenio) (24 m s. n. m.) (Periodo de referencia: 1981-2010, extremas: 1951-2016)
Mes
Ene.
Feb.
Mar.
Abr.
May.
Jun.
Jul.
Ago.
Sep.
Oct.
Nov.
Dic.
Anual
Temp. máx. abs. (°C)
29.4
29.5
34.0
34.3
36.0
36.2
39.0
44.2
39.0
36.9
36.0
30.4
44.2
Temp. máx. media (°C)
20.8
21.2
22.3
22.6
23.6
25.3
26.9
27.5
27.2
26.2
24. 2
22.2
24.2
Temp. media (°C)
18.0
18.4
19.2
19.4
20.4
22.2
23.8
24.5
24.3
23.1
21.1
19.3
21.3
Temp. mín. media (°C)
15.3
15.6
16.2
16.3
17.3
19.2
20.8
21.6
21.4
20.1
18.1
16.5
18.2
Temp. mín. abs. (°C)
8.0
7.5
6.5
9.0
11.3
12.0
14.8
16.0
14.6
14.0
7.0
9.7
6.5
Precipitación total (mm)
25.1
24.4
12.5
5.9
1.1
0.3
0.1
0.4
9.1
16.0
22.4
31.3
151.3
Días de precipitaciones (≥ 1 mm)
3. 1
3.0
2.3
1.3
0.3
0.1
0.0
0.1
1.1
2.3
3.9
4.5
22.1
Horas de sol
184.0
191.0
228.7
227.7
272.0
284.1
307.8
300.4
241.5
220.1
185.4
179.2
2821.9
Humedad relativa (%)
65
66
64
64
65
66
65
66
68
69
67
68
66
Fuente: Agencia Estatal de Meteorología[14][15]
Playas[editar]
Playa de Las Canteras
La ciudad cuenta con cinco playas, de las cuales la más importante es la de Las Canteras. Ubicada en el norte de la ciudad, la singularidad de esta playa de arena dorada reside fundamentalmente en su barra, un arrecife calcáreo de más de 100 000 años de antigüedad. La barra casi recorre los 3100 metros de longitud de la playa en paralelo a la orilla y a una distancia de 200 metros, por lo que constituye un rompeolas natural y proporciona unas aguas siempre calmas en buena parte de ella. Con una temperatura media anual de 21° – 20° en el agua-, posee además un ecosistema único, con diferentes hábitats y abundante riqueza piscícola.
Las Canteras es la playa urbana más importante del Archipiélago Canario y una de las más destacadas de Europa. Así lo acredita el certificado UNE-EN ISO 14001, concedido por AENOR en junio de 2004. Está bien conectada mediante transporte público y durante todo el año se organizan actividades de ocio y esparcimiento en ella.[16] Las otras cuatro playas que tiene la capital son Las Alcaravaneras, El Confital, San Cristóbal y La Laja. Además, la playa de Las Canteras cuenta con el certificado UNE-EN ISO 14001, de AENOR, que solo poseen en España las playas de La Concha –en San Sebastián– y La Victoria –en Cádiz– por la implantación de un sistema para la gestión integral del Medio Ambiente. La otra playa más concurrida de la ciudad es Las Alcaravaneras, está situada junto al Muelle Deportivo y dentro de las aguas del Puerto de la Luz, que está enmarcada entre dos clubes náuticos.
Espacios verdes[editar]
La ciudad posee diversos parques y plazas como los de Santa Catalina, San Telmo, Doramas y Romano, a los que se han ido sumando otros más recientes como el Parque de Las Rehoyas (con 100 000 m²) y el Parque Juan Pablo II (con 120 000 m²), el mayor parque de Canarias. Y el último en añadirse a la lista es el Parque de La Mayordomía, en el barrio de Tamaraceite. Este espacio municipal ocupa 3728 metros cuadrados y cuenta con 35 parcelas de 27 metros cuadrados para la gestión y cultivo. Este huerto urbano que se encuentra dentro del parque, viene a ampliar la ya significativa cifra de los existentes en la ciudad como los habilitados de El Polvorín, El Pambaso, Siete Palmas y Pino Apolinario, además de otro que se ejecuta en estos momentos en el barrio de El Lasso, en el Distrito Vegueta-Cono Sur-Tafira. La ciudad dispone actualmente de seis huertos urbanos y avanza para contar con siete, unas áreas que persiguen el fomento del desarrollo sostenible y la calidad medioambiental, resaltando a su vez el clima acogedor y participativo de la ciudad.[17]
La ciudad dispone de 22 zonas verdes propiamente dichas. Además, cuenta con varias plazas y alamedas. Entre otros destacan:[18]
Jardín botánico Viera y Clavijo
Parque de Las Rehoyas
Parque de ocio en Cuesta Ramón
Parque Doramas
Parque urbano de Siete Palmas (Parque Juan Pablo II)
Parque urbano de La Ballena
Fundación[editar]
Escultura de 1892 representando a Cristóbal Colón
Ermita de San Antonio Abad. Según la tradición, rezó Colón en ella en 1492
Los orígenes fundacionales de la ciudad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria se remontan al año 1478, concretamente al 24 de junio (día de San Juan), momento en el cual Juan Rejón, capitán de la Corona de Castilla, inició la conquista de la isla de Gran Canaria. Esta comenzó en la desembocadura del barranco de Guiniguada, donde asentó el El Real de Las Palmas y hoy es el barrio de Vegueta.
La lucha se prolongó por un periodo de cinco años, costando un gran número de vidas, sobre todo en el bando aborigen, que carecía de medios suficientes para defenderse frente a los ejércitos enviados por los Reyes Católicos. Aun así, la resistencia fue feroz. El final de la conquista llegaría en 1483, con la incorporación de la isla a la Corona de Castilla por parte de Pedro de Vera, quien logró el sometimiento de los aborígenes de Gáldar en la zona noroeste de la isla.[cita requerida]
En 1485 se trasladó la diócesis desde El Rubicón (Lanzarote) hasta el Real de Las Palmas. La importancia de la ciudad crecería paulatinamente, constituyéndose el Obispado de Canarias, el primer Tribunal de la Santa Inquisición, la Real Audiencia de Canarias y la residencia de Capitanes Generales de Canarias. Aunque la capitalidad, tal y como se entiende a partir del siglo XIX, no existía como tal en el Archipiélago, dado que la Residencia del Capitán General estaba en Las Palmas se puede considerar que esta fue la capital de Canarias durante parte de los siglos XVI y XVII; después, aunque sin significado jurídico y real, continuó siendo considerada capital honorífica del archipiélago canario. [6]
Prueba de la importancia que fue adquiriendo la urbe es la escala que realizó Cristóbal Colón en agosto de 1492 para efectuar unas reparaciones en el timón de la nave Pinta, además de cambiar el velamen original de La Niña (las velas triangulares por unas cuadradas, hecho que la convirtió en la carabela más rápida de la expedición), antes de partir hacia La Gomera. Esta fue la penúltima escala antes del descubrimiento de América.[cita requerida]
Durante estos primeros siglos de vida, la ciudad se convirtió en un punto muy activo económicamente, debido sobre todo al comercio de la caña de azúcar. En el siglo XVII se produjo una recesión a causa del freno que sufrieron las exportaciones agrarias tanto a América como a Europa. Durante la época de esplendor se asistió a numerosos ataques piráticos, que se prolongaron en el tiempo hasta el siglo XVIII.[cita requerida]
Ataques piratas[editar]
Castillo de la Luz, o de Las Isletas. Fue el primer castillo construido en la isla de Gran Canaria
Plano de la ciudad realizado en 1792 por Luis Marquell
Desde finales del siglo XV, la ciudad se hallaba defendida solo por una fortaleza, enclavada en las montañas de la península de La Isleta. Este fortín, a cinco kilómetros de la urbe, en las inmediaciones de donde hoy se levanta el castillo de la Luz, era el más próximo para asistirla en caso de ataque. Tal precariedad defensiva se mantuvo hasta los últimos decenios del siglo XVI, cuando ya se había hecho notar la amenaza de corsarios y flotillas extranjeras. Desde entonces se empieza a dotar a la ciudad de un sistema de fortificaciones más apropiado. Así, se levantaron pequeños baluartes en el litoral, de los que ha llegado hasta nuestros días el Torreón de San Pedro Mártir, conocido popularmente como «Castillo de San Cristóbal», del año 1577. De esta misma época datan las murallas que cerraban la ciudad por sus flancos norte y sur, que vinieron a marcar los límites a su expansión urbana. Aún hoy se conservan algunos restos de ellas, justo en las cercanías del llamado castillo de Mata, hoy restaurado y convertido en el museo de la ciudad.
Ataque del corsario Pieter van der Does a la ciudad. Grabado neerlandés del siglo XVII
Estas fortificaciones no hicieron desistir a la escuadra de navíos ingleses, comandada por John Hawkins y Francis Drake, que a finales del siglo XVI (1595) pretendió sin éxito desembarcar en el litoral de Las Palmas con la intención de saquearla. Aquel ataque supuso el primer combate de la desastrosa expedición inglesa contra la América española, que acabaría en una estrepitosa derrota inglesa, costando la vida tanto a Drake como a Hawkins. Tampoco arredraron a la Gran Armada holandesa, mandada por el almirante Pieter van der Does, que se presentó ante la ciudad el 26 de junio de 1599. En esta ocasión, Las Palmas fue asediada durante dos días y finalmente, tras duros y cruentos combates, tomada en la tarde del 28 de junio por las fuerzas holandesas, formadas por más de seis mil soldados y 74 navíos. Hostigados por las milicias isleñas, que consiguieron hacerles frente y ganarles algunas batallas, los invasores permanecieron en la ciudad algunos días más. Durante este tiempo, saquearon la catedral de Canarias dedicada a Santa Ana, patrona principal de la ciudad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, las Casas Consistoriales, conventos y numerosas iglesias, así como algunas casas privadas y mansiones. Finalmente, el 4 de julio, después de sufrir la derrota en la batalla de El Batán, a manos de las fuerzas grancanarias que los emboscaron en el barranco de Santa Brígida los holandeses tuvieron que marcharse, no sin antes proceder al incendio de la ciudad. Las llamas afectaron a numerosas casas, conventos, hospitales, ermitas e iglesias y edificios públicos, algunos de los cuales quedaron completamente destruidos. También se perdieron numerosas obras de arte, entre ellas los retablos, altares e imaginería de la catedral. Sin embargo, no se pudo destruir el templo catedralicio gracias a la solidez de su construcción. Fue esta, por tanto, la mayor invasión en la historia de la ciudad.[19]
Historia reciente[editar]
Movimiento portuario. A lo lejos, el ferry Volcán de Tijarafe
Puerto de La Luz desde la zona del Parque de Santa Catalina
Panorámica de la ciudad con la playa de Las Canteras al fondo
En el siglo XIX se produjo un hecho de importancia vital para la economía de la ciudad: la instauración de los puertos francos. Se trataba de un régimen económico especial que favorecía las relaciones comerciales del archipiélago. Ello hizo que numerosos barcos y navieras recalaran en la isla, sembrando la semilla de lo que posteriormente se convertiría en la principal fuente de riqueza de la actualidad: el turismo. De este interés inicial por el turismo nace en 1890 el primer hotel de Gran Canaria, el hotel Santa Catalina, que en la actualidad sigue abierto y tras su renovación de 2019 obtuvo el galardón de mejor hotel histórico de lujo de Europa.
En 1927, un real decreto de la dictadura de Miguel Primo de Rivera puso fin a la provincia de Canarias. Ello supuso el nacimiento de las nuevas provincias de Santa Cruz de Tenerife y Las Palmas. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria se convirtió en capital de esta última, que integró a las islas de Gran Canaria, Lanzarote y Fuerteventura. Con esta medida se intentó poner fin a la lucha por el control económico y político de las islas que hizo nacer el llamado pleito insular.
Francisco Franco, como general de división comandante militar de las Islas Canarias, después de declarar el Estado de Guerra en todo el archipiélago partió el 18 de julio de 1936 desde Las Palmas de Gran Canaria hacia África, en lo que representó el comienzo de la sublevación que condujo a la guerra civil española. En el hotel Madrid se conserva intacta la habitación en la que hizo noche el general el día anterior al golpe de estado contra la república.
En 1937 y aún en plena guerra civil española, el municipio de San Lorenzo (Gran Canaria) es anexionado a Las Palmas de Gran Canaria tras el fusilamiento de su alcalde Juan Santana Vega y parte del consistorio electo durante la II República, quedando este reducido a un mero distrito de la capital insular, pasándose por alto la Ley de Municipal de 1935. [20]
Varios lustros después de la finalización de la Segunda Guerra Mundial se notaron ciertos síntomas de recuperación turística, que se materializaron en la Navidad de 1957 cuando aterrizó en el aeropuerto de Gran Canaria, un avión de la compañía sueca Transair AB con 54 pasajeros. Acababa de iniciarse la era del turismo, principal motor económico de la isla y del archipiélago canario en la actualidad. Durante los años 70 y 80, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria perdió su carácter turístico en beneficio de los municipios del sur de la isla.
Tras la restauración democrática de 1977, la ciudad ha tenido alcaldes de distinto signo, si bien solo Juan Rodríguez Doreste (PSOE) y José Manuel Soria López (PP) han disfrutado de mandatos duraderos. El actual alcalde de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria es Augusto Hidalgo, del PSOE, elegido en los comicios de 2015 y renovado en los de 2019.
Evolución demográfica de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (1768 – 2019). Fuente: ISTAC[21]
Vista general de la ciudad
En Las Palmas de Gran Canaria residen 378 517 personas (INE, 2018), una población que crece cada mañana por la afluencia de quienes se desplazan desde núcleos urbanos próximos (tales como Telde, Arucas, Gáldar, etc.), para desarrollar sus labores profesionales en la capital insular. Está integrada en el área metropolitana de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria que es la décima de España, con 616 903 habitantes.
Según el estudio de Indicadores Urbanos que elabora el INE, de entre las dos capitales canarias, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria es la que tiene la esperanza de vida más baja con 80,9 años.[22]
Gráfica de evolución demográfica de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria entre 1900 y 2021
Residentes habituales oficiales según los censos de población del ISTAC.[21]
Área metropolitana[editar]
Artículo principal: Área metropolitana de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
El área metropolitana de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria es la más poblada de Canarias. Puede distinguirse un primer anillo inmediato y otro más amplio. El primero incluye los municipios limítrofes (Telde, Arucas, Santa Brígida y Teror), con una población de 540 415 habitantes (2005), donde se concentra buena parte de la actividad industrial y comercial de la isla. Por su parte, el anillo más amplio coincide prácticamente con lo que establece la ley de grandes ciudades, abarcando un radio de 20 km: dentro de este anillo habitan 619 565 personas. Si tomamos como referencia las conurbaciones norte, sur y centro de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria con otras localidades de la isla, esta cifra asciende a más de 700 000 habitantes.
Administración y política[editar]
Gobierno municipal[editar]
Artículo principal: Alcalde de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Oficinas municipales
El municipio de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria está gobernado por el Ayuntamiento de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, cuyos representantes se eligen cada cuatro años por sufragio universal de todos los ciudadanos españoles y de la Unión Europea mayores de 18 años de edad que estén empadronados en el término municipal. En las elecciones del 24 de mayo de 2015 ganó el Partido Popular, con diez concejales de 29, seguido por el Partido Socialista con siete concejales, otros seis concejales para Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Puede, dos concejales para Ciudadanos, otros dos concejales para Nueva Canarias y, por último, dos concejales para Unidos por Gran Canaria. De esta manera el socialista Augusto Hidalgo, con el apoyo de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Puede y Nueva Canarias, se convirtió en alcalde el 13 de junio de 2015,[23] sucediendo a Juan José Cardona, que gobernaba la ciudad con mayoría absoluta entre 2011 y 2015.
Alcaldes desde las elecciones de 1979
Alcalde/sa
Inicio del mandato
Fin del mandato
Partido político
Manuel Bermejo Pérez
1979
1980
Unión del Pueblo Canario (UPC)
Francisco Zumaquero García
1980
1980
Partido Socialista Obrero Español (PSOE)
Juan Rodríguez Doreste
1980
1982
Partido Socialista Obrero Español (PSOE)
Diego Villegas Betancor
1982
1983
Unión de Centro Democrático (UCD)
Juan Rodríguez Doreste
1983
1987
Partido Socialista Obrero Español (PSOE)
Juan Vicente León Fernández
1987
1990
Centro Democrático y Social (CDS)
Emilio Mayoral Fernández
1990
1991
Partido Socialista Obrero Español (PSOE)
Juan Vicente León Fernández
1991
1992
Centro Democrático y Social (CDS)
José Sintes Marrero
1992
1993
Partido Popular (PP)
Emilio Mayoral Fernández
1993
1995
Partido Socialista Obrero Español (PSOE)
José Manuel Soria
1995
2003
Partido Popular (PP)
Josefa Luzardo
2003
2007
Partido Popular (PP)
Jerónimo Saavedra
2007
2011
Partido Socialista Obrero Español (PSOE)
Juan José Cardona
2011
2015
Partido Popular (PP)
Augusto Hidalgo Macario
2015
Actualmente en el cargo
Partido Socialista Obrero Español (PSOE)
Resultados de las elecciones municipales en Las Palmas de Gran Canaria[24]
Partido político
2019
2015
2011
2007
Votos
%
Concejales
Votos
%
Concejales
Votos
%
Concejales
Votos
%
Concejales
Partido Socialista Obrero Español
48 558
31,70
11
33 211
19,75
7
36 615
23,29
9
70 783
41,90
15
Partido Popular
34 004
22,20
7
48 335
28,74
10
68 641
43,27
16
61 255
36,26
12
Unidas Podemos
15 915
10,39
3
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Ciudadanos
14 558
9,50
3
12 955
7,70
2
–
–
–
–
–
–
Nueva Canarias
14 554
9,50
3
12 594
7,49
2
9729
6,12
2
7667
4,54
0
Coalición Canaria
12 833
8,38
2
9360
5,57
2
7708
4,85
0
4449
2,63
0
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Puede (LPGC PUEDE)
–
–
–
27 127
16,13
6
–
–
–
–
–
–
Compromiso por Gran Canaria (CGCa)
–
–
–
5365
3,19
0
11 096
6,98
2
4978
6,70
2
Organización territorial[editar]
Casas en la playa de Las Canteras
La ciudad baja presenta una distribución lineal a lo largo de la costa, con una arteria principal, la Avenida Marítima, que la recorre de una punta a otra. Desde principios del milenio, con la creación de la carretera de circunvalación, muchos puntos de la ciudad son accesibles sin tener que atravesar el centro urbano.
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria está dividida administrativamente en cinco distritos, que a su vez se subdividen en barrios, no necesariamente coincidentes con los barrios tradicionales. Cada uno de los distritos está administrado por una Junta Municipal de Distrito, con competencias centradas en la canalización de la participación ciudadana de los mismos. La última división administrativa de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria data del año 2004 y estructura a la ciudad y su municipio en los siguientes distritos y barrios (datos poblacionales de 2006):
Distritos municipales. Las cifras se corresponden con la enumeración oficial de la izquierda
Dt1 – Vegueta, Cono Sur y Tafira (75 877 hab.): Aglutina cuatro diseminados (La Montañeta, Los Hoyos, Marzagán y Tafira) y a los barrios de Campus Universitario, Casablanca I, Cuesta Ramón, El Batán, El Fondillo, El Lasso, El Secadero, Hoya de La Plata, Jinámar (Fase III), La Calzada, La Cantera, La Data, La Montañeta, Llano de Las Nieves, Llanos de La Barrera, Lomo Blanco, Lomo de Enmedio, Lomo El Sabinal, Lomo Verdejo, Los Hoyos, Marzagán, Mercalaspalmas, Monteluz, Montequemado, Pedro Hidalgo, Pico Viento, Salto del Negro, San Cristóbal, San Francisco de Paula, San Juan-San José, San Roque, Santa Margarita, Tafira Alta, Tafira Baja, Tres Palmas, Vega de San José, Vegueta, Zárate y Zurbarán.
Dt2 – Centro (88 546 hab.): Barrios de Alcaravaneras, Canalejas, Casablanca III, Ciudad del Mar, Ciudad Jardín, Fincas Unidas, La Paterna, Lomo Apolinario, Los Tarahales, Lugo, Miller, Miller Industrial, San Francisco-San Nicolás, Triana; y diseminado de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria.
Dt3 – Isleta-Puerto-Guanarteme (72 345 hab.): Guanarteme, El Confital, El Rincón, El Sebadal, La Isleta, La Puntilla, Las Coloradas, Nueva Isleta, Santa Catalina y Las Canteras.
Dt4 – Ciudad Alta (101 684 hab.): Altavista, Chumberas, Cueva Torres, Díaz Casanova, Don Zoilo, El Cardón, Escaleritas, La Feria, La Minilla, Las Rehoyas, Las Torres, Las Torres Industrial, Rehoyas Altas, San Antonio, San Lázaro (urbanización Siete Palmas) y Schamann.
Dt5 – Tamaraceite-San Lorenzo-Tenoya (39 191 hab.): Diseminados de Almatriche, Los Giles, San Lorenzo, Tamaraceite y Tenoya; y barrios de Almatriche Alto, Almatriche Bajo, Cañada Honda, Casa Ayala, Ciudad del Campo, Costa Ayala, Cruz del Ovejero, Cuevas Blancas, Dragonal Alto, Dragonal Bajo, El Pintor, El Román, El Roque, El Toscón, El Zardo, Hoya Andrea, Isla Perdida, La Cazuela, La Cruz, La Galera, La Milagrosa, La Palma, La Suerte, Ladera Alta, Las Cuevas, Las Majadillas, Las Mesas, Las Perreras, Llanos de María Rivera, Lomo Corcobado, Lomo Los Frailes, Los Giles, Masapez, Piletas, Risco Negro, San José del Álamo, San Lorenzo, Siete Puertas, Tamaraceite y Tenoya.
Barrios[editar]
Artículo principal: Barrios de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Vegueta y Triana[editar]
Cimborrio sobre el crucero de la catedral
Una casa modernista, año 1908, en la calle Mayor de Triana
Se tratan de los barrios fundacionales de la ciudad, y sus calles atesoran un notable patrimonio cultural e histórico-artístico. Vegueta fue el origen de la primera ciudad fundada por la Corona de Castilla en el Atlántico,[25] en un momento histórico inmediatamente anterior a su expansión por tierras americanas. Se explica así que, siendo Las Palmas de Gran Canaria la primera capital de Castilla en las Islas Canarias después de San Marcial del Rubicón Lanzarote y Betancuria en Fuerteventura, se establecieran en Vegueta los edificios de las instituciones político-administrativas que habrían de regir el archipiélago, acompañados por las mansiones y terrenos de los primeros señores. Todo ello motivó el relativamente rápido crecimiento de la urbe en su primera etapa de expansión, lo que llevó a parte de sus habitantes a establecerse al otro margen del barranco de Guiniguada, donde se constituyó el barrio de Triana.[25]
En el barrio de Vegueta se hallan las Casas Consistoriales, la Catedral de Canarias, el Palacio Episcopal, la Casa Regental y la Casa de Colón.
La Catedral de Canarias comenzó a construirse en 1497, y se abrió al culto en 1570. Un gran número de arquitectos participaron en el proyecto, por lo que en su construcción se observan varios estilos arquitectónicos: posee una fachada neoclásica, tiene retablos de estilo barroco y su sacristía es de estilo plateresco. La catedral posee 13 capillas.
La Casa de Colón es un conjunto de varios edificios localizados en el núcleo de la ciudad. La tradición indica que Cristóbal Colón pasó por ella en el primero de sus viajes a América. Destaca la gran portada en la Plaza del Pilar Nuevo, creada por Néstor Álamo. El patio central posee características renacentistas, y en el patio de armas destaca su pozo gótico.
En pleno barrio histórico de Vegueta, desde 1951, la Casa de Colón se ha centrado en estudiar, investigar y difundir la historia de Canarias y sus relaciones con América. Dentro de la misma, el museo, la biblioteca y el centro de estudios especializados, conforman un espacio singular.
Uno de los grandes legados que alberga la Casa de Colón es su colección de pinturas que van del siglo XVI al XIX. Interesantes muestras que van desde tablas flamencas a grabados de Goya.
En concreto se sitúa entre la plaza del Pilarillo Seco y el callejón que lleva a la ermita de San Antonio Abad. Este edificio arquitectónico es muestra de la arquitectura señorial.[26]
Cruzando el barranco de Guiniguada con dirección al Puerto de la Luz se emplaza el barrio de Triana, llamado así por las similitudes que, en sus orígenes, tenía con el barrio homónimo de Sevilla.[25] El barrio se estructuró alrededor de la Calle Mayor de Triana, vía de gran belleza arquitectónica con una gran muestra de edificios modernistas y larga tradición comercial. Cerca de ella se alzan edificios como el Teatro Pérez Galdós, el Gabinete Literario, o la Iglesia de San Francisco.
Se está elaborando una propuesta conjunta para que los barrios de Vegueta y Triana sean declarados Patrimonio Mundial de la Humanidad por la UNESCO. No obstante, desde hace algunos años ya se han venido reconociendo los valores patrimoniales que encierra el casco histórico de la ciudad. Vegueta fue declarada Conjunto Histórico-Artístico Nacional en 1973 y, años más tarde, en 1993, fue reconocido el núcleo histórico de Triana.
El Puerto[editar]
Buque perforador Stena Drillmax atracado en el Puerto de la Luz
Playa de las Canteras. Al fondo, el Auditorio Alfredo Kraus
Con este nombre es popularmente conocida la zona que rodea al Puerto de la Luz y de Las Palmas, uno de los principales motores económicos de la isla. Aquí está el Parque de Santa Catalina, donde se desarrollan algunas de las fiestas de la ciudad como los carnavales. También se halla en esta área la zona comercial de Mesa y López, con numerosos comercios y oficinas, y la Playa de Las Canteras, verdadero pulmón de la ciudad.
Según un estudio llevado a cabo para la revista Mundo Científico, la playa de Las Canteras es una de las mejores playas urbanas del mundo. Su litoral arenoso tienen unos cuatro kilómetros de longitud, extendiéndose desde la Puntilla hasta el Auditorio Alfredo Kraus, donde se celebran anualmente el Festival Internacional de Cine de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, el Festival de Opera y, conjuntamente con Santa Cruz de Tenerife y otras localidades canarias, los conciertos del Festival de Música de Canarias. La playa posee una barra natural a unos 100 metros de la costa, que reduce el oleaje sobre la orilla y conforma un ecosistema muy valioso.
El precio del suelo en esta zona es de los más caros de la ciudad, llegando a superar los 5000 euros/m² en la primera línea del paseo de Las Canteras.[27]
En las proximidades del Puerto encontramos barrios de carácter popular como los de La Isleta, Guanarteme y Alcaravaneras. En este último está enclavada la playa del mismo nombre.
En el año 2011, el Puerto de la Luz, uno de los más importantes de España, fue galardonado por la prestigiosa revista internacional Dream World Cruise Destinations con el premio al puerto con la mejor conexión, ofertas de transporte, hoteles, manejo de equipajes y nivel turístico mundial, consolidándose la ciudad como uno de los mejores destinos turísticos de este tipo.[28]
También cuenta con el acuario Poema del Mar, perteneciente a la empresa tinerfeña Loro Parque.[29]
Representación consular[editar]
Los consulados con sede en Las Palmas de Gran Canaria son:[30]
Alemania
Austria
Bélgica
Bolivia
Brasil
Cabo Verde (preferente)
Chile
Colombia
Corea
Cuba
El Salvador
Estados Unidos
Finlandia
Francia
Grecia
Guatemala
Guinea Bissau
Guinea Conakri
Guinea Ecuatorial
Irlanda
Islandia
Italia
Japón
Luxemburgo
Marruecos
Mauritania
Nicaragua
Noruega
Panamá
Paraguay
Perú
Portugal
Reino Unido
Rusia
Senegal
Serbia
Suecia
Suiza
Togo
Uruguay
Educación[editar]
Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria[editar]
Artículo principal: Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
La ULPGC fue creada el 23 de abril de 1989 a partir de la Universidad Politécnica de Canarias y de varios centros hasta ese momento adscritos a la Universidad de La Laguna. Cuenta en la actualidad con cerca de 23 000 alumnos.
Centros escolares internacionales[editar]
Los centros escolares internacionales de la ciudad son el Deutsche Schule Las Palmas o Colegio Oficial Alemán de las Palmas de Gran Canaria,[31] The British School of Gran Canaria o colegio británico;[32] y el Colegio Americano de Las Palmas.[33]Además el Liceo Francés de Gran Canaria se encuentra en la vecina ciudad de Telde.[34]
También contó con el Colegio Japonés de Las Palmas, un colegio japonés en el extranjero.[35] Localizada en Tafira Baja, se abrió en el octubre de 1973; fue el colegio japonés más antiguo de España y el tercero más antiguo de Europa.[36] Se cerró permanentemente en el marzo de 2001.[37]
Institutos de educación complementarios[editar]
La Escuela Complementaria Japonesa de Las Palmas, un instituto complementario japonés a tiempo parcial para nacionales japoneses, tenía clases de japonés. [38]
Sanidad[editar]
En Las Palmas de Gran Canaria se encuentran los tres hospitales generales de la isla de Gran Canaria. El Hospital Universitario de Gran Canaria Doctor Negrín, atiende a toda la ciudad salvo el cono sur, además de atender a la población del norte, oeste y las medianías de la isla (excepto Valsequillo). En el cono sur se encuentra el Complejo Hospitalario Materno-Insular, constituido por el Hospital Universitario Insular de Gran Canaria, que además de atender a los barrios cercanos atiende a la población del este y el sur grancanarios, y por el Hospital Universitario Materno-Infantil de Canarias Ambas instituciones están afiliados a la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. La ciudad también cuenta con centros de salud públicos así como varías clínicas privadas.
Transporte[editar]
Guaguas[editar]
Vehículo articulado de Guaguas Municipales
Máquina para recargar y retirar la tarjeta LPA movilidad
El servicio de guaguas, nombre local por el que se conocen los autobuses en Canarias, es ofrecido por la empresa Guaguas Municipales y cuenta con una estación principal (La Estación de San Telmo, compartida con la empresa de transporte interurbano Global), dos terminales especiales (Teatro y Manuel Becerra, conocida como Puerto) y cuatro intercambiadores (Santa Catalina y Tamaraceite, compartido con Global; Hoya de la Plata y Auditorio Alfredo Kraus, conocido como Auditorio).
Guaguas Municipales ofrece 40 líneas de transporte urbano,[39] que recorren tanto la parte baja como la alta de la ciudad. Las líneas principales son la 1 (Teatro – Puerto), 2 (Guiniguada – Puerto), 12 (Puerto – Hoya de la Plata), la 17 (Teatro – Auditorio), las líneas 25 y 26 (Auditorio y Santa Catalina – Campus Universitario), 33 (Guiniguada – Puerto, por Ciudad Alta), la 47 (Puerto – Tamaraceite) y la 91 (Teatro-Tamaraceite, por Siete Palmas y La Feria). Además, existen tres líneas de servicio nocturno, denominado Luna. L1 (Hoya Plata – Santa Puerto), L2 (Santa Catalina – Teatro, por Ciudad Alta) y L3 (Teatro – Tamaraceite). Las 3 líneas Luna tienen correspondencia en el Teatro para facilitar el transporte nocturno por la ciudad y funcionan de 23:00 a 05:00.
Global, compañía de guaguas interurbanas, posee 110 líneas,[40] muchas con origen o destino a la capital. Esta compañía surgió en el año 2000, producto de la fusión de las anteriores compañías interurbanas Salcai (concesión sur-sureste) y Utinsa (concesión norte-centro).
Existe también un servicio de Guagua Turística, que recorre los sitios de mayor interés turístico de la ciudad con guía en varios idiomas. El vehículo cuenta con dos plantas, una inferior cerrada y la superior abierta. Desde ella se puede divisar la ciudad, sus monumentos, museos, centros comerciales con una panorámica de 360º a 4 m de altura. La guagua cuenta con un sistema de audio multilingüe individual que ofrece la información en 8 idiomas.[41] La Guagua Turística es una de las mejores alternativas para conocer la ciudad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria en un solo día. Presta sus servicios de lunes a domingo y comienza a las 9.30 horas y termina a las 18:00. Cada 30 minutos parte una unidad desde el Parque Santa Catalina. El ticket -que se puede adquirir en la propia guagua- vale para todo el día y permite subir y bajar libremente en las paradas.[42]
MetroGuagua[editar]
La MetroGuagua es un autobús de tránsito rápido (BRT),[43] recorrerá 11,7 km a lo largo de la ciudad y dispondrá de 21 paradas y tres estaciones entre Hoya de La Plata (sur) y la plaza Manuel Becerra (norte). Irá a una velocidad media de 20 kilómetros por hora frente a los 11 que alcanzan las guaguas actuales, con una frecuencia de paso de entre 4 y 5 minutos. Estará dotada con 22 vehículos biarticulados de 24 metros de longitud, dos estaciones subterráneas, una en el extremo sur, en el barrio de Hoya de la Plata y otra en el Parque Santa Catalina y una terminal en la Plaza de Manuel Becerra en el extremo norte del recorrido. Las cocheras y centro de control de la MetroGuagua, estarán ubicadas en la estación de Hoya de la Plata.[44]
El proyecto se puso en marcha en 2017, proveyéndose su finalización para 2021, pero distintos problemas surgidos durante la realización de las obras han retrasado su inauguración al menos a 2023.[45]
Hoya de la Plata – Puerto[44]
Hoya de la Plata · Ciudad Deportiva · Hospital Insular · Polígono Vega de San José · San José · Eufemiano Jurado · Avenida Marítima · Teatro · San Telmo · Fuente Luminosa · Luis Doreste Silva · Juan XXIII · Parque Doramas · Ciudad Jardín · Estadio Insular · Mercado Central · Mesa y López · Santa Catalina · Castillo de La Luz · Plaza Manuel Becerra
Bicicleta[editar]
Punto de recogida de bicicletas en Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Rotonda – San José —Glorieta de la Vega San José, junto a calle Alicante— a la altura de Lady Harimaguada
Desde 2011 existe un servicio municiapl de préstamo de bicicletas. Inicialmente denominado Biciambiental tuvo escaso éxito por contar con menos de 50 vehículos y solo 11 estaciones. En 2015 cambió su nombre a Las Palmas Bybike. El nuevo servicio sumó 2 nuevas estaciones e incorporó 150 nuevas bicicletas con mejores prestaciones.[46][47]
Además se amplió y acondicionó una serie de carriles bici que han hecho a Gran Canaria una de las islas con el carril bici más amplio, carril cuya vía se extiende desde el antiguo barrio de Vegueta hasta las Canteras,[48] y que recorre entre otras: plaza del Doctor O’Shanahan, el corredor Playa, que conecta el Parque Santa Catalina con el Auditorio, calles Fernando Guanarteme, avenida Marítima, Franchy Roca, la Base Naval, el paseo de Alcaravaneras, rotonda de Julio Luengo y Secretario Padilla, Luis Morote, Eufemiano Jurado y Olof Palme.[46]
En abril de 2018 se produjo una nueva reforma del sistema de préstamo, denominándose ahora Sítycleta, que amplía el número de estaciones hasta 40 e incorpora casi 400 bicicletas «inteligentes», y 20 vehículos eléctricos. [49] Paralelamente se inicia la primera fase de la red de carriles bici, con la construcción de los primeros 28 kilómetros de ciclovías que recorrerán toda la ciudad.[50] Para ello, se ha procedido a la supresión de varios carriles de vehículos a motor y la eliminación de zonas de estacionamiento.
Ferrocarril[editar]
El tren de Gran Canaria (TGC) es un proyecto de ferrocarril propuesto inicialmente como alternativa para ir de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria a Maspalomas en menos de una hora,[51] aunque posteriormente se planteó su prolongación hasta Gáldar, habiendo 2 líneas de tren. Recientemente ha culminado la redacción de los proyectos del trazado y de las once estaciones del futuro tren del sur, a la espera de la financiación para la ejecución de las obras.[52]
Gabinete Literario
Catedral de Canarias
Los monumentos declarados Bien de Interés Cultural del municipio son los siguientes:[53]
Antigua Muralla de Las Palmas
Archivo Histórico Provincial Joaquín Blanco
Barrio de Triana
Biblioteca Insular (Hurtado de Mendoza 2)
Biblioteca Pública del Estado
Capilla Anglicana
Casa del Niño
Casa Falcón y Quintana
Casa Manrique
Casa Museo de Pérez Galdós
Casa Regental, en la Plaza de Santa Ana
Casa y jardín de Rodríguez Quegles
Casas de la Mayordomía y Ermita de San Antonio Abad (Barranco de Tamaraceite)
Castillo de la Luz o de las Isletas
Castillo de Mata
Castillo de San Cristóbal
Catedral de Canarias
Cementerio de Vegueta
Cementerio Inglés
Conjunto de la calle Perojo e inmediaciones
Conjunto Histórico Artístico del Barrio de Vegueta
Edificio Elder-Miller
Ermita de San Antonio Abad
Ermita de San Pedro González Telmo
Gabinete Literario
Iglesia de San José
Iglesia de Santo Domingo de Guzmán
Inmueble Calle Doctor Chil 21 y 23 (Antiguo edificio del Santo Oficio)
Inmueble Calle Reyes Católicos 47
Inmuebles modernistas de la Calle Triana números 76, 78, 80 y 82
Mercado del Puerto de La Luz
El Museo Canario
Museo Néstor
Sitio Histórico de los Siete Lagares
Teatro Pérez Galdós
Templo Parroquial de San Francisco de Asís
Yacimiento Cueva de los Canarios de El Confital
Zona Arqueológica Cuevas de los Frailes (compartido con Santa Brígida)
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria ofrece una agenda cultural relativamente amplia y variada: teatro, cine, ópera, conciertos, artes plásticas y danza son espectáculos habituales en las carteleras de la ciudad, destacando especialmente el Festival de Música de Canarias, el de Teatro y Danza y el Festival Internacional de Cine.
Teatros[editar]
Teatro Pérez Galdós
El teatro Pérez Galdós fue diseñado por el arquitecto Francisco Jareño y Alarcón en 1867. Su aspecto actual, con algunas modificaciones, se debe a las intervenciones de Fernando Navarro y Miguel Martín Fernández de la Torre, tras el incendio que lo destruyó casi por completo en 1928. Este último contó con la colaboración de su hermano, el pintor Néstor de la Torre, quien se encargó de decorar el patio de butacas, los salones y el escenario. En un principio se llamó teatro de Tirso de Molina, hasta que en 1901, coincidiendo con el estreno de Electra, adoptó el nombre del escritor canario Benito Pérez Galdós. Tras unas obras de remodelación, el teatro reabrió sus puertas nuevamente en abril de 2007.
El teatro Cuyás, en el escenario del antiguo cine Cuyás, es una obra del arquitecto racionalista canario Miguel Martín Fernández de la Torre. Su sala principal tiene capacidad para 940 personas, repartidas entre el patio de butacas y dos anfiteatros. Posee además un amplio patio que permite la organización de eventos al aire libre. Se está construyendo actualmente una sala alternativa y de ensayos con capacidad para un centenar de butacas.
La Sala Insular de Teatro es un espacio escénico peculiar que se levanta en la nave principal de una antigua iglesia. En 2007, tras unas obras de remodelación, la sala volvió a abrir sus puertas al público, acogiendo pequeños montajes de compañías locales.
El teatro Guiniguada, el antiguo teatro cine Avellaneda, fue sede de la Filmotéca Canaria. Su rehabilitación se inició en junio de 2000 para reabrirse el 27 de marzo de 2011 con una inversión pública que superó los 6 millones de euros. Desde entonces este gran teatro ha formado parte de la red canaria de artes escénicas.[54]
Auditorios y palacios de congresos[editar]
Auditorio Alfredo Kraus
El auditorio Alfredo Kraus se halla a orillas del Atlántico, junto a la playa de Las Canteras, en una de las zonas más privilegiadas de la urbe. Cuenta con 13.200 m², en los que se disponen 11 salas que permiten acoger desde conciertos hasta convenciones y grandes congresos.
El palacio de Congresos de Gran Canaria se halla en las instalaciones de la Institución Ferial de Canarias, con un aforo para 800 personas en 16 000 m².
El Centro de Iniciativas de la Caja de Ahorros de Canarias (CICCA) ocupa uno de los edificios realizados a mitad del siglo XIX en el barrio de Triana por el arquitecto Manuel Ponce de León. Es un pequeño centro de congresos con la más avanzada tecnología y capacidad para 500 personas.
Museos y salas de exposiciones[editar]
Categoría principal: Museos de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Lady Harimaguada, Martín Chirino
Museo Casa de Colón, con reformas historicistas
Locomotora de vapor del año 1885, que prestó servicio en Renfe, ahora en el Museo Elder
El Centro Atlántico de Arte Moderno (CAAM), inaugurado en 1989, es una de las más importantes referencias de la vida cultural y artística de las Islas Canarias. Se encarga de divulgar el arte hecho en las islas en relación con el resto del mundo, especialmente con África, América y Europa. Posee exposiciones temporales y permanentes que abarcan desde las vanguardias históricas hasta las últimas tendencias. Ubicado en la calle de Los Balcones de Vegueta, conserva la fachada original del siglo XVIII.
El Museo Canario se encuentra en el barrio histórico de Vegueta. Fue fundado en 1879. Se trata de una sociedad científico-cultural de rango internacional, asociada al Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC). Cuenta con una valiosa colección de objetos arqueológicos canarios, que se exhiben en 16 salas. Está dotado además de una biblioteca con más de 60.000 volúmenes, muchos de ellos sobre temas canarios. Su hemeroteca abarca desde 1785 hasta nuestros días.
La Casa-Museo Pérez Galdós está ubicada en el otro barrio histórico de la ciudad, el de Triana. Se trata de la casa natal de Benito Pérez Galdós. Aquí se halla el mejor fondo documental sobre este novelista grancanario, con una amplia colección de documentos, libros, muebles y objetos personales del escritor. Además en el corazón de la Plaza de la Feria podemos contemplar la escultura de Benito Pérez Galdós realizada por el artista Pablo Serrano en la que anualmente se deposita la tradicional ofrenda floral con motivo del Nacimiento del escritor.
La Casa Museo de Colón se halla en la Plaza de San Antonio Abad, en la trasera de la catedral. Su exposición versa sobre la historia de Canarias y su relación con América. Posee 13 salas de exposiciones permanentes, una biblioteca y un centro de estudios especializado, así como diversos espacios destinados a actividades temporales. El complejo consta de varias casas, una de las cuales fue la residencia del antiguo gobernador (más conocida ahora como casa de Colón), visitada por Cristóbal Colón durante su primer viaje a América en 1492. Se organiza en cinco áreas temáticas: América antes del Descubrimiento, Colón y sus viajes, Canarias: enclave estratégico y base de experimentación del Nuevo Mundo, Historia y génesis de la ciudad de Las Palmas, y Pintura del siglo XVI a inicios del XX.
El Museo Elder de la Ciencia y la Tecnología está situado junto al Parque de Santa Catalina. Es un espacio dedicado a la cultura científica y tecnológica, mostrándose de forma interactiva y didáctica. El edificio Elder data de finales del siglo XIX, aunque está reformado. Dispone de salas de exposiciones, talleres de física recreativa, planetario digital, cine de gran formato 3D. Conserva también algunas piezas históricas, como una auténtica locomotora de vapor y un avión supersónico de combate CASA-Northrop F-5.
El Museo Néstor se halla en el barrio de Ciudad Jardín. Dedicado al pintor modernista Néstor Martín Fernández de la Torre, fue inaugurado en 1956 dentro del conjunto arquitectónico del Pueblo Canario, concebido por él mismo y construido por su hermano Miguel Martín Fernández de la Torre. Posee 10 salas de exposición, así como un centro de documentación y pedagogía.
Museo Diocesano de arte sacro situado en el lateral sur de la Catedral de Canarias, en el llamado Patio de Los Naranjos.
Museo Castillo de Mata, estuvo dedicado a la historia de la ciudad desde el siglo XV hasta la actualidad, en función de la historia del Castillo y su arqueología y la relación con el mar de la ciudad. Posteriormente se ha reconvertido en sala de exposiciones temporales y del fondo artístico del Museo Néstor de la Torre[55]
Fundación de arte y pensamiento Martín Chirino, exposición de 25 obras del escultor grancanario Martín Chirino que forman parte de la exposición permanente en el interior del Castillo de la Luz, unas piezas que realizan un repaso por la trayectoria de artista.[56]
Acuario Poema del Mar, instalación que representa 35 ecosistemas acuáticos distribuidos en distintos acuarios con un total de 7,5 millones de litros de agua.[57] Cuenta con el cristal curvo más grande del mundo, un metacrilato de 140 toneladas de peso, 36 metros de largo y siete metros de alto.[58]
San Martín Centro de Cultura Contemporánea, situado en Vegueta, ocupó el edificio que albergó el primer hospital de la ciudad y exhibió exposiciones temporales, de arte moderno y contemporáneo. El edificio está en proceso de ampliación y ocupará en el futuro el Museo de Bellas Artes de Gran Canaria[59]
Centro de Arte La Regenta, se sitúa en el edificio de una antigua fábrica de tabacos, en el barrio de Puerto-Canteras. Es una institución pública dedicada al arte contemporáneo.[60]
Festivales[editar]
Una de las noches temáticas del Carnaval de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria 2008
Exposición de los Drag Queen en el carnaval del 2011
Carlos Sadness en el Monopol Music Festival 2017[61]
Festival Internacional de Cine de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Festival de Cine Fantástico y Terror de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Festival de Música de Canarias
Festival de Teatro, Música y Danza (Temudas fest)[62]
Canarias Jazz
WOMAD Las Palmas de Gran Canaria: World of Music, Arts and Dance, entre 2014 y 2016 se celebró en Fuerteventura[63] volviendo en 2017. [64]
Festival de Ópera de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Festival de Zarzuela de Canarias
Canarias Mediafest: festival internacional de arte y culturas digitales
Animayo: festival internacional de animación, efectos especiales y videojuegos
Cine+Food: festival de cine y gastronomía
Macfest: música electrónica y arte sonoro de la Macaronesia
Monopol Music Festival.[65]
Fiestas[editar]
Carnaval de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Gala Drag Queen de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Fiestas Fundacionales (24 de junio)
Fiestas Oficiales de la Ciudad: Fiestas de la Virgen de la Luz en La Naval declaradas en 1985 y se celebran en octubre, Fiestas de San Lorenzo declaradas en 1990 y que se celebran en agosto, Fiestas del Pilar en Guanarteme declaradas en 1991 y que tienen lugar en octubre, Fiestas de la Virgen de los Dolores en Ciudad Alta declaradas en 2014 y que se celebran en septiembre, y las Fiestas de la Virgen del Carmen de La Isleta declaradas en 2016 y que se celebran en julio.
Bibliotecas[editar]
La ciudad cuenta con una amplia red de bibliotecas, repartidas por los diversos distritos. Junto a las 11 bibliotecas municipales hay que reseñar estos cuatro centros:
La Biblioteca Insular, que cuenta con capacidad para 500 usuarios en sus tres plantas, además de un salón de actos y más de 100 conexiones de ordenador con 20 puntos de acceso a Internet.
La Biblioteca Simón Benítez Padilla, centro especializado en Geología, Biología y Ecología que recoge el valioso fondo bibliográfico del expresidente del Museo Canario Simón Benítez Padilla, notable impulsor del estudio de la cultura canaria.
Biblioteca Pública del Estado.[66]
El Archivo Histórico Provincial Joaquín Blanco, que recoge 160 años de la historia de la ciudad, ya que el incendio de las Casas Consistoriales en 1845 destruyó todo el fondo documental previo.
Patronazgo de la ciudad[editar]
Nuestra Señora de la Soledad de la Portería Coronada, Parroquia de San Francisco de Asís. Es la imagen mariana más venerada en la ciudad.[67][68] Su procesión del Retiro es la más importante de la ciudad[69]
La patrona de la ciudad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria y patrona histórica de la isla de Gran Canaria, es Santa Ana,[70][71] cuya imagen se encuentra presidiendo la Catedral de Canarias y cuya festividad se celebra cada 26 de julio. El patrono del Ayuntamiento de la ciudad es el Santísimo Cristo de la Vera Cruz que se encuentra en la Parroquia Matriz de San Agustín de Hipona, su fiesta se celebra el 14 de septiembre. Pero la imagen de mayor devoción en la ciudad es Nuestra Señora de la Soledad,[67][68] la cual es aclamada popularmente como «Señora de la ciudad», su procesión del Retiro es la procesión por antonomasia de la ciudad.[69] La imagen de la Virgen se venera en la Parroquia de San Francisco de Asís y Santuario Mariano de Nuestra Señora de la Soledad desde el siglo XVI, aunque la actual imagen es del XVII. [72][67]
Bajada de la Virgen del Pino[editar]
Es tradición que ciertos años, la imagen de la Virgen del Pino (patrona de Gran Canaria) se traslade en peregrinación desde la Villa Mariana de Teror hasta la ciudad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria para conmemorar diferentes efemérides religiosas. Durante estas estancias de la Virgen en la ciudad, que duran aproximadamente dos semanas, la Virgen es visitada por miles de fieles. La última bajada de la Virgen a la capital grancanaria fue entre mayo y junio de 2014. Anteriores bajadas fueron en 2000, 1988, 1965, 1954 y 1936.[73]
Ocio nocturno[editar]
El barrio histórico de Vegueta ha recobrado una gran popularidad en los últimos años, siendo el punto de encuentro preferido de muchos jóvenes que los fines de semana llenan sus bares de copas y discotecas. En la zona del puerto se encuentran también numerosos bares y discotecas, sobre todo en las proximidades del Parque Santa Catalina.
Durante el carnaval de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, normalmente entre enero y febrero, se puede disfrutar de múltiples actividades, como los populares mogollones (verbenas) y las galas de elección de la reina y de la drag queen.
Mención especial merece el Festival WOMAD (World Of Music, Art & Dance), que generalmente en el mes de noviembre de cada año tiene como escenario a la capital grancanaria. El primer festival se celebró en Las Palmas de Gran Canaria en 1993 ininterrumpidamente hasta 2012, siendo retomado, tras 3 ediciones en 2014, 2015 y 2016 en Fuerteventura, en 2017 hasta el presente.
Deportes[editar]
Categoría principal: Deporte en Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Diversos clubes que militan o han militado en las máximas categorías españolas tienen su sede en esta ciudad:
UD Las Palmas club perteneciente a la Segunda División de España. Disputa sus partidos en el Estadio de Gran Canaria, anteriormente los disputaba en el Estadio Insular.
Herbalife Gran Canaria perteneciente a la Liga ACB de baloncesto y asiduo participante en competiciones europeas, en la temporada 2014-15 jugó la final de la Eurocup. Disputa sus partidos en el Gran Canaria Arena.
Club Voleibol J.A.V. Olímpico equipo femenino que milita en la Superliga Femenina de Voleibol.
La ciudad fue subsede del Mundobasket 2014 que organizó la Federación Española de Baloncesto, para lo cual se construyó un nuevo pabellón polideportivo en el barrio de Siete Palmas
Destacan los deportes acuáticos, con las tradicionales regatas de vela latina, que se realizan cada fin de semana en la bahía de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, así como varías instituciones que fomentan dichos deportes y el golf:
Real Club Náutico de Gran Canaria, club con numerosos campeones olímpicos y mundiales de diversas categorías.[74]
Club Natación Metropole.
Club Natación Las Palmas.
Real Club de Golf de Las Palmas, fundado el 17 de diciembre de 1891, siendo el decano de los clubes de España. [75]
Entre otras pruebas atléticas las más notables:
La Transgrancanaria, prueba de trail running que recorre la isla y que en diferentes ediciones ha tenido salida o llegada en la capital.
La Gran Canaria Maratón, recorre íntegramente las calles de la ciudad, tanto las modalidades de maratón como de mediamaratón.
LPA Night Run, es una nueva prueba, que recorre los lugares de interés de la ciudad de noche, aprovechando las buenas temperaturas que tiene la ciudad.
Ciudades hermanadas[editar]
Oficialmente, la ciudad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria está hermanada con tres localidades:[76]
San Antonio, Texas, Estados Unidos (25 de septiembre de 1975)
Nuadibú, Mauritania (31 de octubre de 1986)
Garachico, Tenerife, España (30 de octubre de 1998)
Además, el municipio ha aprobado en el Pleno su voluntad de hermanamiento con las siguientes ciudades, si bien aún no se han oficializado dichos hermanamientos:[76]
Praia, Cabo Verde (27 de febrero de 2009)
Rabat, Marruecos (27 de marzo de 2009)
Xiamen, República Popular de China (27 de marzo de 2009)
Martinsicuro, Italia (23 de marzo de 2010)
Gdansk, Polonia (25 de febrero de 2011)
Génova, Italia (25 de febrero de 2011)
Vigo, España (25 de febrero de 2011)[77]
Vista Parcial de La Isleta
Hospital Universitario Insular de Gran Canaria
Kiosco de Música en San Telmo
La Península de la Isleta
Hotel Santa Catalina
Monumento a Benito Pérez Galdós
Plaza de Cairasco
Plaza de España
Gobierno de Canarias
Iglesia de Nuestra Señora del Pino
Plaza de San Francisco
Hospital Universitario de Gran Canaria Doctor Negrín
Auditorio Alfredo Kraus y Palacio de Congresos de Canarias
Parque Santa Catalina
Puerto de La Luz
Calle Perojo
Árbol de Navidad frente al Teatro Pérez Galdós
Quiosco modernista en el Parque de San Telmo
Vista de Las Canteras desde la trasera del Auditorio Alfredo Kraus
Parque Doramas
Vista del Puerto de Las Palmas desde Alcaravaneras
Playa de la Laja
Véase también[editar]
Provincia de Las Palmas
Gran Canaria
↑ El uso de palmense es minoritario. En general, los habitantes de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria no suelen nombrarse con un gentilicio; simplemente son «de Las Palmas».
Referencias[editar]
↑ Agencia Estatal de Meteorología (ed.). «Las Palmas de Gran Canaria». Datos de altitud para Las Palmas de Gran Canaria en la página de previsión meteorológica de AEMET provenientes del Nomenclátor geográfico de municipios y entidades de población del Instituto Geográfico Nacional: [1].
↑ Instituto Geográfico Nacional (IGN) (ed.). «Mapa topográfico de España del Instituto Geográfico Nacional». Consultado el 1 de octubre de 2016.
↑ Real Academia Española y Asociación de Academias de la Lengua Española. «palmense». Diccionario de la lengua española (23.ª edición).
↑ Memoria de la Alcaldía de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria 2019
↑ «Real Decreto 1147/2020, de 15 de diciembre, por el que se declaran oficiales las cifras de población resultantes de la revisión del Padrón municipal referidas al 1 de enero de 2020. ». 31 de diciembre de 2020. 30 de diciembre de 2020.
↑ ab La Junta Suprema de Canarias. Volumen I. Buenaventura Bonnet y Riveron. Real Sociedad Económica de Amigos del País de Tenerife, Editorial: Editorial Interinsular Canaria SA, publicado en Santa Cruz de Tenerife en 1980 (reedición de 1948) Páginas 104-106
↑ C.G.P.J. «C.G.P.J – Qué es el TSJ Canarias». www.poderjudicial.es. Consultado el 5 de octubre de 2018.
↑ «Página web oficial de la Diócesis de Canarias».
↑ «El CES». www.cescanarias.org. Consultado el 5 de octubre de 2018.
↑ Nafría, Ismael (18 de junio de 2018). «Las 70 áreas metropolitanas de España según su población – The NBP». The New Barcelona Post. Consultado el 5 de octubre de 2018.
↑ Situación y Clima Archivado el 29 de junio de 2010 en Wayback Machine. Web oficial del Ayuntamiento
↑ «Publicación de la AEMET: Mapas climáticos de España (1981-2010) y ETo (1996-2016)».
↑ Whitmore, Thomas (1996). Pleasant Weather Ratings (pdf) (en inglés). ISBN 0-9645785-7-3. Archivado desde el original el 20 de agosto de 2014. Consultado el 19 de agosto de 2014.
↑ AEMET. Valores climatológicos normales. Gran Canaria Aeropuerto (Consultado el 9/11/2017)
↑ «Datos de la Agencia Estatal de Meteorología: Valores extremos en la estación meteorológica del Aeropuerto de Gran Canaria.».
↑ «Playa Viva. Playas de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria».
↑ «La Provincia – Diario de Las Palmas».
↑ «Parques y Jardines». Ayuntamiento de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria.
↑ ««La Gesta del Batán: IV centenario del ataque holandés a Gran Canaria.»».
↑ «Ley de Municipal de 1935.».
↑ ab «Estadística de la Evolución Histórica de la Población. Municipios por islas de Canarias. 1768-2021». Instituto Canario de Estadística. Consultado el 20 de enero de 2022.
↑ Anaga convierte a Santa Cruz en la tercera gran ciudad de España con más suelo natural
↑ «Augusto Hidalgo (PSOE) será el nuevo alcalde de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria». Consultado el 4 de julio de 2016.
↑ «Resultado de las Elecciones Municipales en Las Palmas de Gran Canaria». El País. 2011.
↑ abc Herrera Piqué (op. cit.)
↑ Casa – Museo de Colón Revista de Turismo, Viajes y Vacaciones
↑ «Las viviendas urbanas más caras de Canarias se hallan en primera línea de Las Canteras.». www.laprovincia.es. La Provincia – Diario de Las Palmas. Consultado el 9 de diciembre de 2016.
↑ «Canarias Ahora.es».
↑ HOSTELTUR. «Gran Canaria da un salto al ocio del siglo XXI con el Poema del Mar | Economía». Hosteltur: Toda la información de turismo. Consultado el 9 de diciembre de 2016.
↑ GranCanaria.com. «Hospitales. Clínicas. Oficinas consulares. Isla de Gran Canaria.». www.grancanaria.com. Archivado desde el original el 10 de octubre de 2016. Consultado el 9 de octubre de 2016.
↑ “Contacto Archivado el 2 de abril de 2015 en Wayback Machine..” Colegio Oficial Alemán de las Palmas de Gran Canaria. Consultado el 8 de abril de 2015. “Deutsche Schule Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Lomo del Drago, s/n E-35018 Las Palmas de Gran Canaria”
↑ “Contacto.” The British School of Gran Canaria. Consultado el 8 de abril de 2015. “Crta. Tafira a Marzagán s/n. El Sabinal 35017 Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Las Palmas”
↑ “Ubicación.” Colegio Americano de Las Palmas. Consultado el 8 de abril de 2015. “Carretera de los Hoyos, Km 1.7 35017-Las Palmas de Gran Canaria España”
↑ “Contacto Archivado el 18 de marzo de 2017 en Wayback Machine..” Liceo Francés de Gran Canaria. Consultado el 8 de abril de 2015. “LYCÉE FRANÇAIS RENÉ-VERNEAU de GRAN CANARIA Crta. de Taliarte s/n 35214, Telde (Espagne)”
↑ “欧州の日本人学校一覧” (). MEXT. Consultado el 6 de abril de 2015. “ラス・パルマス Japanese School of Las Palmas Carretera Del Centro 47, Tafira Alta, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria,Espana ”
↑ Ávila Tàpies, Rosalía (Universidad de Kioto) y Josefina Domínguez Mujica (Universidad de Las Palmas). “Canarias en el imaginario japonés: el análisis de tres narrativas contemporáneas” (, Archivo PDF). Anuario de Estudios Atlánticos ISSN 0570-4065, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (2011), número. 57, pp. 525-56. Recibido 26 de mayo de 2010. Aceptado 30 de junio de 2010. CITADO: p. 528 (PDF 4/38). “El colegio japonés «rasuparumasu nihonjin gakko-» en Tafira Baja, abierto en el año 1973 (octubre) como el tercer colegio japonés más antiguo de Europa y el primero de España, se cerró definitivamente en el 2000 (marzo).”
↑ “関係機関へのリンク” (Archivo). The Japan School of Doha. Consultado el 31 de marzo de 2015. “アテネ日本人学校(2007年3月休校)” y “ラス・パルマス日本人学校(2001年3月閉校)”
↑ “欧州の補習授業校一覧(). MEXT, 2 de enero de 2003. Consultado el 6 de abril de 2015. “ラス・パルマス La escueda [sic] complementaria japonesa de Las Palmas Carretera del Centro 47,TafiraAlta,LasPalmas de Gran Canaria SPAIN”
↑ «GUAGUAS MUNICIPALES – La Empresa – ¿Quiénes somos?». www.guaguas.com. Archivado desde el original el 6 de junio de 2017. Consultado el 24 de febrero de 2017.
↑ «Global». www.globalsu.net. Archivado desde el original el 25 de febrero de 2017. Consultado el 24 de febrero de 2017.
↑ La Guagua Turística Archivado el 10 de junio de 2013 en Wayback Machine. Página web del Patronato de Turismo de Gran Canaria
↑ Guagua Turística Ayto. de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
↑ «Metroguagua». www.guaguas.com. Consultado el 24 de febrero de 2017.
↑ ab «La MetroGuagua – El Recorrido». www.guaguas.com. Consultado el 5 de noviembre de 2021.
↑ «MetroGuagua avanza a trompicones en la capital». Canarias7. 4 de julio de 2021. Consultado el 5 de noviembre de 2021.
↑ ab «El Ayuntamiento amplía el carril bici de la Avenida Marítima con un proyecto de actuación en 2.320 metros cuadrados de superficie». laspalmasgc.es. 6 de mayo de 2015. Consultado el 7 de mayo de 2015.
↑ «ByBike LPA crece al ritmo de lo que demanda la ciudad». 5 de mayo de 2015. Consultado el 7 de mayo de 2015.
↑ «Alquiler de bicicletas». Consultado el 7 de mayo de 2015.
↑ «Sítycleta, el nuevo sistema de bici pública de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria». Sagulpa. Consultado el 25 de abril de 2018.
↑ «Carriles Bici». www.laspalmasgc.es. Consultado el 25 de abril de 2018.
↑ «El tren de Gran Canaria pasará de la capital al sur de Gran Canaria».
↑ «El Cabildo confía en financiar los 1.650 millones del tren de Gran Canaria con fondos europeos».
↑ «Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte». www. mecd.gob.es. Consultado el 9 de octubre de 2016.
↑ «El Teatro Guiniguada de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria reabre sus puertas con la intención de ser un recinto “muy vivo”». 20minutos.es – Últimas Noticias. Consultado el 24 de febrero de 2017.
↑ GranCanaria.com. «Museos en Gran Canaria – Canarias». www.grancanaria.com. Archivado desde el original el 2 de febrero de 2017. Consultado el 21 de enero de 2017.
↑ Fundación Martín Chirino
↑ «Poema del Mar ya ilumina la ciudad». www.canarias7.es. Consultado el 10 de enero de 2018.
↑ «El primer verso del Poema del Mar». www.grancanaria.com. Consultado el 10 de enero de 2018.
↑ «San Martín Centro de Cultura Contemporánea». www.sanmartincontemporaneo.com. Consultado el 24 de diciembre de 2018.
↑ «El Centro». Centro de Arte La Regenta. Consultado el 30 de diciembre de 2018.
↑ «Horarios 2017». Monopol Music Festival. Archivado desde el original el 12 de abril de 2017. Consultado el 12 de abril de 2017.
↑ «Festival de Teatro, Música y Danza TEMUDAS». lpatemudasfest.com. Consultado el 16 de abril de 2019.
↑ «Gran Tarajal acogerá el Festival WOMAD Fuerteventura». Europa Press (Puerto del Rosario (Canarias)). 26 de septiembre de 2014. Consultado el 9 de junio de 2016.
↑ Alberto García Saleh (5 de agosto de 2017). «El Womad regresa a la ciudad». La Provincia. Consultado el 7 de marzo de 2018.
↑ «Monopol Music Festival». Monopol Music Festival. Archivado desde el original el 12 de abril de 2017. Consultado el 12 de abril de 2017.
↑ «La Biblioteca Pública del Estado en Las Palmas».
↑ abc «Sitio oficial de la parroquia. Véase último párrafo del apartado primero: La Parroquia.».
↑ ab «Visita virtual en la página oficial de la parroquia de san Francisco. Véase el número 13.».
↑ ab «La procesión por antonomasia de la ciudad».
↑ «Santa Ana, patrona de Gran Canaria.».
↑ «Véase la página trece donde se cita el patronazgo de la santa sobre la isla.».
↑ «Página oficial de la Pontificia y Real Archicofradía de Nuestra Señora de la Soledad».
↑ «Y la Virgen del Pino bajó a la capital 50 veces.».
↑ «Palmarés general del Club Naútico de Gran Canaria». Archivado desde el original el 15 de julio de 2011. Consultado el 12 de noviembre de 2009.
↑ «Real Club de Golf». Archivado desde el original el 30 de marzo de 2010. Consultado el 26 de abril de 2010.
↑ ab Hermanamientos. Página oficial del Ayuntamiento de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
↑ REDACCIÓN. VIGO (2 de junio de 2010). «Sorpresa en Las Palmas por el hermanamiento con Vigo». www.atlantico.net (Rías Baixas Comunicación S. A.). Consultado el 3 de junio de 2010.
Bibliografía[editar]
Herrera Piqué, Alfredo (1984). Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. Alcorcón: Editorial Rueda, S.L. ISBN 84-7207-041-7.
Martín Galán, Fernando (2001). Las Palmas Ciudad y Puerto – Cinco siglos de evolución. Fundación Puertos de Las Palmas. ISBN 84-607-2186-8.
Enlaces externos[editar]
Wikimedia Commons alberga una categoría multimedia sobre Las Palmas de Gran Canaria.
Ayuntamiento de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Control de autoridades
Proyectos Wikimedia
Datos: Q11974
Multimedia: Las Palmas de Gran Canaria / Q11974
Guía turística: Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Citas célebres: Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Identificadores
WorldCat
VIAF: 155929774
BNF: 12087445v (data)
GND: 4252447-7
LCCN: n79121681
NARA: 10045035
SUDOC: 027788601
Diccionarios y enciclopedias
Britannica: url
Lugares
OSM: 340783
TGN: 7010417
INE: 35016
Provincia de Las Palmas – Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre
Para otros usos de este término, véase Las Palmas (desambiguación).
Las Palmas es una provincia española de la comunidad autónoma de Canarias, formada por las islas de Gran Canaria, Fuerteventura, Lanzarote y La Graciosa,[nota 1] junto con los islotes deshabitados de Alegranza, Montaña Clara, Isla de Lobos, Roque del Este y Roque del Oeste. Tiene 4066 km² de superficie, contando con 1 131 065 habitantes (2020),[1] siendo la provincia más poblada de Canarias y decimotercera de España.
La capital de la provincia es la ciudad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, en la isla de Gran Canaria, ciudad con la mayor población y densidad de población de Canarias, y la 9.ª de España por número de habitantes. Además, su área metropolitana ocupa una población de más de 700 000 habitantes, por lo que es la mayor en Canarias. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria es también capital de la Comunidad Autónoma de Canarias junto con Santa Cruz de Tenerife.
Índice
1 Historia
2 Gentilicios
3 Naturaleza
4 Administración
5 Demografía
6 Municipios
7 Véase también
8 Notas y referencias
8. 1 Notas
8.2 Referencias
9 Enlaces externos
La provincia surgió en 1927 cuando la provincia de Canarias (con capital en Santa Cruz de Tenerife)[4][5] se divididió en las provincias deː Las Palmas y de Santa Cruz de Tenerife.[4][5]
La provincia recibió el nombre de su capital, pero al cambiar años más tarde el nombre de la ciudad por el actual de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, se perdió la homonimia entre provincia y capital, puesto que la provincia continuó llamándose “Las Palmas” a secas.
Gentilicios[editar]
No existe un gentilicio común para los habitantes de la provincia, utilizándose gentilicios propios para cada isla. Así los habitantes de Gran Canaria se les denomina grancanarios y coloquialmente canariones; a los de Fuerteventura, majoreros; y a los de Lanzarote, lanzaroteños o conejeros. Por su parte, los habitantes de La Graciosa son conocidos como gracioseros.
Las islas que integran la provincia de Las Palmas suelen ser comúnmente denominadas “islas orientales“, para diferenciarlas de las islas de la provincia de Santa Cruz de Tenerife, denominadas “islas occidentales” por su situación geográfica al oeste de esta provincia. En ocasiones, también se ha utilizado para la provincia de Las Palmas la denominación de “Islas Canarienses“, aunque esta denominación surge por influencia de la diócesis católica de esta provincia, llamada Diócesis Canariense o Diócesis Canariense-Rubicense. En este sentido, la provincia de Santa Cruz de Tenerife por su parte se denomina como “Islas Nivarienses“, también por el nombre de su diócesis.
La provincia de Las Palmas cuenta con un parque nacional, el de Timanfaya en Lanzarote, así como numerosos parques y reservas naturales. Tales son la Reserva Natural de Inagua, en Gran Canaria, o el archipiélago Chinijo, entre muchos otros.
Todas las islas de esta provincia han sido declaradas por la UNESCO Reservas de la Biosfera.
Algunos monumentos naturales de la provincia son la península de Jandía, todos y cada uno de los islotes (Alegranza, montaña Clara, Roque del Este, Roque del Oeste e isla de Lobos), la isla de La Graciosa, la península de La Isleta, el Dedo de Dios, el Roque Nublo, la playa y riscos de Famara, el Roque Bentayga, etc.
Administración[editar]
A diferencia de la mayoría de las provincias de España, la provincia de Las Palmas (al igual que la de Santa Cruz de Tenerife) carece de órgano administrativo común para toda la provincia. Las competencias que normalmente ostentan las Diputaciones Provinciales se las reparten entre el Gobierno de Canarias y los Cabildos Insulares. El Boletín Oficial de la Provincia de Las Palmas es editado por el Gobierno de Canarias.
La población de la provincia de Las Palmas es de 1 131 065 (INE 2020). Por islas, la más habitada es Gran Canaria con 855 521 habitantes, seguida de Lanzarote con 155 812 y Fuerteventura con 119 732.
Si nos centramos en la densidad de población se observa como la zona más poblada es la costa noroccidental de la isla de Gran Canaria, donde se encuentra la capital de la provincia, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, con 381 223 habitantes.
En cuanto al crecimiento de la población, la isla que más crece en los últimos 20 años en Fuerteventura, con un 131,08%, pasando de 49 020 en 1998 a 113 275 en 2018. Le sigue la isla de Lanzarote, con un crecimiento de un 75,82% y por último Gran Canaria con un crecimiento de 18,26%.
Los municipios más beneficiados del crecimiento de población son los situados en Fuerteventura, seguidos por el sur de Lanzarote y la costa suroccidental de Gran Canaria.
Municipio
Isla
Población (2018)
Superficie (km²)
Densidad (hab/km²)
Agaete
Gran Canaria
5573
45,5
122,48
Agüimes
Gran Canaria
31152
79,28
392,94
Antigua
Fuerteventura
11948
250,57
47,68
Arrecife
Lanzarote
61351
22,72
2700,31
Artenara
Gran Canaria
1090
66,7
16,34
Arucas
Gran Canaria
37691
33,01
1141,81
Betancuria
Fuerteventura
731
103,64
7,05
Firgas
Gran Canaria
7491
15,77
475,02
Gáldar
Gran Canaria
24209
61,59
393,07
Haría
Lanzarote
4969
106,59
46,62
Ingenio
Gran Canaria
30831
38,15
808,15
Mogán
Gran Canaria
19657
172,43
114,00
Moya
Gran Canaria
7728
31,87
242,49
La Oliva
Fuerteventura
25884
356,13
72,68
Pájara
Fuerteventura
20539
383,52
53,55
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Gran Canaria
378517
100,5
3766,34
Puerto del Rosario
Fuerteventura
39382
289,95
135,82
San Bartolomé
Lanzarote
18327
40,89
448,20
San Bartolomé de Tirajana
Gran Canaria
53588
333,13
160,86
La Aldea de San Nicolás
Gran Canaria
7608
123,58
61,56
Santa Brígida
Gran Canaria
18314
23,81
769,17
Santa Lucía de Tirajana
Gran Canaria
71863
61,56
1167,37
Santa María de Guía de Gran Canaria
Gran Canaria
13924
42,59
326,93
Teguise
Lanzarote
22122
263,98
83,80
Tejeda
Gran Canaria
1921
103,29
18,60
Telde
Gran Canaria
102424
102,43
999,94
Teror
Gran Canaria
12449
25,7
484,40
Tías
Lanzarote
20006
64,61
309,64
Tinajo
Lanzarote
6119
135,28
45,23
Tuineje
Fuerteventura
14791
275,94
53,60
Valsequillo de Gran Canaria
Gran Canaria
9278
39,15
236,99
Valleseco
Gran Canaria
3784
22,11
171,14
Vega de San Mateo
Gran Canaria
7625
37,89
201,24
Yaiza
Lanzarote
16289
211,84
76,89
La provincia de Las Palmas es la 15. ª de España en que existe un mayor porcentaje de habitantes concentrados en su capital (34,13 %, frente a 31,96 % del conjunto de España).
Véase también[editar]
Municipios de la provincia de Las Palmas
Escudo de la Provincia de Las Palmas
Provincia de Santa Cruz de Tenerife
Provincia de Canarias
Provincias de España
Alfarería en Canarias
Despoblados de la provincia de Las Palmas
Notas y referencias[editar]
Notas[editar]
↑ Desde el 26 de junio de 2018, la isla de La Graciosa pasó de ser considerada un islote a ser considerada la octava isla habitada de Canarias, tras la aprobación, por unanimidad, de una moción en el Senado de España. Actualmente se encuentra en trámites de ser considerada una pedanía, aunque administrativamente seguirá adscrita al municipio de Teguise de la isla de Lanzarote.
Referencias[editar]
↑ ab «Real Decreto 1147/2020, de 15 de diciembre, por el que se declaran oficiales las cifras de población resultantes de la revisión del Padrón municipal referidas al 1 de enero de 2020. ». 31 de diciembre de 2020. 30 de diciembre de 2020.
↑ «Real Decreto 743/2019, de 20 de diciembre, por el que se declaran oficiales las cifras de población resultantes de la revisión del Padrón municipal referidas al 1 de enero de 2019.». 27 de diciembre de 2019. 20 de diciembre de 2019.
↑ Worldpostalcodes.org, Códigos postales de España por provincia.
↑ abReal Decreto de 30 de noviembre de 1833 en wikisource
↑ abReal Decreto de 30 de noviembre de 1833 en el sitio web oficial del Gobierno de Canarias
Enlaces externos[editar]
Wikimedia Commons alberga una categoría multimedia sobre Provincia de Las Palmas.
Control de autoridades
Proyectos Wikimedia
Datos: Q95080
Multimedia: Province of Las Palmas / Q95080
Identificadores
WorldCat
VIAF: 131353338
LCCN: n80162762
NKC: xx0038051
NARA: 10044407
Diccionarios y enciclopedias
Britannica: url
Lugares
OSM: 349031
INE: 35
Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Este artículo trata sobre el centro educativo. Para el equipo de fútbol, véase Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Club de Fútbol.
La Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (ULPGC) es una universidad pública con sede en la ciudad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria y con varias instalaciones en las islas de Gran Canaria, Lanzarote y Fuerteventura que fue creada el 26 de abril de 1989 en la isla de Gran Canaria a partir de la Universidad Politécnica de Canarias y de varios centros hasta ese momento adscritos a la Universidad de La Laguna mediante la Ley de Reorganización Universitaria de Canarias. Es la universidad con más alumnos de Canarias.[11]
Cuenta con cuatro campus: el campus de Tafira, el campus de San José, el campus del Obelisco y campus de Montaña Cardones, además del edificio del rectorado situado en el barrio de Vegueta, el edificio de la biblioteca general de la ULPGC que se encuentra en el campus de Tafira, las instalaciones deportivas que se encuentran en dicho campus, el Parque tecnológico y dos extensiones, una en la isla de Fuerteventura donde se imparte el grado de enfermería en dicha isla y otra en la isla de Lanzarote donde se imparten los grados de turismo y enfermería en dicha isla.
Dentro de la comunidad autónoma de Canarias es una de las dos universidades públicas, compartiendo dicho espacio con la Universidad de La Laguna.
La universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria destaca por sus grados en el área de la ingenierías y en ciencias de la salud, con estudios innovadores dentro del panorama educativo superior español, como el Grado en Ciencia e Ingeniería de Datos o Ciencias del Mar, además de una oferta creciente de titulaciones en línea en su campus virtual.
Índice
1 Símbolos
2 Historia
2.1 Precedentes (1901-1978)
2.2 Universidad Politécnica de Las Palmas (1979-1988)
2.3 Creación de la ULPGC (1989-1991)
2.4 Consolidación de la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (1992-actualidad)
3 Información académica[16][17]
3.1 Investigación
4 Instalaciones
4.1 Rectorado
4.2 Espacio Nexo
4. 3 Finca “La Palmita”
4.4 Campus universitarios de la ULPGC
4.4.1 Campus de Tafira
4.4.2 Campus del Obelisco
4.4.3 Campus de San José
4.4.4 Campus de Montaña Cardones
4.5 Jardín del pensador
4.6 Otras instalaciones
4.6.1 Edificio de Taliarte
4.6.2 Instalaciones en la isla de Lanzarote
4.6.3 Instalaciones en la isla de Fuerteventura
4.7 Transportes
5 Organización institucional[35]
5.1 Órganos unipersonales
5.1.1 Rector
5.1.1.1 Lista de rectores desde la creación de la ULPGC
5.2 Órganos colegiados
5.2.1 Claustro Universitario
5.2.2 Consejo de Gobierno
5.2.3 Consejo social
5.2.3.1 Lista de presidentes del Consejo Social de la ULPGC [41]
5.2.4 Juntas de escuelas o facultades
6 Doctores honoris causa[42]
7 Véase también
8 Referencias
9 Bibliografía
10 Enlaces externos
10. 1 Redes sociales
Escudo de la ULPGC
La Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria usará como símbolos institucionales representativos a su escudo, logotipo, sello, medalla y bandera.
Siendo el escudo descrito de la siguiente manera por los estatutos de la universidad:
«El escudo de la ULPGC tiene forma circular, obrando de fondo un astrolabio y, de forma descentrada, el escudo de las siete islas canarias rodeado por el lema “Ad orbem per technicam”. La denominación de la institución, Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran
Canaria, se inserta dentro del símbolo en la banda exterior del círculo. ».
Estatutos de la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. Boletín Oficial de Canarias nº 153 de 9 de agosto de 2016, p. 22711[12]
Además el sello institucional es el mismo que el escudo y la bandera esta conformada por un fondo de color naranja oscuro en donde en su centro se encuentra el escudo de la universidad.
Precedentes (1901-1978)[editar]
En 1901 se crea la denominada Escuela superior de Industrias en la ciudad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria pero no es hasta el año 1902 que el por aquel entonces Ministerio de Instrucción pública y Bellas Artes no empieza a regular los estudios elementales ni a hacerse cargo de la Escuela Superior de Industrias. Tal situación hasta dicha regulación, obligaba a los estudiantes a estudiar fuera de la isla de Gran Canaria.
Ya en 1927 la isla de Tenerife consigue hacerse exclusivamente con la universidad de la región. Pero por aquel entonces la gestión y la administración de dichos estudios no tiene un rumbo fijo y eficaz dentro de lo que viene a ser el conjunto de las islas del archipiélago Canario, dejando una gran falta de cohesión y conectividad entre islas. Cosa que planta la semilla de un descontento en la población de Gran Canaria, Fuerteventura y Lanzarote que provoca la manifestación progresivamente hasta los años finales de la dictadura franquista generando presión social para remediar esta situación remontándonos hasta el año 1978.
Universidad Politécnica de Las Palmas (1979-1988)[editar]
En el año 1979 debido al aumento de la presión social se crea la Universidad Politécnica de Las Palmas siendo de ámbito regional que aglutina la Escuela Técnica Superior de Arquitectura, la Escuela Técnica Superior de Ingenieros Industriales, la Escuela Universitaria Politécnica de Las Palmas, la Escuela Universitaria de Ingeniería Técnica Agrícola y la Escuela de Arquitectura Técnica de La Laguna.
Ya en 1982 se amplia la oferta universitaria creando el Centro Superior de Ciencias del Mar y los estudios de Derecho, Filología y Geografía e Historia. Siendo en el año 1986 donde la Comunidad Autónoma de Canarias se hace responsable directo de todo lo referente en cuanto a asuntos de universidades en Canarias. mediante el Real Decreto18011/986.[13] Aunque se seguía dependiendo de la Universidad de La Laguna
Creación de la ULPGC (1989-1991)[editar]
Miles de ciudadanos llegaron a ser convocados en dos manifestaciones a finales de los años ochenta solicitando al gobierno autonómico la creación en la provincia de Las Palmas de un centro de enseñanza universitaria pleno. Al mismo tiempo, se hicieron convocatorias en la isla de Tenerife, principalmente en la ciudad de Santa Cruz de Tenerife, solicitando que no se crease tal universidad. Todo ello supuso un nuevo episodio del denominado pleito insular.
La Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria fue creada como resultado de las manifestaciones y presión popular de la isla de Gran Canaria, demandas que habían ido creciendo con el paso del tiempo. Una de las razones era que se quería tener una universidad propia independiente de la Universidad de La Laguna pero la razón de mayor peso fue por la necesidad de trasladarse a la vecina isla de Tenerife para cursar estudios universitarios siendo un obstáculo para muchos estudiantes de escasos recursos económicos, por lo que el día 26 de abril de 1989 el Parlamento de Canarias aprueba la Ley de Reorganización universitaria de Canarias[14] dando inicio a la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria y la readscripción de los distintos centros según su ubicación geográfica. Siendo en el año 1991 cuando se crean los primeros estatutos de la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria.[15]
Consolidación de la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (1992-actualidad)[editar]
Las enseñanzas de la Universidad Politécnica de Canarias y las no técnicas de la Universidad de La Laguna en la isla de Gran Canaria se integraron en la ULPGC, mientras que las técnicas de la isla de Tenerife fueron devueltas a la Universidad de La Laguna. En Las Palmas de Gran Canaria se creó el rectorado, cuya sede institucional acabaría ocupando el edificio reformado del antiguo Hospital Militar de San Martín, en el barrio de Vegueta, en el margen derecho del barranco de Guiniguada. El Campus de Tafira va completando su urbanización con la construcción de los edificios de Ciencias Básicas, Informática y Matemáticas, Ingenierías, aulario de Telecomunicaciones, instalaciones deportivas y facultad del deporte, edificio de la Biblioteca General, nuevo edificio de Ciencias Empresariales, edificio y aulario de Jurídicas, residencias universitarias y espacios verdes, edificio de investigación, parque tecnológico, etc. ; además de con la reforma y ampliación de edificios ya existentes como el que albergaba la Escuela Universitaria Politécnica, hoy Edificio de la Escuela Técnica Superior de Arquitectura. Además de las titulaciones que se imparten de forma presencial, existe la plataforma no presencial. Se encuentra en una “casa” cercana a la Facultad de Ciencias de la Educación.
La universidad ofrece 42 títulos de grado, 26 de Máster y 13 de doctorado a más de 20.000 estudiantes en el curso 2020/2021.
Clasificaciones universitarias
Nacional
ARWU
31-37[18]
El Mundo
44
CSIC
–
4ICU
36[19]
QS
–
RIUPE
–
Scimago
43[20]
Mundial
ARWU
801-900[18]
CSIC
–
4ICU
–
QS
–
Scimago
641[21]
Los campos que se ofrecen están muy enfocados hacia técnicas y estudios de ingeniería (Ingeniería Civil, Arquitectura, Ingeniería de Software, Telecomunicaciones), pero también incluyen grados relacionados con la salud (Medicina, Enfermería o Veterinaria) y Humanidades (Historia, Derecho, Ciencias Sociales). La ULPGC fue una de las primeras universidades en España que ofrece un título específico en Ciencias del Mar”.[22]
La universidad tiene un campus virtual basado en Moodle para dar servicio a todas las aulas tradicionales y especialmente a 5 títulos de grado totalmente en línea y 4 programas de postgrado.[23] De acuerdo con un periódico popular español (El País), el ULPGC utiliza su plataforma en línea de una manera excepcional.[24]
Investigación[editar]
Los institutos universitarios suponen el máximo órgano de gestión de la investigación. La ULPGC destaca en la investigación internacional en varios campos tales como ciencias marinas, sanidad, energía, economía y turismo, agua y TIC alrededor del mar, como demuestra la concesión de la mención de Campus de Excelencia Internacional por el Gobierno de España, con la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria y la Universidad de La Laguna, como eje tricontinental Europa-África-América.
El Instituto Universitario de Turismo y Desarrollo Económico Sostenible (IUTIDES) como Instituto responsable de la investigación de turismo en la ULPGC[25] ha contribuido a que la ULPGC ocupe el segundo puesto en España en productividad científica internacional en turismo[26] y se encuentre entre las 30 primeras universidades mundiales en productividad científica en turismo[27]
Instalaciones[editar]
Cuenta con 16 escuelas y facultades,[28] 11 institutos universitarios,[29] 36 departamentos,[30] 15 bibliotecas[31] 1 escuela de doctorado, 1 residencia, 1 aula de idiomas, 1 hospital universitario y el edificio del Rectorado.
Rectorado[editar]
Edificio del Rectorado de la ULPGC
Conocido también como “La Casa Verde” o “El Paraninfo” cuenta con una fachada exterior de estilo Clasicista-Académico (Academisismo), un templete cilíndrico abierto con una cúpula sobre 8 pilastras, jardines y patios traseros. {2}}, cuenta con varios despachos, un salón de actos y una galería de arte[32] dividida en 3 salones con los siguientes nombres: Juan Hidalgo, Lola Massieu y Arte Clara Muñoz.
En el salón de actos del edificio del Rectorado de la ULPGC se celebran las sesiones del Claustro Universitario de esta universidad.
Este edificio se empezó a construir en el año 1919 y se terminó en 1925 financiado por el Cabildo Insular de Gran Canaria, siendo el primer instituto de Bachillerato en Las Palmas donde además se usaba como Escuela de Comercio. Luego en el año 1937 su uso cambio mediante una cesión del Cabildo de Gran Canaria al Ramo de Guerra para ser un Hospital Militar debido al estallido de la Guerra Civil española, siendo usado como tal hasta 1984, en donde a partir de ese año ese edificio fue cerrado y dejado sin ningún uso debido a la construcción del nuevo Hospital Militar que se encuentra en el barrio de San Francisco en Las Palmas de Gran Canaria.
Se pensó en dejar todas las dependencias administrativas y de gobierno de la ULPGC en el Campus de Tafira pero se decidió en el año 1993 usar este edificio como la sede de la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria siendo a partir de este año cuando se inicio el proyecto para adaptar el edificio al uso como rectorado de la ULPGC.
A día de hoy sigue cumpliendo su función de Rectorado de la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria.
Espacio Nexo[editar]
Espacio Nexo ULPGC
El 14 de octubre de 2020 se inauguró el Espacio Nexo en el Campus de Tafira por el rector en aquel momento, Rafael Robaina[33] y esta ubicado al lado de las instalaciones deportivas. Este edificio tiene la finalidad de ser usado como multiusos en donde se llevan a cabo charlas o cursos de corta duración de forma paralela a las enseñanzas oficiales de la universidad. Además aquí tiene lugar varios encuentros entre la comunidad universitaria de la ULPGC y el sector empresarial.
Este lugar este dividido entre la zona especifica donde estará ubicada la asociación Alumni de la ULPGC, las cocinas, diversos talleres multidisciplinares y la zona común donde tienen lugar los encuentros o los cursos.
Finca “La Palmita”[editar]
ULPGC Finca La Palmita
Este lugar se encuentra al lado de la Facultad de Ciencias de la Actividad Física y el Deporte en el Campus de Tafira y alberga las oficinas de la Defensoría de la Comunidad Universitaria. Esta casa era una casa típica canaria que fue rehabilitada y luego usada como interés cultural.
Campus universitarios de la ULPGC[editar]
Véase también: Categoría:Facultades de la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
La ULPGC cuenta con 4 campus universitarios repartidos por la isla de Gran Canaria junto a un edificio de investigaciones oceanográficas y las instalaciones de las islas de Fuerteventura y Lanzarote.
Campus de Tafira[editar]
Situado en las afueras de la ciudad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, es el más extenso de ellos y el que concentra la mayor oferta docente y gran parte de los servicios comunes para la comunidad universitaria. Aquí se encuentra el conocido edificio llamado “el Bunker” usado por los estudiantes para estudiar., varias sucursales de la cafetería llamada “Las Casitas” (una al lado de la Escuela de Ingenierías Industriales y Civiles y otra en el aulario de la Facultad de Economía Empresa y Turismo) junto a otras cafeterías repartidas por todo el Campus de Tafira. Además cuenta con un Servicio de Reprografía Encuadernación y Autoedición junto a la sede del Consejo de Estudiantes de la ULPGC. En este campus se encuentran las siguientes facultades, Institutos Universitarios de Investigación y edificios:
Acceso principal a la Escuelade Arquitectura de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, en el Campus de Tafira.
Campus de Tafira, vista parcial.
Campus del Obelisco[editar]
En el centro de la ciudad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria en plena calle Tomas Morales, en el Campus del Obelisco, se imparten las titulaciones del área de Humanidades y Ciencias Sociales. Aquí se encuentra el Edificio de Formación del Profesorado, Edificio de Humanidades, Aulario del Obelisco, Biblioteca Universitaria del Campus del Obelisco, el Anexo del Edificio de Humanidades, un Servicio de Reprografía, Encuadernación y Autoedición, un Servicio de Información del Estudiante y un gimnasio. En este campus se encuentran las siguientes facultades e instituto Universitario de Investigación:
Facultad de Ciencias de la Educación.
Facultad de Traducción e Interpretación
Facultad de Geografía e Historia
Facultad de Filología
Instituto Universitario de Análisis y Aplicaciones Textuales (IATEXT)
Campus de San José[editar]
Hospital Universitario Insular de Gran Canaria.
Al sur de la capital grancanaria, en la conocida Avenida Marítima de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria se encuentra el Campus de San José donde se concentran las titulaciones del área de Ciencias de la Salud: Medicina, Enfermería y Fisioterapia, junto al Complejo Hospitalario Universitario Insular Materno-Infantil y un edificio de servicios generales en donde se encuentra la Administración del Edificio de Ciencias de la Salud, el Decanato de la Facultad de Ciencias de la Salud y la Biblioteca Universitaria de Ciencias de la Salud.
Además aquí se encuentra el edificio conocido como “La Granja”, usada por el Vicerrectorado de estudiantes y empleabilidad en donde se imparten los siguientes estudios: diploma de Estudios Canarios, diploma Peritia et Doctrina, Diploma de Estudios Europeos y los Cursos de Acceso para mayores de 25 y mayores de 45 años. Dentro de este mismo edificio se encuentra el Servicio de Acción Social, TIC ULPGC S.L., Instituto Confucio ULPGC, Instituto King Sejong Las Palmas y el Centro de Investigación y Cooperación Marítimo Pesquero. En este campus se encuentran las siguientes facultades, Institutos Universitarios de Investigación y edificios:
Facultad de Ciencias de La Salud
Hospital Universitario Insular de Gran Canaria.
Edificio de servicios generales
La Granja
Instituto Universitario de Investigaciones Biomédicas y Sanitarias (IUIBS)
Campus de Montaña Cardones[editar]
En el vecino término municipal de Arucas, en el Campus de Montaña Cardones, se ubican las instalaciones de Veterinaria, que aprovechan las infraestructuras de la Granja Agrícola Experimental del Cabildo Insular de Gran Canaria. En este campus se encuentran la siguiente facultad, Instituto Universitario de Investigación y edificios:
Facultad de Veterinaria
Hospital Clínico Veterinario
Instituto Universitario de Sanidad Animal y Seguridad Alimentaria (IUSA)
Biblioteca de Veterinaria
Jardín del pensador[editar]
Jardines del Pensador en la ULPGC
En el Campus de Tafira se encuentra el Jardín del Pensador de la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria ubicado en la parte trasera del departamento de Señales y Comunicaciones de la Escuela de Ingeniería de Telecomunicación y Electrónica (EITE) y el Departamento de Ingeniería Telemática de dicha escuela junto al Aula Magna del Instituto Superior de Teología de las Islas Canarias (ISTIC) y cuenta con un área de 23. {2}}.
Fue inaugurado el 23 de enero de 2007 por el rector Manuel Lobo Cabrera y contó con un presupuesto para su elaboración de 300.000 euros[34].
Entre su diversa flora se encuentra la Ceballosia fruticosa y la Gesnouinia arborea entre otras especies endémicas Canarias. Además esta zona cuenta con un estanque, zonas de paseo y merenderos.
Otras instalaciones[editar]
Edificio de Taliarte[editar]
En la costa de la vecina ciudad de Telde, se encuentra el edificio de Taliarte, donde se ubica una serie de instalaciones orientadas a las investigación científica y tecnológica, en el ámbito marítimo, con la implantación del Parque Tecnológico de Taliarte, en convivencia con otros espacios científicos, como la Plataforma Oceánica de Canarias el Instituto Canario de Ciencias Marinas y la instalación de Algología, que en la actualidad albergan el Banco Nacional de Algas. En este campus se encuentra el siguiente Instituto Universitario de Investigación y edificios:
Instituto Universitario de Oceanografía y Cambio Global (IOCAG)
Plataforma Oceánica de Canarias
Banco Nacional de Algas
Instalaciones en la isla de Lanzarote[editar]
En este campus se encuentran la siguiente facultad, escuela y edificio:
Escuela Universitaria Adscrita de Turismo de Lanzarote (EUTL)
Facultad de Ciencias de la Salud en Lanzarote
Delegación de la ULPGC en Lanzarote
Instalaciones en la isla de Fuerteventura[editar]
En este campus se encuentran la siguiente facultad, escuela y edificio:
Unidad de Apoyo a la Docencia de la ULPGC
Facultad de Ciencias de la Salud en Fuerteventura
Estructura de Teleformación ULPGC
Biblioteca universitaria de Ciencias de la Salud en Fuerteventura
Transportes[editar]
Para el Campus de Tafira se puede ir usando el servicio de transporte municipal de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria conocido como Guaguas Municipales con las líneas número 7, 25, 26 y 48; y el servicio llamado Global con las líneas 026, 301, 302, 303, 311, 313, 323, 324, 325, 327 y 328.
De igual manera para ir al Campus de San José usando el servicio municipal solo sirven las líneas 9, 12, 13, 50, 51 y 55; y el Global las líneas 001, 004, 005, 008, 010, 011, 012, 021, 023, 030, 050, 055, 057, 058, 059, 060 y 074.
Para acceder al Campus de Montaña Cardones solo se puede usar el servicio Global con las líneas 103, 105, 116, 117, 201, 204, 206, 210, 234, 324 y 325.
Mientras que para el Campus del Obelisco solo se puede ir usando el servicio de transporte municipal de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria conocido como Guaguas Municipales con las líneas número 2, 11, 25, 81 y L3.
Finalmente para ir al rectorado se usa el servicio municipal con las líneas 2, 7, 25, 33 y 70.
Organización institucional
[35][editar]
Según los estatutos de la ULPGC los órganos de gobierno se dividen en dos categorías: órganos colegiados donde entra el Claustro universitario, el Consejo Social, el Consejo de Gobierno, las Juntas de Escuela o Facultad, los Consejos de Departamento y los Consejos de los Institutos Universitarios de Investigación. Órganos unipersonales como el Rector, los vicerrectores, el Secretario/a general, el/la gerente y las direcciones de centro o facultad.
Órganos unipersonales[editar]
Rector[editar]
Es la máxima autoridad académica dentro de la universidad quien se encargara de representarla, de dirigirla, gestionarla y desarrollar lo dictaminado por lo acordado por los órganos colegiados asimismo nombrará a su equipo donde entrarán los vicerrectores, el Secretario General o el Gerente. Será elegido por mediante elecciones siendo por sufragio universal, directo y secreto, siendo el voto ponderado, 52% al profesorado doctor permanente, un 12% al profesorado doctor no permanente, un 26% al estudiantado y un 10% al personal de administración y servicios.
Podrá ser rector aquellas personas dentro de la universidad que formen parte en activo del cuerpo de catedráticos, solo podrá ser reelegido una sola vez y cada mandato tendrá una duración de 4 años. Podrá ser revocado por el Claustro Universitario siendo a iniciativa de un tercio de este órgano y aprobado por dos tercios de este, en caso de prosperar, se convocarán elecciones a Rector y el equipo rectoral pasara a estar en funciones junto a la disolución del Claustro Universitario.
El titular de este órgano actualmente es el catedrático Lluís Serra Majem.
Lista de rectores desde la creación de la ULPGC[editar]
Rector, -ora
Inicio del mandato
Fin del mandato
Francisco Rubio Royo
1989
1998
Manuel Lobo Cabrera[36]
1998
2007
José Regidor García[37]
2007
2016
Trinidad Arcos Pereira[38]
2016
2017
Rafael Juan Robaina Romero[39]
2017
2021
Lluís Serra Majem[40]
2021
Actualidad
Órganos colegiados[editar]
Claustro Universitario[editar]
El Claustro universitario tiene la función de ser el órgano en donde se representa a la comunidad universitaria. Esta formado por el Rector quien lo presidirá, el/la Secretario General que actuara como el Secretario del Claustro, el/la Gerente y 200 miembros más que pertenecen al Claustro en donde el 52% pertenece al profesorado doctor permanente, un 12% al profesorado doctor no permanente, un 26% al estudiantado y un 10% al personal de administración y servicios. Este órgano tiene una duración de 4 años aunque cada año se renovará aquellos puestos libres que aparezcan con el paso del tiempo por perdida de su condición de claustral de algún miembro.
Este órgano tiene como función elaborar y modificar los estatutos de la universidad, aprobar el reglamento propio del claustro, revocar al Rector tal y como indica la Ley de universidades española y el artículo 79 de los estatutos de la ULPGC, elegir a los representantes de cada sector al órgano de Consejo de Gobierno y revocarlos, crear comisiones dentro de las competencias del claustro, elaborar y modificar el reglamento electoral de la universidad, modificar o aprobar los símbolos de la ULPGC, solicitar la comparecencia de cualquier miembro de órgano de la universidad y celebrar cada año una sesión para debatir el estado de la universidad.
Consejo de Gobierno[editar]
Este órgano es el encargado de establecer las pautas a seguir y como aplicar en la universidad las directrices sobre investigación, docencia, de recursos humanos, económicos y elabora los presupuestos (no los aprueba). Como el Claustro Universitario estará formado de la misma manera por el Rector, el/la Secretario General que , el/la Gerente y los vicerrectores siendo que estos últimos forman parte del grupo de 50 personas miembros de este órgano. Repartido un 50% por miembros elegidos por y de los que forman parte los Decanos de Facultad, Directores de Escuela y Directores de Departamento e Institutos Universitarios de Investigación; y otro 50% entre miembros del Claustro elegidos por este último. Durara 4 años pero entre el estudiantado se reduce este tiempo a la mitad.
El Consejo de Gobierno creara una comisión permanente formada de igual manera que este órgano pero con la diferencia de que en ve de estar todos lo vicerrectores solo estarán 2 asignados por el Rector, 5 miembros elegidos por el Claustro y 4 elegidos por los Decanos de Facultad, Directores de Escuela y Directores de Departamento e Institutos Universitarios de Investigación.
Las funciones del Consejo de Gobierno son modificar y aprobar su propio reglamento interno y aquellos reglamentos donde tengan competencia, proponer al Consejo Social la aprobación del presupuesto , proponer al Gobierno de Canarias la creación, modificación y supresión de Escuelas, Facultades e Institutos Universitarios de Investigación así como la de Centros de Investigación y de Grupos de Investigación, la aprobación de los planes de estudios y de los planes de organización docente de las titulaciones, la creación o modificación de Departamentos, servicios generales y sociales de la ULPGC, proponer al Consejo Social la supresión de títulos, aprobar las plazas para personal docente investigador y asignar 3 miembros de este órgano al Consejo Social.
Consejo social[editar]
Esta regulado por la Ley de la Comunidad Autónoma de Canarias siendo el órgano que actúa como la representación de la sociedad en la universidad actuando como mediador y conexión entre la universidad y la sociedad. Asegurando la correcta interconexión entre la actividad docente e investigadora de la universidad con las necesidades de la sociedad. En ningún momento este órgano podrá legislar en materia de docencia e investigación.
El Consejo Social de la ULPGC tiene como función de fiscalizar las acciones de la universidad y sobre todo las de carácter económico, aprueba los presupuestos y acciones a largo plazo propuestos por el Consejo de Gobierno. Además se encarga de promover la financiación social de la universidad.
Formarán parte de este órgano por parte de la comunidad universitaria el Rector, el Secretario General, el Gerente, un representante de cada sector elegido por y del consejo de gobierno siendo un representante por los estudiantes, otro por el profesorado y otro por el personal de administración y servicios. Por otra parte formarán parte de este consejo miembros de la sociedad y en número lo que diga la Ley de la Comunidad Autónoma de Canarias que estrictamente no pertenezcan a la universidad, es decir, personalidades ajenas a la universidad de carácter social, cultural, económico. ..
Lista de presidentes del Consejo Social de la ULPGC
[41][editar]
Presidente del Consejo Social de la ULPGC
Inicio del mandato
Fin del mandato
José María Barrientos
1985
1986
Octavio Llinás González
1986
1993
Lizardo Martell Cárdenes
1994
1998
Domingo Bello Cabrera
1998
2003
Aureliano Francisco Santiago Castellano
2003
2005
Lothar Siemens Hernández
2005
2015
Ángel Tristán Pimienta
2015
2019
Jesús León Lima
2019
2021
Ángel Tristán Pimienta
2021
Actualidad
Juntas de escuelas o facultades[editar]
Cada escuela o facultad tendrá su propia junta que se encargará de desarrollar lo referente a procesos académicos, administrativos y de gestión referentes a los títulos a académicos del centro junto a establecer los objetivos y planes académicos. Aprobar el proyecto docente de cada asignatura de las titulaciones que se imparten dentro del centro también es competencia de las juntas de centro como aprobar y ejecutar el presupuesto del centro así como elaborar y modificar su régimen interno. Además elige y revocara el director de centro o decano.
La junta de centro tiene una duración de 4 años con la posibilidad de ser reelegido una sola vez más formado por entre 120 y 150 personas.
Esta conformada por el decano o director de centro quien lo presidirá, el secretario del centro quien asimismo será el Secretario de la junta, el Administrador del edificio y un representante de la Biblioteca universitaria que contará con voz pero sin voto a menos que se trate de un representante del personal de administración y servicios, el 62% de la junta de centro será profesorado, un 33% estudiantes y un 5% del personal de administración y servicios.
Cualquier miembro podrá asistir aunque no tendrá voto pero si voz previamente solicitado al Decano o Director de Centro.
Doctores honoris causa
[42][editar]
Alfredo Kraus Trujillo, tenor grancanario. 1992.
Juan Díaz Rodríguez, médico, maestro y licenciado en Derecho. 1992.
Werner Arber, premio Nobel de Medicina 1978. 1996.
Jean Dausset, premio Nobel de Medicina 1980. 1996
Renato Dulbecco, premio Nobel de Medicina 1975. 1996.
Carleton Gajdusek, Premio Nobel de Medicina 1976. 1996.
Hamilton Smith, Premio Nobel de Medicina 1978. 1996.
Christian B. Anfinsen, Premio Nobel de Química 1972. 1996.
Severo Ochoa, Premio Nobel de Medicina 1959. 1996.
Santiago Grisolía, Premio Príncipe de Asturias 1990. 1996.
José Saramago, Premio Nobel de Literatura 1998. 1999.
Manuel Alvar, Precursor del estudio del español de Canarias. 1999.
César Manrique, Pintor, escultor y artista español. 1999.
Pedro Lezcano Montalvo, Poeta y dramaturgo. 2001.
Ramón Trujillo Carreño, Estudioso de la Semántica, especialmente del español hablado en Canarias. 2001.
Miguel López Alegría, Astronauta de la Nasa. 2001.
Rigoberta Menchú Tum, Premio Nobel de la Paz en 1992, Premio Unesco Educación para la Paz en 1990 y Premio Príncipe de Asturias de Cooperación Internacional en 1998. 2001.
Eugenio Coseriu, Lingüista especializado en filología románica. 2003.
Jesús Telo Núñez, Ha dedicado toda su vida a la promoción y desarrollo del deporte en Canarias. 2003.
↑ Gobierno de Canarias (ed.). «Estatutos de la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria.» (pdf). Boletín Oficial de Canarias nº 153 de 09 de agosto de 2016: 22711. Título preliminar. Artículo 8.
↑ «BOE.es – BOE-A-1987-4839 Real Decreto 2802/1986, de 12 de diciembre, de traspasos de funciones y servicios a la Comunidad Autónoma de Canarias en materia de Universidades. ». www.boe.es. Consultado el 14 de marzo de 2021.
↑ «Ley 5/1989, 4 mayo, de reorganización universitaria de Canarias».
↑ «BOC – 1991/069. Jueves 23 de Mayo de 1991». www.gobiernodecanarias.org. Consultado el 14 de marzo de 2021.
↑ Titulaciones que se ofertan en la ULPGC
↑ «Estudios de Grado de la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria». Consultado el 13 de marzo de 2021.
↑ ab «Academic Ranking of World Universities 2020». Consultado el 13 de marzo de 2021.
↑ «Top Universities in Spain 2021 Spanish University Ranking». Consultado el 13 de marzo de 2021.
↑ «Ranking Universities in Spain 2022 Spanish University Ranking». Consultado el 13 de mayo de 2022.
↑ «2022 Mundial University Ranking Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria». Consultado el 13 de mayo de 2022.
↑ «ULPGC». Archivado desde el original el 10 de noviembre de 2011.
↑ Albacete-Sáez C. and Fuentes-Fuentes M, (2010) “Difusión de la investigación española sobre turismo en revistas internacionales”. Revista de Análisis Turístico Asociación Española de Expertos Científicos en Turismo. nº 9, 14-29
↑ Park, K. et al. (2011) “Hospitality and tourism research rankings by author, university, and country using six major journals: the first decade of the new millennium. Journal of Hospitality and Tourism Research, 35, 3, 381-416
↑ ULPGC – Datos globales
↑ «Directorio Institutos universitarios». ULPGC – Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. Consultado el 13 de marzo de 2021.
↑ «Listado de Departamentos». ULPGC – Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. Consultado el 13 de marzo de 2021.
↑ «Bibliotecas | Biblioteca ULPGC». biblioteca.ulpgc.es. Consultado el 13 de marzo de 2021.
↑ «Galería de Arte de la ULPGC».
↑ «El Rector Rafael Robaina inaugura el edificio NEXO #Espacio Innovación, en el Campus de Tafira». Portal de noticias de la ULPGC. 14 de octubre de 2020. Consultado el 13 de mayo de 2022.
↑ «El Rector inaugura los Jardines del Pensador en el Campus de Tafira».
↑ «Estatutos de La Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria».
↑ «Manuel Lobo Cabrera, Rector (1998 – 2007). Discursos institucionales». Consultado el 13 de marzo de 2021.
↑ «El BOC publica el decreto de nombramiento de D. José Regidor García como Rector de la ULPGC». Consultado el 13 de marzo de 2021.
↑ «Consejo de Gobierno de la ULPGC: Trinidad Arcos quedará como Rectora accidental a partir de octubre». Consultado el 13 de marzo de 2021.
↑ «El BOC publica el nombramiento como Rector de la ULPGC de Rafael Robaina». Consultado el 13 de marzo de 2021.
↑ «Toma de posesión del Rector LLuís Serra Majem». Consultado el 13 de marzo de 2021.
↑ «Consejo Social ULPGC Historia». Consultado el 13 de marzo de 2021.
↑ «Doctores Honoris Causa de la ULPGC». Consultado el 13 de marzo de 2021.
Bibliografía[editar]
Real Decreto 2802/1986, de 12 de diciembre, de traspasos de funciones y servicios a la Comunidad Autónoma de Canarias en materia de Universidades.
Ley 5/1989, de 4 de mayo, de Reorganización Universitaria de Canarias por la que se crear la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Estatutos de la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
REGLAMENTO DEL CONSEJO DE ESTUDIANTES DE LA UNIVERSIDAD DE LAS PALMAS DE GRAN CANARIA – Aprobado por el Consejo de Gobierno de la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria el 3 de marzo de 2015 (BOULPGC de 5 de marzo de 2015)
Nuestros campus | ULPGC – Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Historia de la Biblioteca Universitaria de la ULPGC
Conoce nuestra Sede Institucional
Enlaces externos[editar]
Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, sitio web
Consejo Social de la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, sitio web
Consejo de estudiantes de la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, sitio web
Segunda posición de la ULPGC en el Ranking de Universidades en Software Libre 2013
Redes sociales[editar]
Facebook
Twitter
Instagram
Linkedin
YouTube
Control de autoridades
Proyectos Wikimedia
Datos: Q940302
Multimedia: University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria / Q940302
Caso Isla de Palmas – Fallo Arbitral 1928 » Data DIP
Caso Isla de Palmas (EEUU c/Paises Bajos)- Sentencia arbitral
ASUNTO DE LA ISLA DE PALMAS
Estados Unidos / Países Bajos
(sentencia arbitral, 1928)
[Síntesis tomada de la publicación de Oriol Casanovas y La Rosa, Casos y Textos de Derecho Internacional Público, Tecnos, Madrid, 4ª ed. revisada (1986), pp. 210-219]
Nota: En 1906 se inició un litigio entre los Estados Unidos de América y los Países Bajos cuyo objeto era la soberanía sobre la isla de Palmas, también llamada Miangas, que está situada en el área del archipiélago filipino; éste había sido cedido a los Estados Unidos por España mediante el Tratado de París de 1898, al terminar la guerra hispano-americana.
El litigio surgió tras la visita que en 1906 hizo el general americano Wood a la isla de Palmas y el informe que posteriormente envió a la Secretaría militar del Ejército de los Estados Unidos; dicho informe llevó a la conclusión de que la isla era reclamada por los Países Bajos.
Los Estados Unidos alegaban su soberanía sobre la isla de Palmas por considerar que estaba incluida en los territorios que les había cedido España. Los Países Bajos reivindicaban, por el contrario, su soberanía sobre la isla basándose en que venían ejerciendo desde mucho tiempo atrás su autoridad sobre ella.
La controversia fue sometida al Tribunal Permanente de Arbitraje [Corte Permanente de Arbitraje] para su resolución por un árbitro único, que fue el jurista suizo Max Huber.
En la sentencia se dice:
… Antes de 1906 no había surgido ninguna controversia entre los Estados Unidos, o España, de un lado, y los Países Bajos, del otro, referente en concreto a la isla de Palmas o Miangas.
Ambas partes reclaman la isla en cuestión en calidad de territorio vinculado durante un largo período de tiempo a territorios que están situados relativamente próximos a ella y que pertenecen sin discusión a la soberanía de una u otra de ellas.
De los términos del Acuerdo Especial se deriva que las partes adoptan la postura de que para los fines del presente arbitraje la isla en cuestión sólo puede pertenecer a una u otra de ellas. Los derechos de terceras potencias sólo pueden tenerse en consideración en tanto en cuanto los derechos de las Partes en la disputa puedan derivarse de ellos …
… El árbitro considera necesario hacer algunas observaciones generales sobre lo que la soberanía significa en relación con el territorio.
… La soberanía referida a una parte de la superficie del globo (terrestre) es la condición jurídicamente necesaria para que dicha parte pueda ser adscrita al territorio de un determinado Estado…
La soberanía en las relaciones interestatales equivale a independencia. La independencia respecto a una parte del globo (terrestre) es el derecho a ejercer en dicho lugar las funciones estatales, con exclusión de cualquier otro Estado. El desarrollo de la organización de las naciones en forma estatal y, correlativamente, el desarrollo del derecho internacional, han establecido este principio de la competencia exclusiva del Estado respecto de su propio territorio, de suerte que han hecho de dicho principio el punto de partida para resolver la mayoría de las cuestiones relativas a las relaciones internacionales.
… La soberanía territorial pertenece siempre a uno, o en circunstancias excepcionales a varios Estados, con exclusión de todos los demás. El hecho de que las funciones estatales puedan ser realizadas por cualquier Estado en determinadas zonas es precisamente, por otra parte, el rasgo característico de la situación jurídica vigente en aquellas partes del globo tales como el alta mar o los territorios sin dueño, que no son o todavía no forman parte del territorio de un Estado.
La soberanía territorial es, en general, una situación reconocida y delimitada en el espacio, bien por las llamadas fronteras naturales, reconocidas por el derecho internacional, o por signos exteriores de determinación que sean indiscutibles, o bien por compromisos legales contraídos entre vecinos interesados, tales como convenios fronterizos, o por actos de reconocimiento de Estados en el ámbito de límites determinados. Si surge una controversia referente a la soberanía sobre una parte del territorio, es costumbre examinar cuál de los Estados que reclaman (dicha) soberanía posee un título … mejor al que otro Estado pueda exhibir contra él. Sin embargo, si la controversia se basa en el hecho de que la otra Parte ha ejercido su soberanía, no basta con determinar el título por el que la soberanía territorial fue válidamente adquirida en un momento determinado; también se ha de demostrar que dicha soberanía territorial ha continuado existiendo y que existió en el momento que deba ser considerado como crucial para la decisión de la controversia. Esta demostración consiste en el despliegue de actividades, tales que sean propias únicamente del soberano territorial.
Los títulos de adquisición de la soberanía territorial en el derecho internacional actual se basan, bien en un acto de efectiva aprehensión, tal como ocupación o conquista, o, en el caso de la cesión, presuponen que la Potencia cedente y la cesionaria, o al menos una de ellas, tienen la facultad de disponer efectivamente del territorio cedido.
Del mismo modo el acrecentamiento natural sólo puede concebirse como el incremente a una parte de territorio donde existe una soberanía actual capaz de extenderse a un punto que cae dentro de su esfera de actividad. Parece, pues, natural que un elemento que es esencial para la constitución de la soberanía no debería faltar en su continuación. Esto es tan cierto, que la práctica … reconoce … que el ejercicio continuo y pacífico de soberanía territorial … equivale a un título. La creciente insistencia con que el derecho internacional, desde mediados del siglo dieciocho, ha exigido que la ocupación deba ser efectiva, sería inconcebible si sólo se requiriera la efectividad para el acto de adquisición y no igualmente para el mantenimiento del derecho. Si se ha insistido por encima de todo en la efectividad en relación con la ocupación, ello es debido a que la cuestión rara vez se suscita en conexión con territorios en los que ya existe un orden de cosas establecido. Igual que antes del nacimiento del derecho internacional los límites de los países se determinaban necesariamente por el hecho de que el poder de un Estado era ejercido dentro de su ámbito, también después, bajo el imperio del derecho internacional, el ejercicio continuo y pacífico constituye todavía uno de los elementos más importantes a tener en consideración al establecer los límites entre los Estados.
La soberanía territorial … implica el derecho a ejercitar de forma exclusiva las actividades (propias) de los Estados. Este derecho tiene como contrapartida un deber: la obligación de proteger dentro de su propio territorio los derechos de los demás Estados, especialmente su derecho a la integridad e inviolabilidad tanto en tiempo de paz como de guerra, juntamente con los derechos que cada Estado pueda reclamar para aquellos de sus nacionales que se hallen en territorio extranjero. Si el Estado no manifiesta su soberanía territorial de una forma adecuada a las circunstancias, no pueda cumplir plenamente con este deber. La soberanía territorial no puede limitarse a su aspecto negativo, v. gr., a la exclusión de las actividades de otros Estados; ya que dicha soberanía cumple la función de distribuir entre las diversas naciones el espacio en que han de desarrollarse las actividades humanas, con el fin de dispensar a éstas en cualquier parte aquel mínimo de protección del que el derecho internacional es garante.
… El derecho internacional, cuya estructura no está basada en una organización supraestatal, no puede suponerse que minimice un derecho como el de la soberanía territorial, con la que están ligadas casi todas las relaciones internacionales, a la categoría de un derecho abstracto, sin manifestaciones concretas.
… Las manifestaciones de soberanía territorial asumen, es verdad, diferentes formas, de acuerdo con las condiciones de tiempo y lugar. La soberanía, aunque en principio (es) continua, de hecho no puede ejercitarse en todo momento sobre todos los puntos de un territorio. La intermitencia y discontinuidad compatibles con el mantenimiento del derecho difieren necesariamente según se trate de regiones habitadas o deshabitadas, o regiones situadas entre territorios en los que la soberanía es ejercida incuestionablemente, o regiones accesibles, por ejemplo, desde el alta mar. Es cierto que los Estados limítrofes pueden, mediante convenio, fijar límites a su propia soberanía, incluso en regiones tales como el interior de continentes apenas explorados donde tal soberanía se manifiesta escasamente y de este modo cada uno puede impedir al otro cualquier penetración en su territorio…
Si, sin embargo, no existe ninguna línea convencional de precisión topográfica suficiente, o si existen lagunas en las fronteras establecidas de otro modo, o si una línea convencional da pie para la duda, o si, como por ejemplo en el caso de una isla situada en alta mar, surge la cuestión acerca de si el título es válido erga omnes, el ejercicio efectivo, continuo y pacífico de las funciones estatales es, en caso de controversia, el criterio lógico y normal de soberanía territorial.
… El derecho internacional experimentó profundas modificaciones entre el final de la Edad Media y el final del siglo diecinueve, respecto de los derechos de descubrimiento y adquisición de regiones deshabitadas o regiones habitadas por salvajes o por pueblos semicivilizados …. (Además), un hecho jurídico debe ser apreciado a la luz del derecho contemporáneo suyo, y no (a la luz) del derecho vigente en el tiempo cuando surge, o ha de zanjarse, una controversia con él relacionada. El efecto del descubrimiento por España ha de ser, pues, valorado por las normas de derecho internacional vigentes durante la primera mitad del siglo dieciséis…
Si se adopta el punto de vista más favorable a los argumentos americanos, … esto es, si consideramos como derecho positivo durante el período en cuestión que la regla del descubrimiento como tal, o sea, el mero hecho de ver tierra, sin ningún acto, incluso simbólico, de toma de posesión, comprendía, ipso iure, la soberanía territorial y no un «título incoado» , un ius ad rem que habría de ser completado eventualmente por una toma de posesión efectiva y duradera en un plazo de tiempo razonable, surge la cuestión de si existía soberanía en la fecha crítica, esto es, en el momento de la conclusión y entrada en vigor del Tratado de París.
Sobre la cuestión de cuál de los diferentes sistemas jurídicos prevalecientes en sucesivas épocas ha de ser aplicado en un caso concreto –el llamado derecho intertemporal– se debe distinguir entre la creación de derechos y existencia de derechos. El mismo principio que somete el acto creador de un derecho al derecho vigente al tiempo del nacimiento de este derecho, exige que la existencia del derecho, entre otras palabras, su manifestación continuada, deberá seguir las condiciones requeridas por la evolución del derecho. En el siglo diecinueve, el derecho internacional, en consideración al hecho de que la mayor parte de la tierra estaba bajo la soberanía de Estados miembros de la comunidad internacional y que los territorios sin dueño eran relativamente escasos, tomó nota de la tendencia existente y desarrollada especialmente desde mediados del siglo dieciocho y sentó el principio de que la ocupación, para fundar una reclamación de soberanía territorial, debe ser efectiva, esto es, ofrecer ciertas garantías a otros Estados y a sus nacionales. Por ello parece incompatible con esta regla de derecho positivo que haya regiones que ni estén bajo la efectiva soberanía de un Estado ni se hallen sin dueño y que, en cambio, estén reservadas a la exclusiva influencia de un solo Estado, en virtud únicamente de un título de adquisición que ya no está reconocido por el derecho vigente, incluso si tal título alguna vez confirió la soberanía territorial. Por estas razones, el solo descubrimiento, sin ningún acto subsiguiente, no puede bastar en el momento presente para probar la soberanía sobre la isla de Palmas o Miangas…
Si, por el contrario, se toma el punto de vista de que el descubrimiento no constituye un título definitivo de soberanía sino sólo un título «incoado», tal título existe, es cierto, sin manifestación externa. Sin embargo, de acuerdo con la opinión que ha prevalecido en todo momento desde el siglo diecinueve, un título incoado de descubrimiento debe ser completado en un plazo razonable por la ocupación efectiva de la región que se afirma haber descubierto. Se debe aplicar este principio en el presente caso por las razones expuestas antes en relación con las reglas que determinan cuál de los sucesivos sistemas legales ha de aplicarse – el llamado derecho intertemporal. En el presente caso no ha sido alegado ningún acto de ocupación ni tampoco, excepto en un período reciente, ningún ejercicio de soberanía en la isla de Palmas (realizado) por España. Pero incluso admitiendo que el título español existiera todavía como incoado en 1898 y pudiera considerársele incluido en la cesión realizada por el art. III del Tratado de París, un título incoado no puede prevalecer sobre un título anterior definitivo presentado por otro Estado…
Queda por examinar, por último, el título que nace de la contigüidad. Aunque en determinadas circunstancias los Estados han mantenido que las islas (situadas) relativamente cerca de sus costas les pertenecen en virtud de su situación geográfica, es imposible mostrar la existencia de una regla de derecho internacional positivo al efecto de que las islas situadas fuera de aguas territoriales deban pertenecer a un Estado por el mero hecho de que su territorio constituye la terra firma, el continente más cercano o isla de tamaño considerable. No sólo parece que no existen precedentes (lo) suficientemente frecuentes y precisos en su contenido (como) para establecer tal regla de derecho internacional, sino que dicho principio es por su propia naturaleza tan incierto y tan controvertido que incluso los Gobiernos de un mismo Estado han sostenido en ocasiones diferentes opiniones contradictorias respecto de su validez. El principio de la contigüidad puede no estar fuera de lugar referido a islas cuando se trata de adjudicarlas a un Estado en vez de a otro, ya por un acuerdo entre las partes o por una decisión no fundada imperativamente en el derecho; pero este principio, en tanto que regla estableciendo ipso iure una presunción de soberanía a favor de un determinado Estado, estaría en conflicto con lo que se ha dicho que es la soberanía territorial y con la necesaria relación entre el derecho a excluir de una región a otros Estados y el deber de ejercitar allí las actividades estatales. Tampoco es admisible este principio de contigüidad como un método jurídico de decidir cuestiones de soberanía territorial, pues carece totalmente de precisión y su aplicación conduciría a resultados arbitrarios. Esto sería especialmente cierto en un caso como el de la isla en cuestión, que no está relativamente cerca de un único continente sino que forma parte de un extenso archipiélago en el que no están claras unas estrictas delimitaciones entre sus diferentes partes.
Sin embargo, existe en el fondo de la idea de la contigüidad un aspecto que también ha de ser examinado en relación con la isla de Palmas o Miangas…
… En el ejercicio de la soberanía territorial existen necesariamente lagunas, intermitencias en el tiempo y discontinuidades en el espacio. Se puede observar este fenómeno especialmente en el caso de los territorios coloniales (que están) parcialmente deshabitados o todavía parcialmente insumisos. El hecho de que un Estado no pueda probar el ejercicio de soberanía sobre dichas partes del territorio no puede interpretarse precipitadamente en el sentido de que dicha soberanía no existe. Cada caso debe considerarse según las circunstancias propias del mismo.
Hay que tener presente que la jurisprudencia arbitral internacional en (materia de) controversias sobre soberanía territorial … parece atribuir a los actos de ejercicio de soberanía, incluso realizados aisladamente, mayor peso que a la continuidad del territorio, a pesar de que dicha continuidad se combinara con la existencia de límites naturales.
… La argumentación de los Países Bajos sostiene que la Compañía de las Indias Orientales estableció la soberanía holandesa sobre la isla de Palmas o Miangas desde el siglo diecisiete por medio de acuerdos con los reyezuelos (indígenas) y que dicha soberanía se ha venido ejerciendo durante los dos últimos siglos.
Los actos de la Compañía (Holandesa) de las Indias Orientales realizados con el fin de ocupar o colonizar las regiones en litigio en el presente caso deben, según el derecho internacional, asimilarse enteramente a los actos del propio Estado de los Países Bajos. Desde finales del siglo dieciséis hasta el siglo diecinueve, a las compañías formadas por individuos y dedicadas a fines económicos (Compañías creadas por Carta) se les concedieron, por aquellos Estados de quienes dependían, facultades de carácter público para la adquisición y administración de colonias. La Compañía Holandesa de las Islas Orientales es una de las mejor conocidas…
… Si un contrato celebrado por la Compañía cae en la esfera de las meras transacciones económicas o tiene naturaleza política o administrativa de carácter público es una cuestión que debe resolverse atendiendo a cada caso concreto. Respecto a los contratos entre un Estado o una Compañía, como la Compañía Holandesa de las Indias Orientales, y reyezuelos indígenas o jefes de pueblos no reconocidos como miembros de la comunidad internacional, (éstos) no son, según el derecho internacional, tratados o convenios capaces de crear derechos y obligaciones semejantes a los que, en derecho internacional, nacen de los tratados. Sin embargo, los contratos de esa naturaleza no están enteramente desprovistos de efectos indirectos en situaciones regidas por el derecho internacional; si bien no constituyen títulos en derecho internacional, al menos constituyen hechos que el derecho debe tener en cuenta en ciertas circunstancias… Generalmente las relaciones jurídicas creadas en virtud de tales contratos adoptan la forma de señorío y vasallaje o la del llamado protectorado colonial…
… La prueba documental lleva a la conclusión de que la Isla de Palmas o Miangas era considerada por la Compañía Holandesa de las Indias Orientales en la primera mitad del siglo dieciocho como una parte de su Estado vasallo de Tabukan…
… La reclamación de soberanía de los Estados Unidos con respecto a la isla de Palmas o Miangas se deriva de España por vía de cesión, de acuerdo con el Tratado de París. Este tratado … no otorgó a favor de los Estados Unidos ningún título de soberanía que no hubiera tenido España anteriormente. El punto esencial es, pues, decidir si España tuvo soberanía sobre Palmas o Miangas en el tiempo de la entrada en vigor del Tratado de París.
Los Estados Unidos fundan su reclamación en títulos basados en el descubrimiento, el reconocimiento por tratado y la contigüidad, esto es, títulos relacionados con circunstancias que llevan a la adquisición de soberanía; sin embargo, no han demostrado el hecho de que la soberanía así adquirida fuese ejercida en algún momento.
Los Países Bajos fundan, por el contrario, su reclamación de soberanía esencialmente en el título del continuo y pacífico ejercicio de la autoridad del Estado sobre la isla. Debido a que en derecho internacional este título prevalecería sobre un título de adquisición de soberanía no seguido por el ejercicio efectivo de autoridad estatal es necesario aclarar… si lo alegado por los Países Bajos ha sido suficientemente probado y, si así es, durante cuánto tiempo.
… Los Países Bajos han logrado probar… (que, al menos desde 1790, la isla formó parte de dos de los Estados indígenas de la Isla de Sangri, los cuales estaban desde 1677 bajo el señorío de la Compañía de las Indias Orientales, y por ello, de los Países Bajos, y que se ejercieron actos de autoridad que afectaban a la Isla por el vasallo, o el señor, entre 1700 y 1898, y 1898 y 1906).
… Consideración aparte de que las manifestaciones de soberanía sobre una isla pequeña y distante, habitada por indígenas, no puede esperarse que sea frecuente, no es necesario que el ejercicio de la soberanía se remonte a un período muy lejano. Puede bastar con que tal ejercicio existiera en 1898 y que hubiera ya existido bastante antes de esta fecha de una forma tan continuada y pacífica como para permitir a cualquier Potencia que pudiera considerarse poseedora de soberanía, el tener, según las condiciones locales, una posibilidad razonable para verificar la existencia de un estado de cosas contrario a sus ciertos o supuestos derechos.
… Es bastante normal que el establecimiento de la soberanía sea el resultado de una lenta evolución, de una intensificación progresiva del control estatal. Especialmente esto sucede así al adquirirse la soberanía en virtud del establecimiento de un señorío por una Potencia colonial sobre un Estado indígena, en relación con las posesiones exteriores de dicho Estado (indígena).
Ahora, las pruebas referentes al período posterior a la primera mitad del siglo diecinueve muestran con certeza que el Gobierno de las Indias Holandesas consideraba claramente a la Isla como parte de sus posesiones y que en los años inmediatamente precedentes a 1898 tuvo lugar una intensificación en el ejercicio de su soberanía.
… Debe ser admitido el carácter pacífico del ejercicio de la soberanía holandesa durante todo el período al cual se refieren las pruebas relativas a actos de ejercicio (de soberanía) (1700-1906).
Más aún, no existen pruebas que permitan afirmar la existencia de un acto de ejercicio de soberanía sobre la Isla por parte de España u otra Potencia, de modo que pudiera contrarrestar o descartar las manifestaciones de soberanía de los Países Bajos. En cuanto a terceras Potencias, las pruebas aportadas al Tribunal no revelan ningún rastro de tales actuaciones al menos desde mediados del siglo diecisiete en adelante. Estas circunstancias, junto con la ausencia de prueba alguna de conflicto entre autoridades holandesas y españolas respecto de Palmas o Miangas durante más de dos siglos, constituyen una prueba indirecta del ejercicio exclusivo de la soberanía holandesa.
… Respecto de los requisitos de adquisición de soberanía por vía del ejercicio pacífico y continuado de la autoridad (por) un Estado (la llamada prescripción adquisitiva)… se ha de decir lo siguiente:
(Que) el ejercicio ha sido público y sin ocultación, es decir, conforme a los usos referentes al ejercicio de soberanía sobre Estados coloniales. Parece imposible que pudiera existir un ejercicio clandestino de autoridad estatal sobre un territorio habitado durante un período de tiempo considerable. (Que) no hubo obligación por parte de los Países Bajos de notificar a las demás potencias el establecimiento del señorío sobre los Estados Sangi o el ejercicio de soberanía en esos territorios.
Tal notificación, como cualquier otro acto formal, sólo sería requisito jurídicamente necesario si se deriva de una norma de derecho expresa. Una norma de este tipo, adoptada en 1885 por las Potencias para el continente africano, no se aplica de plano a otras regiones, y de aquí que los acuerdos de … 1885 … 1889, incluso si hubieran de ser considerados como las primeras manifestaciones de soberanía sobre Palmas o Miangas no estarían sometidos al requisito de notificación.
En adelante ya no puede dudarse de que los Países Bajos ejercieron la autoridad estatal sobre los Estados Sangi como soberanos por derecho propio y no por título derivado o precario.
Se deben considerar cumplidos los requisitos de adquisición de soberanía por parte de los Países Bajos. Queda ahora por ver si los Estados Unidos, como sucesores de España, están en posición de exhibir un título equivalente o mejor. A esto hay que responder negativamente.
El título de descubrimiento… según la interpretación más favorable y extensiva, sólo podría existir como título incoado, como pretensión de establecer la soberanía mediante ocupación efectiva. Sin embargo, un título incoado no puede prevalecer sobre un título perfecto basado en un ejercicio de soberanía pacífico y continuo.
El título de contigüidad, entendiendo como fundamento de la soberanía territorial, carece de base en derecho internacional…
… El derecho internacional, como (todo) el derecho en general, tiene la función de garantizar la coexistencia de intereses diversos que son dignos de protección jurídica. Si, como en el presente caso, sólo puede prevalecer uno de los dos intereses en conflicto, ya que la soberanía sólo puede atribuirse a una de las Partes, el interés que supone el mantenimiento de un estado de cosas que, en el momento crítico, ofrecía una cierta garantía para el respeto de sus derechos a los habitantes del territorio disputado y a los demás Estados, debe prevalecer, en caso de duda, sobre un interés que, supuesto que estuviera reconocido por el derecho internacional, todavía no se ha desarrollado mediante manifestaciones concretas.
Suponiendo que, al tiempo de la entrada en vigor del Tratado de París, la Isla no formara parte de ningún Estado, España sólo habría podido ceder aquellos derechos que posiblemente se derivaran del descubrimiento o la contigüidad. En cambio, el título incoado de los Países Bajos no hubiera podido ser alterado por un tratado celebrado entre terceras Potencias; y tal tratado tampoco hubiera podido imprimir el carácter de ilegalidad a ninguna acción emprendida por los Países Bajos con vistas a completar su título incoado –al menos en tanto no surgiera una controversia sobre el tema…
Ahora, del informe del general Wood, se deduce que el establecimiento de la autoridad de los Países Bajos, demostrado también por signos externos de soberanía, había alcanzado tal grado de desarrollo que la importancia de mantener este estado de cosas debe considerarse que debe prevalecer sobre una reclamación basada posiblemente, o bien en un descubrimiento (realizado) en tiempos muy remotos y no reforzado por la ocupación, o en una mera posición geográfica.
Esta es la conclusión alcanzada atendiendo a la relativa fuerza de los títulos innovados por cada Parte y fundada exclusivamente en una parte limitada de las pruebas relativas a la época inmediatamente anterior al nacimiento de la controversia.
La misma conclusión se impone todavía con mayor vigor si se toman en consideración todas las pruebas por las que se pretende demostrar que, durante el período de 1700 a 1906, se realizaron actos no perturbados de ejercicio pacífico de la soberanía por parte de los Países Bajos, y que… pueden considerarse prueba suficiente de la soberanía de los Países Bajos.
Por estas razones el árbitro decide lo siguiente: La Isla de Palmas o Miangas forma en su totalidad parte del territorio de los Países Bajos (Nations Unies, Recueil des Sentences Arbitrales, vol. II, págs. 829 y sigs.).
*Tomado del Blog “El Rincon del Fallo” publicado por Fanny.
Las Palmas, la capital de Gran Canaria
Las Palmas es el nombre de la capital de Gran Canaria, pero el nombre Las Palmas también representó la provincia. Un poco de historia nos dice que Las Palmas fue fundada en 1478 después de una forcejeo con los habitantes de la época de la isla, los guanches. En 1492, Cristóbal Colón hizo una parada aquí para su viaje a América. Prueba de ello es la Casa de Colón en la ciudad.
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La conquista de Las Palmas
Cuando Juan Rejón conquistó y fundó la ciudad en 1478, ninguna persona habia pensado que Las Palmas hoy es tan importante por Gran Canaria. La ciudad se forma sobre una colina, Barranco de Guiniguada. La conquista de las Islas Canarias fue encargado por los Reyes Católicos de España. Es en Las Isletas de que los conquistadores de España pusieron pie en tierra. Las Isletas hoy hace todavía parte de la capital.
En 1599 fue el entonces Las Palmas destruida en gran parte por el holandeses encabezada por Pieter van der Does. Estos trataron de recapturar Las Palmas de los españoles, pero sin éxito. Una campana de bronce donados por los Países Bajos, se encuentra como recordatorio en la magnífica catedral de Santa Ana.
Una capital con muchas opciones
Las Palmas está situado en el mapa, en el noreste de la isla de Gran Canaria. Esta ciudad también está cerca del océano Atlántico. Debido a estas favorable posición tiene Las Palmas un importante puerto y varias playas como la Playa de las Canteras y Playa de las Alcaravaneras. Algo menos favorable que es el clima en Las Palmas que es más húmedo, más nublado y menos soleado que la parte sur de la isla. La ciudad también es menos turística.
Ir al paso en Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Lo que yo recomendaría es, obviamente, una noche de fiesta en esta próspera ciudad capital. Allí es como en todas las grandes ciudades, día y noche una vida nocturna en Las Palmas. Bares, restaurantes, museos, discotecas y casinos.
El Casino de Las Palmas es nuestro primer destino. Tal vez somos más ricos o, quién sabe más pobre. Pero es día de fiesta, estamos seguros de no despertar. Gran Casino Las Palmas está situado en la calle Simón Bolívar, 3 ( mapa ), cerca de Parque Santa Catalina. El casino está abierto todos los días 12:00-04:00 ( horario de apertura ). Por supuesto también hay un bar y un restaurante, donde se puede disfrutar romántica con su dos pueden comer. ( Página web de Casino )
Tienes el dinero que quede después de su visita al casino, entonces Las Palmas definitivamente mimado usted con una amplia gama de bares y discotecas. Algunos ejemplos están el Neón Dancing S.L. Regulares hay organizados Noches especiales o aquí en este ya 30 años discoteca existentes. Los DJs y música en vivo entretener a los huéspedes aquí en la música contemporánea en el gran salón de baile. Discoteca Los 40 Y Que es un área separada donde la música de los 70, 80 y 90 se tuerza.
Puedo imaginar que tal vez no eres un fan de la música discoteca. El Auditorio / Teatro Alfredo Kraus se centra más en el visitante que aman la música clásica, el ballet y el teatro, incluyendo el teatro infantil. En el auditorio se puede disfrutar de gastronómico en el restaurante japonés y una cocina de vanguardia de Tailandia, Perú, Brasil y por supuesto nuestra propia cocina canaria con vinos.
Un concepto muy diferente es de nuevo el Café Central en Calle Numancia, 85. Este se encuentra cerca de Alfredo Kraus. Café Central es la comida, la música y el centro de exposiciones de nuevo central.
Hay pintura y fotografía exposiciones regularmente de varios artistas. En el pequeño pero auténtico y acogedor restaurante se puede degustar la deliciosa cocina del Café Central. Especialmente las especialidades canarias están muy bien cocinados. Por supuesto, el menú también incluye un montón de aperitivos y tapas.
La vida nocturna en Las Palmas es una experiencia en sí, no lo hace en un día o de la noche. Una estancia de varios días para descubrir todo lo que esta hermosa capital canario es sin duda recomendable. Todos los consejos sobre cafeterías, bares, teatros y discotecas, por lo tanto siempre bienvenidos a través del formulario de contacto.
El camino a Gran Canaria
Las Palmas ha crecido hoy en una ciudad moderna que sigue creciendo todos los días. La ciudad se puede llegar en barco a través de los dos puertos maravillosos e importantes. Estos puertos de Las Palmas proporcionan una buena conexión diaria entre las Islas Canarias. Le gustaría hacia a Gran Canaria de vacaciones o visitábamos la familia de la España peninsular entonces hay una conexión semanal entre Cádiz y Las Palmas.
Regularmente puedes visitar los majestuosos cruceros que atracan en el puerto de Las Palmas. A partir de octubre, los puertos deportivos de Las Palmas son reservado para yates. Las Islas Canarias son por las temperaturas moderadas y las horas de sol en el invierno también populares entre las personas que vienen a hibernar.
La mayoría de los turistas llegar a su destino favorito en avión. Casi todas las aerolíneas del mundo vuelan al aeropuerto de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. Es, por lo tanto, un aeropuerto muy ocupado.
Usted está de vacaciones en Gran Canaria y le gustaría llegar un dia de viaje o excursión a Las Palmas. La forma más fácil es con el transporte público. La sociedad Global tiene varios servicios de autobús disponibles a Las Palmas. Tenga cuidado si usted desea mover en la ciudad de Las Palmas que se necesita en la transferencia de la estación de autobuses de San Telmo a un autobús de la ciudad (Guaguas Municipales). Una alternativa es el taxi. Al igual que en el sur de la isla es un taxi no es caro aqui. Más información sobre el transporte público …
Continuará en la página siguiente …
Explorando la Ciudad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, capital de la isla
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, capital de la isla, está situada al noreste de la misma, en un paisaje maravilloso compuesto de dos bahías y dos playas: la Playa de las Canteras y la Playa de las Alcaravaneras.
Fue fundada en 1478 y presume de una importante herencia histórica y cultural, que se centra en el distrito de Vegueta, el más antiguo de la ciudad, declarado por la UNESCO como Patrimonio de la Humanidad en 1990.
En su origen fue un campamento militar castellano, bautizado como Real de Las Palmas, que se levantó en la parte derecha del Barranco del Guiniguada, donde se sitúa hoy en día la capilla de San Antonio Abad. Con el tiempo se fue extendiendo hacia las orillas derecha e izquierda del barranco, dando lugar a los barrios de Vegueta y Triana respectivamente. Hoy, una de las mayores calles de la ciudad, la calle Juan de Quesada, que cruza el Guiniguada y conduce hacia el centro de la isla, separa estos dos barrios históricos.
Durante unos 400 años, la ciudad se limitó al norte dentro del perímetro de los barrios amurallados de Vegueta y Triana. Sin embargo, durante los siglos XVI–XVIII fue creciendo hacia el interior de la isla, como casi todas las ciudades del archipiélago. Vegueta, Triana, San José y algunos pequeños barrios habitados por inmigrantes y pescadores constituyeron lo que hoy conocemos como Las Palmas. Solo en el XIX, gracias a la construcción del Puerto de la Luz, se expandió hacia el norte a lo largo de la franja costera, dando lugar a los barrios de Arenales, Ciudad Jardín, Alcaravaneras, Santa Catalina y La Isleta emerged.
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria posee una impresionante infraestructura de hoteles y apartamentos y el Puerto de la Luz es uno de los más importantes de Europa, dando a la ciudad una imagen muy cosmopolita. Solo bajo el impulso del turismo y de las actividades económicas en la década de los 60 fue que se terminó de consolidar y de asentarse, con una población que se ha doblado durante los últimos 30 años (actualmente ronda los 400.000 habitantes).
Hoy en día, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria es una animada ciudad que rezuma una atmósfera, una historia y una cultura españolas. La lucha canaria y la vela latina son deportes autóctonos que se han generado en la capital grancanaria. De hecho, casi todos los fines de semana se pueden observar regatas de vela latina en sus aguas.
Además, hay muchísimo que ver y hacer en Las Palmas. Tanto si se hospeda directamente en la ciudad como si viaja desde otro punto de la isla, se le garantiza un sinfín de actividades para completar sus vacaciones. En Las Palmas encontrará lo mejor de ambos mundos: una enorme playa de arena y la vida de una gran ciudad.
Hay muchísimas tiendas y boutiques de las mejores marcas, callejuelas repletas de cafeterías y lugares perfectos para probar unas tapas y una copa. Los hoteles de nuestra guía están perfectamente ubicados, de modo que pueda aprovechar sus vacaciones al máximo, sin tener que aventurarse muy lejos para llegar a los lugares de interés.
Spain-Grancanaria selecciona cuidadosamente solo los mejores hoteles de la isla basándose en la ubicación, el servicio y, por supuesto, el precio. El Hotel Santa Catalina de 5 estrellas es puro lujo: este magnífico edificio es casi un punto de referencia en Las Palmas y acoge con regularidad a famosos e incluso miembros de la realeza. ¿Por qué no ser uno de ellos? Este precioso hotel es una oferta muy especial de habitaciones de época, una hospitalidad sin parangón y un sinfín de instalaciones. Se encuentra muy cerca del Puerto Deportivo y de la Playa de las Alcaravaneras (una de las dos que posee la capital). Los huéspedes pueden hacer uso de un servicio de autobús cortesía del hotel hasta la Playa de las Canteras, una bella franja de arenas rubias y tranquilas aguas turquesas.
Hay dos fantásticos hoteles que dan a la playa: el AC Hotel Gran Canaria y el Hotel Cristina Las Palmas. Cuentan con una ubicación excelente si ha venido a relajarse y solazarse en la costa mientras disfruta de la ventaja de hospedarse en el corazón de esta animada ciudad cosmopolita. Ambos ofrecen unas habitaciones atractivas y modernas, además de increíbles comodidades para el hombre de negocios y el turista.
Si desea experimentar unas fiestas especiales en la ciudad, debe venir durante los Carnavales (entre enero – febrero – marzo) o en junio (el día 24), cuando se celebran las Fiestas Fundacionales de San Juan, que conmemoran el nacimiento de la ciudad.
Los siguientes enlaces son los que consideramos más importantes de los barrios de Las Palmas:
Vegueta Lugares que visitar: Catedral de Santa Ana – Casa Museo de Colón – Centro Atlántico de Arte Moderno – Museo Canario
Triana Lugares que visitar: Casa Museo Pérez Galdós
Ciudad Jardín Lugares que visitar: Pueblo Canario
Santa Catalina
Playa de las Canteras
La Isleta Lugares que visitar: Castillo de la Luz
Sightseeing tour in the capital of the island
The city of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, the capital of the island, is located in the northeastern part, in an incomparable beauty place, formed by two harbors with beautiful beaches – Playa de las Canteras and Playa de las Alcaravaneras.
Founded in 1478, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria boasts an important historical and cultural heritage, many of which can be found in Vegueta, the city’s oldest quarter, declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1990.
The original settlement, called Real de Las Palmas, originated as a Castilian military town on the right side of the Barranco de Guiniguada ravine, where the San Antonio Abad chapel now stands. In the future, it began to gradually expand, and thus the quarters of Vegeta and Triana were formed on the right and left sides of the Barranco de Guiniguada. Today, these two historical quarters are separated by the main thoroughfare of the city of Las Palmas – Juan de Quesada Street, which crosses the Barranco de Guiniguada and extends further from the city towards the center of the island.
For almost 400 years, the northern border of the city was determined by the perimeter of the walls of the quarters of Vegeta and Triana, and during the XVI-XVIII centuries the settlement grew mainly inland, like almost all the cities of the archipelago. Vegeta, Triana, San José and a few small suburbs inhabited by immigrants and fishermen formed the basis of the city of Las Palmas. Only in the 19th century, thanks to the construction of the port of Puerto de la Luz, did the city begin to grow north along the coastline: the areas of Arenales, Ciudad Jardin, Alcaravaneras, Santa Catalina and La Isleta were born.
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria has an impressive network of hotels and apartments, and its Puerto de la Luz harbor is one of the most important in all of Europe, giving the city a very cosmopolitan character. Only thanks to the development of tourism and the revitalization of economic activity in the 60s, the city finally took shape and began to grow rapidly, while over the past 30 years its population has doubled (today it is about 400,000 inhabitants).
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria has an impressive network of hotels and apartments, and its Puerto de la Luz harbor is one of the most important in all of Europe, giving the city a very cosmopolitan character. Only thanks to the development of tourism and the revitalization of economic activity in the 60s, the city finally took shape and began to grow rapidly, while over the past 30 years its population has doubled (today it is about 400,000 inhabitants).
And of course there are many things to do in Las Palmas. Whether you decide to head straight to the city or pre-travel around the island, you are guaranteed a wide range of options to enjoy your holiday. From a long stretch of sandy beaches to vibrant city life, Las Palmas has the best for every taste.
There are many luxury shops and boutiques, the streets and alleys are full of cafes and other first-class establishments where you can enjoy tapas and various drinks. All the hotels in our guide are ideally located so you can make the most of your holiday. You will not need to travel long distances to interesting places and sights!
CDM (Centro de Design da Madeira, Lda) carefully selects only the best hotels on the island based on their location, services and of course price. The 5-star Hotel Santa Catalina is luxury itself. Its magnificent building is a kind of landmark of Las Palmas; famous guests and even members of royal families regularly come to it. Why don’t you join them? This spectacular hotel is truly something very special, with decadent-style accommodations, unparalleled hospitality and an abundance of services. The hotel is located next to the stylish marina and Playa de las Alcaravaneras (one of the capital’s two beaches). Guests can use the free shuttle bus to nearby Playa de las Canteras, a beautiful stretch of golden sand lapped by calm turquoise waters.
Two other great hotels facing the sea are the AC Hotel Gran Canaria and the Hotel Cristina Las Palmas. Their location is ideal for those guests who like to relax and unwind on the coast while enjoying the benefits of this exciting cosmopolitan city. Both hotels offer attractive, modern rooms and delightful services for business and leisure travellers.
And if you want to feel the atmosphere of the typical Las Palmas holidays, come here during the carnival period – in January, February or March (dates vary depending on the specific year) or in June (the 24th), when the Fiestas Fundacionales de San Juan (Saint John Feasts) are held to celebrate the birthday of the city of Las Palmas.
University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria – Las Palmas de Gran Canaria | Cost | Receipt
Description
Location
Incoming
University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
( ULPGC )
–
state
higher education institution in Spain.
ULPGC began operations in 1989. The main building of the university is located in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria inside an urban campus.
The University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria is one of the top 50 universities in Spain.
Admission and tuition fees.
The admission committee of the university organizes the recruitment of applicants, evaluating the academic performance of the applicant, as well as the results of the exams passed.
A significant percentage of applicants are successfully admitted to the university, the average competition is 90 places per 100 applicants.
The academic year at the university classically consists of two semesters.
Undergraduate education at a university is considered inexpensive, at less than 2,500 USD/year.
Education in master’s programs at this university can hardly be called cheap, the cost is 2,500 USD per year of study.
Although the tuition fees are low, students can also apply for scholarships.
Distance learning is also available for students of this university.
You can get more accurate information about the cost, study programs and admission requirements on the official website of the university at http://www.ulpgc.es.
University staff.
The University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria is an average university in terms of the number of students, in which no more than 18 thousand students receive education.
The admission committee of the educational institution considers applications from both local and foreign applicants.
The percentage of foreigners in ULPGC is about 8% of the total number of students.
Academ. the composition of the educational institution is represented by 2000 teachers.
Students of the educational institution have access to various international exchange programs.
The university is represented in several social networks, including: Flickr, Twitter, Youtube, Linkedin.
University infrastructure.
The university library is also available to university students.
The educational institution allows students to live on campus.
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There are more than seven thousand islands in the Philippines, of which about two thousand are inhabited, and Siargao has been the best place to relax for many years in a row. It is located in the east of the country on the Pacific coast. Photos of this particular island are placed on tourist booklets and advertising posters. Deserted beaches, cozy lagoons, coconut groves, mangrove reserves and tropical forests. The island offers a secluded vacation for connoisseurs of peace, quiet and tranquility.
The first Europeans landed on Siargao in 1543 and named the island Isla de las Palmas (Palm Island). The first Soviet “tourist” was the Soviet oceanographer Slava Kurilov. During a cruise from Vladivostok, he jumped off a cruise liner and swam in the sea with a mask and fins for more than 2 days. Having sailed more than 100 kilometers, the scientist came out on the shores of the Philippine island of Siargao. Later, Slava Kurilov wrote the book Alone in the Ocean, in which he described his story in detail.
Rest here, as the authors of the portal write, is more suitable for independent travelers, since “package holidays” are not developed in Siargao. In addition, people often come here to overcome the wave: Siargao is considered one of the best places for surfing. Here you can meet everyone – from beginner surfers to water sports professionals.
The main advantage of the island is that there are no crowds of tourists and annoying sellers of excursions, as in other resorts. Locals treat tourists who come to rest with great respect and do not impose excursions until they themselves wish it.
Life on the island is very measured. Most vacationers here are surfers, they get up early to catch the most favorable time for surfing, and, accordingly, go to bed early. There are no clubs and other noisy establishments that work until the morning, most bars and restaurants close at 23.00.
The main attractions of the island can be seen by renting a motorbike. The cost of gasoline in Siargao is about 375 tenge per liter, and the gasoline consumption of mopeds is about 2 liters per 100 kilometers.
The hallmark of this place is the Sugba Lagoon. It contains small islands with dense vegetation, it gives the impression of complete uninhabited. An excursion to Sugba Lagoon will cost about 14,000 tenge, this price includes a round-trip transfer, lunch and a tour of the nearby island. Be sure to visit the natural pools Magpupungko rock pools on Magpupungko beach. These are natural depressions in coral rocks that fill with water at low tide. Embark on a scenic boat tour of Daku, Guyam and Goly Islands.
One of the nice beaches in Siargao is located near the most famous surf spot Cloud 9. At high tide the beach is great for swimming and snorkelling. There is also a good beach for relaxation in Siargao in the village of General Luna. The beach is located to the left of the market. Among other beaches in Siargao, it is also worth highlighting the beach near Dapa and Magpupungko Beach. It is no secret that the reef bottom gives some kind of discomfort, it is inconvenient to walk on it without special shoes – corals, and you can seriously get hurt while swimming. To relax on the beaches with a sandy bottom, you need to go to the islands of Naked and Daku (Naked Island, Daku Island).
In addition to the most beautiful lagoons, you will find a small island consisting only of white sand. Take a walk along Cloud 9 Pier, a place for surfers to hang out and leisurely walks along the coast. Diving enthusiasts should go to these most popular sites: Blue Cathedral, Guyam Island, Dako Island, Seeco Reef, Antokon, Shark Point. The approximate cost of two dives is 13,000 tenge. Off the coast of the island there are colorful coral reefs that fans of snorkeling will love. You can rent a mask and fins on the beaches in General Luna or Cloud 9. A popular type of recreation on the island is also renting a boat or kayak.
Where to live. Summer houses with minimal amenities on the first line in General Luna or Cloud 9 can be found from 9,000 tenge per day. On the second line and beyond, housing in General Luna and Cloud 9 is cheaper. Good Siargao hotels offer rooms costing 30,000 – 40,000 tenge per night. And in some hotels there are both budget rooms for 12,000 tenge and luxury rooms – one of these hotels is 101 Resort.
What is there. Seafood dishes are widely represented on the island. Here you can try dishes from blue marlin, tuna, sea bream, squid, octopuses and other marine inhabitants. Hotels and guesthouses offer standard European breakfasts, consisting of porridge, toast, scrambled eggs and pancakes.
Siargao, like other tourist islands in the Philippines, has several varieties of cafes and restaurants.
Inconspicuous-looking cafes with local cuisine, such establishments usually have plastic tables and chairs, a very simple interior, and quite tasty food. A lunch of a main course and a drink in Philippine cafes on the island costs an average of 2,500 tenge.
Cafes with European cuisine have a more attractive look and dishes familiar to Europeans, prices in such establishments are higher – a lunch of a main dish and a drink in one of the European cafes costs an average of 3000-4000 tenge.
How to get there. Siargao can be reached by direct flight from Mactan-Cebu (CEB) from Cebu, Luzon Clark International (CRK) from Luzon or Davao (DVO) from Mindanao. Attention! Only low-cost airlines fly to the airport of Siargao – Sayak (Sayak Airport, IAO). Ferries are also available, but, for example, a ferry from Manila to Siargao takes 30 hours to travel, so it is not always advisable to spend this amount of time moving between the islands of the Philippines.
HERE
Siargao 5-Day Vacation Plan To make your vacation perfect, you need to plan everything in detail. We offer the option of a 5-day holiday on the island with a visit to the main attractions.
Day 1: Sugba Lagoon Tour
Day 2: Boat Tour to Naked, Daku and Guyam Islands
Day 3: Sohoton Cove Trip
Day 4: Surfing
Day 5: Siar North Trip and a visit to Magpupungko Rock Pools
Good to know. The climate in Siargao is tropical, with prevailing high temperatures (the average daily temperature on the island fluctuates around +30 degrees), high humidity and rainfall throughout the year. The driest months in Siargao are March and April, when the Philippine summer comes to the island. If you are an advanced surfer, you should pay special attention to your time in Siargao. While for beginners, there are suitable waves on Siargao throughout the year, advanced surfers can enjoy skiing on the island in August and September. The season of rains and gusty winds in Siargao lasts from November to January – February. At this time of the year, your stay on the island can be spoiled by bad weather. Accordingly, the best months to visit Siargao are from March to October.
Please note that there are no ATMs on the island and in most establishments it is not possible to pay by credit card. It is best to get a peso (the national currency of the Philippines) in advance in major cities before arriving in Siargao.
In addition, the Internet works on the island with varying success, the speed of mobile Internet, as well as Wi-Fi in establishments, is very low, and in most cases the Internet is simply not available.
If you are going to swim, snorkel or surf on your own in Siargao – carefully study the tide schedule, there are strong tides on the island, and, accordingly, the sea goes far at low tide.
HERE
Be prepared for the fact that Siargao is a very quiet resort. Basically, everyone here is surfing, getting up early and going to bed just as early. There is no nightlife in Siargao. It gets dark, as elsewhere in the Philippines, in Siargao around 18:00, after which everyone has dinner and rest. Institutions in Siargao close by 22-23 hours.
The weather in Siargao is unstable, especially during the rainy season, which affects flights – in bad weather they are often delayed or canceled. This is especially worth considering if Siargao is the last point of your route in the Philippines before flying home – it is better to have 1-2 days left to fly from Siargao.
In high season, book accommodation, tours, tickets and even mopeds in Siargao in advance.
Russian Center on the island of Gran Canaria
Directory – a guide to the island of Gran Canaria
Gran Canaria – Greenwich Mean Time GMT 00, London. The island is home to 40% of the total population of the Canary archipelago. In 2013, just under 860,000 people lived on the island, of which 49.7% were men and 50.3% were women. Most of the population is concentrated in the capital and its surrounding municipalities. The capital Las Palmas is the largest city in the archipelago and the administrative center of one of the two provinces of Spain as part of the autonomous community of the Canary Islands. It is a strategically important port in the Atlantic Ocean.
The Canary Islands extend between 27°38′ and 29°35′ N and between 13°20′ and 18°14′ W. Spain’s international dialing code: +34 xxx xxx xxx (0034)
We have collected all the necessary information and created a convenient guide to the island of Gran Canaria , which will help you visit this truly heavenly piece of Earth!
Museo Casa de Colón – Colon Museum Address: C/Colón, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Tel: 928 312 533 Opening hours 09:00 to 19:00, Saturdays and Sundays from 09:00 to 15:00 www. casadecolon.com
Casa África – Africa House Address: Alfonso XIII, 5. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. Tel: 928 432 800 Working hours: Monday to Friday from 10:00 to 20:00, Saturdays from 10:00 to 12:30 www.casafrica.es
Museo4 Canario 903 museum Address: C/ Dr. Verneau, 2. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Tel: 928 336 800 Working hours: Monday to Friday from 10:00 to 20:00, Saturdays and Sundays from 10:00 to 14:00 Web: www.elmuseocanario .com
Centro de Arte La Regenta Address: León y Castillo, 427. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Tel: 928 472 379 Working hours: Tuesday to Friday from 10:00 am 20:00, on Saturdays and Sundays from 10:00 to 15:00. Closed on Mondays and public holidays www.laregenta.org
Centro Atlántico de Arte Moderno CAAM – Atlantic Center for Contemporary Art Address: calle/ Los Balcones, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Tel: 928 311 800 Working hours: Tuesday to Saturday from 10:00 to 21:00, Sundays from 10:00 to 14:00
Casa Museo Pérez Galdós – Pérez Galdós House Museum Address: C/ Cano – Las palmas de Gran Canaria Tel: 928 366 976 Working hours: Tuesday to Friday from 10:00 to 14:00 and from 16:00 to 20:00, Saturdays and Sundays from 10:00 to 14:00
Museo Néstor – Nestor Museum Address: Pueblo Canario – Parque Doramas, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Tel: 928 245 135 Working hours: Tuesday to Friday from 10:00 to 20:00, Sundays from 10:30 to 14:30 www. museonestor.com
Museo Cenobio de Valeron Cuesta de Silva, s/n, Guia, Islas Canarias Tel: 618 607 896 Winter opening hours: Tuesday to Friday from 10 am: 00 to 17:00 Opening hours during the summer season: Tuesday to Friday from 10:00 to 18:00 www.cenobiodevaleron.com
Elder de la Ciencia y la Tecnología – Museum of Science and Technology Address: Parque Santa Catalina, 35007, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Tel: 928 011 808 Office hours: Tuesday to Sunday from 10:00 to 20:00 la Rama – Rama Museum Address: C/ Párroco Alonso Luján 5, Agaete – Gran Canaria Tel: 928 554 382
Museo Poeta Javier de la Rosa – Museum of the Poet Javier Rosa Address: León y Castillo,60, 35480 Agaete – Gran Canaria – Spain Working hours: Tuesday to Friday from 10:00 to 14:00 and from 17:30 until 19:00, Saturdays from 10:00 to 13:30 Tel: 928 898 484 www. museojavierdelarosa.jimdo.com
33 Vecindario, Santa Lucía de Tirajana Opening hours: Tuesday to Friday from 10.00 to 14.00 and 16.00 to 19.00, Saturdays and Sundays from 10.00 to 13.00 Tel: 928 759 796
Museo Diocesano de Arte Sacro Diocesan Museum of Sacred Art Address: C/. Espíritu Santo, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Tel: 928 314 989 Opening hours: Monday to Friday from 10:00 to 16:30, Saturdays from 10:00 to 13:30
Casa Museo León y Castillo – León Castillo House Museum Address C/. Leon y Castillo – Telde, Gran Canaria Tel: 928 691 377 Opening hours: Monday to Friday from 09:00 to 20:00, Saturdays from 10:00 to 20:00, Sundays from 10:00 to 13:00
Museo y Parque Arqueológico Cueva Pintada – Cave Museum of the Guanches Address: C/ Audiencia, Gáldar de Gran Canaria Tel: 928 895 746 Opening hours: Tuesday to Saturday from 09:30 to 20:00, Sundays from 11:00 to 20:00 www.cuevapintada.com
Casa Museo Antonio Padrón – Casa Museo Antonio Padrón Address: C/. Drago, Gáldar, Islas Canarias Tel: 928 551 858 Working hours: Monday to Friday from 09:00 to 14:00
Museo de Historia – Museum of History Address: C/. Juan Alvarado y Saz, Agüimes Tel: 928 785 453 Working hours: Tuesday to Sunday from 8:30 am to 1:30 pm and from 4:00 pm to 6:00 pm
Museo de Guayadeque – Guayadeque Museum Address: Barranco de Guayadeque, Agüimes, Gran Canaria 9005 Tel: 928 172 026 Working hours: Tuesday to Saturday from 9:00 to 17:00, Sundays from 10:00 to 18:00
Museo de Esculturas Abraham Cárdenes Address: C/ Leocadio Cabrera, Tejeda, Gran Canaria Tel: 928 666 189 Working hours: Tuesday to Friday from 11:00 to 15:00, Saturday from 11:30 to 14:30 and on Sundays from 11:30 to 16:00
Casa Museo Tomás Morales – Casa Museo Tomás Morales Address: Plaza de Tomás Morales, Villa de Moya, Gran Canaria Tel: 928 620 217 Working hours: Monday to Friday from 9:00 to 20:00, Saturday from 10:00 to 20:00, Sunday from 10:00 to 14:00
Parroquia San Juan Bautista de Arucas Address: C/ Párroco Cárdenes 2, Arucas de Gran Canaria www. parroquiasanjuanbautista.net
____________________________________________________________________________ Gran Casino Costa Meloneras Address: Auda. Mar Mediterraneo 1, 35110 San Bartolomé de Tirajana, ( Gran Canaria) Tel: 928 143 909 www.orenesgrupo.com/casinos/meloneras/index.html
Aeropuerto de Gran Canaria – Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Airport Address: Carretera General del Sur, s/n 35014, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Tel: 928 579 130 www. aena-aeropuertos.es
Puerto de la Luz Las Palmas Port de la Luz Las Palmas Address: Muelle de Santa Catalína s/n, 35008, Las Palmas, Gran Canaria Tel: 928 214 400 www.palmasport.es ____________________________________________________________________________
Atlatico 0053 Address: C/ Ardargoma s/n, 35110 Vecindario, Santa Lucía de Tirajana Working hours: 10:00 – 22:00 Tel: 928 791 541 El Muelle Address: Muelle de Santa Catalína s/n, 35008 Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Working hours: 10:00 – 22:00 Tel: 928 327 527 www.ccelmuelle.es
Las Ramblas – Las Ramblas Address: Av. Juan Carlos I, Nº 29, 35019 Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Working hours: 10:00 – 21:15 Tel: 928 482 030 Address www.lasramblascentro.com
0 Ballena La4 ena 90 340 La1 : Carretera del Norte 112, 35013 Las Palmas Tel: 928 411 455 Working hours: 10:00 – 22:00 www. centrocomerciallaballena.com , Maspalomas – San Fernando Bazaar, Maspalomas Address: Avenida Alejand Del Castillo, San Fernando, Maspalomas Working hours: Wednesdays and Saturdays from 08:00 to 14:00
Mercado de41 , Maspalomas – “Flea market” (antiques, second hand) in the parking lot of the shopping center Faro 2 Maspalomas Opening hours: every Sunday from 08:00 to 14:00
Mercado de San Mateo (Gran Canaria) – Market in the town of San Mateo (Gran Canaria) Working hours: every Saturday from 08:00 to 20:00 and on Sundays from 08:00 to 14:00
Mercado de Arguineguin – Arguineguin Port Bazaar Working hours: Tuesdays and Thursdays from 08:00 to 14:00 Tel: 928 351 167 www. cobis.org.uk
The British school south Address: C\ Mar de Azor 3, El Hornillo, 35100 San Bartolomé de Tirajana Tel: 928 142 494 www.bs-gc.com
________________________________________________________________________
The American school of Las Palmas Address: Carretera de los Hoyos, Km 1.7, 35017- Las Palmas de Gran Canaria – Canterbury School Maspalomas Address: Ctra. Palmitos Park 8, 35100 Maspalomas, Islas Canarias Tel: 928 142 889 www.canterburyschool.com
Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
(ULPGC) Address: Juan de Quesada 30, 35001 Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain Tel: 928 451 000/023 www.ulpgc.es
10 Unmissable Things To Do In Los Angeles For First Time Visitors
Los Angeles is the iconic home of blockbuster movie production, sandy beaches, never-ending sunshine and 50 million annual tourists. But in the entertainment capital of the world, it can feel almost impossible to narrow down exactly what you should do when visiting LA for the very first time. This essential list of the 10 best things to do in Los Angeles on your first visit is the perfect place to start planning your trip.
Do you have to tick off all 10 to feel as though you’ve seen Los Angeles? Absolutely not!
Even if you manage 5 out of the 10 on this list, you will get a taste for the world famous City of Angels.
And that way, you have the perfect excuse for a second visit.
*Please note this post may contain affiliate links. If you click on one of them, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you!*
Los Angeles Factfile
City: Los Angeles State: California
Nicknames: L. A., City of Angels, La-La Land, Tinseltown
Population: 3.9 million (13 million metropolitan) Locals Known As: Los Angelino, Angelino
Famous For: Hollywood, beaches, sunshine, movie stars, sports, museums Body of Water: Pacific Ocean
Annual visitors: 50 million tourists (2019)
How To Get To Los Angeles
Flights To Los Angeles International Airport (LAX)
LAX has the second highest throughput of passengers in the United States after Atlanta, Georgia, which makes finding cheap and flexible flight options a walk in the park.
Multiple flights will be available daily domestically in the US, as well as Internationally from many major cities around the world.
We always use Skyscanner flight search engine to find the best value for money flights. Flexibility is the key to saving money on flights, search by month on Skyscanner to find the top deals.
Driving To Los Angeles
San Diego to Los Angeles – Take I-5 North for 120 miles all the way up to Los Angeles. It doesn’t get much easier! Without incident or worse than usual traffic, the drive should take around 2 hours. However, be prepared for a much longer journey because traffic is well known to be a problem!
San Francisco to Los Angeles – Take I-5 South for 5 hours 30 minutes. However, the incredible road trip California highway 1 runs along the coast and should not be missed if you have a few extra days.
LAX to Hollywood – If you hire a car at LAX and drive to Hollywood (the most popular neighborhood for first time visitors) you can expect a drive time between 30 minutes to 1 hour depending on traffic.
Other Notable Driving Times – Las Vegas: 4 hours, Joshua Tree National Park: 2 hours, Death Valley National Park: 4 hours and Phoenix, AZ: 5 hours 30 minutes.
Getting Around in Los Angeles
Los Angeles is huge, its sprawling metropolis can not be walked like in San Diego or San Francisco. You will need to use other means of getting around LA.
Driving through the city is stressful and time consuming but necessary at times. Consider using the Metro when possible, for example to downtown, Hollywood or Santa Monica.
10 Epic Things To Do In Los Angeles, California For First Time Visitors
Los Angeles is overloaded with amazing things to do for first time visitors, but there are some you simply can’t miss. This is one of the top bucket list US vacation spots and we want you to help you make the most of your trip.
We compiled this list based upon our own experiences when visiting LA and selected only the best.
1. Hike a Dusty Trail to the Hollywood Sign
What is it?
The HOLLYWOOD Sign, the iconic landmark Los Angeles is most known for, is more than just 9 enormous white letters on the dusty hillside of Mt Lee. Hollywood’s ‘biggest star’ is a symbol of what can be achieved by dreamers and believers. There are a number of viewpoints around Griffith Park and Sunset Boulevard but hiking to the summit of Mt Lee is the ultimate way to appreciate the reason this location for the sign was chosen.
Why visit?
Magnificent views over Los Angeles and even the Pacific Ocean on a clear day await you at the summit of Mt Lee. You will get the classic scene: the back of DOOWYLLOH, Griffith Observatory, LA city, mountains and ocean. Clear days are hard to come by but arrive before sunrise for the most amazing blue hues in the sky.
How to visit?
Many traditional hiking trails lead you to the Hollywood Sign, including Hollyridge trail, Brush Canyon trail, Innsdale Drive trail and the one we took – Wonder View trail. Wonder view was regarded as the shortest and most challenging but it is now closed permanently.
You can park on certain residential streets to begin the hikes but many are restricted. You will know where you can park when you see dozens of cars lining the streets. Here’s more information.
Top Tip?
LA’s heat can be relentless. The day we hiked in November was well into the 90’s – as you can see, we were a sweaty and dusty mess!
Take sunscreen and as much water as you can carry.
2. Shop ’til You Drop on Rodeo Drive, Beverly Hills
What is it?
Rodeo Drive is the world famous 2 mile stretch of road featuring some of the most expensive designer brand boutiques on the planet. It is synonymous with the rich and famous, luxury sports cars and ‘the culturally elite’.
Beverly Hills is fabulously manicured and a short drive around the neighborhood will reveal countless properties valued at eye watering sums!
Why visit?
It is impossible not to be intrigued by Beverly Hills thanks to popular culture throughout the last 30-40 years. A walk down Rodeo Drive should be on every Los Angeles itinerary simply because of its notoriety but don’t expect to see celebrities en mass.
A great place to visit is the eccentric Louis Vuitton exhibit on the corner of Rodeo / Santa Monica blvd. There were more security guards and employees than visitors inside the day we looked around.
How to visit?
There are a surprising amount of multi story parking lots in Beverly Hills, so if you’re driving around the city you can park up easily. The closest metro is in Hollywood but that is 3.7 miles away, which means taking a bus is the better public transport method.
Alternatively, you can take a guided ‘celebrity tour’ of Beverly Hills.
Top Tip?
If you’re not wearing Gucci shoes with a Dolce & Gabbana shirt, expect to be followed around any store you go inside!
3. Watch a Stunning California Sunset at Santa Monica Pier
What is it?
Another of Los Angeles’ world famous attractions, Santa Monica Pier has featured in too many movies and tv shows to mention. The pier contains the world’s only solar powered Ferris wheel, arcades, amusement park, aquarium and is popular for sport fishing.
Santa Monica neighborhood is a lovely part of Los Angeles for a slow meander once the sun has set and sand is no longer warm underfoot.
Why visit?
Santa Monica is the most popular beach for tourists on a first time visit to Los Angeles but the neighborhood is more than worth the visit alone. Santa Monica Pier is gimmicky but perfect if you’re traveling with younger kids.
California is blessed with a mediterranean climate and year round epic sunsets. Santa Monica is one of the best places in Los Angeles to watch a beautiful orange sun setting over the Pacific Ocean.
How to visit?
You will find a number of parking lots close to Santa Monica Pier. On weekends and holidays expect these to fill early. A flat fee or hourly rate will apply for parking nearby.
A better option is to take the metro expo line from downtown to Santa Monica. You can begin in Hollywood and change downtown but expect total travel time to be around 1 hour each way.
Top Tip?
Walk underneath Santa Monica Pier as the sun is setting to see some awesome sun bursts through dozens of wooden support joists, perfect for photographers.
Take on the legendary Pacific Coast Highway road trip when you visit California starting in San Francisco and driving the coast through Los Angeles to San Diego.
4. Walk to Venice
What is it?
Venice is a cultural hub known for eccentric arts, its bohemian vibe and Venice beach. The famous beach is complimented by a 2.5 mile promenade, along which you can find street art, basketball courts, coffee shops and muscle beach outdoor gym.
Why visit?
Walking from Santa Monica to Venice in late afternoon is perfect for getting a feel for the real LA, seeing the positive effects of gentrification in a sprawling city and to get out of your comfort zone before heading back to Santa Monica for sunset.
Venice Beach won’t be suited to all travelers visiting Los Angeles for the first time. Personally, we enjoyed walking along the promenade to see the local artwork and didn’t feel unsafe. That being said, the area can be slightly intimidating.
How to visit?
You can take your car to a number of small parking lots or take a bus directly from Union square downtown LA. However, walking from Santa Monica is by far the best way to visit Venice. We saw a tv show being filmed as we walked between the two beaches.
Top Tips?
Tip 1: Hidden behind Venice Beach are a series of picturesque canals with modern houses reflecting in perfectly still water. Don’t miss Venice canals if you walk from Santa Monica to Venice Beach.
Tip 2: Walk along the promenade to Venice, then return along the beach as the sun gets lower in the sky.
5. Watch a Live Gameshow or Talk Show
What is it?
Many of America’s most popular gameshows and talk shows are recorded in studios around Los Angeles. These shows need audience members to create the excitable clapping and whooping, which is where you come in! Tickets are usually free and offered to anyone visiting or living in LA.
Take your pick between Jeopardy, Price is Right, Late Late Show with James Corden, Jimmy Kimmel and more.
Why visit?
It’s not everyday you get the chance to sit in the audience of Jeopardy if you enjoy a quiz show, or see your favorite celebrities chatting to talk show hosts. Trust us, this is the only way to guarantee seeing a celeb in LA!
Choose a show like Price is Right and you might end up on stage winning $25,000 worth of prizes. We got last minute tickets to Price is Right but didn’t do enough dancing or make enough noise to get the ‘come on down’ – and we’re fine with that!
How to visit?
Simply search for tickets on any of the game shows or talk shows you prefer. Total time required for game shows is much longer than we anticipated. Expect to spend a good 4-5 hours for one episode of Price is Right. In hindsight, we might have preferred Jeopardy, especially if Ken or James were on!
Top Tip?
Loosen your hips, vocal cords and inhibitions to stand more chance of getting down to one of the 4 podiums on Price is Right.
6. Tour a Movie Studio
What is it?
Who isn’t a fan of TV shows and movies?! When you’re in Los Angeles, one of the things you must do is tour a movie studio. Take your pick between Warner Bros, Universal, Paramount and Sony for the 4 big industry players.
Spend 2-3 hours walking around exterior sets, huge interior lots, exhibits of previous movies and tv shows plus props used in your favorite movies.
Why visit?
Movie studio tours are not the place to go celeb spotting and don’t expect to watch the latest blockbuster being made!
What you will get is an insight into how movies and tv shows are made, from sound and production to sets and costumes. Unless you’re a mega film fan and have vip subscription to IMDb, one tour is enough to get a taste for movie making. Choose wisely!
How to visit?
Choose which studio you would prefer to tour and buy tickets online. Purchasing in advance is a good idea to avoid disappointment on the day. Each tour has parking options but Paramount is the only studio walkable in Hollywood neighborhood.
Here are the websites for each of the 4 tours: Sony | Paramount | Universal | Warner Bros
Top Tip?
We chose Warner Bros movie studio tour after reading it was the purest tour for movie and tv show lovers. Friends, Big Bang, DC, Batman and Harry Potter are the main exhibits.
Read our complete guide to Warner Bros studio tour before deciding which Hollywood movie tour to take.
7. Explore Hollywood
What is it?
Hollywood is tinseltown, it is the glitz and glamour entertainment capital of the world and the heartbeat of Los Angeles.
The Neighborhood of Hollywood is a melting pot of eateries, bars, souvenir shops and gimmicky tourist attractions. At night, Hollywood blvd comes to life in an array of loud noises and bright colors, definitely the best time to explore.
For a first time visit to Los Angeles, Hollywood is one of our top choices for booking a hotel because it is at the heart of things to do in LA.
Why visit?
It’s Hollywood, who is going to LA and not exploring the worlds showbiz capital?!
Most tourists set up base in or around Hollywood, which means bars fill up with people from all continents and makes for great nights out.
During the day, you can’t miss the walk of fame which runs along 15 blocks of Hollywood blvd and contains over 2,500 stars. TCL Chinese theater is where you will find hand and foot prints of the biggest names in movies and next door is the Dolby theater where the Oscars ceremony is held each year.
How to visit?
If you decide to book a hotel in Beverly Hills, Santa Monica or any other part of LA, you can take public transport to Hollywood. Metro (red line) from downtown or Santa Monica and bus from Beverly Hills. Visit in the late afternoon, evening or night to see the action.
Top Tip?
Go inside Dolby theater and as you walk through the hall you will see all Oscar best picture winners since the ceremony began on lighted arches.
8. Cruise Around Mulholland Drive
What is it?
Mulholland Drive is a 21 mile long winding road meandering through the Santa Monica Mountains just North of Hollywood. The name was made famous by David Lynch’s 2001 psychological thriller ‘Mulholland Drive’ and many of Hollywood’s finest call the Hollywood Hills home.
Why visit?
There are mansions around every corner to admire as you pass through Laurel Canyon and Nichols Canyon, some of the most expensive houses in the world.
But the main reason to drive your car around Mulholland’s twisting roads is because you have fantastic vantage points to see LA, the Hollywood Sign and the Pacific on clear days.
How to visit?
You will need your own vehicle for this one. Start by entering Mulholland Drive to the East from Cahuenga Blvd after visiting Universal or Warner Bros. Drive the winding roads and stop to admire the views as you pass over the hills.
Top Tip?
Tip 1: Don’t miss Jerome C Daniel Overlook on the Eastern side of Mulholland Drive. From this viewpoint you can see the Hollywood Sign and with binoculars or a telephoto lens you’ll get great views over the sign and Hollywood bowl.
Tip 2: Drop back down into Beverly Hills through Benedict Canyon for an efficient day ticking off the best things to do in Los Angeles.
9. Don’t Miss Griffith Observatory
What is it?
The Griffith Observatory has one of the best locations in Los Angeles on the South facing slope of Mount Hollywood. It offers primetime views over LA city, the Hollywood Sign and the Pacific Ocean.
Inside the Greek style building are science and space exhibits, including a fantastic planetarium show. This is the perfect place to occupy teenage kids!
Why visit?
Many visit simply for the excellent views but we implore you not to miss the awesome exhibits inside. You will find a pendulum demonstrating the rotation of Earth, a Tesla coil and Zeiss Telescope at night.
Entry to the Griffith Observatory is free but you will pay US$ 8-10 to park. This is one hugely popular attraction and it will be busy, but it is absolutely worth it for the planetarium display (costs just a few dollars).
How to visit?
Drive to Griffith Observatory which has limited parking at the designated parking lot or park along Observatory / Western Canyon roads.
Alternatively, take a DASH observatory bus from Vermont/Sunset Metro (red line).
Top Tip?
Tip 1: If you visit on a busy day and cars are parked all the way up the road, try the top first because there may be spaces free. Yep, that’s exactly what we did and we got a spot straight away.
Tip 2: Early evening is a great time to visit, do the planetarium before watching the sun setting and then look through the Zeiss Telescope at the night sky.
10. We’re Going Downtown Los Angeles
What is it?
When you’ve had enough of Hollywood and need a bit of history, art or culture head downtown to one of many excellent Los Angeles museums, music venues or eateries.
Downtown LA (DTLA) is diverse, exciting and overflowing with cool hangouts. You can visit Little Tokyo, Chinatown or the Fashion District and eat every type of street food at Grand Central Market.
Why visit?
Have you really been to LA if you haven’t been downtown?!
The Broad is a highly rated modern art museum and next door is Walt Disney concert hall with its mind-bending stainless steel deconstructivism architectural style.
A few minutes walk away is OUE Skyspace, a 1,000 ft tall 360 degree observation platform featuring transparent slide on the outside of the building!
How to visit?
Driving isn’t recommended to get into downtown LA. Instead take a metro to either 7th Street / Metro center, civic center / grand park or union station depending on what you want to do in DTLA.
Plenty of bus routes will run into downtown but the metro will be much quicker without traffic!
Top Tip?
If you’re staying in Hollywood – group Santa Monica, Venice and downtown into one day of your LA itinerary. That way you can bunch together the remaining best things to do in Los Angeles North of downtown.
Where To Eat In Los Angeles
Los Angeles is the second largest US city after New York and with over 4 million residents (not including metro area) you can be sure there are restaurants galore!
We’ll break LA down into its most popular neighborhoods and give you our top foodie recommendations for first time visitors:
Hollywood
Musso & Frank Grill – Classic American lunch and dinner | Menu
Salt’s Cure – Healthy comfort food local ingredients | Menu
Pizzeria Mozza – Awesome pizza at great value | Menu
LONO – Tiki bar tropical theme cocktails and food | Menu
Beverley Hills
Spago – Wolfgang Puck’s flagship restaurant | Menu
Maude – High end new American seasonal tasting menu | Menu
The Grill on the Alley – Steakhouse for everyone | Menu
The Cheesecake Factory – Perfect alternative for those on a budget | Menu
Santa Monica
Dialogue – Very highly rated seasonal food | Menu
Tar & Roses – Wood, fire, smoke. American small & large plates | Menu
UOVO – Pasta made fresh daily in Italy | Menu
Downtown LA
Nickel Diner – Famous tasty comfort food & big desserts | Menu
Cole’s French Dip – Epic French dip sandwiches, cocktails, top rated bar | Menu
Sonoratown – Popular low key, cheap and tasty Mexican food | Menu
Wurstkuche – German sausages and brewery\Menu
Otium – Contemporary, New American & cocktails | Menu
Where To Stay In Hollywood Los Angeles
With over 50 million tourists visiting each year, you can rest assured there will be no problems finding a hotel in Los Angeles!
Our advice is always to shop around and hunt for the best prices. Be as flexible as possible to snag the top deals. Personally, we think Hollywood is the best place to book a hotel when visiting LA for the first time.
Related: Our 15 pro tips on how to book the cheapest hotels every time you travel
The following budget, mid range and luxury Hollywood hotels are recommended by value for money and guest satisfaction:
Low Budget – The Hotel Hollywood
Located just 1 block from Hollywood blvd and under US$ 100 per night with a rating of 8/10 plus breakfast, the clean and smart Hollywood Historic Hotel is the perfect budget option.
Check price of The Hotel Hollywood.
Mid Range Budget – Loews Hollywood Hotel
Also located just 1 block from Hollywood blvd but more central. Under US$ 200 per night with a rating of 8.7/10, featuring fitness center and rooftop pool, Loews location rating is almost perfect at 9.4/10.
Check price of Loews Hollywood Hotel.
Top End Budget – Kimpton Everly Hotel
Located on the Eastern end of Hollywood’s walk of fame, Kimpton Everly offers a little more luxury but still costs way under US$ 300 per night with a rating of 8. 8/10. Featuring fitness center, rooftop pool and views of the Hollywood sign, this is the place to unwind after a hectic day in Los Angeles.
Check price of Kimpton Everly Hotel.
Best Things To Do In Los Angeles Map
Click into this interactive map, zoom in / out and move around to find all the best things to do in Los Angeles, plus where to stay and eat:
Maroon markers – The best things to do on your visit to Los Angeles as listed above
Dark Green markers – All restaurants referenced in the where to eat section
Purple markers – Budget, Mid Range and Top End hotel options in Hollywood
Read More from California…
San Francisco – 15 Awesome Things to do in 3 Action Packed Days
San Diego – 9 Best Things to do in 3 Unforgettable Days
Death Valley – Perfect One Day Road Trip Itinerary from Las Vegas
Yosemite – Ultimate First Time Visitor Guide and 3 Day Itinerary
Joshua Tree – Perfect Day Trip Itinerary from Los Angeles
We hope this list of best things to do in Los Angeles for first time visitors helped you plan your LA itinerary!
Please let us know if you have any questions or need any help with planning your visit!
Happy Travels,
Mark and Kristen
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8 Things You Shouldn’t Miss When Visiting Los Angeles
By Tyler Wildeck
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From the glitz and glamor of Hollywood to the laid-back vibe of Venice Beach, as a traveler, there isn’t a shortage of things to do in Los Angeles.
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Los Angeles is a bustling metropolis, but take a look at the history, The City of Angels unfolds as a cultural and historical marvel worth discovering again and again. From the glitz and glamor of Hollywood to the laid-back vibe of Venice Beach, as a traveler, there isn’t a shortage of things to do. It’s the home of celebrities, movie studios, and the entertainment industry. Every traveler wants to head over there without spending any extra money quickly.
There’s a lot a visitor can do to get the most out of the hard-earned dollar. The following are 8 things vacationers shouldn’t miss in LA.
8 Natural History Museum
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Open in 1913, the Natural History Museum is one of the largest and most comprehensive museums globally. It houses over 35 million objects, including dinosaur fossils, mounted animals, a planetarium, an aquarium, and an observatory.
The museum’s exhibits are divided into three sections, including geology, paleontology, and biology, not forgetting a research library. Visitors can explore dinosaur fossils and learn about the history of wildlife. There are also many temporary exhibitions throughout the year that showcase different cultures worldwide.
Related: Your 10-Day Itinerary For Fully Enjoying a Trip To Los Angeles
7 La Brea Tar Pits
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It’s a natural asphalt lake reserved by the city, but it’s open to the public. The La Brea Tar Pits is home to many rare fossils, including saber-toothed cats, dire wolves, and mammoths. These tar pits formed after an asphalt bubbled up from below ground and covered over animals that died in the area. The asphalt hardened into rock, preserving the bones and bodies of everything from horses to mastodons that were trapped in it over time. The museum not only has interesting exhibits and fossils, but it’s also worth visiting because it’s weird.
6 Los Angeles County Museum Of Art
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The LACMA is a must-see attraction in Los Angeles. The museum’s collection includes more than 150,000 objects that span 5,000 years of human history and culture. Find everything from ancient Egyptian mummies to works by Jackson Pollock and Andy Warhol. LACMA features an impressive sculpture garden that includes Rodin and Alexander Calder pieces.
Take a stroll through LACMA’s Art plus Film Gala at nightfall when many of the galleries are closed. But gardens are open till midnight. LACMA has amazing collections from all over the world and a wide variety of programs for both adults and children.
Related: Best Must-Do Activities In Los Angeles Only Known By Locals
5 Universal Studios Hollywood
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For a visitor looking for a fun way to spend the day, Universal Studios Hollywood is the place to go. The park offers thrill rides like the Jurassic Park River Adventure and kid-friendly rides like Despicable Me Minion Mayhem and Woody Woodpecker’s Nuthouse Coaster.
Guests can also hit up the studio tour or take a free tram ride through backlot sets of Universal classics like Back to the Future and Psycho. The studio tour is excellent for families with kids and adults who want to relive their childhoods.
4 Griffith Park Observatory
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Griffith J. Griffith built the observatory in 1935, and it’s the only art deco building in the city. It has a massive telescope that visitors can use on Friday nights and Saturdays. The Griffith Observatory is the home to a planetarium that shows movies about astronomy or space exploration.
Visitors can enjoy the thrilling experience of watching the stars and planets through telescopes. In addition, there are several hiking trails within the park and picnic areas where visitors can relax and enjoy nature in its purest form.
3 Hollywood Walk Of Fame
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The Walk of Fame stretches along 15 blocks on Hollywood Boulevard between La Brea Avenue and Vine Street. It features 2,600 terrazzo-and-brass stars embedded in the sidewalk that honor industry personalities from film, music, and television with their names set into small brass pieces.
It has gained international recognition, and more than ten million adventurers visit it annually from all over the world. It’s a fun way to spend an afternoon walking along the famous boulevard and trying to spot as many celebrity names as possible.
2 Disneyland
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The happiest place on Earth is the most popular destination for families with children of all ages. Walt Disney originally built the park for his daughters and friends to play on weekends. Today, it attracts millions of visitors every year who enjoy the rides and shows. The meet-and-greets with Disney characters are also unforgettable.
The park is divided into five different “lands,” including Main Street USA, Tomorrowland, and Adventureland. Looking forward to exploring Los Angeles? Meet Mickey Mouse himself in Disneyland.
1 Santa Monica Beach
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The beach is a 2.5-mile-long stretch of sand that can be accessed by foot or bike along Santa Monica Pier, extending into the Pacific Ocean. The beach also has a path for joggers and surfers who want to catch some waves. It features wide, clean beaches, beautiful ocean views, and plenty of outdoor activities such as swimming and volleyball.
The Santa Monica beach also has a 1,000-foot-long fishing pier with an amusement park at its end. The pier features restaurants, shops, and arcades, so adventurers can do some shopping or try out different foods.
10 Quintessential Things To In L.A.
You haven’t been to L.A. if you haven’t been to these iconic spots…
L.A. is filled with hidden gems to discover and explore, but we tend to overlook the obvious spots without realizing that some of the best things to see in the city are hiding in plain sight. These places are essential L.A. spots where you’ll find a diverse mix of both locals and tourists from all walks of life just going about their business. While they absolutely should be enjoyed for all they have to offer, they also hold some unique aspects that are worth experiencing.
1. Griffith Observatory
Credit: Carl Nenzen via Unsplash
The Griffith Observatory is a must-see in L.A., which is why it’s number one on our list – what better way to get to know a city than to peer out at the fantastic views, including the famous Hollywood Sign? Come day or night, both experiences are different in their own right – telescopes are available to look at the starry sky and several exhibits can be found inside. Oh, and another added benefit is that it’s totally free – you just have to get yourself there. The easiest way is to take the DASH Observatory bus from Vermont / Sunset Metro Red Line Station, or alternatively, get an UBER.
The good thing is that you can see Santa Monica and Venice in under an hour because they’re walking/biking distance apart. With the opening of the new Metro Rail Expo Line, there’s a direct route from Union Station in DTLA to Downtown Santa Monica. From there, it’s a 5-minute walk to the third street promenade, where you’ll find restaurants and all the biggest name brand shops. Look out for the giant Ferris wheel, located on the Santa Monica pier. From there you walk along the beach until you reach the Venice Boardwalk. During this walk, you’ll pass by Muscle Beach; aka the birthplace of the fitness boom in the US, where there are always people doing incredible gymnastics. You’ve reached the end of the walk once you get to the skate park, stick around for a bit and watch the talented skaters do their thing!
3. Melrose
Photo by Tomás Sala on Unsplash
What’s more L.A., than spending the day shopping on Melrose Ave? Melrose is known for its cool wall art, funky/trendy shops and great cafes. It’s perfect for a stroll on a sunny day (which is pretty much every day), whether you’re there to go shopping, or just get a coffee. Check out Melrose trading post, a market that happens every Sunday where you can find vendors selling things like antiques and vintage clothes. You may also want to stop by the Insta-famous hot pink Paul Smith wall for that obligatory wall snap.
4. The Grove
Photo by Devin Avery on Unsplash
The Grove is an outdoor open-plan shopping mall and is within walking distance from Melrose so you can easily combine both into a day’s activities. You can find more shops, several food vendors, places for drinks, a cinema and an overall cozy atmosphere. You should come just before sunset to get the best of both worlds because the vibe is completely different during the day and night. While the twinkling lights and rushing fountains are an experience on their own, you should head to the rooftop parking spot for epic views of the city too.
5. Oue Skyspace [Permanently Closed]
I’m a big big girl in a big big world 🙆♀️🌎
Una publicación compartida de W (@winniefung_) el
The Oue Skyspace is a one-of-a-kind experience, it’s California’s tallest observation deck that gives a full view of the city, as well as the unique option to have a go on the all-glass slide. The building has recently been taken over and there is no news as to whether it will reopen the slide and observation deck yet.
6. Laugh Factory [Temporarily Closed]
wikipedia.com
The Laugh Factory is a chain of comedy clubs that can be found in Chicago, Las Vegas, Long Beach, Reno, Scottsdale and of course, in Hollywood. It’s one of the most famous comedy clubs, home to some of the biggest names in stand up comedy today. We recommend going to the event “Chocolate Sundaes” which is held every Sunday. You can rsvp here and either choose the time slot between 19:00-21:00 or 21:00-23:00. The entry is free, with the only requirement being a two drink minimum per person.
7. Universal Studios
Credit: Universal Studios Hollywood
Does this really need any explanation? Universal Studios is quintessential Los Angeles, and it’s right in the heart of Hollywood so it’s easy to get to. You can get a guided tour of real-life movie lots and studios, see the re-imagining of Hogwarts where you can buy wands, Butter Beer, and anything else Harry Potter related and go on a bunch of thrilling rides! Get your tickets online here!
8.
Getty Centre
You can’t forget to do something cultural, and what better place than the Getty Centre. In addition to the 19-20th century European art that can be found in the museum, the entire premises is an architectural treat to walk around in.
Open times: Tue–Fri, Sun 10:00 – 17:00. Saturday 10:00 – 21:00. Free admission.
9. Rodeo Drive
wikipedia.com
This street name must pop into your head right after Melrose when you think of L.A. right? Known for its luxury brand shops, you can find it in the heart of Beverly Hills, and although not everyone can afford to shop there- you can’t come to L.A. and not check out Beverly hills!
10. Arts District
With the current gentrification of Downtown L.A., the Arts District has become one of the most popular spots amongst locals and tourists. Its history began back in the 70s when artists started illegally occupying spaces for their studios, and has slowly developed as the place to be for creatives. You can find wall art, galleries, breweries, and much more!
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Things To Do
50 Best Things to Do in Los Angeles That You Must Do in 2022
Photograph: Courtesy CinespiaCinespia
Your essential guide to the best things to do in Los Angeles, from stair hikes to scenic drives and more
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Looking for the best things to do in Los Angeles? We have you covered with the very best that L.A. has to offer. Whether you’re a culture vulture, outdoorsy type or simply a lover of our fine city, there’s more than enough here to keep you busy. Even lifelong Angelenos will find something new to add to their to-do list, between the city’s landmark attractions that are still accessible, an ever-changing inventory of the best restaurants in Los Angeles, essential L. A. museums and even some off-the-beaten path secrets. How many of the best things to do in Los Angeles will you try?
September 2022: Unbearably hot weather aside, we kind of love September in L.A. and its mash-up of holidays: Not all of the summer fun has disappeared quite yet while Oktoberfest celebrations and Halloween festivities are starting to enter the picture (and before the crowds flock to them). You’ll find that reflected in our picks below, where we’ve swapped out some summer concerts in favor of the early arrival of haunted houses.
You can also find out more about how Time Out selects the very best things to do all over the world, or take a look at our list of the 50 best things to do in the world right now.
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Best things to do in L.A.
Photograph: Courtesy Beth Coller/The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens
Stroll through the stunning gardens at the Huntington Library
Things to do
Event spaces
San Marino
price 2 of 4
What is it? A historic library, museum and sprawling gardens that was the bequest of entrepreneur Henry E. Huntington.
Why go? The Huntington’s distinctly themed gardens are easily the most stunning manicured outdoor spaces in SoCal, especially its recently expanded Chinese garden. The library and museum are equally impressive; all require reservations on weekends.
Don’t miss: On select Fridays (Sept 16, Oct 7), you can catch family-friendly picnic-style movie screenings on the museum’s lawn.
Photograph: Shutterstock
See L.
A. from above at Griffith Park
Things to do
Griffith Park
What is it? A 4,000-plus–acre rugged park in the center of the city.
Why go? The trails, the flora, the views, the howls of coyotes down the canyons at night, the twinkly lights of Downtown in the distance—L.A. may not have a grassy, centralized park, but Griffith’s massive, hilly wilderness makes for a stellar alternative.
Don’t miss: Even when the Griffith Observatory is closed (it’s open Thursday through Sunday), you can still drive or hike up to the grounds of the landmark Art Deco dome to take in the unparalleled views. Wherever you end up hiking, we highly suggest listening downloading Ellen Reid’s Soundwalk, a location-based musical composition that transforms as you move about the park.
Practice your acceptance speech at the Academy Museum
Museums
Movies and TV
Miracle Mile
price 2 of 4
What is it? A permanent home for the history of moviemaking that’s finally open.
Why go? The collection includes the sorts of cinematic treasures you’d expect from the people who put on the Oscars: the Rosebud sled for Citizen Kane, Dorothy’s ruby slippers, R2-D2, the Dude’s robe from The Big Lebowski, the sole surviving shark from Jaws and the flowery May Queen dress from Midsommar. Expect some of those displays to give way to fresh selections throughout the rest of the year. Oh, and the gift shop is pretty fantastic, too.
Don’t miss: The museum’s second-ever special exhibition, “Regeneration: Black Cinema 1898–1971,” which explores how Black filmmakers have played a vital role in cinema since its inception.
Photograph: Time Out/Michael Juliano
Have tacos and egg sandwiches from Grand Central Market
Restaurants
Downtown Historic Core
price 2 of 4
What is it? A European-style food hall that’s been operating in Downtown L. A. since 1917.
Why go? Even if you’re not there for the food, it’s worth a trip; people from all corners of L.A. mix and mingle among rows of spices, produce and vintage neon signage. Of course, if you’re hungry it’s a great place to get cheap pupusas, carnitas tacos and aguas frescas, as well as food from handsome, trendy eateries like Shiku, Fat & Flour, Sticky Rice, Sari Sari, Horse Thief BBQ, Eggslut, McConnell’s and G&B Coffee.
Don’t miss: Tacos Tumbras a Tomas serves the hall’s go-to taco, particularly the carnitas and al pastor.
Take a food tour of Downtown L.A.
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Photograph: Courtesy Museum Associates/LACMA
Pose in front of streetlights at LACMA
Museums
Art and design
Miracle Mile
price 1 of 4
What is it? Chris Burden’s Urban Light, a piece made up of 202 cast-iron street lamps gathered from around L. A. and restored to working order, that stands outside of the massive museum.
Why go? Yes, snag your streetlight selfies. But you’d be selling yourself short if you don’t venture beyond the photo-friendly installation; LACMA’s collections boast modernist masterpieces, large-scale contemporary works, traditional Japanese screens and by far L.A.’s most consistently terrific special exhibitions.
Don’t miss: A survey of modern Korean art, as well as free jazz concerts on Friday nights. Reservations are highly recommended; if you live in the county book one for a weekday after 3pm and admission is free.
Photograph: Shutterstock
Bike the Strand
Sports and fitness
Cycling
Venice
What is it? A 22-mile bike path, officially known as the Marvin Braude Bike Trail, that traces nearly the entire extent of L.A.’s westward-facing coastline.
Why go? It’s the best way to tour the coastline. The path starts at Will Rogers State Beach and winds its way all the way down to Torrance County Beach.
Don’t miss: If you’d rather take the path at a walking pace, you’ll find pedestrian-friendly forks in Santa Monica, Venice and Manhattan Beach.
Take a guided bike ride along the coast.
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Photograph: Shutterstock
Pedal around Echo Park Lake
Things to do
Echo Park
What is it? A former reservoir turned public recreation area at the center of one of L.A.’s most buzzing neighborhoods.
Why go? The historic Echo Park Lake in recent years finally became a family-friendly destination worthy of its bold backdrop: the Downtown skyline amid the lotus flower blooms, fountains and the Lady of the Lake statue.
Don’t miss: You can push your way through the lake in a swan boat ($11 per hour) or stroll around the path that hugs its borders.
Photograph: Michael Juliano
Take your pup to the only off-leash beach, Rosie’s Dog Beach
Attractions
Beaches
Long Beach
What is it? A pooch-friendly paradise in Paradise.
Why go? The four-acre waterfront spot is the only legal off-leash dog beach in L.A. County. The park is named after the area’s late local canine celebrity, Rosie the English bulldog.
Don’t miss: The entrance. There are no fences marking the dog-friendly area—though you’ll know you’re in the right spot if you see the signs and colorful “Dogs at Play” sculpture—so you’ll want to stay between Granada Avenue and Roycroft Avenue between 6am and 8pm daily.
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Photograph: Courtesy Cinespia
Watch movies in a cemetery at Cinespia
Movies
Hollywood
What is it? A screening series held at Hollywood Forever Cemetery every summer.
Why go? While the booze- and picnic-friendly vibe are enough for some people, the excellent film programming makes this outdoor series rise above the rest each summer. Oh, that and the fact that it’s held at the final resting place of Old Hollywood’s screen legends.
Don’t miss: Cinespia’s still going even as summer is winding down, with screenings this month of Goodfellas, Ghostbusters and A Star is Born.
Photograph: Michael Juliano
Gaze into infinity at the Broad
Museums
Art and design
Downtown
What is it? A free, contemporary art museum in Downtown L.A.
Why go? Three little words: Infinity Mirror Rooms. The persistently popular museum has two mirror-laden Yayoi Kusama installations (the more immersive of which you can now reserve in advance). Of course, there’s plenty more to see, from Robert Therrien’s oversized Under the Table to more than a dozen Jean-Michel Basquiat paintings.
Don’t miss: The final month of the colorful Takashi Murakami exhibition (which you can see for free on Thursday nights), as well as the final entry in a new sound bath series.
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Photograph: Courtesy Unsplash/Natalie Grainger
Go apple picking in the mountains
Things to do
What is it? A cluster of U-pick farms in Oak Glen.
Why go? Apple pie, apple cider, apple turnovers, apple fritters: If any of those have you smacking your lips in anticipation, you’ll want to head east to feast on freshly-baked apple treats, or to pick them yourself at a trio of farms.
Don’t miss: Apple picking season typically runs from Labor Day through Thanksgiving, though this year most farms in Oak Glen aren’t expecting bountiful harvests until October.
Photograph: Stephanie Breijo
Have a street food feast at Smorgasburg LA
Things to do
Markets and fairs
What is it? A Sunday market with dozens of food vendors in the Arts District.
Why go? The weekly food fest is like an incubator for L.A.’s next big food spot, with more than 80 food and retail stalls at ROW DTLA. You’ll also find the I Love Micheladas beer garden for local brews and micheladas.
Don’t miss: The market hosts a record fair every third Sunday of the month.
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Photograph: Time Out/Michael Juliano
Ride the tram up to the Getty Center
Museums
Art and design
Westside
What is it? A free hilltop art museum with a rolling lawn overlooking the ocean.
Why go? From the ocean to the mountains northeast of Downtown L.A., the panoramic views from this artopolis more than compensate for its relative inaccessibility (you need to ride a tram to the museum). So too do the masterpieces on display, particularly its Impressionist paintings and baroque and French decorative arts.
Don’t miss: Pacific Palisades sister institution the Getty Villa is absolutely worth a visit, too, and brimming with Greek and Roman antiquities. Both museums require a free reservation.
Photograph: Courtesy Larry Hirshowitz
Dance your way around the city with KCRW Summer Nights
Music
Little Tokyo
What is it? A slew of free summer concerts programmed by everyone’s favorite NPR member station.
Why go? Familiar KCRW DJs and local buzz bands will be providing free, open-air tunes on select nights this month with the final few events at One Colorado, the Geffen Contemporary at MOCA and JANM.
Don’t miss: If you go to the edition at the Geffen (Sept 22, 29), make sure to check out MOCA’s new exhibit on L.A.’s celebrated Chicana muralist Judith F. Baca.
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Photograph: Shutterstock
Walk along the Venice Canals
Things to do
Venice
What is it? A series of small canals that run through the beachfront neighborhood—hence the name, Venice.
Why go? Tucked between the grimy Venice Boardwalk and the posh Abbot Kinney, the Venice Canals offer a completely different side of the famed beachfront neighborhood. Take a stroll through these three canal-lined blocks and you’ll discover an idyllic scene with arching pedestrian bridges, charming (and astronomically priced) beach houses and bunches of ducklings.
Don’t miss: Though you won’t find boat rentals anywhere along the canals, you can bring your own non-motorized vessel to tour the neighborhood at water level (enter via the launch ramp at Venice Boulevard).
Photograph: Shutterstock
Raise a stein during Oktoberfest
Things to do
Festivals
price 3 of 4
What is it? In Germany? A massive folk festival? In L.A.? Beer and brats at some bars.
Why go? You saw we said there’s beer and brats, right? Both craft breweries and Bavarian-style biergartens roll out deliciously festive menus in the early fall to celebrate.
Don’t miss: Many events occur mid-month, and some spots (like Wirtshaus) have specials that run throughout October.
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Photograph: Time Out/Michael Juliano
See L.A. from 6,000 feet up at the Mount Wilson Observatory
Things to do
Angeles National Forest
What is it? A mountaintop observatory, and a winding, scenic drive to get there.
Why go? High up in the San Gabriel Mountains, the Mount Wilson Observatory affords terrific views of the surrounding region. Admission to the area is free, but you’ll need to buy a Forest Service Adventure Pass in order to park at the site and its adjoining picnic area as it’s located within the Angeles National Forest.
Don’t miss: Take a self-guided tour of the grounds, or a seasonal docent-led tour ($15) of the observatory on weekend afternoons (same-day tickets are available at the Cosmic Cafe). For late-night stargazing, you’ll have to keep your eyes peeled for the rare ticketed event. And consider securing tickets for a concert inside the dome on select Sunday afternoons.
Photograph: Time Out/Michael Juliano
Have an oceanfront, roadside meal at Neptune’s Net
Restaurants
Seafood
Ventura County
price 2 of 4
What is it? A postcard-worthy seafood shack on the Pacific Coast Highway toward the western edge of Malibu.
Why go? The fried ocean bites and weekend biker crew make Neptune’s Net a unique destination. (Alternatively, dine up the coast with locals at Malibu Seafood, where the long line is worth the wait for fresh fish and seafood, or grab a superlative lobster roll at Broad Street Oyster Co.).
Don’t miss: Take your food across the street and park in the dirt patch by the water, with views of surfers and kite boarders.
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Photograph: Courtesy Rooftop Cinema Club
Watch a movie outdoors
Movies
What is it? Multiple series of pop-up movie screenings, which are extending their alfresco schedules well past summer.
Why go? Outdoor movie season is still going strong, and the schedule is jam packed. Melrose Rooftop Theatre is running nearly nightly as is Rooftop Cinema Club, while Rooftop Movies at the Montalbán has screenings on Saturday nights. Meanwhile Street Food Cinema is hopping around town with its weekend picnic-style screenings, as is Eat|See|Hear. Cinespia, which we mentioned earlier, is nearly ready to wrap up for the season.
Don’t miss: New series and screenings are sprouting up constantly—including, this month, The Sound of Music sing-along at the Hollywood Bowl—so be sure to check back for updates.
Photograph: Courtesy Unsplash/Anthony Fomin
Explore the twisted exterior of the Walt Disney Concert Hall
Music
Music venues
Downtown
price 3 of 4
What is it? A concert hall and home of the LA Philharmonic designed by famed local architect Frank Gehry.
Why go? Cruise along Grand Avenue and you can’t miss the Walt Disney Concert Hall, a twisted metallic explosion of Frank Gehry’s imagination. You can look inside the stunning auditorium on a self-guided tour, but the exterior is also just as exquisite.
Don’t miss: Climb up the staircase on Grand Avenue, near 2nd Street, and you’ll find a garden hidden behind the hall. Bring a bagged lunch or a climb along the building’s lustrous exterior.
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Photograph: Courtesy Desert Daze
Spend the weekend at a music fest
What is it? The proper post-Coachella continuation of music festival season.
Why go? Festival season is in full force this month with the much-anticipated L.A. debut of Primavera Sound. BeachLife Ranch will bring a country-ish twist on the Redondo Beach fest, while Desert Daze stages some psychedlic goodness in the desert.
Don’t miss: There’s at least one major local music fest every month from now until the end of the year, so make sure to scope out our full list.
Photograph: Michael Juliano
Stand underneath a space shuttle at the California Science Center
Museums
Science and technology
USC/Exposition Park
What is it? A space shuttle, Endeavour, that’s permanently housed at the California Science Center.
Why go? The final ship to be built in NASA’s space shuttle program, Endeavour inspires a reach-for-the-stars ambition unlike any other exhibit in the city. And its story is distinctly rooted in L.A.: Endeavour was built in Palmdale and, almost 123 million miles later, rolled along our streets to its temporary resting place in the museum (the permanent one just broke ground).
Don’t miss: Make sure to venture just outside of the Endeavour space to see an unused massive orange fuel tank that NASA donated to the museum.
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Photograph: Courtesy Unsplash/Andrew Sterling
Take a scenic drive around the Palos Verdes Peninsula
Things to do
What is it? Ten miles of streets, mostly along Palos Verdes Drive, hugging the coast from the Torrance border to San Pedro.
Why go? The first third of the drive sticks mostly to spectacular real estate a few blocks inland, but after you round Point Vicente, the drive changes dramatically. For a few miles past Terranea, there’s nothing but undeveloped oceanfront hillsides, winding roads and golden-hued bluffs.
Don’t miss: Take a stroll by the Point Vicente Interpretive Center for views of the nearby lighthouse.
Photograph: Michael Juliano
Silence your cell phone for the return of live theater
What is it? The return of musicals and dramas on stages all over town.
Why go? Though it had a few false starts in 2021, live theater has returned in a big way. In DTLA, The Prom wraps up its run at the Ahmanson before making room for the Oklahoma! revival. Over in Hollywood, Jagged Little Pill kicks off its run at the Pantages Theatre.
Don’t miss: If you want to plan far ahead, take a peak at which musicals are headed to Pantages later this year.
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Photograph: Courtesy CC/Flickr/Alissa Walker
Hike the Silver Lake Stairs
Things to do
Walks and tours
Silver Lake
What is it? Dozens of public, outdoor stairways scattered around Silver Lake’s verdant hillsides.
Why go? These WPA era staircases are well-suited for a workout or a fitness-included tour of the area. Though some homeowners have tried to prevent open access, make no mistake: These sets of stairs are for public use. You can find an exhaustive list in author Charles Fleming’s Secret Stairs.
Don’t miss: Highlights include the heart-painted Micheltorena Stairs (Sunset Blvd and Micheltorena St) and the Music Box Steps (Vendome St and Del Monte Dr), of Laurel and Hardy fame.
Photograph: Shutterstock
Fly a kite by the Korean Bell of Friendship
Things to do
San Pedro
What is it? A mighty metallic bell and pavilion in San Pedro donated by South Korea in 1976.
Why go? Perched over the Pacific, this grassy spot overlooking the ocean is known for its namesake bell, with an ornately painted hipped roof. The exposed hillside is an ideal spot to fly a kite thanks to persistent winds coming off the ocean.
Don’t miss: The bell rings only four times each year: Fourth of July, National Liberation Day of Korea (Aug 15), New Year’s Eve and during Constitution Week in September.
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Photograph: Courtesy Koury Angelo
See DTLA turn into a projection art playground at LUMINEX
Art
Installation
What is it? A one-night-only event that’ll turn turned buildings along five blocks of Downtown L.A. into canvases for colorful projections.
Why go? For the second year, DTLA will once again come alive after dark thanks to a dozen site-specific installations, from live performances to immersive artworks to a digital drone activation.
Don’t miss: The event goes down on September 17, from 7:30 to 11:30pm, within a five-block area of South Park (W Pico Blvd, S Hope St, W 11th St, S Olive St, S Broadway). But if you can’t make it, you’ll be able to pull up the augmented reality experience portion afterwards via the Hoverlay app.
Photograph: Courtesy CC/Flickr/vagueonthehow
Picnic at the Hollywood Bowl
Things to do
Event spaces
Hollywood
price 2 of 4
What is it? A gorgeous and instantly recognizable outdoor amphitheatre that’s been hosting concerts since the LA Philharmonic first played there in 1922.
Why go? Nestled in an aesthetically blessed fold in the Hollywood Hills, the 18,000-seat venue can bring out the romantic in the terminally cynical. It’s the summer home of the LA Phil (and boozy picnics).
Don’t miss: As long as there’s no performance going on (which is most days in the winter and spring), it also doubles as a public park. During the busier summer season, you’re welcome to bring your own food to ticketed shows (and even booze to LA Phil-produced ones).
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Photograph: Courtesy CC/Flickr/Tobin
Get some fresh air at Malibu Creek State Park
Attractions
Parks and gardens
Santa Monica Mountains
price 1 of 4
What is it? An 8,000-acre mountainous park that looks unlike anything else in L.A.
Why go? With dramatic gorges, open pastures, lush forests, hidden pools and jagged peaks, Malibu Creek is simply one of the most stunning spots in Southern California.
Don’t miss: A bit of silver screen history; you can spot remnants of the M*A*S*H set and splash in the rock pool that was featured in Planet of the Apes. Consider using your library card to secure a free parking pass.
Photograph: Shutterstock
Admire the coastline atop Temescal Gateway Park
Things to do
Pacific Palisades
What is it? A Pacific Palisades hillside park with multiple viewponts of the ocean.
Why go? With a variety of terrain, flora and views of the Pacific and city, Temescal Canyon Park is great for trail runners, hikers and dog walkers. You’ll experience vast, breathtaking views that span from Catalina to Downtown and enough varied terrain to keep you and your furry friend going—all the way to the Valley, should you dare.
Don’t miss: The stop signs. Seriously. They’re photo enforced, and you’ll be sent a $100 fine if you roll through.
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Photograph: Courtesy @mai_perspective
Watch the sunset from El Matador
Attractions
Beaches
Malibu
What is it? A small but beautiful state beach in Malibu dominated by rocky coves.
Why go? Because it’s easily the most scenic stretch of coastline in the region. It’s only accessible via a steep gravelly path from a paid parking lot. But the effort is worth it, whether it’s to watch the waves lap against the rocks or see the sunset.
Don’t miss: The tide. The beach here is pretty narrow and sand comes at a particular premium when high tide rolls in.
Sling webs and pal around with Spider-Man at Avengers Campus
Things to do
Event spaces
Anaheim
price 3 of 4
What is it? A Marvel-themed, superhero-filled land at Disney California Adventure Park.
Why go? If you’re an MCU obsessive, then you’re going to want to add Disneyland’s newest area to your Infinity Gauntlet. You can see Spider-Man’s high-flying stunt-double animatronic launch 65 feet in the air, feast on a hilariously-proportioned Ant-Man–inspired chicken sandwich and encounter acomic-universe–deep roster of costumed character encounters.
Don’t miss: There are a lot of changes going on with Disneyland’s queueing systems, so we suggest brushing up on Genie Plus before you plan your attack for getting on the Spider-Man–themed 3-D ride WEB SLINGERS.
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Photograph: Victor Leung
Hike to Eaton Canyon Falls and back in less than an hour
Things to do
Pasadena
What is it? A 50-foot waterfall located in an easy-to-access canyon in the San Gabriel Mountains.
Why go? Los Angeles is a beautiful place, and it’s not afraid to flaunt it. Case in point: Eaton Canyon. The Pasadena-area park is one of the most accessible and easygoing trails where you’ll truly feel like you’ve slipped into the wilderness.
Don’t miss: On weekdays only, you can cut out the most boring part of the hike and park outside of the Pinecrest Gate, which is just barely over a mile from the waterfall.
Photograph: Stephanie Breijo
Travel back in time at the drive-in
Movies
What is it? About a half-dozen drive-in movie theaters in SoCal that are still going strong.
Why go? For nearly a year, it was one of the only ways to see a first-run movie that wasn’t on your couch. But even with regular theaters open again, we still think it’s tons of fun and cost effective.
Don’t miss: We particularly love the programming at Mission Tiki in Montclair.
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Courtesy Universal Studios
Brave a Weeknd maze at Halloween Horror Nights
Things to do
Festivals
Universal City
What is it? Universal Studios’ annual assembly of big-budget haunted houses and mazes, Halloween Horror Nights.
Why go? The Weeknd (as in, yes, “Blinding Lights” singer the Weeknd) gets the maze treatment this year with a walkthrough inspired by the singer’s latest album, After Hours. That’s in addition to experiences inspired by the classic Universal Monsters, Halloween and The Black Phone, plus a “Terror Tram” takeover of the studio tour that includes a Jordan Peele mash-up between Us and Nope.
Don’t miss: Prices increase considerably as we approach Halloween, so the earlier you can go the better.
Photograph: John Borden
Step inside the sunny Wayfarers Chapel
Things to do
Rancho Palos Verdes/Rolling Hills Estates
What is it? A glassy chapel designed by architect Lloyd Wright on an oceanfront road.
Why go? Accessible via a dramatic oceanfront drive—no matter which direction you approach from—architect Lloyd Wright’s enchanting glass church drinks in tree-dappled sunlight through its faceted shell. All are welcome to admire the serene sanctuary’s intimate structure—though you may have to do so from the outside if there’s a wedding in progress.
Don’t miss: Across the street, Abalone Cove Shoreline Park is the perfect starting point for beachfront trailheads.
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Photograph: Benny Haddad
Tackle 282 steps at the Baldwin Hills Scenic Overlook
Things to do
Culver City
What is it? A Westside lookout best known for its 282 steep, concrete stairs to the top.
Why go? The views from the top offer some of the best views of the region, with the ocean on one side and the Downtown L.A. skyline on the other (set against a backdrop of snowcapped mountains in the winter). Once you reach the summit, sit at the long park bench and take in the 360-degree views.
Don’t miss: If you’d rather not beat up your knees, take a shortcut and drive up to the top of the hill and park in one of the many empty spaces ($6).
Photograph: Jakob N. Layman
Survey DTLA architecture on a Los Angeles Conservancy Walking Tour
Things to do
Walks and tours
Downtown Financial District
price 1 of 4
What is it? Take a fuel-efficient walking tour and cherish Los Angeles’ urban architectural heritage.
Why go? The Los Angeles Conservancy walking tours take in the city’s top sights and most beautiful buildings, including Downtown’s historic theaters and Art Deco buildings (on a weekly basis) as well as the modern skyline (monthly). Be sure to reserve a place well ahead, because the tours are incredibly popular.
Don’t miss: The tour of Victorian homes in Angelino Heights (first Saturday of the month) is perfect for Halloween-time.
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Photograph: Jakob N. Layman
Become a pinball wizard at EightyTwo
Bars
Downtown Arts District
price 2 of 4
What is it? An Arts District arcade bar.
Why go? If ever there was a bar to geek out in, this one is it. L.A.’s first arcade bar boasts more than 40 classic arcade cabinets and pristinely preserved pinball machines—all fixed with cup holders for endless booze-fueled sessions. An homage to the golden age of arcade games, cocktails here have names like Kill Screen, Zangief and Dr. Mario.
Don’t miss: Swing by the last Sunday of the month for an open pinball tournament (or join the L.A. Pinball League, which plays on Tuesday nights).
Photograph: Rozette Rago
Hunt for antiques at the Rose Bowl Flea Market
Shopping
What is it? A staggeringly colossal flea market held outside of the Rose Bowl the second Sunday of each month.
Why go? The sheer size and scale of this flea market means that it encompasses multitudes: new and old, hand-crafted and salvaged, the cheap and the costly. There are plenty of duds, to be sure, but come out early enough and you may go home with that perfect purchase.
Don’t miss: Stray from the main loop around the stadium; there are rows and rows of old furniture, albums and vintage clothes and accessories that fill the adjacent parking lot.
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Photograph: Shutterstock
Achieve your farm-to-table dreams at the Santa Monica Farmers’ Market
Shopping
Markets and fairs
Santa Monica
What is it? A series of farmers’ markets held every week year-round in Santa Monica.
Why go? The next time you’re at a restaurant and tempted to ask the waiter where your astoundingly fresh beets came from—don’t. We’ll save you the trouble and answer for you: the Santa Monica Farmers’ Market.
Don’t miss: While the market occurs on a couple of days in various parts of Santa Monica, the best day to go is on Wednesday along Arizona Avenue.
Photograph: Courtesy Delusion
Brave a cult meeting in an old mansion at Delusion
Theater
Interactive
Pomona
What is it? Part immersive theater, part story-based haunted house, staged inside of the Phillips Mansion, an 1875 estate in Pomona.
Why go? “Valley of Hollows” will unfold a 1970s-set tale that tasks you with deprogramming people from the clutches of the Hollows cult, a group of fanatics with a death wish that have swarmed the mansion in the wake of a widow’s disappearance.
Don’t miss: You can upgrade to a VIP ticket for access to the second floor of the mansion, which includes a sound-and-touch area dubbed “Hell’s Hollow,” a projector that plays ’70s horror classics and a bar where you’re literally invited to drink the Kool-Aid.
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Photograph: Shutterstock
Relax on the sand at Point Dume State Beach
Attractions
Beaches
Malibu
price 1 of 4
What is it? One of Southern California’s most beautiful beaches and a frequent Hollywood filming location due to its iconic rock face.
Why go? If you can’t find a free space along Westward Beach Road or you’re willing to pay for parking, you’ll be rewarded with this wide and rarely crowded patch of sand and surf. As all the parking spots are only steps from the sand, Point Dume is the perfect place to pack a picnic for a beachfront meal as seals and dolphins frolic during sunset—just watch out for those hungry seagulls.
Don’t miss: An easygoing dirth path climbs from the sand to the top of the point, with tons of yellow wildflowers in the winter and spring.
Photograph: Courtesy Descanso Gardens
Stroll through SoCal flora at Descanso Gardens
Attractions
Parks and gardens
La Cañada
price 1 of 4
What is it? A hillside botanical garden in La Cañada Flintridge that harbors a year-round collection of native flora.
Why go? This delightful tribute to the horticultural magic of Southern California includes more than 600 varieties of camellia (best seen between the middle of February and early May), as well as groves and hillsides of native plants.
Don’t miss: The seasonal blooms, including—as mentioned—camellias in the winter, and tulips and the Japanese garden’s cherry blossoms in the spring. Look out for Carved’s pumpkin-filled trail in October.
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Photograph: Michael Juliano
Look out on L.
A. from Los Angeles City Hall
Things to do
Downtown
What is it? A grand, white concrete tower that’s served as L.A.’s city hall since 1928.
Why go? It’s the cheapest way to take in an elevated view of Downtown and beyond. If you’re ever passing through the Civic Center during weekday public hours, enter on Main Street—then you owe yourself a visit to the 27th floor observation deck.
Don’t miss: Look for the 1984 Olympic torch near the Spring Street exit.
Photograph: Courtesy Amoeba Music
Load up on records at Amoeba Music
Music
Music venues
Hollywood
price 1 of 4
What is it? A warehouse-sized record store in the middle of Hollywood.
Why go? Sure, Spotify is great, but anyone in search of that arcane track off of that mid-’80s Tom Robinson album knows it isn’t perfect. Neither is Amoeba, but it is the largest independent record store in the United States, and the variety of music on offer is amazing, the prices are fair and the staff really know their music.
Don’t miss: Its new address. The shop recently moved from its longtime home on Sunset Boulevard to a spot at the corner of Hollywood Boulevard and Argyle Avenue.
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Photograph: Jakob N. Layman
Raise your wand at the Wizarding World of Harry Potter
Attractions
Theme parks
Universal City
price 3 of 4
What is it? A Harry Potter-themed land at Universal Studios Hollywood (which also recently unveiled a new Nope attraction).
Why go? This meticulously detailed land, which features shops and edible delights in Hogsmeade village and a thrilling ride inside Hogwarts Castle, should delight even those Muggles unfamiliar with the Potterverse—particularly if you have a mug of Butterbeer in your hand.
Don’t miss: Speaking of that sweet treat, you can hack together a Butterbeer float with an order of soda and ice cream. Just a heads up that you’ll need to secure a reservation to visit.
Photograph: Steven A. Miller
Step inside the precursor to Disneyland at Walt Disney’s Carolwood Barn
Museums
History
Griffith Park
What is it? A model train workshop housed inside of a red barn that used to reside in Walt Disney’s Holmby Hills backyard.
Why go? Walt Disney used to ride his own 1/8th scale live-steam railroad—the “Carolwood Pacific Railroad”—around his backyard until he shifted his focus to a much bigger project: Disneyland. In 1999, the red barn that he used as his workshop was moved to Griffith Park’s Los Angeles Live Steamers Railroad Museum. Every third Sunday of the month, you can visit the barn to find a collection of train models and memorabilia.
Don’t miss: Legendary Disney artists and engineers are known to pop in during open hours.
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Photograph: Courtesy Unsplash/Audrey Fretz
Spend time with your dog at the South Coast Botanic Garden
Things to do
Walks and tours
price 2 of 4
What is it? A once-a-month block of dog-friendly hours at the Palos Verdes botanical garden.
Why go? To spend some quality outdoor time with your four-legged best friend, of course. Every third Sunday of the month, you can roam the gardens’ 87 acres with your fur baby.
Don’t miss: Nabbing a reservation. You (the human) will need a reservation, while your best friend (the pup) will need to remain on their leash at all times, including in the parking lot.
Photograph: Courtesy CC/Flickr/J Jakobson
Find your zen at the Lake Shrine
Attractions
Parks and gardens
Pacific Palisades
What is it? A meditation garden in the Pacific Palisades.
Why go? Get lost in your thoughts at one of L.A.’s best kept secrets: the Self-Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine. Set on a 10-acre site that was used as a film set during the silent era, its lovely gardens offer some increasingly rare assets today: peace and tranquility.
Don’t miss: A reservation. You’ll need one right now to visit the meditation gardens, which are open for free from Wednesday through Sunday.
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More great things to do across the globe
Photograph: Mark Pickthall, courtesy Field of Light, Uluru, Bruce Munro 2016
The 40 best things to do in the world right now
Things to do
Going out and doing things satisfies our need to explore, to learn and to grow (and then to brag about it on social media). Our hope is that the DO List becomes not just your bucket list, but your inspiration to experience and appreciate the corners of magic in the world.
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What to Do When You Visit
Photograph: Courtesy Unsplash/Ruben Gutierrez
From spotting stars on Rodeo Drive to stargazing at the Griffith Observatory, plan ahead with these places to visit in L.A.
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With so many world-famous sites and attractions to visit, deciding on the best things to do in Los Angeles can be a bewildering task. If it’s your first visit, you may be inclined to beeline it to Hollywood—but then you’d be missing out on all of L.A.’s essential museums. Or you might have your heart set on getting star-struck in Beverly Hills—but then you’d miss out on all of the remarkable restaurants farther to the east.
Our point is: L.A. is big, and stuffed with so many worthwhile experiences that you’ll never be asking yourself what to do but instead when you’ll find time to relax on the beach in Santa Monica, dine along the vibrant streets of the Arts District and grab a drink in super-hip Silver Lake.
There are so many great places to visit and things to see, it can be hard knowing where to start and what to fit in. This list should help you decide and get the most from your L.A. getaway.
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Photograph: Courtesy Unsplash/Gerson Repreza
1. Relax on postcard-perfect beaches in Malibu
Put in the extra miles to venture north and west from Venice and Santa Monica and you’ll be rewarded with the most picturesque beaches in L.A. County. We couldn’t pick just one stretch of sand to visit in Malibu, so we’ll instead offer three: Point Dume for picnicking and sunbathing by an as-seen-on-TV scalable cliff, El Matador for sunsets among photogenic coves and outcrops and Leo Carrillo for secluded sand and an on-leash dog beach. If you’re hungry, we’ll recommend a trio of seafood spots, from east to west: superlative lobster rolls at Broad Street Oyster Co., excellent fish and chips at Malibu Seafood and fried goodness at Neptune’s Net.
Want to make a night of it? Book a stay at the best beachfront rentals in L.A.
Photograph: Jakob N. Layman
2. Grab a bite at Grand Central Market
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Photograph: Courtesy Unsplash/Ruben Gutierrez
3. Museum hop along Miracle Mile
The collections of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, or LACMA, are housed in a vast complex of buildings, with a modern and contemporary art-filled west campus that opened 2008 and a single-building redesign on the way. The focal point is its grand entrance, which includes Chris Burden’s photogenic installation Urban Light. LACMA shares a park with the La Brea Tar Pits and sits just across the street from the Petersen Automotive Museum and Craft Contemporary, and next to the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures.
Make sure to check out all of the free museum days before you visit.
Photograph: Courtesy Unsplash/Jaredd Craig
4. Gaze into the cosmos (and out onto the cityscape) at the Griffith Observatory
Sure, you can’t see all that much through its enormous telescope, but you can still spend a few hours browsing around the Griffith Observatory quite happily (open Thu–Sun; grounds open daily). There’s the popular Hall of the Sky and Hall of the Eye, a pair of complementary displays that examines the interplay between people and space. The building itself is the star attraction though—and the stunning view of the city from Griffith Park makes it worthy of a visit whether you’re a space buff or not.
Don’t miss out on these other essential Los Angeles attractions.
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Photograph: Time Out/Michael Juliano
5. Bow down to the masters at the Getty
The Getty Center is packed full of artistic masterpieces and enjoys an awe-inspiring hilltop location with incredible views of L. A. and a stunning central garden. Among the highlights hanging here are works by Rubens and Impressionists such as Renoir, Monet, Van Gogh and Cézanne—the lovely French decorative arts galleries are our personal favorites. If you want to rewind the clock a few millennia, head west to the museum’s predecessor, the Getty Villa. The Italian-style estate is stuffed with largely Greek and Roman antiquities, and its palatial courtyard is worth the trip alone.
Make sure to see these seven must-see works at the Getty.
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Photograph: Courtesy CC/Flickr/Tim Wang
6. Stroll (briefly) along the stars in Hollywood
For a glimpse of the stardust on which the city’s built, stroll along the Hollywood Walk of Fame, where more than 2,700 of the entertainment world’s most illustrious names are immortalized in pink terrazzo and gold lettering. For film fanatics, the famous hand and footprints at the Chinese Theatre are a requisite stop—though the tourist-choked area leaves much to be desired. Countless galas, premieres and award ceremonies have passed through over the decades and although the area isn’t nearly as glitzy as you imagined, Hollywood, unpleasant as it may be, still has its (brief) place in a visit to L.A.
Thinking of making a day of it? Find our favorite things to do in Hollywood.
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Photograph: Time Out/Michael Juliano
7. Stare into infinity at the Broad
Over half a decade in now and the arrival of the Broad still feels like a gamechanger thanks to the museum’s distinctive design, free admission and post-war art collection. Yayoi Kusama’s pair of Infinity Mirror Rooms in particular continue to pull in the crowds—one which transports viewers into a twinkling, pulsating starfield of LEDs (you can reserve a time slot), the other via smaller reflective chamber that you can pop your head into.
Have time to kill before your reservation at the Broad? Explore the best things to do by the Broad.
Photograph: Courtesy Unsplash/Viviana Rishe
8. Get active on Venice Beach
Venice Beach has long been known as the bohemian epicenter of California, and while the area gets plenty of mainstream tourists, it still boldly embraces its eccentric spirit—for better or worse. Abbot Kinney has transformed into a high-end ’hood over recent years, but the boardwalk is still a, let’s say, unique place for people watching, with radical pamphleteers, skateboarders and body builders all making their presence known (if you’re simply after a picturesque stretch of beach, we suggest venturing to Santa Monica or Malibu instead). Grab lunch at the Fig Tree before browsing the shelves at Small World Books. Make sure to stray from the boardwalk and stroll along the Venice Canals, too.
Looking to relax by the ocean? Check out the best beaches in L.A..
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Photograph: Courtesy Rahul Bhogal
9.
Shop in style on Rodeo Drive
We’ve all dreamed of being Julia Roberts shopping on Rodeo Drive, but very few of us could actually afford to shop in the designer boutiques and flagship stores seen in the film Pretty Woman. Which means window-shopping is the order of the day. Along the $200-million ersatz European cobbled walkway Two Rodeo, browsing tourists mingle with serious spenders. A short journey away is Anderson Court, which is the only shopping mall designed by Frank Lloyd Wright.
Fulfill your fashion dreams at the best shops in L.A.
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Photograph: Rozette Rago
10. Get animated with Mickey and Minnie at Disneyland
Reservations are required.
You’re never too old for Disneyland. This legendary theme park overflows with brilliant things to do, spread over numerous themed lands—including Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge and Avengers Campus—and the adjacent California Adventure. After making sure you’re up to speed best food, stroll down Main Street USA for a taste of early-19th-century America, trek Westwards at Frontierland and soak up the music of New Orleans Square. Of course, there are dozens of rides too, including the epic Indiana Jones Adventure and, across the way in California Adventure, the uplifting Soarin’.
Make sure to get on the 25 best Disneyland rides while you’re there.
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12 Things Not to Do in LA | L.
A. Info
For visitors to Los Angeles, trying to make decisions about what they’re going to spend their precious time doing here, almost as important as adding things to the list is eliminating from it those things that they AREN’T going to do. Because in a city as big and varied as LA it just isn’t possible to do everything. If you try you’re just going to drive yourself crazy (probably quite literally), you won’t do any of those things properly and, after all, you’re on vacation – you should be relaxing. So, just for fun – and to help you – we’ve put together this list of things not do do in LA, to help you get the best possible experience from your trip here. It’s designed for those looking for a more authentic experience of Los Angeles than the traditional “movie stars and beaches” one, and is open to having their preconceptions challenged.
1. DON’T VISIT RODEO DRIVE!
Go to the Fashion District in downtown instead. It’s vibrant, alive, affordable and it’s the real Los Angeles – basically everything that the famous shopping street to the stars isn’t. You almost certainly won’t see any stars doing their shopping on Rodeo Drive, it’s insanely expensive and you can find most of the designer shops on any high-end shopping street anywhere in the world. If the Fashion District is out of your way how about Venice’s trendy Abbot Kinney or the more fashionable shopping areas of Robertson or Melrose?
2. DON’T DO A STARS’ HOUSES TOUR!
Why not? Well, unfortunately many of the tour buses aren’t safe and most of the “information” the operators tell their guests is wrong. Angelenos never do these tours, they’re really a joke here. The bottom line is it’s not an authentic experience of Los Angeles, the buses just clog up the area’s residential streets and the only thing that you will learn is that rich people have nice houses. That’s one thing that isn’t unique to LA.
3. DON’T GET YOUR PRONUNCIATION OF LA PLACE NAMES WRONG!
Los Angeles has many local peculiarities when it comes to pronouncing place names here. Wilshire Boulevard is not “Will-SHIRE”, it’s “WILL-sher”. The neighborhood below Griffith Park is not “Los FeLIZ”, it’s “Los FEElus”. We never use the names of the freeways here either, always the number – so it’s not the “Harbor Freeway”, it’s “the 110”. Also you never use the “i” before the freeway, as in the “i405”, it’s always “the 405”. Small details, but when you’re trying to get directions…
4. DON’T ASK LOCALS WHERE YOU CAN FIND MOVIE-STARS!
It’s not uncommon for Angelenos to see famous people around town (often in very unlikely places), but here’s the thing about “celebrities” – they’re just like us (except they’re rich and famous of course). So, if you do happen to run into a “celebrity” (often highly visible because they’re the only person wearing baseball cap and sunglasses while inside a building), just be respectful and leave them alone. Just imagine how many other people may have approached them that day and remember that they’re busy doing whatever it is that they’re doing.
Anyway, you don’t need to ask anyone about this – just read our guide and follow the instructions, that way you’re guaranteed to see a celebrity in an appropriate setting.
5. DON’T ASK TOUR GUIDES TO SELL YOU MARIJUANA!
For one things it’s legal to buy marijuana in California now, so you don’t have to ask your tour guide to get it for you. Just visit MedMen while you’re here! While we’re on the subject don’t ask them what their “real job” is either – there’s nothing wrong with being a full-time tour guide (several of our guides are in fact). If you’re joining us on a tour this is definitely high on the list of things not do do in LA!
6. DON’T BOTHER TRYING TO FIND AN OUTLET STORE!
We go to discount stores like Burlington, Nordstrom Rack, TJ Maxx and Ross, Angelenos don’t generally shop at outlets (apart from the Citadel).
7. DON’T BE SURPRISED THAT THE TRAFFIC IS BAD IN LOS ANGELES!
It’s famous for being horrendous (just watch any TV show or movie that’s set in LA). In fact a recent study found we have the worst traffic on the entire planet.
8. DON’T RENT A CAR!
As referenced above traffic in Los Angeles is awful. All the time. Many travelers assume that there isn’t any public transport here and that if they want to get around they have to rent a car. That just isn’t true and the cost of renting a car and parking it can be very high. Besides, why bother? Probably you drive when you’re staying at home, so look at your trip to LA as being a vacation from driving. We have a reasonably wide-ranging Metro system, which is fast-growing, clean, efficient and very cheap (the $1.75 flat fare is a bargain). Why not use that? For more information on how to do this read our guide to using public transit in Los Angeles.
9. DON’T FORGET TO VISIT DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES!
For most visitors to LA the main locale’s to check out are Hollywood, Beverly Hills and Santa Monica/Venice. DTLA isn’t even on their radar. Big mistake! Huge! It’s the most interesting part of the city, both historically and architecturally, to such an extent that it’s usually the highlight for guests on our LA in a Day tour (and the other neighborhoods we visit on that tour are Hollywood and Santa Monica). One of the cool things about LA is how varied it is and if you miss downtown you’re missing a big piece of the picture (including gems such as Union Station, see below).
10. DON’T BUY A PLASTIC OSCAR AT A HOLLYWOOD BOULEVARD TOURIST TRAP!
You’re only encouraging them if you do. Get a book about movie or LA history, or buy a poster, from one of the few bookstores still hanging on in there, like Larry Edmunds.
11. DON’T THINK HOLLYWOOD BOULEVARD AND VENICE BOARDWALK ARE THE REAL LA!
They both exist and they’re both in Los Angeles, but they’re completely atypical of the city, in the way that Times Square is not an authentic representation of New York. Hollywood Boulevard and Venice Boardwalk are the only two places that you’ll get hassled (and possibly hustled) here but, because most tourists feel compelled to go there, many leave with the impression that this is what LA is like unfortunately. It isn’t at all. Angelenos are nearly always polite, friendly and helpful, it’s just that these areas attract a lot of hustlers because so many visitors go there.
If you do go to these neighborhoods (and we do) just ignore the tour touts, CD sellers and pan-handlers and make a point of visiting other parts of this hugely varied city, like Griffith Park, Santa Monica and downtown. It’s often said here about Hollywood Boulevard that “It’s the place that tourists always go and Angelenos never go”, and while that may not be strictly true it tells you a lot.
12. DON’T FORGET TO LEAVE A GRATUITY!
We’ve covered this extensively in our guide to tipping in the U.S., but when you’re in Los Angeles please tip whenever necessary. It’s probably not common to do this where you come from – or at least not as much as we do in the U.S. – but here it’s expected. It’s just how we do things. If you go to a restaurant, for example, and you leave without tipping the waiter you’re going to be making some Angelenos very unhappy. They probably won’t follow you out of the restaurant – which happens in New York – but if you were happy with your meal you’ve just been very disrespectful to the restaurant staff. For no reason. When you look at the prices on the menu just add 25% – 10% for the sales tax and 15% for the tip.
If you have any feedback on our list of things not to do in LA, or if you have some recommendations of your own, please email us and let us know. We’ll be sure to take it into account.
What to see in Los Angeles – 42 top attractions
Los Angeles City Hall is one of the most recognizable objects in the city, which has appeared many times in popular films and TV shows. It was erected in 1928. Its main levels are neoclassical, while the tower is in Art Deco. Since 1940, the image of this legendary building has adorned the badges of the city’s police department. Until 1964, City Hall remained the tallest building in Los Angeles. There is an observation deck on the 27th floor. It is open to visitors during business hours from Monday to Friday. You must have an ID with you.
North and south of the historic Santa Monica Pier is a 5.6 km stretch of fine sandy beach. It is within walking distance of popular hotels, shops and restaurants. Santa Monica State Beach infrastructure includes picnic areas, playgrounds, and lifeguard stations. Bicycle paths are equipped here, bicycles are rented, you can play volleyball and basketball on special grounds. On the coast, south of the pier, there is Original Muscle Beach, where exercise machines are freely available, zones with crossbars and bars of different heights for gymnastic training are equipped. Among the attractions of the beach is the International Chess Park.
The Bradbury Building is another Los Angeles architectural treasure and the oldest office building in downtown. Behind its rather modest façade hide breathtaking interiors. The Victorian-style courtyard is flooded with sunbeams streaming in from a huge skylight. The play of light and shadow is continued by exquisite forging on the railings of stairs and internal balconies, carved marble friezes and rare open elevators. The building has been used many times as a location for filming Hollywood films. It currently houses the Los Angeles Police Department’s Internal Investigations Unit.
The oldest and largest market in Los Angeles is a gourmet paradise. It has occupied the entire first floor of the historic Homer Laughlin Building since 1917. It sells products of the highest quality – seasonal vegetables and fruits, many types of cheese, meat and seafood, spices and spices, alcohol, flowers. There are mini-bakeries on site that bake fresh bread and rolls. Here you can taste the most delicious food from all over the world, attend interesting cooking classes, comedy shows and other events.
This is a must-see in Los Angeles. Angels Flight is considered the shortest railway in the world. Since its opening in 1901, more than 200 million people have ridden on it. The length of the route is 91 meters. The funicular is located in the Bunker Hill area and runs between Hill Street and Grand Avenue. Two orange and black carriages are moving simultaneously in opposite directions. The windows offer a great view of the historical part of the city. The funicular ride is paid, but quite inexpensive. Here you can buy a souvenir ticket to keep the memory of a pleasant trip.
Everyone who wants to try the most delicious burger in Los Angeles comes to In-N-Out Burger. Eateries offer a fairly uncomplicated menu – a hamburger, a cheeseburger, a double-double (two patties plus two cheeses), french fries, soda and several varieties of milkshake. But at the same time, the client has the opportunity to design the dish himself. For example, increase the number of cutlets and cheese several times, order a vegetarian option or change seasonings. Diversity is also brought in by two serving options. Animal Style – with the addition of mustard, fried onions and a lot of sauce. Protein Style – with the replacement of buns with lettuce leaves.
Cafe Gratitude establishments located in popular areas of the city – Larchmont Village, Arts District and Venice. Only the freshest and highest quality products grown on local farms are used here. At Cafe Gratitude, you can not only enjoy dishes from Chef Seizan Dre Ellis, but also feel the special meditative atmosphere. The owners of the restaurant chain Matthew and Terses Engelhart profess the philosophy of sacred commerce, when a business company becomes the center of self-realization and spiritual transformation of each employee. Therefore, it is not surprising that all the dishes in these establishments are so delicious, because they are prepared with love for people and the planet.
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News Los Angeles – our top 7 things to see in the City of Angels
Hello everyone! I talk about the most interesting sights of Los Angeles must-see when traveling to California on the US West Coast. Information about the most interesting places in the City of Angels will be especially useful for those who are just about to go to America and visit the capital of world cinema and the city of dreams, unofficially called La La Land, where the dreams of the lucky ones come true and the hopes of many other dreamers collapse.
In the article I will introduce you, dear readers, to where to go and go in Los Angeles. Based on my practical experience of traveling to the USA, I will advise the most exciting and interesting areas, neighborhoods and beaches, where you must visit to see this city in all its glory and grandeur!
I would add that whether you are traveling the United States on an unlimited budget or on a budget, with children or alone, the unique sights of Los Angeles will certainly not leave you indifferent. Read my article, get ready for the long-awaited trip and you will be very pleased with your trip to the City of Angels!
Contents of the article
1 Trip to Los Angeles
2 Top 7 attractions in Los Angeles
3 Other attractions in Los Angeles
3.1 Practical information about Los Angeles attractions
3.2 When is the best time to go to Los Angeles?
3.3 Top things to see in Los Angeles
4 Where to live in Los Angeles near attractions
5 Our review of Los Angeles attractions
6 Map of Los Angeles attractions
7 Other attractions on the US West Coast near Los Angeles
Trip to Los Angeles
When you are planning your trip to the USA, once you see Los Angeles on the map, you will be surprised at how large an area it occupies. Its attractions, unlike the main attractions in New York or Chicago, are not concentrated in the city center, but are located in different parts of the city on a fairly wide stretch of hilly terrain, starting right from the Pacific coast in the west and stretching over the hills to high mountain ranges. in the north and east. So get ready, dear travelers, for quite a lot of driving and walking around the city.
Good to know: In the vicinity of Los Angeles is the very first Disneyland (in the city of Anaheim), which was built during the lifetime of Walt Disney himself. So if you are going on a trip with children, then do not miss the birthplace of Mickey Mouse, a cult place of all times and peoples!
Related article:
Los Angeles Online Travel Guide
Los Angeles on the US West Coast
Tourists who come to see Hollywood may not realize that there is still a lot of interesting things to do in Los Angeles – the city that is considered the entertainment capital of the world.
In addition to seeing the most famous sights, many people come here to meet their favorite American TV and movie stars by chance on the street or take photos with celebrities in a restaurant, surf on world-famous beaches like Malibu, or visit the Hollywood Bowl – a unique amphitheater open air.
In any case, anyone who is just planning their trip will be very welcome to learn about the mild climate and fairly comfortable weather in Los Angeles all year round, determined by the temperate Mediterranean climate, characteristic of the southwestern coast of California, USA.
Top 7 Los Angeles Attractions
Tens of millions of tourists visit Los Angeles every year. Judging by their popularity among them, top attractions in Los Angeles are
Undoubtedly, these attractions are worth visiting in the first place. And if you are traveling with children, I also recommend a full day trip to Disneyland .
Important to know: It will take at least 2-3 days to see the main attractions of Los Angeles on your own, and on one of the days it is better to rent a car to drive along the highway along the Pacific coast. There you can enjoy breathtaking ocean scenery and magnificent views of the coastline, as well as stroll along wonderful beaches such as Surfrider Beach in Malibu or Zuma Beach, wander around the hilly suburbs of the city, located far from the center.
Next, I will talk about each of these attractions separately in order.
1. Hollywood Boulevard and Walk of Fame
Whether you’re a movie buff or not, walking down Hollywood (from Hollywood Boulevard to the Sunset Strip) is an unforgettable experience. Here you can feel like a movie star and try to capture the atmosphere of creativity and luxury.
Almost all tourists who come to Los Angeles for the first time visit Hollywood Boulevard , which is located in the Hollywood Boulevard area, and is also photographed with the Grauman Chinese Theater located in its very center . Then it is worth walking along the Walk of Fame, stretching for 18 blocks, where you can find the star of your idol with hand or foot prints. You can just look at the names of your favorite actors on the sidewalk, winners of the Oscars, the annual award ceremony for which success in cinema takes place at the nearby Dolby Theater (also known as the Kodak Theatre).
Our recommendation: If you are going to travel around California by car, but first want to see the Avenue of Stars and sleep after the flight, then upon arrival, immediately rent a car at LAX airport (link) and go to a good inexpensive hotel in Hollywood with free parking, in which we personally lived – La Brea Inn . It is clean and nice with spacious rooms and good soundproofing. It is convenient to leave the car there and go for a walk to the main attractions. The Chinese Theater is only 3 minutes walk.
2. West Hollywood and the Sunset Strip
After that, you can go to the West Hollywood area, located between Beverly Hills and Hollywood, which for many years was known as the world’s gay center -culture, and today it has also become “their” area for the main actors of the entertainment industry – numerous producers, directors, writers and aspiring actors. West Hollywood is considered one of the most popular hiking destinations for tourists and is surrounded by some of the finest restaurants in the city. In the evening, you should definitely take a walk along the two-kilometer section of one of the most famous streets in Los Angeles – Sunset Boulevard, which is called Sunset Strip , where famous clubs and expensive 5 * hotels are located, the facades of which look especially amazing in the evening, when millions of lights are lit on them with bright light.
Hollywood sign on the hillside
3. Griffith Observatory
Hollywood is not far from the famous Griffith Observatory , which is one of the main attractions of Los Angeles. It is located on the south slope of Mount Hollywood in Griffith City Park, one of the most famous places in the city of L.A. It got its name in honor of Jenkins Griffith, who donated money for the construction of an observatory, an exhibition hall and a planetarium, and subsequently donated it to the city.
Inside the observatory is a planetarium, large telescopes and amazing exhibits. The observation deck allows you to admire the panorama of the city. Anyone can go for a walk along one of the many trails (walking trails) in Griffith Park. It is also worth noting that the observatory is located in close proximity to another very famous attraction – sign Hollywood on the slope of one of the high hills surrounding the city. All tourists must take photos of big white letters HOLLYWOOD , which is a symbol of all modern American cinema,
Hollywood Sign
The cheapest way to get to the Griffith Observatory from the city center is by bus with the name of the DASH Observatory route, which leaves from the Vermont / Sunset station, located on the red metro line . The observatory offers wonderful panoramic views of downtown Los Angeles to the southeast, Hollywood to the south, and the Pacific Ocean to the southwest. Today, anyone can visit Griffith Park and the observatory absolutely free of charge.
Griffith Observatory view of downtown Los Angeles
4. Beverly Hills
For celebrity encounters, head to Beverly Hills , which contains Rodeo Street – a drive with fashion boutiques and expensive designer stores, the Beverly Center shopping complex with the most original goods, as well as the best hotel in Los Angeles – Beverly Wilshire (Beverly Wilshire) on Wilshire Boulevard, where they filmed the film “Pretty Woman” with Julia Roberts in the title role. Expensive restaurants in the vicinity of Rodeo Drive, the most famous street in the Beverly Hills area, are still the main place for business negotiations and discussion of large deals.
Related article:
The Beverly Wilshire 5* Hotel in Los Angeles – the best 5 star hotel in the USA
Beverly Hills area
)
5. Downtown (Downtown L.A.)
After seeing the main attractions associated with the dream factory and Hollywood, go to Downtown (Downtown) in Los Angeles, which is the center of city life, business negotiations between “white collar” and at the same time a place of concentration of the highest skyscrapers, expensive offices, noisy streets and huge warehouses. Lovers of urban architecture and urbanists should definitely walk around Downtown, where many tourist attractions are literally within walking distance from each other, in order to better feel the history of Los Angeles.
Downtown Los Angeles
Right on the streets of Downtown, you can explore a wide variety of cultures and traditions, as well as never cease to be surprised by the motley crowd of business people in expensive suits rushing to work with cups of Starbucks coffee, mixed with hipsters of all ages.
It is here that Los Angeles Historic District is located – Los Angeles Historic District or Pueblo de Los Angeles – this oldest part of the city is also a popular attraction for tourists who come to see Olvera Street, the most famous in this historic area.
View of Downtown from an Airplane
Also located in the very center of Downtown are a number of national neighborhoods such as Chinatown, Little Tokyo and Koreatown, surrounding the Union Station train station, from which city bus routes diverge throughout the city. In addition to the Japanese, Chinese and Korean quarters, here you can also meet the Armenian and Thai, as well as admire the Eastern Gate, the Buddhist temple or the Golden Pagoda
0095 restaurants in Los Angeles and many cultural and sports facilities, including the Walt Disney Concert Hall, Staples Center, L.A. Live and the largest stadium in Los Angeles – the Memorial Coliseum, which hosted the Olympic Games twice in the last century, and today they play American football and soccer.
6. Los Angeles Beaches and the Getty Villa
Rent a car to see the ocean and enjoy the gorgeous views and sunshine (on site Rentalcars.com ) and take a trip to one of the most famous Los Angeles beaches on the US West Coast.
Travel Tip: When driving in Los Angeles, try to avoid major freeways during weekday rush hours (especially 6-9 am and 4-7 pm). However, if you cannot avoid traveling during this time, add an extra hour to the total time when planning your route to your destination.
At Surfrider Beach in Malibu
7. Santa Monica Pier
Lobster , or grab a refreshing lemonade and try Hot Dog on a Stick . The famous carousel, which has been rolling everyone since 1922, will allow you to get in touch with the distant past, and the solar-powered Ferris wheel makes it possible to admire the entire Pacific coast from Malibu to Palos Verdes.
Not far from the Santa Monica Pier, where the famous Route 66 ends (it links the West and East coasts of the United States), you can meet many tourists, athletes on bicycles riding along the scenic bike path, as well as local residents making regular runs along the Pacific coast. ocean. Sports in Los Angeles are incredibly popular among people of all ages, and you have a chance to join them for a while.
It is worth adding that the famous Santa Monica Aquarium is home to over 100 species of marine life, as well as starfish, crabs and other interesting ocean creatures that are especially interesting for children to show.
Santa Monica Pier Entrance
Other Los Angeles Attractions
Among the important sights of Los Angeles, but not included in our review, there are a number of interesting places that are most popular among city visitors. I will list them to complete the picture of where to go and what to see in Los Angeles.
Venice area , the beach of which can be seen in many films about Los Angeles. It is famous for its canals and is called the Venice of America for a reason. And here is a unique atmosphere!
Bel Air – not only the best 5-star hotel in Los Angeles, but also one of the most expensive areas with millionaire mansions
Mulholland Drive Angeles
Universal Film Studio – see how films are made in America
Getty Museum – one of the best art museums in the world
MOCA – Museum of Contemporary Art
University Art Museum – University of California and the Arts Exhibition Center
Grammy Museum – all about the history of contemporary music
Union Station – Union Station
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City Hall – City Hall “City Hall” and a free observation deck on the 27th floor of a skyscraper.
TCL Chinese Theaters Grauman’s Chinese Theater in Hollywood
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And before the trip to L.A. be sure to watch this video about Los Angeles attractions to visit:
Practical information about Los Angeles attractions
Things to see in Los Angeles on your own:
Brief
Name description, address, website
Ticket price and inspection time
Griffith Observatory and Griffith Park
The observation deck, located on a hill, offers the best view of the city and the ocean. Interesting exhibitions are held at the observatory, and you can watch an interesting show at the planetarium. Address: 2800 East Observatory Road; 4730 Crystal Springs Drive | Los Angeles, CA
Website: http://www.griffithobservatory.org/
Observation deck – free, planetarium ticket costs from 3 to 7 dollars. Time for inspection – 2-3 hours.
Santa Monica Pier and Beach
One of the most legendary beaches in the USA with an unforgettable view. Address: 200 Santa Monica Pier | Santa Monica, CA
Website: http://www.santamonicapier.org/
Free, 4-8 hours
Rodeo Drive (Rodeo Drive)
A huge street of fashion stores in Los Angeles in the area Beverly Hills. Address: Rodeo Drive | Beverly Hills, CA
Website: http://www.rodeodrive-bh.com/
Free, 2-4 hours
Universal Studios Hollywood (Universal Studios Hollywood) interesting rides. Address: 100 Universal City Plaza | Los Angeles, CA 91608 Website: http://www.universalstudioshollywood. com/
Tickets: Front of Line passes – $139, adults – $87, children (from 3 to 9years) – $79. Time for the visit is a full day.
Hollywood Bowl (Hollywood Bowl)
Unusual outdoor amphitheater with excellent sound for various kinds of outdoor musical performances, has been operating since 1922. The Beatles, the Rolling Stones, the Doors, Madonna, Elton John, Tina Turner, Simon and Garfunkel have performed here. Address: 2301 North Highland Avenue | Los Angeles, CA
Website: http://www.hollywoodbowl.com/
Ticket prices vary for each event. Sometimes there are free performances. The duration of the event is from 2 hours to a full day.
Venice Beach (Venice Beach)
Well-known beach where you can walk and hang out well, with many boutiques and restaurants. Address: 1531 Ocean Front Walk | Los Angeles, CA Website: http://www.venicebeach.com/
Free entry, half day to full day visit
The Getty Center (The Getty Center)
One of the most impressive architectural masterpieces in the USA, which brings together the best art objects and hosts interesting exhibitions. Address: 1200 Getty Center Drive | Los Angeles, CA
Website: http://www.getty.edu/
Admission is free. Time for inspection – 2-4 hours. TCL Hollywood Walk of Fame & TCL Chinese Theater The Chinese Theatre, opened in 1927 (previously called the Grumman’s Chinese Theatre) is one of the most memorable places in Hollywood and a must see. Address: Hollywood Blvd at Vine Street | Los Angeles, CA
Website: http://www.tclchinesetheatres.com/
Free, optional $13.50 theater tour. The duration of the visit is 1-2 hours.
Los Angeles County Museum of Art
LACMA houses thousands of exhibits from diverse cultures, ranging from Islamic artefacts to European impressionists and contemporary art. Address: 5905 Wilshire Boulevard | Los Angeles, CA
Website: http://www.lacma.org/
Admission for children under 18 is free, admission for adults is $15. A tour of the museum will take from several hours to half a day.
Farmers Market (Farmers Market and The Grove)
The Farmers Market, which began in 1934, is located in the southern part of West Hollywood. Here you will find a lot of delicious things! Address: 6333 West Third Street | Los Angeles, CA Website: http://www.farmersmarketla.com/
Free, 2-4 hours
Runyon Canyon (Runyon Canyon)
Just a couple of blocks from Hollywood Boulevard, you can admire the beautiful panorama of the city from the city park . From the top of the canyon, you can see the San Fernando Valley and the Pacific Ocean. This is one of the most popular hiking spots in the city of Los Angeles. Address: 2001 North Fuller Avenue | Los Angeles, CA
Website:
Admission is free, viewing – 2-4 hours
Walt Disney Concert Hall (Walt Disney Concert Hall)
One of the most unusual and memorable buildings in downtown. During the day you can go on a tour, and in the evening come to listen to music. Address: 135 North Grand Avenue | Los Angeles, CA
Website: http://www.laphil.org/
Free sightseeing and tour inside, visit time 1-2 hours
Angeles is quite difficult due to the high number of cars on the roads (it has one of the highest rates of motorization of the population), so during your travel around the city and trips for sightseeing, be sure to allow for additional time that will have to be spent in traffic jams or waiting for public transport, with whom in the City of Angels, not everything is as good as we would like.
See also:
How to rent a car in Los Angeles – our experience
When is the best time to go to Los Angeles?
The best time of the year to visit Los Angeles is autumn – September and early October. Children go to school and most vacationers go home, and the weather is not much different from summer and is still very warm and sunny. In winter, Los Angeles is also interesting in its own way, and it’s nice to just walk around the city.
The worst time to visit the City of Angels is during the summer peak tourist season in July and August (this is the best time to visit the most interesting US national parks such as the Grand Canyon and Yellowstone) and during the cloudy season in late spring (especially in the beach areas of the city), when low clouds often create the so-called “June gloom”, which sometimes lasts all day.
Be aware that downtown Los Angeles is the most popular with tourists and includes the most famous high-rise and most built-up areas such as Downtown and Hollywood, where quite a lot of interesting things are located, including the old neighborhoods where film studios that made this city famous all over the world. Today, these areas are the most urbanized and diverse, both in terms of the ethnic composition of the inhabitants who inhabit their old quarters, and in urban architecture. It is with them that you should first begin your acquaintance with the city.
First things to see in Los Angeles
If you don’t have much time in Los Angeles and you’re only here for a few days, then I advise you to choose only the most interesting sights according to your taste to feel their atmosphere and have time to focus on important details.
The most popular movie-related places are the famous Hollywood Walk of Fame (Walk of Fame), Paramount Pictures Studio (the only film and television studio in Los Angeles) and Universal Studios , as well as TCL Chinese Theater (TCL Chinese Theatre) and Griffith Park (Griffith Park).
You can get a taste of fame by shopping in fashion boutiques at Rodeo Drive (Rodeo Drive) in the well-known area of Beverly Hills.
Be sure to visit the most famous beaches: Malibu , Santa Monica or Venice .
A must-do for any wealthy man in Hollywood is to ride a convertible at Sunset Boulevard before sunset.
Where to live in Los Angeles near attractions
the highest level of service and within walking distance of iconic Los Angeles attractions such as the Walk of Fame, Grauman’s Chinese Theater and the Wax Museum. Accommodation options in Hollywood are better to look at here →
Just in case, hotels near the airport LAX see here →
Manhattan Beach area (Manhattan Beach) is good for families with young children and couples. It is close to Los Angeles International Airport and South Bay beaches, and about an hour from Disneyland and Universal Studios. The Kettle is a fairly well-known restaurant in this part of town, and it’s open 24 hours a day, which is a definite plus for those who have just arrived from another continent and get used to the time difference, wanting to have dinner at 3 am.
Los Angeles Areas
A number of mid-range and more budget hotels (see >>) are located along the Pacific Coast Highway (also known as Highway 1 and Sepulveda Boulevard), and there are also a couple of fairly well-known shopping malls downtown Los Angeles – Manhattan Village and Manhattan Gateway.
Downtown Los Angeles (Downtown L.A.) is another great place to stay for those travelers who like to hang out and have fun, as well as being constantly in the center of city life.
From the historic Millennium (Millennium Biltmore) to the modern The Ritz Carlton (Ritz Carlton), which opened in 2010, a wide range of hotels to suit all tastes and price ranges are available to tourists all year round (best options) for housing, see here →)
As the development of the Downtown continues, there are a large number of excellent restaurants and clubs that are constantly being updated. And from here you can easily get to the Hollywood area, where, in addition to attractions, you can also find many famous clubs and restaurants.
There are a large number of hotels throughout Los Angeles, so that every tourist can choose accommodation in the area that suits him the most.
Hotels in the Beverly Hills area can be booked here →
Hotels in the Westside area: select →
Hotels near Disneyland here →
Hotels in Venice follow this link →
Hotels in Marina del Rey see here →
Hotels near the beaches of Santa Monica view →
We recommend renting an apartment or an apartment in Los Angeles on the website Airbnb.ru . Get a $20 rental bonus by visiting via this link >> (discount on first booking at registration).
Our Review of Los Angeles Attractions
We also visited Los Angeles and were pleasantly surprised by the variety of all the interesting places we visited, as well as a wide range of activities and entertainment for all tastes. Unlike the Maldives, where there was practically nothing to see besides wildlife and we had to book sea excursions, it was so cool here that we didn’t even have time to do and see everything that was planned in advance!
View of Los Angeles from the Hollywood Bowl Observation Deck
We were very surprised by the dozens of unique city blocks, from Chinatown to Little Ethiopia and many others, such as Japanese or Korean neighborhoods, located throughout Los Angeles. It was somewhat unusual to see a sharp change in cultural codes and a variety of architectural styles, when, for example, we left an area with Asian motifs and immediately got into a business district. I think this is only in the hands of independent travelers, because they can get to know a variety of cultures and their cuisines there. You should definitely try fine dining at the best restaurants in Los Angeles, because they are also one of the main attractions of this multicultural metropolis.
Based on my experience of a successful acquaintance with Los Angeles, I recommend that you start preparing for a trip to the USA by collecting information about what to see in Los Angeles and when to go in order to pinpoint the most interesting sights and how best to plan your trip to America. Be sure to read about how and when the annual festivals and holidays are held in Los Angeles. After that, it will be much easier for you to choose the right dates and buy plane tickets and book a good hotel in L.A. (the easiest way to read reviews and choose a hotel room from a photo is on site Booking.com ).
We were lucky and bought fairly cheap flights to Los Angeles ( here ) during the sales season, and we didn’t catch anything on purpose, but booked as soon as we saw a fairly low price. In the future, the price of tickets only grew, and in this way we did not fail, but were able to effectively prepare for the trip, in which, as a result, we saw quite a few important sights of Los Angeles, which actually seemed very interesting to us.
* * *
This concludes my story about the most interesting places in Los Angeles. I wish you, dear readers, to also make the best route to the sights of the City of Angels, which will definitely leave you with the most unforgettable impressions!
Map of Los Angeles attractions
Here is our detailed map of attractions with names in Russian and English:
Other attractions on the US West Coast near Los Angeles
All travelers who are going to visit the US West Coast, I also recommend visiting interesting sights near Los Angeles.
Useful Articles:
ABSOUT Near Los Angeles
California Route
Here are 10 popular places that are worth watching in California near L.A.
Recommendation:
Renting a trip to the United States is inexpensive (from $ 20 per day) here →
9095 also buy where to get to the Losanges yourself
cheap flights from Moscow to Los Angeles
Low-cost airlines in the USA
Transport from Los Angeles airport – how to get to your area
Money and exchange rates in the USA, bank cards and tips
A trip to New York
New York hotels
San Francisco hotels
What to see in Los Angeles: places of interest, familiar sights
Table of contents
1 Day one: city tour.
1.1 What people are in Hollywood!
1. 2 Beverly Hills
1.2.1 Rodeo Drive
2 What We Didn’t See in Los Angeles and Really Regretted
2.1 Griffith Park and Observatory
2.2 The most recognizable place in LA
Hello friends!
As promised, I continue my story about my trip to the USA, and in particular about the City of Angels. About the first impressions of LA and the country as a whole, I wrote an article Trip to Los Angeles: what awaits tourists on vacation in the USA.
This time I’ll tell you about the sights of this city that we managed to see in 3 days. To be honest, there was a catastrophic lack of time to see all the objects required for a mandatory tourist inspection… But we still managed to see something.
When visiting Los Angeles, many tourists feel like they’ve been there before. And this is not surprising. Many Hollywood films are set on its streets.
So, what caught our eye during 3 days in Los Angeles — read this article.
Day one: overview of the city.
The day after our endless flight to LA, we were to get to know the city on a sightseeing tour. At about nine o’clock in the morning we were picked up from the hotel by a guide in a car, and we went to see the sights of the City of Angels.
The first place we were brought to was Downtown – the same area with skyscrapers that is in every major American city. But, to be honest, Downtown in LA did not seem to me an interesting place for tourists. No, if you, of course, fundamentally need to see this place in order to take a photo against the background of skyscrapers and post it on social networks – “look, people, I’m in America!”, then you are welcome. Downtown is the only place in LA where they, skyscrapers, are. The rest of the LA area is practically the most one-story America there.
The guide gives information on duty: according to official data, more than 17 million people live in Los Angeles. The city is mostly low-rise, very scattered (we ourselves saw this when flying up to the airport – LA is so big that when landing / taking off the plane you can’t see where it ends). No wonder: after all, the city, growing, united 88 settlements. Now it is divided into 10 districts. Downtown is the highest.
We walked a bit in this area. But apart from building at the Disney Concert Hall, there wasn’t much to see here. Tourist guides describe the “Disney” hall with the phrase “flying steel”. And this seems to be true. The history of the building begins in 2003. Immediately after the opening, the Concert Hall turned into one of the most important sights of the city.
After Downtown, we head to the historical part of the city, or rather, to its Mexican-Spanish region. Yes, it was 44 Spanish missionaries who founded the City of Angels on September 4, 1781.
This area is located in the northeast part of Downtown Los Angeles, near Los Angeles Union Station . We also have time to see him, though only from the car window.
Olvera Street is a colorful street located in the center of the historic district known for many years as El Pueblo de la Reina de Los Angeles. This is the oldest part of Los Angeles, which is now called the Los Angeles Plaza Historic District. During Spanish rule 1871-1821, Mexican rule 1821-1847 and for most of 19century, the area was the center of Los Angeles.
The area is so lively: trade and souvenir shops interspersed with cafes and restaurants. We don’t want to eat yet. We go over the souvenirs with interest. But the assortment is for everyone: either Chinese (!) consumer goods, or Mexican horror stories with skulls.
But you can find something cute if you look: the husband buys himself a cowboy hat. OK, we came to the Mexican market for a reason.
In addition to shopping, we still manage to visit the local museum. It is located in the oldest building in this historic district. Inside you will see the life of those very first Spanish settlers. I was pleased that the museum is free and you can photograph and film everything.
We have an hour for everything about everything. We want to exchange Mexican passions for Hollywood chic as soon as possible!
What people are in Hollywood!
Yes, every tourist who comes to LA must visit Hollywood. Everything else can be skipped, but it would be unforgivable not to see this Olympus of the celestials!
Hollywood is not just any particular venue. This is a whole area of Los Angeles, where many cinematographic studios are located, the Kodak Theater, where Oscar statuettes are awarded, and the world-famous Avenue of Stars. So we went to see them.
This is how the beginning of Hollywood Boulevard looks like: palm trees, shops and office buildings:
But in general, you should look under your feet – it is here, on Hollywood Boulevard, that the Avenue of Stars is located. You can walk on the stars for a long time – the Alley has grown over the decades, staffed with new stars and big names, so now it occupies 18 blocks.
It is also full of various souvenir shops. Prices are more expensive than in other areas of LA. But I could not resist and bought myself a T-shirt – with the inscription Hollywood, , of course. And my husband bought himself a T-shirt. And another mug. And magnets. And no, we are not shopaholics! It’s just that this place has some kind of special air, apparently – you can’t leave without shopping …
But the Kodak Theater, more precisely – now it’s called Dolby Theatre, doesn’t look special without a red carpet.
You can go inside, which we do – admission is free. Here is the staircase inside just red – lined with red mosaics, so laying a red carpet is not necessary.
But what’s outside is much more interesting: all these prints of famous hands and feet on the plates, which can be used to study the history of American cinema.
It all started with an incident: in the spring of 1927, construction work was in full swing around the cinema, and the famous actress in America, Norma Talmadge, accidentally stepped into the uncured cement. Grauman realized that this imprint in cement was destined to become a place of worship over time, and then the astute producer suggested that other Hollywood stars follow Talmadge’s example, but for a fee: $ 2,000 from each “star” who wants to be immortalized in cement. These days, for a similar procedure, the “stars” fork out a larger amount, as the guide said.
However, don’t expect to meet live stars on Hollywood Boulevard, you can go to Beverly Hills (which we later did). But I find Marilyn Monroe’s handprints:
Across the street from the theater is Roosevelt Hotel ( Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel ). This hotel was built with private donations from famous Hollywood personalities including Douglas Fairbanks, Mary Pickford and Louis Mayer. The construction of the 12-story building cost $2.5 million ($31.6 million at the current exchange rate), and on May 15, 19In 27, the hotel opened its doors to guests for the first time. The hotel often housed the Hollywood stars themselves, because it’s convenient to go to the Oscars next door, across the street.
We went inside to take pictures. Cinema stars, alas, were not seen. But such pretty firefighters were caught in the frame – they had some kind of conference there. Well, aren’t they beautiful!?!
Hollywood Boulevard is home to many other attractions such as Grauman’s Chinese and Egyptian Theatres, the Wax Museum, the El Capitan Theatre, interesting shopping malls and restaurants. But we have a sightseeing tour, and we still have to see other iconic places in the City of Angels.
Beverly Hills
Rodeo Drive
Probably every girl knows the name of this street – after all, it was here that Vivienne, the heroine of Julia Roberts in the movie Pretty Woman, did her fabulous shopping. To find this street, we head to the wealthy area of Beverly Hills. Rodeo Drive is located at the intersection of Crescent Drive, Wilshire Boulevards, and Santa Monica Boulevards.
So, Rodeo Drive is a fairly long street full of luxury boutiques and showrooms of the world’s leading brands. Residents of Los Angeles call this place the “Golden Triangle”. You can stroll along Rodeo Drive as much as you like, but if you decide to go shopping, get ready for high prices and dress codes (remember, the Pretty Woman heroine was not wanted to be served because of her provocative outfit of a street “priestess of love”? In general, not filmmakers lied, as it turned out)
Gorgeous cars parked by the side of the road are also plentiful here (only I didn’t see Richard Gere driving a silver Lotus no matter how hard I tried)
Well, most of the scenes from the film Pretty Woman were filmed here , at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel on Rodeo Dry. The hotel — here it is, has not gone anywhere:
The interiors of the hotel are made in a classic style. But nothing impressed Vivienne in the “royal” chambers like a huge hot tub. This is where the story takes an unexpected turn. The immediacy of the heroine, singing in a bubble bath, pushes the millionaire Edward to the decision not to part with her. For starters, at least the next week. We agreed on a sum of 3,000 dollars. By the way, the original idea was to call the film “3000 dollars”…
You can say that the Beverly Wilshire hotel in Pretty Woman has acted as a full-fledged character. In any case, without his interiors, the film would not have taken place. The hotel has become the epitome of luxury and wealth.
And the epitome of luxury and wealth of real Hollywood stars are the chic mansions of the Beverly Hills district.
The area where modern-day Beverly Hills is located was known for its mild climate and fertile soils, due to which the Tongwa Indians who inhabited it called it “Accumulation of Water” (Spanish: El Rodeo de las Aguas) and considered it holy land .
We also feel a kind of trepidation when taking pictures with this sign:
We are driving through the neighborhoods immersed in greenery, trying to listen to the guide and take pictures of the mansions behind the fences at the same time. And the history of this area is from the series “you never know where you will find and where you will lose” …
In 1900, a certain Burton Green with several partners bought a ranch in this place in the hope of finding oil here. Having dug several wells, and not finding a drop of oil, Green abandoned this venture. He and his wife named the land Beverly Hills, after Beverly Farms, Massachusetts. Greene hired landscape architect Wilbur Cooke, who created the famous wide streets that wind around the Hollywood Hills. And since the beginning of the 20th century, Hollywood stars began to settle in this area, and even for several years the world-famous Russian composer Sergei Rachmaninov lived.
Many rich and famous people still live in Beverly Hills today: Goldie Hawn, Kurt Russell, Steven Spielberg, Sylvester Stallone, Mickey Rourke, Eddie Murphy, Mick Jagger, Tony Curtis, Roman Polanski, Demi Moore, Bruce Willis, Kim Kardashian , Ashton Kutcher, Mila Kunis and others.
Of course, it is difficult to see world celebrities behind high fences. However, the town itself is worth a stroll through it.
12 Beverly Hills Hotel. The hotel has become the cultural center of the city, being a theatre, meeting place, church and famous restaurant.
We were lucky: Halloween, a popular holiday in the USA, was approaching. And many houses were decorated accordingly:
This is where our sightseeing tour came to an end. The guide recommended that we visit one of the LA theme parks, for example, the same “Universal Studio”. This is what we did the next day.
But still, something was not shown to us on this review, which is clearly interesting to all tourists …
What we did not see in Los Angeles and very much regretted it
Griffith Park and the Observatory
If you have time and the opportunity, be sure to visit this place. Incredible scale park complex in the heart of Los Angeles. From entertainment:
observation deck,
Griffith Observatory,
Greek Amphitheater,
golf club, planetarium and attractions.
The guide drew our attention to the building of the observatory, standing on the edge of a green hill, when we were driving to Beverly Hills. But either he didn’t give us detailed information, or we were already full of impressions for this day to the eyeballs … In general, somehow it didn’t stick in our head that this place must be visited. But in vain …
Griffith Park was opened in 1896, and today is one of the largest urban parks in the United States. It is very popular as a place for picnics, biking or horseback riding. On its territory there are golf courses, football, tennis courts. Such wonderful sights that the whole family will love, like Los Angeles Zoo and Botanical Garden are also located within Griffith Park.
Well, actually, the very famous Griffith Observatory. After reading the reviews of tourists, I realized that we had lost a rather interesting sight from the roof of the observatory. From there, a stunningly beautiful view of Los Angeles opens up, and it is from here that a huge number of panoramic photos of the City of Angels were taken. Particularly gorgeous pictures are obtained during sunset …
There is a space museum on the ground floor of the observatory itself. The museum is quite fascinating, as tourists write. There is also a planetarium that offers very interesting show programs. For example: “Centered in the Universe”, dedicated to eternal questions: “Who are we and where did we come from”? Light of the Valkyries is about Viking cosmology and the northern lights.
On the second floor there is a cafe and a souvenir shop. In general, these establishments are in any more or less touristic place in the United States. We had no problems with souvenirs, but when I saw this photo, I regretted that we did not get to the Observatory.
But if we did not plan to get to this place from the very beginning (and therefore it was not so insulting not to get there), then I can’t say the same about the next place.
The most recognizable place in LA
Probably, there are not so many people on our planet who have not at least once seen on TV or on the Internet the white letters HOLLYWOOD on the slopes of the Hollywood hills! This is the most recognizable symbol of the City of Angels. Already on the approach to LA, we crouched at the porthole, distinguishing these letters in the distance, on a hill …
This inscription appeared almost a hundred years ago – in 1923. And she served, oddly enough now, an advertising banner to attract the attention of buyers who want to buy land in the vicinity of Hollywood.
Climbing directly to the letters will not work – it’s forbidden, the guide told us. “Why do you need to go there, the inscription is already so perfectly visible from many areas of Los Angeles!” she raised her eyebrows in surprise at the question of how to get there.
Well, no matter how we were going to climb on the letters … But at least I wanted to take a photo so that the inscription was clearly visible. Therefore, upon returning, they began to study the Internet, read reviews – how to get there. We found out that there is a good observation deck at 3000 Canyon Lake Drive, and decided to try and get there by taxi when we had some free time. But, looking ahead, I will say that we did not find this time. The next day, we went to the “Universal Studio”, where we were stuck for the whole day – to our surprise. And then they all went to Las Vegas.
So, this is the only photo of mine where you can see these same letters (there, on the hill, in the gap between two palm trees … Don’t you see? I almost don’t see them in the photo myself :(( )
In general, I will say this: as long as you have time in LA, you will find so many interesting places there. Enough attractions for every day. Such is it, the City of Angels, where dreams come true. You just need to be able to dream…
Essential questions can be asked in the comments. And don’t forget to vote in our poll! And I say goodbye to you until the next article.
See you soon!
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9 tips to beat traffic jams in LA
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Photo: by Neil Kremer/flickr.com
Much of the life of the average Los Angeles resident is spent in traffic jams. However, if you follow the tips below, you can avoid this hell, or at least choose a comfortable place for yourself in it!
1
Do not get into the car during rush hours
It may seem obvious, but this is the first and most important rule for traveling in Los Angeles. Whatever you are doing and wherever you are in a hurry, avoid the roads from approximately 7:30 am to 9:30 am and from 3:30 pm to 7:30 pm every working day. Of course, if you are driving to work at the time, it can be difficult. But if you, say, go to the gym or a diner before that, you will miss the worst.
Photo: by Prayitno/flickr.com
2
Avoid Route 405…
Another obvious rule. The 405th highway can rightly be called a demonic curse imposed on humanity (even with those few additional lanes built a few years ago). If you need to avoid congestion on the 405, the best option is to cut through Coldwater or Laurel Canyons.
Photo: by Luke Jones/flickr.com
3
…and use Sepulveda boulevard instead …
Why go on the 405th highway, if Sepulveda Boulevard is located parallel to it, where the traffic is much faster? This trip might be a little windier, that’s all.
Photo: by Robert Nunnally/flickr.com
4
…but avoid both if heading to South Bay
Morning traffic jams or airport “toffees” will not leave you a chance to quickly slip through the 405th or Sepulveda. Better use Vista del Mar, Pershing Drive and Highland Ave. And don’t forget Aviation Boulevard too: it runs parallel to Sepulveda Boulevard.
Photo: by Prayitno/flickr.com
5
Use the lane for drivers with passengers
The lane for cars with passengers is open not only during peak hours, but around the clock and 7 days a week. And even if there is no passenger next to you, the Green Clean Air Vehicle sticker will give you access to an alternate universe on Route 110, Route 134, Route 405, and East of Route 10. It is, of course, sad if you did not have time to get one, but you can still sign up for the waiting list.
Photo: carprousa.com
6
Download the Waze app to wind the side streets like a pro
Yes, many people hate this app. It’s not fun at all when rows of loud cars turn onto your street in the early morning, because there are traffic jams on the freeways. But what is the lesser evil? Traffic that looks like parking, or an app that’s literally designed to reduce congestion?
Photo: xakep. ru
7
Best Road to Hollywood – Fountain Street
When asked about the best way to get to Hollywood, American actress Bette Davis, nominated for 10 Oscars, answered that it was Fountain Street. Try it too!
Photo: Ana Paula Hirama/flickr.com
8
Don’t miss your plane, follow La Cienega
Don’t drive on the highway. You will be stuck in a traffic jam and curse everything in the world while your plane takes off peacefully. And even if you don’t miss your flight due to traffic, you’ll probably do so for security checks. Yes, La Cienega can be a bit rough all the way to Rodeo Road, but after that the speed limits increase. It’s just a hidden gem in Los Angeles.
Photo: by Clotee Allochuku/flickr.com
9
Leave 45 minutes before the end or 45 minutes after the baseball game…
… or any other road-blocking event. Keep this in mind when the Dodgers play or when the president comes to town.
Photo: by Chris Yarzab/flickr.com
Material source: Thrillist.
See also: 5 ways to survive in LA without a car, Rent a car in the USA: how to rent a car in LA and City of NOT Angels: what annoys people in LA the most.
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TOP 10 main attractions of the City of Angels
This post will be useful for those who are going to spend their summer holidays in America and visit the world capital of cinema – luxurious and glamorous Los Angeles.
One day, at a meditation center in northern Thailand, we met a wonderful girl, Nari. She is Thai by nationality, but for the last 12 years she has lived in the USA, in Los Angeles. Nari told us not only about the huge community of Thais, both in California in general and in Los Angeles in particular, but also told us what made her so captivated by this city, and why she decided to open her business (Thai restaurant) there .
A conversation with Nari brought back memories of our trip to California, so we decided to share some tips with you in this article – a mini guide to Los Angeles.
Year after year, millions of people dream of being in Los Angeles – children want to visit the homeland of Mickey Mouse and Barbie dolls; ambitious young talents are eager to climb to the top of the film Olympus; surfers sleep and see the raging Pacific waves, and mere mortal tourists want to taste all the delights of life by riding in a convertible along the Pacific Ocean, looking into the prestigious Beverly Hills area, and playing Texas Hold’em poker, beloved by many celebrities, in one of the casinos Los Angeles, where gamblers gather at the table every night, champagne flows like water, and ladies parade in elegant evening dresses, dazzling everyone with their diamond jewelry.
Traveling across America in September 2011, we only spent a couple of days in Los Angeles. Our schedule was tight, and we were in a hurry to the national parks of Utah and Arizona, so we managed to visit only some of the interesting places, and left some for the next time.
Contents
Los Angeles Attractions
1. First go to Hollywood is the most famous part of Los Angeles. Stroll past the Egyptian and Chinese theatres, and visit the famous Theater Kodak Theatre, home to the annual Academy Awards, better known as The Oscars , the 85th ceremony this year . Imagine, for a moment, world stars shining in the beams of spotlights at the sight of video cameras and cameras, and confidently walking along the red carpet into the hall.
2. Follow Hollywood Walk of Fame , which stretches across Los Angeles for 18 blocks, and find the hand and footprints of your idols. I must say, we hardly found the names of familiar actors – there are too many unknown to us, but no less famous stars and other media figures who have made a significant contribution to the development of theater, cinema, radio, music and television
3. After “Alley glory” climb the south slope of Mount Hollywood, to Griffith Observatory , where you can look at the starry sky through a huge telescope, and, with bated breath, admire the view of the Pacific Ocean and downtown Los Angeles from the observation deck of Griffith Park. From there, if the weather permits, you can see the city’s famous trademark – the big white letters “Hollywood” on the hills of the same name.
4. Set aside a full day to visit one of Los Angeles’ famous movie studios – “ Warner Brothers ” or “Universal Studio “. We spent almost the entire day in the Universal Studios Park, where we saw how disaster films are made and learned the secrets of staging special effects for Hollywood films. They also tried all kinds of rides there, got amazing emotions, and got involved in the plot actions of the most popular films, such as King Kong and the Terminator. For more information about our stay in the park, the cost of entrance tickets, as well as what else can be seen on the territory of the studio, we wrote in the article “Universal Studio – a place where dreams come true”
5. Spend the evening at Rodeo Drive in the Los Angeles area Beverly Hills and take a look at one of the main streets of the city – Wilshire Boulevard and Miracle Mile – maybe you will meet some celebrities 🙂
6. Visit the largest stadium in Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum , where the Olympic Games were held twice (in 1932 and in 1984) . There is also a huge park area, a zoo, many museums and an exhibition park nearby 7. Take a stroll in Downtown , downtown Los Angeles, where on weekdays you can watch white collars with glasses from Starbucks hurrying in a crowded crowd through noisy streets to their skyscraper office, and in weekends to wander through the empty streets, like an extinct quarter. By the way, these days there is a high probability of becoming a witness of filming, because it is precisely when the clerks leave the center of Los Angeles that the mafia wakes up in the city, filmmakers become active on the streets, and street scenes for various films are shot from morning until late at night.
8. If you are not big fans of the film industry, then the ultra-modern building Walt Disney (Walt Disney Concert Hall) with a futuristic design will certainly not leave you indifferent. It hosts concerts of the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra, whose performances, by the way, can be heard not only in this hall, but also in cinemas throughout the country, they are often broadcast live.
9. After exploring Downtown, you can easily get to the neighboring ethnic neighborhoods of Los Angeles – Chinese, Armenian, Korean and Japanese . There is a Buddhist temple, and the Eastern Gate, and the Golden Pagoda, many fountains, and there is even a Japanese garden on the roof of the DoubleTree by Hilton hotel, and, of course, the streets are decorated with red lanterns. Mm, what food is here! For a moment, even in Los Angeles, you can feel like in real Asia. The local Chinatown is not as huge as Chinatown in San Francisco, but still deserves attention. And if you, like us, love Thai cuisine, don’t miss Thai quarter Los Angeles – after all, it is here that there is a good opportunity to eat some authentic Thai dish prepared according to the original recipe.
10. Ride the shortest railroad in the world, on one of the oldest Los Angeles attractions, the historic Angels Flight funicular and go around the highest skyscraper in California (310 m) and at the same time, the highest skyscraper with a heliport on roof in the world – U.S. Bank Tower
Housing in Los Angeles
Los Angeles is a fairly low-budget city, and despite the fact that there is a lot of housing here, finding something that is not too expensive is quite problematic. The following hotels can be considered as inexpensive options:
Saharan Motor Hotel (from $117)
Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel (from $288)
Days Inn Hollywood Universal Studios (from $157)
Also, Airbnb service is very well developed in the USA, so as an alternative to booking systems hotels, you can search for private accommodation through it. We wrote more about the service here. If you haven’t used Airbnb before, when you sign up through this link, you’ll receive a bonus on your first booking.
Tours in Los Angeles
Los Angeles Attractions Map
How to get to the hotel from Los Angeles Airport
Public transport. From the airport there are many bus routes to different parts of the city. There is also a free shuttle bus that takes you to the nearest metro station.
Local Taxi. The cost also depends on the destination. On average, a taxi to downtown will cost $40.
The most expensive, but also the most comfortable way is a pre-booked transfer. In this case, you will not need to look for a taxi on the spot – in the arrivals area you will be met by a driver with a sign with your name on it. You can view prices and book a transfer here.
Nha Trang beaches – the most complete list of beaches in the city, around and on the islands, a map of beaches
Koh Samui beaches – the most complete overview, map marks, photos, infrastructure
Beaches of Sri Lanka – an overview of the best beaches of the island, personal experience, photos
Beaches of Boracay – the best beaches in the world on a paradise island
Beaches of Bali – debunking popular myths about the island
Beaches of Goa – European food and Russian tourists
Sunset Strip
Getty Museum
Rose Bowl Flea Market
TV studios and shows
Hills: Hollywood, Beverly or Holmby
Disneyland
Los Angeles offers a wide range of entertainment and entertainment. From picturesque beaches full of beautiful people to celebrities, museums, amusement parks, film studios and TV studios, the City of Angels is sure to be an unforgettable vacation.
Griffith Park ObservatoryGriffith Park Observatory
Griffith Park and Observatory
Griffith Park is one of the largest urban parks in the entire country and is home to the Los Angeles Zoo, Greek Theatre, Horse Riding Center, breathtaking views and the Griffith Observatory. You can easily spend several hours in the observatory alone, with some of its highlights, including the Hall of Heaven and the Hall of the Eye, demonstrating the connections between people and space. The observatory stands on top of a hill overlooking the city and also gives visitors the opportunity to view the view through a telescope for free. The building itself is also a star attraction and was featured in the movie Rebel Without a Cause.
Venice Beach Venice Beach
Venice Beach
Venice Beach is a must experience. This world-famous beach is known as a place to see and be seen and also as a mecca for many eccentric characters, making it one of the best places for people watching in the area. Its wide strip of golden sand rests on a path that is always filled with joggers, walkers, rollerbladers and cyclists. You can watch muscle builders pump iron under the hot sun in an area called Muscle Beach or browse the interesting shops along the walkway selling all kinds of goods. There are hundreds of street vendors and performers on the west side of the path, including everything from mimes to musicians, jugglers, break dancers and those who dare to walk on broken glass.
Hollywood SignHollywood Sign
Hollywood Attractions
If you want a glimpse of Hollywood life, you won’t want to miss visiting Attractions in Tinseltown. This L.A. suburb has long been associated with the film and television industry, celebrities, and a lot of glitz and glamour. Walk the Hollywood Walk of Fame, where you’ll find some 2,400 characters from all over the entertainment world immortalized here, and try your hand at capturing the famous handprints at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre. It is also a popular location for big movie premieres. During major Hollywood screenings, the public is free to stand outside the theater along the red carpet and watch the stars arrive. Most celebrities will stop and say a few words to the crowd before going to watch a movie.
Rodeo DriveRodeo Drive
Rodeo Drive
If you’ve ever dreamed of shopping like Julia Roberts in Pretty Woman, you’ll want to head to Rodeo Drive. Just a few blocks away, the famous section of Rodeo Drive is like a film set that runs between Wilshire and Santa Monica Boulevards. Although few can afford a wide range of products, window shopping is the next best thing. You will find many tourists, which roam among the more serious tourists on Europe’s 200 million paved crosswalk in two rodeos. It’s a great place for unforgettable photo shoots, and also where you’re likely to find the most expensive luxury cars parked on the side of the road, along with celebrities shopping.
The Grove The Grove
The Grove
The Grove is a great place to shop and many celebrities like to shop here. The open-air mall houses more than 50 stores, including Abercrombie & Fitch, Anthropologie, Apple and Barney’s New York. Visitors can also enjoy old-fashioned trolley rides and gorgeous dancing fountains, which are one of the reasons it’s becoming a “must see” in Los Angeles. Original farmers’ market founded in 1934, located next to the Grove, offering everything you can from fresh products. to international culinary delights. The top of the parking lot offers one of the best views of the city – don’t forget to bring your camera.
La Brea Tar Pits / The Pages MuseumLa Brea Tar Pits / The Pages Museum
La Brea Tar Pits / The Pages Museum
La Brea, one of the world’s most famous Ice Age mining sites, formed 40,000 years ago when the oil seeped through the rock. The pits will trap passing animals that get stuck in the substance. Resin has served as a natural preservative for fossils for centuries. Here, visitors can see the bones being worked on and what happens before the bones and skeletons are ever shown. The museum features fully restored fossils of various mammals, including mammoths, saber-toothed cats, dire wolves, and others, ranging from 10,000 to 40,000 years old.
Chateau Marmont BarChateau Maramont Bar
Chateau Marmont Bar
The Marmont Bar, located in the Chateau Marmont, is an attractive Hollywood bar in its own right. This famous Los Angeles hangout is another great place for people to watch here with its many artists, actors and musicians. Grab a drink and order something from the deli pub’s fantastic menu, courtesy of Carolyn Spence, former head chef of New York’s famed spotted pig cuisine. Even if you don’t spot anyone you hope to see, the classic vibe and 20s decor is worth it.
Craig Craig
Craig
If you want to spend a good meal while you’re here and also enjoy the chance to see some of your favorite star restaurants, Craig’s in West Hollywood is a great place to do it. The menu features American cuisine, including pizza, vegan options, seafood, and steaks at prices you won’t need to mortgage your home for. Celebrities who have been here recently include Courteney Cox, Dylan McDermott, Sandra Bullock, Sarah Silverman, Jake Gyllenhaal and Hugh Jackman, just to name a few.
Santa Monica PierSanta Monica Pier
Santa Monica Pier
The Santa Monica Pier opened over 100 years ago and is a popular destination for families. It’s home to Pacific Park, the Heal the Bay Aquarium, and the 1922 carousel that was featured in the 1973 classic The Sting. Don’t miss the opportunity to ride on the world’s only solar-powered ferris wheel, where you can enjoy a breathtaking bird’s eye view of the coastline. From the pier, you can walk to the nearby beaches and enjoy perpetual sunshine and palm trees, or do your shopping on the Third Street Promenade, just a few blocks away.
Japanese American National Museum Japanese American National Museum
Japanese American National Museum
L.A. is also home to many cultural attractions such as the Japanese American National Museum, known as one of its finest. The museum tells the compelling but heartbreaking story of Japanese immigration to the US that began in 1882 when employers were banned from bringing in Chinese labor, so thousands of Japanese flocked to the country. Unfortunately, instead they ended up in internment camps with the onset of World War II and did not become American citizens until 1952 years old. This museum tells its fascinating story through documentary and art exhibitions, as well as exhibits from its internment camps.
Los Angeles County Museum of ArtLos Angeles County Museum of Art
Los Angeles County Museum of Art
L. A. County Museum of Art is the largest art museum in the Western United States and one of the city’s most popular museums. The multi-storey complex houses an impressive permanent collection from all corners of the globe, featuring everything from American, Islamic and Asian to European art, including a superb Latin American collection showcasing pre-Columbian masterpieces, as well as works by modern and contemporary artists such as Frida . Kahlo and Diego Rivera. If you happen to be here on the second Tuesday of the month, admission is free.
Sunset Strip Los Angeles Sunset Strip Los Angeles
Sunset Strip
The Sunset Strip in West Hollywood offers many typical Hollywood photo ops. This is one of the most famous streets in Los Angeles where you will pass musical venues such as the House of Blues and the historic Whiskey A Go Go, the place where legendary bands and musicians such as The Doors, Buffalo Springfield and Frank Zappa got their start . The strip took on its eccentric character, with mammoth-sized handmade billboards becoming one of its trademarks. The colorful advertisements were originally designed to grab the attention of Hollywood producers as they commuted to work at their Hollywood home in Beverly Hills, but now they mostly serve to boost the egos of the stars they promote.
The Getty MuseumThe Getty Museum
The Getty Museum
The J. Paul Getty Museum is one of the city’s newest attractions. The Getty Center, located in Pacific Palisades, opened in 1997, and its smaller cousin, Getty Villa, in 2006 in Malibu. The villa contains an extensive collection of Greek and Roman art and is modeled after a seaside Roman villa. The center houses an extensive collection of Western art from the Middle Ages to the present day, with its campus featuring numerous garden squares, fountains and pools, and outdoor sculptures. You can easily spend a whole day here and it doesn’t cost anything.
Rose Bowl Flea MarketRose Bowl Flea Market
Rose Bowl Flea Market
The Rose Bowl Flea Market, located in the Rose Bowl stadium on the east side of Los Angeles in Pasadena, is one of the most famous flea markets in the world and the largest on the west coast. This is a great place to find the perfect souvenir that you will enjoy for years to come without wasting your hands and feet. The bad news is that it’s only open on the second Sunday of the month, so you’ll need to get your holiday timing right to experience it. With over 2,500 vendors, scavengers will find a wide selection of antiques, collectibles, furniture, arts and crafts – and even a celebrity or two.
Warner Brothers Studio, Los AngelesWarner Brothers Studio, Los Angeles
Television Studios and Shows
During a typical day in Los Angeles, dozens of shows can be shown in front of a group of people, including everything from comedy shows to talk shows. shows like The Late Late Show with James Corden to reality competitions like American Idol. who get their first live look at the show, especially between the peak production season, typically August through March. It is also common to film multiple TV pilots, giving viewers the right to brag if the show becomes a hit. Best of all, you don’t have to pay anything.
Rodeo DriveRodeo Drive
The Hills: Hollywood, Beverly or Holmby
If you want to get up close and personal with the rich and famous, take a ride in the hills. You’ll find an endless number of magnificent mansions, from the Holmby Hills Spelling Estate, built for Aaron Spelling in 1988 to become the largest home in Los Angeles County, to the Ryan Seacrest complex in Beverly Hills with its 15,000 square feet of living space. , three guest houses, swimming pool and koi ponds.
DisneylandDisneyland
Disneyland
While Disneyland is technically outside of Los Angeles located in Anaheim about 25 miles to the south, this famous theme park draws millions of tourists to the area and is truly a must visit at least once.
15 Best Things To Do in Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife
View of Puerto de la Cruz, with Mount Teide in the background
Did you know Puerto de la Cruz is the oldest tourist resort in Tenerife?
The town of Puerto de la Cruz has always attracted foreign visitors, especially from Northern Europe, who come here during the winter months for the warm climate.
What to do in Puerto de la Cruz
1. Visit Loro Parque, the best Zoo in the world
2. Playa Jardin
3. Playa Martianez
4. Go on a tour to see Mt. Teide and pretty villages
5. Costa Martianez Complex
6. The Botanical Gardens
7. The Orchid Garden – Jardin de Orquideas de Sitio Litre
8. Walk to Playa Bollulo
9. Plaza del Charco
10. Parque Taoro
11. VIP tour to Teide and Masca
12. Places of interest – what else to see while in Puerto de la Cruz
13. Explore the north of Tenerife
14. Big events in Puerto de la Cruz
15. Coastal walk with fantastic views on Rambla de Castro
Although not as warm as the resorts in the South of Tenerife, Puerto de la Cruz still has temperatures around 20°C during the daytime in winter and it’s much more greener compared to Costa Adeje, Playa de las Americas or Fanabe area.
Usually, Puerto de la Cruz attracts more mature tourists, who come here to relax and enjoy the beautiful nature and scenery. If you’re looking for a chilled atmosphere, with lovely restaurants but not noisy club or wild parties, then Puerto de la Cruz is a great place to stay in Tenerife.
What to do in Puerto de la Cruz
There are lots of places to visit and discover inside the city, including beautiful beaches, parks and one of the best swimming pool complexes in Tenerife.
1. Visit Loro Parque, the best Zoo in the world
The penguins at Loro Park
Loro Parque is considered the best zoo in the world and it’s one of the top attractions for visitors in Tenerife.
The park offers plenty of activities and animal shows, so you’ll easily spend an entire day there. If you’re actually staying in Puerto de la Cruz and you want more than one day to explore, you can buy a discounted ticket for a second visit.
BOOK ONLINELoro Parque Skip-The-Line Ticket
Tenerife’s world-famous animal adventure park
One of the top attractions in the Canary Islands
Free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance to receive a full refund
Explore the beaches in Puerto de la Cruz
You have several options in terms of beaches and places to swim right in Puerto de la Cruz, but there are many more great beaches outside of town, many of them wild and perfect for surfers or for people seeking privacy.
2. Playa Jardin
Playa Maria Jiménez, part of Playa Jardin, Puerto de la Cruz – Tenerife
Playa Jardin is actually a beach complex formed by several smaller beaches, with black volcanic sand and a beautiful design that is the creation of Cesar Manrique.
The beach is 600 m long and here you will find all the services and amenities you need for a great day in the sun: sunbeds, beach showers, a waterfall with seawater and lush vegetation.
Playa Jardin is one of the main attractions in Puerto de la Cruz, with lots of restaurants and bars nearby, so it’s a great place to spend an entire day soaking up the sun.
3. Playa Martianez
Martianez beach in Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife
Martianez beach is a black sand beach, located very close to the famous Lago Martianez. It’s not as large as Playa Jardin and here you won’t find sunbeds and umbrellas, so you’ll have to bring your own beach chairs or something to sit on.
Playa Martianez is popular among surfers who stay in the area, as on most days it offers great conditions for surfing.
4. Go on a tour to see Mt. Teide and pretty villages
Go on a tour from Puerto de la Cruz to see the majestic Mt. Teide and Roques de Garcia
Enjoy Tenerife’s Teide National Park and tour the beautiful northern villages like Garachico, Icod de Los Vinos and Masca. Take in the breathtaking views of Tenerife’s countryside as you travel with a local guide.
BOOK ONLINETeide and Northern Tenerife: Grand Tour
Hotel pickup and drop-off included
Explore Teide National Park
See the Dragon Tree in Icod de Los Vinos
Observe the landscape around Masca village and the Canarian architecture in Garachico
5. Costa Martianez Complex
Complex Costa Martianez in the evening, after closing hours
Costa Martianez is a complex of seawater pools, plus several monuments by Cesar Manrique and a few restaurants where you can have lunch during your time there.
Costa Martianez is open all week and there are several large pools, including a geyser in the center or the big pool. You can buy a day ticket for just 5,5 euros, or you can get a ticket that includes entrance + lunch inside the complex, which is available on their website.
6. The Botanical Gardens
The Botanical Gardens in Puerto de la Cruz, also known as Jardin Botanico de Aclimatacion de la Orotava, provides a beautiful walk through a garden with beautiful scenery, lots of exotic flowers and a great collection of trees.
This place is recommended for a peaceful and quiet walk, as most visitors who come to Puerto de la Cruz just for the day choose to spend their time either at Loro Park or at Playa Jardin, so the garden is usually overlooked.
The entrance is just 3 Euros per person, so for such a small amount of money you can enjoy the beauty of the garden, plus a few hours of quiet and relaxation.
7. The Orchid Garden – Jardin de Orquideas de Sitio Litre
Inside this garden, you will find the oldest dragon tree (drago) in Puerto de la Cruz, as well as many beautiful orchids, the main attraction of the park.
The place is an oasis of calm and relaxation in the center of the busy town of Puerto de la Cruz and there’s also a cafe inside, where you can enjoy a lovely drink, at reasonable prices. The entrance ticket is around 9 euros per person, which is more expensive compared to the Botanical Garden, although the Orchid garden is smaller in size. But if you’re staying in Puerto de la Cruz and you’re looking for new things to see and do, the Orchid Garden may prove to be a breath of fresh air and a green oasis, not too far from the ocean.
8. Walk to Playa Bollulo
There is a trail from Puerto de la Cruz that takes you from Puerto de la Cruz to Playa Bollulo. You can start in the area known as El Rincon, and up to there you can get by bus if you don’t have a car. If you have a rental car you can drive all the way down to Playa Bollulo, where there is a paid parking at the restaurant (3€/day last time we went there).
From Playa Bollulo there you can continue your journey toward 2 more wild beaches: Playa Ancon and Playa del Pato. This walk provides amazing views of the ocean and the coastline, so it’s a nice thing to do on a day with mild temperatures, otherwise, you’ll have to be careful to avoid midday hours and always use sunscreen.
9. Plaza del Charco
This is the main square in Puerto de la Cruz, a lovely place to relax, chill and have ice cream (there was a really popular place on one of the corners of the Plaza). We also recommend going inside Columbus Plaza, just to see this beautiful historic building restored (although now it is a place for shopping and grabbing a coffee or something to eat).
10. Parque Taoro
View from Parque Taoro in Puerto de la Cruz
This is a beautiful park which offers a great view over Puerto de la Cruz. Of course, this means that you will have to climb a lot of steps in order to get to the top of the park, but the walk is lovely if you take you time and just enjoy the small waterfalls along the way.
11. VIP tour to Teide and Masca
Go on a VIP tour to visit Masca
Explore the volcanic landscapes of Tenerife and discover hidden places in Teide National Park in a 4WD vehicle.
The tour will also take you to visit Masca, one of the most spectacular and most beautiful villages in Tenerife.
BOOK ONLINEFrom Puerto de la Cruz: Teide and Masca VIP Tour
Includes transportation by 4WD vehicle and pickup at your hotel or nearby meeting point in Puerto de la Cruz
Includes food
Visit hidden places in Teide National Park and the village of Masca
12. Places of interest – what else to see while in Puerto de la Cruz
This a list of landmarks or interesting places to see during your stay in Puerto de la Cruz. The resort offers a lot of walking opportunities and it’s nice to just walk and discover something new every day.
Don’t miss:
Plaza de Europa
Paseo de las Palmeras
Mirador de la Paz
Castillo San Felipe
A walk on Paseo San Telmo
A walk on Paseo de Colon
Iglesia de San Francisco
Iglesia de Nuestra Senora de la Pena de Francia
Anglican Church
13. Explore the north of Tenerife
From Puerto de la Cruz you have quick access to the north of the island, where you can visit many charming towns (like Garachico and La Orotava), or you can go hiking in Anaga, choosing from dozens of trails, suitable for all types of people.
See our recommendations for the best things to do in Tenerife North
14. Big events in Puerto de la Cruz
Depending on when you are visiting, you may have the chance to participate in one of the big and interesting events which are happening in Puerto de la Cruz each year:
The carnival in Puerto de la Cruz – usually happening between in February – March
Oktoberfest in Puerto de la Cruz
The summer carnival (Carnaval de Verano)
15.
Coastal walk with fantastic views on Rambla de Castro
Rambla de Castro, Tenerife – short distance from Puerto de la Cruz
Rambla de Castro is a coastal walk that offers breathtaking views of the ocean and the surrounding natural landscape, with lots of trees.
You can start this walk from several points along the coast and it took us around 2 hours and 30 minutes both ways since we started from calle Romantica I.
Rambla de Castro is less than 10 km away from Puerto de la Cruz, so it’s an interesting thing to do around Puerto de la Cruz if you’re passionate about hiking, nature and outdoor activities.
15 Best Things To Do in Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife
View of Puerto de la Cruz, with Mount Teide in the background
Did you know Puerto de la Cruz is the oldest tourist resort in Tenerife?
The town of Puerto de la Cruz has always attracted foreign visitors, especially from Northern Europe, who come here during the winter months for the warm climate.
What to do in Puerto de la Cruz
1. Visit Loro Parque, the best Zoo in the world
2. Playa Jardin
3. Playa Martianez
4. Go on a tour to see Mt. Teide and pretty villages
5. Costa Martianez Complex
6. The Botanical Gardens
7. The Orchid Garden – Jardin de Orquideas de Sitio Litre
8. Walk to Playa Bollulo
9. Plaza del Charco
10. Parque Taoro
11. VIP tour to Teide and Masca
12. Places of interest – what else to see while in Puerto de la Cruz
13. Explore the north of Tenerife
14. Big events in Puerto de la Cruz
15. Coastal walk with fantastic views on Rambla de Castro
Although not as warm as the resorts in the South of Tenerife, Puerto de la Cruz still has temperatures around 20°C during the daytime in winter and it’s much more greener compared to Costa Adeje, Playa de las Americas or Fanabe area.
Usually, Puerto de la Cruz attracts more mature tourists, who come here to relax and enjoy the beautiful nature and scenery. If you’re looking for a chilled atmosphere, with lovely restaurants but not noisy club or wild parties, then Puerto de la Cruz is a great place to stay in Tenerife.
What to do in Puerto de la Cruz
There are lots of places to visit and discover inside the city, including beautiful beaches, parks and one of the best swimming pool complexes in Tenerife.
1. Visit Loro Parque, the best Zoo in the world
The penguins at Loro Park
Loro Parque is considered the best zoo in the world and it’s one of the top attractions for visitors in Tenerife.
The park offers plenty of activities and animal shows, so you’ll easily spend an entire day there. If you’re actually staying in Puerto de la Cruz and you want more than one day to explore, you can buy a discounted ticket for a second visit.
BOOK ONLINELoro Parque Skip-The-Line Ticket
Tenerife’s world-famous animal adventure park
One of the top attractions in the Canary Islands
Free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance to receive a full refund
Explore the beaches in Puerto de la Cruz
You have several options in terms of beaches and places to swim right in Puerto de la Cruz, but there are many more great beaches outside of town, many of them wild and perfect for surfers or for people seeking privacy.
2. Playa Jardin
Playa Maria Jiménez, part of Playa Jardin, Puerto de la Cruz – Tenerife
Playa Jardin is actually a beach complex formed by several smaller beaches, with black volcanic sand and a beautiful design that is the creation of Cesar Manrique.
The beach is 600 m long and here you will find all the services and amenities you need for a great day in the sun: sunbeds, beach showers, a waterfall with seawater and lush vegetation.
Playa Jardin is one of the main attractions in Puerto de la Cruz, with lots of restaurants and bars nearby, so it’s a great place to spend an entire day soaking up the sun.
3. Playa Martianez
Martianez beach in Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife
Martianez beach is a black sand beach, located very close to the famous Lago Martianez. It’s not as large as Playa Jardin and here you won’t find sunbeds and umbrellas, so you’ll have to bring your own beach chairs or something to sit on.
Playa Martianez is popular among surfers who stay in the area, as on most days it offers great conditions for surfing.
4. Go on a tour to see Mt. Teide and pretty villages
Go on a tour from Puerto de la Cruz to see the majestic Mt. Teide and Roques de Garcia
Enjoy Tenerife’s Teide National Park and tour the beautiful northern villages like Garachico, Icod de Los Vinos and Masca. Take in the breathtaking views of Tenerife’s countryside as you travel with a local guide.
BOOK ONLINETeide and Northern Tenerife: Grand Tour
Hotel pickup and drop-off included
Explore Teide National Park
See the Dragon Tree in Icod de Los Vinos
Observe the landscape around Masca village and the Canarian architecture in Garachico
5. Costa Martianez Complex
Complex Costa Martianez in the evening, after closing hours
Costa Martianez is a complex of seawater pools, plus several monuments by Cesar Manrique and a few restaurants where you can have lunch during your time there.
Costa Martianez is open all week and there are several large pools, including a geyser in the center or the big pool. You can buy a day ticket for just 5,5 euros, or you can get a ticket that includes entrance + lunch inside the complex, which is available on their website.
6. The Botanical Gardens
The Botanical Gardens in Puerto de la Cruz, also known as Jardin Botanico de Aclimatacion de la Orotava, provides a beautiful walk through a garden with beautiful scenery, lots of exotic flowers and a great collection of trees.
This place is recommended for a peaceful and quiet walk, as most visitors who come to Puerto de la Cruz just for the day choose to spend their time either at Loro Park or at Playa Jardin, so the garden is usually overlooked.
The entrance is just 3 Euros per person, so for such a small amount of money you can enjoy the beauty of the garden, plus a few hours of quiet and relaxation.
7. The Orchid Garden – Jardin de Orquideas de Sitio Litre
Inside this garden, you will find the oldest dragon tree (drago) in Puerto de la Cruz, as well as many beautiful orchids, the main attraction of the park.
The place is an oasis of calm and relaxation in the center of the busy town of Puerto de la Cruz and there’s also a cafe inside, where you can enjoy a lovely drink, at reasonable prices. The entrance ticket is around 9 euros per person, which is more expensive compared to the Botanical Garden, although the Orchid garden is smaller in size. But if you’re staying in Puerto de la Cruz and you’re looking for new things to see and do, the Orchid Garden may prove to be a breath of fresh air and a green oasis, not too far from the ocean.
8. Walk to Playa Bollulo
There is a trail from Puerto de la Cruz that takes you from Puerto de la Cruz to Playa Bollulo. You can start in the area known as El Rincon, and up to there you can get by bus if you don’t have a car. If you have a rental car you can drive all the way down to Playa Bollulo, where there is a paid parking at the restaurant (3€/day last time we went there).
From Playa Bollulo there you can continue your journey toward 2 more wild beaches: Playa Ancon and Playa del Pato. This walk provides amazing views of the ocean and the coastline, so it’s a nice thing to do on a day with mild temperatures, otherwise, you’ll have to be careful to avoid midday hours and always use sunscreen.
9. Plaza del Charco
This is the main square in Puerto de la Cruz, a lovely place to relax, chill and have ice cream (there was a really popular place on one of the corners of the Plaza). We also recommend going inside Columbus Plaza, just to see this beautiful historic building restored (although now it is a place for shopping and grabbing a coffee or something to eat).
10. Parque Taoro
View from Parque Taoro in Puerto de la Cruz
This is a beautiful park which offers a great view over Puerto de la Cruz. Of course, this means that you will have to climb a lot of steps in order to get to the top of the park, but the walk is lovely if you take you time and just enjoy the small waterfalls along the way.
11. VIP tour to Teide and Masca
Go on a VIP tour to visit Masca
Explore the volcanic landscapes of Tenerife and discover hidden places in Teide National Park in a 4WD vehicle.
The tour will also take you to visit Masca, one of the most spectacular and most beautiful villages in Tenerife.
BOOK ONLINEFrom Puerto de la Cruz: Teide and Masca VIP Tour
Includes transportation by 4WD vehicle and pickup at your hotel or nearby meeting point in Puerto de la Cruz
Includes food
Visit hidden places in Teide National Park and the village of Masca
12. Places of interest – what else to see while in Puerto de la Cruz
This a list of landmarks or interesting places to see during your stay in Puerto de la Cruz. The resort offers a lot of walking opportunities and it’s nice to just walk and discover something new every day.
Don’t miss:
Plaza de Europa
Paseo de las Palmeras
Mirador de la Paz
Castillo San Felipe
A walk on Paseo San Telmo
A walk on Paseo de Colon
Iglesia de San Francisco
Iglesia de Nuestra Senora de la Pena de Francia
Anglican Church
13.
Explore the north of Tenerife
From Puerto de la Cruz you have quick access to the north of the island, where you can visit many charming towns (like Garachico and La Orotava), or you can go hiking in Anaga, choosing from dozens of trails, suitable for all types of people.
See our recommendations for the best things to do in Tenerife North
14. Big events in Puerto de la Cruz
Depending on when you are visiting, you may have the chance to participate in one of the big and interesting events which are happening in Puerto de la Cruz each year:
The carnival in Puerto de la Cruz – usually happening between in February – March
Oktoberfest in Puerto de la Cruz
The summer carnival (Carnaval de Verano)
15. Coastal walk with fantastic views on Rambla de Castro
Rambla de Castro, Tenerife – short distance from Puerto de la Cruz
Rambla de Castro is a coastal walk that offers breathtaking views of the ocean and the surrounding natural landscape, with lots of trees.
You can start this walk from several points along the coast and it took us around 2 hours and 30 minutes both ways since we started from calle Romantica I.
Rambla de Castro is less than 10 km away from Puerto de la Cruz, so it’s an interesting thing to do around Puerto de la Cruz if you’re passionate about hiking, nature and outdoor activities.
15 Best Things To Do in Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife
View of Puerto de la Cruz, with Mount Teide in the background
Did you know Puerto de la Cruz is the oldest tourist resort in Tenerife?
The town of Puerto de la Cruz has always attracted foreign visitors, especially from Northern Europe, who come here during the winter months for the warm climate.
What to do in Puerto de la Cruz
1. Visit Loro Parque, the best Zoo in the world
2. Playa Jardin
3. Playa Martianez
4. Go on a tour to see Mt. Teide and pretty villages
5. Costa Martianez Complex
6. The Botanical Gardens
7. The Orchid Garden – Jardin de Orquideas de Sitio Litre
8. Walk to Playa Bollulo
9. Plaza del Charco
10. Parque Taoro
11. VIP tour to Teide and Masca
12. Places of interest – what else to see while in Puerto de la Cruz
13. Explore the north of Tenerife
14. Big events in Puerto de la Cruz
15. Coastal walk with fantastic views on Rambla de Castro
Although not as warm as the resorts in the South of Tenerife, Puerto de la Cruz still has temperatures around 20°C during the daytime in winter and it’s much more greener compared to Costa Adeje, Playa de las Americas or Fanabe area.
Usually, Puerto de la Cruz attracts more mature tourists, who come here to relax and enjoy the beautiful nature and scenery. If you’re looking for a chilled atmosphere, with lovely restaurants but not noisy club or wild parties, then Puerto de la Cruz is a great place to stay in Tenerife.
What to do in Puerto de la Cruz
There are lots of places to visit and discover inside the city, including beautiful beaches, parks and one of the best swimming pool complexes in Tenerife.
1. Visit Loro Parque, the best Zoo in the world
The penguins at Loro Park
Loro Parque is considered the best zoo in the world and it’s one of the top attractions for visitors in Tenerife.
The park offers plenty of activities and animal shows, so you’ll easily spend an entire day there. If you’re actually staying in Puerto de la Cruz and you want more than one day to explore, you can buy a discounted ticket for a second visit.
BOOK ONLINELoro Parque Skip-The-Line Ticket
Tenerife’s world-famous animal adventure park
One of the top attractions in the Canary Islands
Free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance to receive a full refund
Explore the beaches in Puerto de la Cruz
You have several options in terms of beaches and places to swim right in Puerto de la Cruz, but there are many more great beaches outside of town, many of them wild and perfect for surfers or for people seeking privacy.
2. Playa Jardin
Playa Maria Jiménez, part of Playa Jardin, Puerto de la Cruz – Tenerife
Playa Jardin is actually a beach complex formed by several smaller beaches, with black volcanic sand and a beautiful design that is the creation of Cesar Manrique.
The beach is 600 m long and here you will find all the services and amenities you need for a great day in the sun: sunbeds, beach showers, a waterfall with seawater and lush vegetation.
Playa Jardin is one of the main attractions in Puerto de la Cruz, with lots of restaurants and bars nearby, so it’s a great place to spend an entire day soaking up the sun.
3. Playa Martianez
Martianez beach in Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife
Martianez beach is a black sand beach, located very close to the famous Lago Martianez. It’s not as large as Playa Jardin and here you won’t find sunbeds and umbrellas, so you’ll have to bring your own beach chairs or something to sit on.
Playa Martianez is popular among surfers who stay in the area, as on most days it offers great conditions for surfing.
4. Go on a tour to see Mt. Teide and pretty villages
Go on a tour from Puerto de la Cruz to see the majestic Mt. Teide and Roques de Garcia
Enjoy Tenerife’s Teide National Park and tour the beautiful northern villages like Garachico, Icod de Los Vinos and Masca. Take in the breathtaking views of Tenerife’s countryside as you travel with a local guide.
BOOK ONLINETeide and Northern Tenerife: Grand Tour
Hotel pickup and drop-off included
Explore Teide National Park
See the Dragon Tree in Icod de Los Vinos
Observe the landscape around Masca village and the Canarian architecture in Garachico
5. Costa Martianez Complex
Complex Costa Martianez in the evening, after closing hours
Costa Martianez is a complex of seawater pools, plus several monuments by Cesar Manrique and a few restaurants where you can have lunch during your time there.
Costa Martianez is open all week and there are several large pools, including a geyser in the center or the big pool. You can buy a day ticket for just 5,5 euros, or you can get a ticket that includes entrance + lunch inside the complex, which is available on their website.
6. The Botanical Gardens
The Botanical Gardens in Puerto de la Cruz, also known as Jardin Botanico de Aclimatacion de la Orotava, provides a beautiful walk through a garden with beautiful scenery, lots of exotic flowers and a great collection of trees.
This place is recommended for a peaceful and quiet walk, as most visitors who come to Puerto de la Cruz just for the day choose to spend their time either at Loro Park or at Playa Jardin, so the garden is usually overlooked.
The entrance is just 3 Euros per person, so for such a small amount of money you can enjoy the beauty of the garden, plus a few hours of quiet and relaxation.
7. The Orchid Garden – Jardin de Orquideas de Sitio Litre
Inside this garden, you will find the oldest dragon tree (drago) in Puerto de la Cruz, as well as many beautiful orchids, the main attraction of the park.
The place is an oasis of calm and relaxation in the center of the busy town of Puerto de la Cruz and there’s also a cafe inside, where you can enjoy a lovely drink, at reasonable prices. The entrance ticket is around 9 euros per person, which is more expensive compared to the Botanical Garden, although the Orchid garden is smaller in size. But if you’re staying in Puerto de la Cruz and you’re looking for new things to see and do, the Orchid Garden may prove to be a breath of fresh air and a green oasis, not too far from the ocean.
8. Walk to Playa Bollulo
There is a trail from Puerto de la Cruz that takes you from Puerto de la Cruz to Playa Bollulo. You can start in the area known as El Rincon, and up to there you can get by bus if you don’t have a car. If you have a rental car you can drive all the way down to Playa Bollulo, where there is a paid parking at the restaurant (3€/day last time we went there).
From Playa Bollulo there you can continue your journey toward 2 more wild beaches: Playa Ancon and Playa del Pato. This walk provides amazing views of the ocean and the coastline, so it’s a nice thing to do on a day with mild temperatures, otherwise, you’ll have to be careful to avoid midday hours and always use sunscreen.
9. Plaza del Charco
This is the main square in Puerto de la Cruz, a lovely place to relax, chill and have ice cream (there was a really popular place on one of the corners of the Plaza). We also recommend going inside Columbus Plaza, just to see this beautiful historic building restored (although now it is a place for shopping and grabbing a coffee or something to eat).
10. Parque Taoro
View from Parque Taoro in Puerto de la Cruz
This is a beautiful park which offers a great view over Puerto de la Cruz. Of course, this means that you will have to climb a lot of steps in order to get to the top of the park, but the walk is lovely if you take you time and just enjoy the small waterfalls along the way.
11. VIP tour to Teide and Masca
Go on a VIP tour to visit Masca
Explore the volcanic landscapes of Tenerife and discover hidden places in Teide National Park in a 4WD vehicle.
The tour will also take you to visit Masca, one of the most spectacular and most beautiful villages in Tenerife.
BOOK ONLINEFrom Puerto de la Cruz: Teide and Masca VIP Tour
Includes transportation by 4WD vehicle and pickup at your hotel or nearby meeting point in Puerto de la Cruz
Includes food
Visit hidden places in Teide National Park and the village of Masca
12. Places of interest – what else to see while in Puerto de la Cruz
This a list of landmarks or interesting places to see during your stay in Puerto de la Cruz. The resort offers a lot of walking opportunities and it’s nice to just walk and discover something new every day.
Don’t miss:
Plaza de Europa
Paseo de las Palmeras
Mirador de la Paz
Castillo San Felipe
A walk on Paseo San Telmo
A walk on Paseo de Colon
Iglesia de San Francisco
Iglesia de Nuestra Senora de la Pena de Francia
Anglican Church
13.
Explore the north of Tenerife
From Puerto de la Cruz you have quick access to the north of the island, where you can visit many charming towns (like Garachico and La Orotava), or you can go hiking in Anaga, choosing from dozens of trails, suitable for all types of people.
See our recommendations for the best things to do in Tenerife North
14. Big events in Puerto de la Cruz
Depending on when you are visiting, you may have the chance to participate in one of the big and interesting events which are happening in Puerto de la Cruz each year:
The carnival in Puerto de la Cruz – usually happening between in February – March
Oktoberfest in Puerto de la Cruz
The summer carnival (Carnaval de Verano)
15. Coastal walk with fantastic views on Rambla de Castro
Rambla de Castro, Tenerife – short distance from Puerto de la Cruz
Rambla de Castro is a coastal walk that offers breathtaking views of the ocean and the surrounding natural landscape, with lots of trees.
You can start this walk from several points along the coast and it took us around 2 hours and 30 minutes both ways since we started from calle Romantica I.
Rambla de Castro is less than 10 km away from Puerto de la Cruz, so it’s an interesting thing to do around Puerto de la Cruz if you’re passionate about hiking, nature and outdoor activities.
10 Best Things to Do in Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife + Map
Puerto de la Cruz is a town located in northern Tenerife that opened to tourism over 200 years ago. Since then, visitors, including ourselves, have fallen in love with it. Surely, it’s easy to see that it’s one of the most important places to visit in Tenerife.
You can find an extensive list of places to visit in Puerto de la Cruz. Here you will be able to walk among traditional Canarian buildings, some of which date back to the 16th century. You can also take advantage of the Canarian climate and enjoy the viewpoints and beaches of Puerto de la Cruz.
I recommend staying here overnight as we did, but if you’re in southern Tenerife and short on time, you can take a day tour to see this city or combine it with an excursion to Teide.
For those who, like us, prefer visiting the city on their own, here are the top 10 things to do in Puerto de la Cruz, including the best restaurants and hotels.
1. Lake Martiánez, a lovely place to visit in Puerto de la Cruz
Lake Martiánez is one of the many creations by Lanzarote artist César Manrique, who collaborated with engineers Juan Alfredo Amigó and José Luis Olcina. The lake is an oasis on the shores of the Atlantic and a must-see in Puerto de la Cruz.
1. Lake Martiánez, a lovely place to visit in Puerto de la Cruz
This leisure complex offers beautiful views of the sea and Mount Teide. It has a large artificial lake with emerald-colored seawater and five small islands. The Central Island is home to the Casino de Tenerife, as well as several terraces, stalls, and restaurants.
This Asset of Cultural Interest is one of the best things to see in Puerto de la Cruz for all ages. There are four pools for adults and three for children.
2. Botanical Garden, the best thing to see in Puerto de la Cruz
Another beautiful place to visit in Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife is its Botanical Garden. Here, you can take an exotic plant tour that will awaken your senses.
2. Botanical Garden, the best thing to see in Puerto de la Cruz
What makes this 18th-century garden a must-see in Puerto de la Cruz is its extensive sample of tropical plants that will transport you to different parts of the world. Among the 2,500 specimens are flowers from Asia, the Americas, Africa, and Europe, and huge trees with impressive twisting roots.
Without a doubt, visiting the garden is one of the top activities in Puerto de la Cruz, especially in the summer.
3. San Felipe Castle & Playa Jardín, two other places to visit in Puerto de la Cruz
San Felipe Castle was built to defend the city from pirates, and it’s a great place to visit in Puerto de la Cruz if you like history.
Its construction dates back to 1599, although it underwent renovations in the 19th century. The castle was declared a Historic-Artistic Monument in 1949, and, to this day, it still retains its original appearance.
3. San Felipe Castle & Playa Jardín, two other places to visit in Puerto de la Cruz
Just a few feet away is Playa Jardín, a lovely beach in Puerto de la Cruz and one of the best beaches in Tenerife. It’s made up of three coves: Playa del Castillo, Playa del Carcón, and Playa de Punta Brava. A promenade connects all three and lets you walk over the black sand.
4. Plaza del Charco, something else to see in Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife
If you’re not sure what to do in Puerto de la Cruz, check out Plaza del Charco, one of the most popular sites in town. The name isn’t too original and comes from the puddle of seawater that used to appear in the center of the square in the past.
4. Plaza del Charco, something else to see in Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife
The plaza has been undergoing renovations in the last decades, but it still preserves the idian laurels brought from Cuba. The square also has impressive palm trees and the famous ñamera, an exotic yam plant with large leaves.
This is one of the top sites in Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife if you want to take in the city’s ambiance. You’ll see many locals milling about here, and the remains of Bar Dinámico, the best-known establishment in Plaza del Charco. The bar opened in 1956 and, since then, has attracted residents, tourists, and intellectuals. In 2019, it transformed into the more modern Cosmopostelana Club Cafe.
5. Playa Martiánez, one of the best beaches in Puerto de la Cruz
If you want to see one of the most beautiful beaches in Puerto de la Cruz, you must visit Playa Martiánez. It’s at the northern end of Lake Martiánez, which I already mentioned.
5. Playa Martiánez, one of the best beaches in Puerto de la Cruz
The black sand beach stretches for over 980 feet and is one of the top places in town for surfing, thanks to its splendid waves. On the downside, the waves can be quite dangerous, so swimming is prohibited at certain times of the year.
While visiting this place in Puerto de la Cruz, be sure to walk along the maritime boardwalk, where you can find shops and restaurants serving local cuisine.
6. Church of Our Lady of Peña de Francia, one of the top sites in Puerto de la Cruz
The Church of Our Lady of Peña de Francia is another must-see in Puerto de la Cruz. It originated as an old hermitage in 1684, although its tower was added in 1898.
6. Church of Our Lady of Peña de Francia, one of the top sites in Puerto de la Cruz
Also, the church houses some of the most-loved images in Puerto de La Cruz, including the Virgen del Carmen and the Great Power of God. For this reason, visiting the church is one of the best free things to do in Puerto de la Cruz.
7. San Telmo hermitage & beach, a beautiful place to visit in Puerto de la Cruz
Another thing to do in Puerto de la Cruz is to visit the Paseo de San Telmo. In it is the hermitage of San Telmo, which was founded in 1780 and dedicated to the patron saint of sailors.
7. San Telmo hermitage & beach, a beautiful place to visit in Puerto de la Cruz
As you walk through, you can catch the most beautiful sunsets on San Telmo beach. This swimming spot is popular among locals, especially at low tide when the little seawater pools form. Moreover, the black sand beach has a small jetty you can walk on, making it one of the best beaches in Puerto de la Cruz.
8. Visit Barrio de la Ranilla, another thing to do in Puerto de la Cruz
If you’re going to take a holiday to Puerto de la Cruz, you must visit the La Ranilla neighborhood. It runs from the Plaza del Charco to the Peñón del Fraile. It is said that its name comes from the first person to settle in this area, soldier Ruiz Ranilla.
This place started as a humble fisherman’s neighborhood, reflecting the economy of Puerto de la Cruz. Over time, it has transformed into a vibrant and colorful part of town.
8. Visit Barrio de la Ranilla, another thing to do in Puerto de la Cruz
Thanks to the Puerto Street Art Initiative, the neighborhood has artwork and murals made by top international artists. Along with its craftsmanship and creativity, La Ranilla has tons of high-quality shops and restaurants. Without a doubt, walking through this neighborhood is one of the most enjoyable things to do in Puerto de la Cruz.
9. See the Hermitage of San Amaro, another free thing to do in Puerto de la Cruz
Another free thing to do in Puerto de la Cruz is to see the Hermitage of San Amaro, which dates back to the end of the 16th century. At that time, the residents wanted an alternative to the Orotava parish, so they built a hermitage to Our Lady of La Paz.
9. See the Hermitage of San Amaro, another free thing to do in Puerto de la Cruz
Built in 1591, it is the oldest religious building in Puerto de la Cruz, although it has undergone renovations and expansions over the centuries. Despite its simple construction, the hermitage attracts pilgrims from all over Tenerife, who come to celebrate the San Amaro festivities every January 15th. If that date coincides with your visit, it’s one of the activities in Puerto de la Cruz you can’t miss!
10. Mirador de La Paz, another awesome place in Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife
If you’re looking for panoramic views, the Mirador de la Paz is one of the best places to visit in Puerto de la Cruz. From here, you can see the newest area of the city, as well as Playa Martiánez. Moreover, it’s one of the most romantic places in town for couples since the sunset here is incredible.
10. Mirador de La Paz, another awesome place in Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife
The viewpoint has two levels and a garden area with benches. You’ll also see several sculptures here, including one of the author Agatha Christie. Puerto de la Cruz welcomed this famed writer during one of the worst moments of her life, and the views inspired her novel, The Mysterious Mr. Quin.
The Mirador de la Paz is on the edge of the Ladera and Martiánez Cliffs. The Sendero de la Costa route starts here and runs along the entire coast and is a great way to see Puerto de la Cruz.
Where to stay in Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife
We stayed at the h20 Tenerife Playa, which is one of the best all-inclusive hotels in Tenerife. The hotel is amazing, right in front of Lake Martiánez, and it offers incredible ocean views. Among its facilities are two swimming pools for adults (one of which is heated during the winter), a children’s pool, and a jacuzzi. You can use the sauna and hydromassage showers, or book a massage, for an extra charge.
Another hotel with a good location and nice service is the Smy Hotel Puerto de la Cruz. It has two outdoor pools (one of which is heated), lush gardens, and balcony rooms. It’s just a 5-minute walk from the city center and just over half a mile from Lake Martiánez. Moreover, the complex has a buffet restaurant and bar that holds performances and concerts throughout the year.
Ten minutes from Puerto de la Cruz Beach and Lake Martiánez are the Casablanca Apartments another interesting option. It has an outdoor swimming pool, a separate children’s pool, and a café-bar serving breakfast and lunch. It’s just a few steps from the city center, so you can visit the best restaurants in town with no problems.
BEST HOTELS IN PUERTO DE LA CRUZ
Finally, I’ll leave here my guide with the best places to stay in Tenerife, in case you visit other areas of the island.
Where to eat in Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife
There are lots of great restaurants in Puerto de la Cruz where you can enjoy the local food of the island. The most iconic restaurant is El Taller Seve Díaz, which you should reserve in advance since it’s very popular. The imaginative menu is based on Mediterranean cuisine, and while it’s not too big, there are two tasting menus. One has 6 courses and the other has 11; we chose the 6-course menu and felt fully satisfied.
A cheaper, yet still wonderful, option is Casa Mediterránea, which serves quality meat dishes. The Romanian restaurant Bambi Gourmet is another excellent restaurant with a good reputation.
Finally, if you’re looking for a good family restaurant with hearty dishes, I recommend Bodega Julián. Here, you can try the famous Canarian mojo and other typical dishes from this area.
How to get to Puerto de le Cruz, Tenerife
If you rent a car at Tenerife Airport, this is the best way to visit Puerto de la Cruz:
Take the TF-5 towards TF-31
Take Exit 32 and continue on TF-31 to TF-312.
If you prefer public transportation, take Bus 30 towards Puerto de la Cruz. The ride into the city takes about 30 minutes (there are 14 stops).
Of course, you could also book a private transfer from the airport. Many hotels in Puerto de la Cruz also offer pick-up services for an extra fee.
Map of Puerto de la Cruz
To make sure you don’t miss any of the places I recommended, here is a map of Puerto de la Cruz.
That’s it from me! If you have any questions or want to recommend another place to visit in Puerto de la Cruz, leave me a comment. Have a safe and wonderful trip!
9 Absolute Best Things To Do In Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife
Last Updated on 27 July 2022
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Wondering what to do in Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife?
You might be familiar with the popular resort towns of Los Cristianos and Playa de las Americas in the south of Tenerife, but Puerto de la Cruz might be a stranger to you. Situated in the north of the island, Puerto de la Cruz is a small town that boasts a charming Old Quarter which is abundant with historic buildings, sociable squares, unique shops, and bistros and bars. And despite becoming more popular in recent years, Puerto de la Cruz still manages to retain its fishing village vibe, making it a wonderful place for any short break or vacation. To make sure you don’t miss out on any of the good stuff, this Puerto de la Cruz blog features 9 of the absolute best things to do in Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife, which you must not miss!
Punta del Viento viewpoint
1.Visit a black sandy beach
If you’re wondering what to see in Puerto de la Cruz that is a little unique, then a black sandy beach is your answer. As with other islands in the Canaries, Tenerife is built around a volcano (Mount Teide). And it is because of this that you will find unusual black sandy beaches, especially in the north of the island.
The black sandy beach of Playa Jardin
The black sandy beaches of Tenerife are made up of eroded hardened volcanic lava that’s been ejected from Mount Teide. Over the years, the power of the sea has broken this down, creating sand which is black in colour. One of the best Puerto de la Cruz beaches to see this natural wonder of Europe is Playa Jardin. With it’s expanse of volcanic sand, the botanical gardens and esplanade outlining Playa Jardin are beautifully landscaped, making it one of the best free things to do in Puerto de la Cruz!
Tip: You will find golden sandy beaches in Tenerife, especially in the southerly parts of the island which are popular with tourists. But these are actually man-made from sand imported from the Sahara Desert!
2. Wander along the promenade
The view towards Playa Jardin
If you’re travelling on a budget, then one of the best free things to do in Puerto de la Cruz is to walk along the promenade. Stretching around the coastal edge of Puerto de la Cruz, wandering the promenade will afford you endless panoramas of the Atlantic Oceanand sweeping vistas of the rocky and mountainous coastline. And it will guide you via many other points of interest, such as lighthouses, historic harbours, black sandy beaches and viewpoints too (plus there are plenty of bars and bistros en route).
Directions for your promenade walking route: Begin your promenade walk at Playa de Martianez (one of the towns volcanic sandy beaches) and end it at Playa Jardin (another of the towns black sandy beaches). From Playa de Martianez, follow the palm-tree lined promenade past Lago Martianez, and continue to Playa de san Telmo and Punta del Viento viewpoint (see best things to do in Puerto de la Cruz #9). Then, wander over to the historic fishing harbour (Muelle Pesquero) and along Esplanada del Muelle where you will find Faro de Puerto de la Cruz (an active lighthouse), until you reach Playa Jardin. If you follow this route from Playa de Martianez to Playa Jardin, the distance is ~2.5km (~1.6 miles).
3. Eat Tapas and drink cocktails (obviously)
Cocktails in Puerto de la Cruz
You can’t travel to Spain (or an autonomous island of Spain) without feasting on Tapas washed down with cocktails! It would be like visiting England without eating Fish and Chips, Thailand without sampling Pad Thai or Bali without feasting on Nasi Goreng. Tapas are the epitome of Spanish cuisine, and one of the best things to do in Puerto de la Cruz at night is to indulge in some! Check out TripAdvisor and find yourself a quaint little Tapas bar with good reviews, situated somewhere amongst the cobbled-streets of the Old Town. (note: I can’t remember where I ate, but it was a lovely little Tapas bar with outside dining on one of the sociable squares within the Old Town)
4. Swim at Lago Martianez
Being situated on the Atlantic, the seas surrounding Puerto de la Cruz can be dangerous. So if you’d prefer to swim in the safety of a swimming pool where there are lifeguards on duty, then an afternoon at Lago Martianez is going to be one of the best things to do in Puerto de la Cruz during your trip. Situated right alongside the sea, Lago Martianez is a large complex comprising 7 outdoor seawater swimming pools. With its many palm trees, loungers, umbrellas, bars, restaurants and stunning coastal views, Lago Martianez is a nice alternative to the beach and offers the best of both worlds! It makes for a lovely place to spend the afternoon if you want to swim but don’t like the roughness of the sea, and it’s various pools, islands and waterfalls make it great for small and big kids alike.
5. Visit the historic fishing harbour
Boats at the Historic Fishing Harbour in Puerto de la Cruz
Although Puerto de la Cruz has grown into a bustling little town, it was originally just a quaint fishing village. And the character of its fishing village roots can be observed nowhere more than at the historic fishing harbour (known locally as Muelle Pesquero). Don’t expect to see a mass port of any kind here – it’s a quaint affair which smaller fishing boats use to dock with their fresh catches of the day. There’s plenty of shops and historic buildings nearby, and you will also find the sculpture of the Fishwife on the harbour side too.
6. Stroll through the Old Quarter
Back streets of Puerto de la Cruz
One of the things that makes Puerto de la Cruz a charming place to visit is its protected Old Quarter. A network of cobbled lanes and palm-lined streets, the Old Town of Puerto de la Cruz is mostly pedestrianised and is full of little outlets, unique shops, bistros, bars, coffee shops and sociable squares. It has all the components of a picturesque Spanish Old Town! The heartbeat of the Old Quarter is Plaza del Charco – a buzzing square lined with trees, fountains, and restaurants, where people gather and music fills the air. Some of the other notable points of interest in the Old Town are the historic fishing harbour and Plaza de la Iglesia, which leads me on to the next of the best things to do in Puerto de la Cruz…
7. See Plaza de la Iglesia (Church Plaza)
Located in the Old Quarter of Puerto de la Cruz a stones throw from the historic fishing harbour, Plaza del Charco and Playa de san Telmo, Plaza de la Iglesia (The Church Square) is a charming area of the town to visit. On Plaza de la Iglesia, the Parish Church of Nuestra Señora de la Peña de Francia takes centre stage. It is a particularly picturesque place in Puerto de la Cruz, given that the church is surrounded by colourful landscaped gardens with tall palm trees and fountains. It makes for a wonderful place to sit for a while, to soak up the chilled aura that pervades the Old Quarter.
8. Enjoy panoramic views from Parque Taoro (Taoro Park)
Tucked away behind the Old Town, you will find Parque Taoro which is one of the best free things to do in Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife. Parque Taoro is a hillside park spanning 100,000 square metres that is abundant with tropical plants and trees, fountains, and cascading waterfalls. If you’re looking for first class views, then you definitely need to factor a visit to Parque Taoro into your Tenerife itinerary! As you progress up through the various levels of the park, you will be rewarded with views over the Old Quarter of Puerto de la Cruz, the Atlantic Ocean, and the peak of Mount Teide (on a clear day)! Given the plethora of trees and seating areas, Parque Taoro is the perfect place to enjoy some shaded peace and tranquillity for a while!
Tip: Given that Parque Taoro offers uninterrupted panoramas of the sea, it makes for one of the best places to sit and enjoy the sunset in Puerto de la Cruz.
9. Visit Playa de San Telmo and the Punta del Viento viewpoint
Nestled in the heart of Puerto de la Cruz and set below the promenade, you will find Playa de San Telmo. Not your average sandy beach, Playa de San Telmo is a rocky expanse and particularly picturesque area, dotted with walkways and railings to help you into the sea if you fancy a swim. But even if you don’t, visiting Playa de San Telmo is still one of the best things to do in Puerto de la Cruz given its rocky charm and scenic backdrop. The best place to admire the beauty of Playa de San Telmo from is the Punta del Viento viewpoint, especially when dramatic waves come ashore! From the Punta del Viento viewpoint, you will be afforded views of the rocky coast, Lago Martianez, and the mountains which slope into the sea beyond!
Tip: The rocks on Playa de San Telmo can be sharp so some beach shoes might be in order here. And it can be pretty precarious when the waves are strong.
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25 THINGS TO DO AND SEE IN PUERTO DE LA CRUZ, TENERIFE
Puerto de la Cruz is one of the most important towns in the north of Tenerife and one of the best things to see on the island (Read:25 best things to see in Tenerife).
It was the first tourist area of the island since the end of the 18th century and later in the 60s after undergoing an important transformation.
Puerto de la Cruz is a beautiful and charming city with its historical center, its old port, the fishing district La Ranilla, historical places like the Casa de la Aduana, the Martiánez complex designed by the famous artist César Manrique as well as Play Jardin and the legendary Botanical Garden.
READ: CÉSAR MANRIQUE’S HERITAGE IN THE CANARY ISLANDS
If you are planning a trip to Tenerife, visiting Puerto de La Cruz is a must.
We invite you to discover all you need to know for your visit to Puerto de La Cruz in this post.
1. Puerto De La Cruz Botanical Garden
The magnificent botanical garden at Puerto de la Cruz was created in 1788 to cultivate species of plants and flowers from the tropics. It is a perfect place to walk in nature and discover very interesting botanical species. The botanical garden is a real paradise for lovers of nature. It is also a great place to rest and escape the heat during the hot summer days.
The Botanical Garden of Puerto de la Cruz is located in the district of La Paz, the upper part of the city that overlooks the ocean and the newest area of the city, built in the 60s and 70s. Right next to the Botanical Garden, you can see one of the most iconic hotel in Tenerife, Hotel Botanico y Oriental Spa Garden. More information here.
Location: here
Website: here
Opening hours: 9AM–6PM every day
2. Hermitage of San Amaro
After visiting the stunning Botanical Garden to the historical center and start your exploration of this charming town.
Head to The hermitage of San Amaro first, the oldest in the city of Puerto de la Cruz, built in 1591.
Location: here
3. Viewpoint of La Paz
Very close to the hermitage of San Amaro is the viewpoint of La Paz which offers beautiful panoramic views of the Atlantic, as well as the complex of Lake Martianez and Martianez Beach.
Location: here
4. Playa Martianez
From the Mirador of La Paz, continue your exploration to Playa Martianez. This is a black sand beach which is nice and quiet despite being so close from the city. The view from Playa Martianez is stunning. With good conditions it can also be a surf spot.
Location: here
READ: BEST SURF SPOTS IN THE CANARY ISLANDS
5. Lago Martiánez
Lago Martiánez was designed in 1977 by César Manrique.
The Lanzarote artist César Manrique designated two works in the city of Puerto de la Cruz in the sixties and seventies: Lake Martiánez and the Playa Jardin. If you want to know more about this amazing artist, you can check this post.
Lago Martiánez is a rather big leisure complex with a huge lake surrounded by swimming pools, gardens and terraces with fantastic views of the sea and the Mount Teide. The artist César Manrique used elements of traditional Canarian architecture, as well as native vegetation.
Location: here
Website: here
6. Iglesia de Nuestra Señora de la Peña de Francia
Continue your visit at Plaza de la Iglesia where the most important church in Puerto de la Cruz, built in 1684 on an old hermitage. The tower of the church is from 1898. Inside you can see the image of Our Lady of the Rock of France and paintings by Luis de la cruz y Ríos and Manuel de la Cruz.
Location: here
7. The hermitage of San Telmo
The hermitage of San Telmo was founded in 1780, next to which there is a promenade of the same name. This hermitage is dedicated to the patron Saint of Sailors. From there you have a beautiful panoramic view of the pools of Lake Martianez.
Location: here
8. San Telmo Beach
San Telmo beach, known as “Bajío de San Telmo”, is a small family beach located next to the promenade and the hermitage. The locals at Puerto de la Cruz prefer this beach thanks to its many “charcos” or natural pools that are perfect for swimming.
Location: here
9. Charco Square
The “plaza del Charco” is a large square with many bars and restaurants where you can taste the culinary specialties of the island of Tenerife: fresh fish, “papas arrugás” (potatoes), “queso asado” (cheese in a frying pan),… In the center of the square there is a fountain decorated with plants.
Location: here
10. The Old Port of Puerto de la Cruz
The old port of Puerto de la Cruz is one of the most charming places in the city. From the waterfront promenade you can have one of the most beautiful photographs: the small beach of the port, the building of the Real Aduana and the sculpture of a fisherwoman.
Location:here
11. Casa de la Real Aduana
The Casa de la Real Aduana is the today the location of the Tourist Office but also a place of art exhibitions. It is one of the most beautiful buildings in Puerto de la Cruz for its typical architecture. Founded in 1620, the Casa de la Real Aduana is next to the castle of Santa Barbara, located opposite the traditional fishing port.
Location: here
12. Europe Square
It is a surprising and enormous square in the shape of a fortress-balcony which has six cannons from the 18th and 19th centuries and is located by the sea. Facing this popular and beautiful square is the town hall of Puerto de la Cruz.
Location: here
13. The fishermen’s quarter of La Ranilla
This is the old fishing district, very interesting for its typical traditional architecture: small colorful houses that make the charm of the district. In this district, take a walk in the beautiful street: calle de La Verdad, with beautiful shops and restaurants, calle Mequinez with colorful houses and El Lomo street.
Location: here
14. San Felipe Castle
The San Felipe Castle is an old military fortress built between 1641 and 1655, renovated in the 19th century, today a cultural center for exhibitions and concerts.
Location: here
15. Playa Jardin
The Lanzarote artist César Manrique designed the Playa Jardin complex, made up of three beaches: Playa Jardín, Playa Chica and Punta Brava which are integrated into a very beautiful environment with gardens of endemic species, caves and waterfalls.
Punta Brava is the largest beach, with 260 meters in length. The Playa Jardin complex is a surprising place to enjoy the beach and the sun in a magnificent natural setting.
The beaches of the Playa Jardin are of black sand and offer many services: toilets, showers, bars and restaurants, sun lounger rentals, children’s play area, parking…
Location: here
READ: 10 BEST BEACHES IN TENERIFE
16. The Museum of Sacred Art
It houses sculptures, altarpieces, paintings and jewelry testifying to the history and worship of Puerto de la Cruz. It is owned by the parish of Nuestra Señora de la Peña de Francia.
Location: here
17. The Archeology Museum
A grand 19th-century Canarian-style mansion is home to the Puerto de la Cruz Archeology Museum, located in the fishing district of La Ranilla. It houses a rich collection of Aboriginal ceramics, a collection of 17th century maps and exhibits of the culture and history of the Canary Islands.
Location: here
18. Visit Loro Parque, one of the best things to do in Tenerife for families
In Tenerife take the opportunity to visit the Loro Parque, the best zoological park in the world according to Tripadvisor. Penguins, Orcas, Parrots etc. There are lots to see here.
If you are visiting Tenerife, this is the perfect opportunity to discover the Loro Parque, which you may have already heard of. Some even go on excursions from the island of Gran Canaria just to visit the park. This place is rather huge, so plan at least half day to see it all.
The park is located in Puerto de La Cruz.
BOOK YOUR TICKET IN ADVANCE HERE AND SKIP THE QUEUE
Location: here
19. Street Art in Puerto de la Cruz
Do not miss the street art in Puerto de la Cruz, a pleasant route that begins in the neighborhood of La Ranilla. The facades of the houses are painted with beautiful art. These houses were were painted as part of the Street Art Festival “MUECA” which takes place every year.
20. Surf in Puerto de La Cruz
There are surf schools in Puerto de la Cruz, where you can take lessons or rent equipment for surfing. For instance you can check La Marea Surfschool (location) at Playa Martianez.
21. Puerto de la Cruz Carnival
Carnival in Tenerife is one of the most important parties of the year: colorful parades that attract people from all over Spain and the world.
But on the island, several carnivals are interesting, such as the Carnival of Santa Cruz de Tenerife or the Carnival of Puerto de la Cruz. The latter lasts a few days and offers one of the most awaited events: the Marcarita Ponte Tacón men’s marathon: an obstacle course where participants are disguised and wear heels. The Puerto de la Cruz Carnival begins in February and ends in March.
22. Museo Abaco
This 18th century house with typical Canarian architecture houses a museum dedicated to the history of the Canaries. Discover how the Spanish conquistadors lived and how the first inhabitants of Tenerife, the Ganches, were enslaved to work in the Spanish plantations… The house has a splendid garden and a restaurant!
Location: here
23. La Orotava
While Puerto de la Cruz once belonged to the municipality of La Orotava, today the the two towns are independent. La Orotava is however much older. It was founded in the 16th century by the conquistadors. The city is built in a staircase on the mountainside and collects water from many springs descending from the mountain.
With all this water, La Orotava was able to become the first banana producing town in Tenerife. Many of the streets in La Orotava are steep, so be prepared to climb a bit. From the gardens of the Marquis, you have a magnificent panorama of the old town as well as Puerto de la Cruz which extends it to the sea.
La Orotava is a typical Canarian town with many colonial mansions. Some are among the most beautiful in Tenerife. A city not to be missed for anyone looking for the authenticity of Canarian towns rather than the bustle of large seaside resorts.
Location: here
24. Sitio Litre Garden
The creation of this garden, in 1730, coincides with the construction of the property to which it belonged. It is the oldest garden in Tenerife. It has a nice collection of orchids as well as the oldest dragon tree in Puerto de la Cruz.
The garden can be proud of counting the novelist Agatha Christie and Alexander von Humboldt, a German scientist who founded the bases of scientific explorations as visitors. The garden is quite small and is located at the very top of a beautiful hill. You can also enjoy a nice coffee at the bottom of the garden.
Location: here
25. Walk to Bollullo Beach
If you wand to enjoy a pleasant coastal walk, head to Bollulo Beach from Puerto de la Cruz. Bollulo Beach is a wild beach of black sand. From there you can continue your journey to Play Ancon and Playa del Pato.
This walk has amazing views all along. It’s a nice thing to do if you stay at Puerto de la Cruz while in Tenerife.
Location: here
How to get to Puerto de la Cruz?
To get to Puerto de la Cruz from Tenerife North Airport (La Laguna) by car which is 27 km away, 21 minutes by TF5. You can rent a car or have a transfer service from the airport. Once you reach the Canary Islands, it is highly recommended to rent a car. To get the cheaper rate we used Rentalcars. com. Check it out here for the best deals.
It is possible to get to Puerto de la Cruz by bus. Check the buses of Tenerife (known as “guaguas”).
Where to stay in Puerto de la Cruz
Today, Puerto de la Cruz is the most sophisticated tourist area of the island. If you visit Tenerife we highly recommend to stay at Puerto de la Cruz. From there you can easily reach other main sights in Tenerife such as Laguna, Garachico or Masca.
Our Recommended Hotels:
$$$ – Hotel Botanico y Oriental Spa Garden
$$ – Puerto Palace
$ – RF San Borondo
Best restaurants in Puerto de la Cruz
Here are the best places in this city to enjoy Canarian and international cuisine.
Casa Pache
Magnificent place in the heart of the Ranilla district. The Casa Pache restaurant has a long tradition of good food. It is a house with a humble facade that hides small cozy rooms, each with a different personality and full of fascinating details typical of the Canaries.
The food, creative Spanish cuisine, is fabulous and the restaurant regularly wins prizes when the town holds tapas competitions.
Location:here
Regulo
Often elected as one of the best restaurants in Puerto de la Cruz. The Regulo restaurant is located in a beautiful Canarian house with traditional wooden balconies and a wide wooden staircase.
The food is of the highest quality, and price are a bit higher than usual in Puerto de la Cruz.
Location: here
The Cofradía de Pescadores
Another place to eat in Puerto de La Cruz is La Cofradía de Pescadores a really nice place in town.
This place is very famous if you are looking for fresh and quality seafood.
The location is absolutely stunning too!
Location: here
In conclusion about Puerto de la Cruz
Visiting Puerto de la Cruz was definitely one of the highlights during our trip. We absolutely loved the historical city center and the coastal walks. The work of César Manrique with Lake Martianez and Playa Jardin is also fabulous.
We can’t recommend enough a visit of Puerto de la Cruz in Tenerife.
For more information on the best things to do and see in Tenerife, check out this post: 25 AWESOME THINGS TO DO AND SEE IN TENERIFE
Tenerife is a great destination to travel to. No wonder, why it is one of the most popular islands in the Canary!
If you have any question about Tenerife or Puerto de la Cruz, feel free to leave a comment below.
HAPPY TRAVELS!
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10 best attractions in Puerto de la-Krus 2022
165 places (sorting by popularity among travelers)
1. Loro Park
30 762
Zoo
Author: _M5833HP
Wonderful place, a lot of beautiful and unique animals. It’s a pity some were at a great distance from the glass…
2. Entertainment complex Lago Martianes
Water parks
Author: galinasL438FK
A very interesting place, given that the beaches are often closed due to high waves. The largest swimming pool with islands…
3. Botanical Garden
Author: OlgaUDan
Nice, cozy park with unique plants. Small in size, but worth a look, especially…
4. Bollullo Beach Going down the stairs without…
5. Playa Jardin But jumping into them, going on the gently sloping, clean and natural sand is still…
6. Orotava Valley
Valleys
Author: umnichka-tvoya
90 Spectacular views! The size of the valley is impressive, it rises to a height of two thousand meters, borders with volcanic …
7. Cup
Cultural objects and attractions
Author: 256maxf
Small pretty area in center of Puerto, close to the sea, lots of places with coffee and food..
11. Playa San Telmo
Author: Investigator64
My personal impression of Tenerife: Southern part – for pampered beach -relaxes and lightweight tusa à la …
9000 9000
12. Igletsia de Nuestra Senora de la Pena Francia
Architectural sites • Religious sites
13. Playa Martianez
14. Historico Muelle Pesquero Puerto de la Cruz
Pierce and Beach Promenade
Autha
15. Castillo de San Felipe
Historical attractions • Castles
28. PARROQUIA de Santa de Casia
Cultural objects and attractions • Churches and cathedrals
9000 9000 9000
29 29 and cathedrals
30. Museo Arqueologico Puerto de la Cruz
0003
Nadia Pritseva
Minsk, Belarus5 publications
Review for: Loro park
Loro world.
Wonderful place, a lot of beautiful and unique animals. It’s a pity some were at a great distance from the glass. Very interesting Gorillas, you look at them and understand the greatness of nature, how many interesting things there are on Earth. I liked the very atmosphere in the park, all the people are cheerful and kind.
Posted February 18, 2021
This review reflects the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and is not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews. Galina S
Riga region, Latvia The largest pool with islands, fountains, bridges. You can swim and walk around. The only thing is small. In every corner you find something new and interesting. I swam between the rocks, found a cave. There is a waterfall in another pool. There is a pool for kids. Good place for rest. The only downside is the water could be warmer. The ocean is warmer. When you come to this city, you must visit.
Published December 28, 2020
This review represents the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and is not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
Olga
Moscow, Russia1 publication
Review for: Botanical Garden
Cozy Park
Nice, cozy park with unique plants. Small in size, but worth a look, especially if it’s hot outside). Entrance fee is moderate.
Published March 14, 2020
This review represents the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and is not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
Queen of Everything
Düsseldorf, Germany3,884 publications
Review for: Bollullo Beach
Black Volcanic Sand Beach
Only needed by car, passing palm trees, but very narrow road. Go down the stairs with an equally beautiful view. It’s amazingly beautiful here. Spend a few hours by the ocean with this view and enjoy. There are lifeguards. Alas, because of the corona, everything is closed and there are no sun loungers, but a visit is a must.
Published March 18, 2021
This review represents the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and is not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
958Andrey_V
Moscow, Russia411 publications
Review of: Playa Jardin
Not a bad natural beach
In the north, apparently, there are almost always waves. But it’s still nice to jump into them, going on the gently sloping, clean and natural sand. True, the neighboring beach Maria Jimenez liked a little more. They bathed there.
Published February 14, 2020
This review represents the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and is not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
SvetlanaK.
3 publications
Review for: Orotava Valley
Beauty, of course!
Luxurious views! The size of the valley is impressive; it rises to a height of two thousand meters, bordering the Las Cañadas volcanic massif. Be sure to take a tour here!
Published December 5, 2019
This review represents the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and is not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
Max F
Zaporizhia, Ukraine1,123 publications
Review for: Charco Square
small
small nice square in the center of Puerto, close to the sea, lots of places with coffee and food. 2019
This review reflects the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and is not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
JULI F
Kharkiv, Ukraine151 publications
Review for: Parque Taoro
Nice walk
I can’t say that this place on the island is a must visit. But if you are in Puerto, then I advise. There is a good viewing platform. Calm and quiet place. Sit down and enjoy the view. Take a couple of bananas with you and feed the lizards, there are a lot of them in the park.
Published August 5, 2019
This review represents the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and is not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
OlgaRus12
Moscow, Russia202 publications
Review for: Jardin de Orquideas de Sitio Liter
Nice, peaceful place
When I got to this park, there was not a soul there. Having received a brochure at the entrance, I calmly walked, admired the beauties. It was a pleasant surprise for me that this is a private property, and the owners allow access here to everyone (for a fee of about 4 euros). When I read about private ownership, I somehow easily imagined how a family walks and rests here in the shade of beautiful trees and flowers. There were not so many orchids, but I really liked that they all bloom and look well-groomed. Very beautiful bushes with flowers, which are called “birds of paradise” – it seems that this is a bird looking out of the bush. In the center is a very pleasant place with a fountain. One feels like sitting, listening to the water flowing and not rushing anywhere… Very nice, sincere place!
Published August 14, 2018
This review represents the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and is not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
svetlanar311
Tel Aviv, Israel22 publications
Review for: Puerto Street Art
Worth a stroll.
An interesting street with original creativity. There are excellent restaurants, casual and very small, serving local cuisine, where it’s nice to sit and watch life around. Tripadvisor and not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
investigator64
Ivanovo, Russia28,809 publications
Review of: Playa San Telmo
Playa San Telmo: Canarian beach in honor of the saint from Spanish Palencia
My personal impression of Tenerife: the southern part is for pampered lovers of beach holidays and incendiary parties à la Golden Mile; the northern part is for those who are in love with the pristine, slightly wild nature, “multiplied” by the greatness and superiority of the water element over man … In other words, the ocean … Therefore, when I was a little “tired” of the beaches and promenades of Costa Adeje, Playa de -las Americas and Los Cristianos, I directed my steps to the north of the island – to Puerto de la Cruz (Puerto de la Cruz). Despite the smaller, en mi humilde opinión, tourist “traffic”, this town is the sixth largest settlement on the island and is “rich” with three beaches at once. Probably, I will not be very mistaken if I say that it is hard to find homo sapiens who, having been on the ocean, would not fall in love with him once and for all… and calm, cool and warm, pampered blue and stern leaden “hypostases” attracted and will attract tourist people. So to the beach, friends! Due to the limited time, I managed to get acquainted with only one of the three Cruz beaches – Playa de San Telmo (there are also Playa Martianez and Playa Jardin). The San Telmo “rookery of human people” is located in the very center of the city and is not at all striking in size (we have seen more beaches !!!). Black-stone rocks, framing it on both sides, add some kind of “intimacy” to the beach. Keep in mind that “here you are not there”, as they say – rocky shores and bottom, “multiplied” by relatively restless surf, make you be extremely careful when entering the water. Toilets and showers are available (which adds “pros” to this place of rest). If you want to “starve a worm” after an ocean swim, on the nearby Calle de San Telmo, relatively inexpensive “Crusovian” catering establishments with traditional Canarian cuisine are waiting for you. And the most unusual thing: this Puerto de la Cruz beach is named after the holy uncle Pedro Gonzalez, better known in the circles of believers as San Telmo – he was a Catholic priest in Palencia (there is such a region in central Spain). According to various tourist brochures, Playa de San Telmo is the most traditional and picturesque beach area in Puerto de la Cruz. So welcome to the beach that bears the name of a holy man!!!
Published January 18, 2022
This review represents the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and is not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
Ekaterina M
Moscow, Russia575 publications
Review of: Iglesia de Nuestra Senora de la Pena Francia
City Center
The cathedral is located in the historical center of the city and is its architectural dominant. From it depart streets with old buildings of the 18-19th century with carved wooden balconies characteristic of the island. Entrance to the cathedral is free, inside is a simple, but rather majestic interior. The bell tower of the cathedral adorns the panorama of the city and is visible from all hotels.
Posted September 19, 2017
This review reflects the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and is not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
Tatyana S
Moscow, Russia213 publications
Review of: Playa Martianez
Good place to sunbathe and swim with a mask – with an umbrella, but splashing as usual here is unlikely to succeed. The bottom here is large slippery stones, and large enough waves make moving along the bottom very difficult. Between the stones there are many sea urchins and all kinds of aquatic animals, many different fish. Therefore, it is very convenient to lie on the wave, dip your head in the mask into the water, put on rubber slippers or fins and enjoy! With good waves, there are many surfers here. Paragliders take off and land from the shore. This bay is not very deep, you can swim far enough. It’s difficult here with small children. We didn’t find a shower or a toilet here. There are many hotels near the beach, a shopping center, and Lago Martianes is also located.
Published August 8, 2018
This review represents the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and is not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
Igor Alexeev
Moscow, Russia105,791 publications
Review of: Historico Muelle Pesquero Puerto de la Cruz
Old fishing port in Puerto de la Cruz…
The old fishing port in Puerto de la Cruz is an interesting city landmark that you can stop by to see during your walks around the city. for example, in order to once again admire the Atlantic Ocean or imagine what Puerto de la Cruz looked like when its main inhabitants were not tourists, but fishermen . ..
Published on November 15, 2019
This review reflects the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
Magnolia1775
Tampere Finland This small fortress was built in the 17th century in honor of the king and founder of the city, Philip VI, and protected the city from the invasion of pirates. I wouldn’t make a special trip for her sake, but if you are nearby, you can take a walk and see!
Posted January 23, 2019
This review represents the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and is not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews. The top attractions to visit in Puerto de la Cruz
are:
Loro park
Entertainment complex Lago Martianes
Botanical Garden
Bollullo Beach
Playa Jardin
See all attractions in Puerto de la Cruz on Tripadvisor
Puerto de la Cruz according to Tripadvisor travelers the best outdoor activities in Puerto de la Cruz are:
Loro park
Orotava Valley
Botanical Garden
Bollullo Beach
Playa San Telmo
See all outdoor activities in Puerto de la Cruz
on Tripadvisor 9The most popular things to do in Puerto de la Cruz with kids according to Tripadvisor travelers are: 0003
Puerto de la Cruz:
Loro park
Orotava Valley
Botanical Garden
Puerto Street Art
Entertainment complex Lago Martianes
See all kid friendly things to do in Puerto de la Cruz on Tripadvisor
The 10 BEST Bad Weather Things to Do in Puerto de la Cruz
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12. Taxi Puerto de La Cruz
Taxi and route buses
Open
Author: Thheshamins
used taxi services many times, so far rested. Good, clean cars, always friendly and…
13. Bee Hive Pub
Bars and clubs
18. La Volá
Bars and Clubs • Coffeei
19. ABACO
BARA
BARA and Clubs
BARA and Clubs
20. Relax Center Puerto de La Cruz
21. Anderson Gay Pub & Show Bar
gay bars
22. Bar Cafeteria EL ARADO
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9000 9000 9000.000 BAR000. ROSANEGRA.
24. Bar de Copas Pub El Jardin
Bars and Clubs • Karaoke Bara
25. Aloe Vera de Canarias
Specialized and souvenir stores
26. Discoteca t-Flon
Bars and clubs • Karaoke-bar
EKATERINA M
Moscow, Russia50002 Moscow : Iglesia de Nuestra Senora de la Pena Francia
City Center
The cathedral is located in the historical center of the city and is its architectural dominant. Streets with old buildings 18-19 depart from itcentury with carved wooden balconies characteristic of the island. Entrance to the cathedral is free, inside is a simple, but rather majestic interior. The bell tower of the cathedral adorns the panorama of the city and is visible from all hotels.
Published September 19, 2017
This review represents the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and is not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
kosarevakhv
Madrid, Spain27 publications
Review of: Museo del Pescador
good museum
for such a small town this maritime museum is a gem. a lot of exhibits. history of the navy. kids are interested
Published January 22, 2018
This review represents the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and is not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
ti040773
St. Petersburg, Russia223 publications
Review of: Teatro Timanfaya
Superb
The Timanfaya area itself is covered in lava. It is impressive that there is a breathing volcano under you, especially when you pick up pebbles after 1 layer, burning straw a meter from the ground and a hot water geyser formed by pouring a bucket of water into a well. Great!!!!
Published September 30, 2014
This review represents the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and is not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
vared
Saint-Petersburg, Russia6 publications
Review for: Las Pirámides de Martianez
you can look in from nothing to do
all previous reviews are correct. the mall is pretty empty. but I did buy 2 pairs of jeans there for 20 euros and some cool slippers for 19 euros.
Published November 7, 2018
This review represents the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
Elena M
Saint Petersburg, Russia Small Canarian balconies, contrasting windows decorated with wood, open from plaster and stones at the corners that also contrast with the general light background. It stands on the very shore of the ocean.
Open Monday to Friday from 9.00 to 20.00, Saturday – from 9.00 to 14.00.
The building is believed to be the oldest in Puerto de la Cruz, dating back to 1620. Here was the customs office of the kingdom.
The museum was established in the middle of the last century and became the first contemporary art museum in Spain. Eduardo Westerdahl, who founded it, was considered an outstanding critic of his time.
Don’t miss the very dynamic sculpture on the waterfront of the Fisherman’s Port adjacent to the building. The system of moles protecting the port from storms is also interesting.
Published April 27, 2018
This review represents the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and is not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
Richard_Roe_42
Moscow, Russia816 publications
Reviewed by: The English Library Tenerife
Not for everyone
The library is of course chic, old, over 100 years old. But to be honest, for people who came for a short break, I don’t think this place is worth a visit. Perhaps if you live here on a permanent basis, this place will interest you.
Published February 20, 2016
This review represents the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and is not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
Xenia G
Moscow, Russia154 publications
Review for: Museo Arqueologico Puerto de la Cruz
A small museum dedicated to the culture of the Guanches
Very little is known about the culture of the natives – the Guanches. These crumbs of information can be found in the museum and look at a couple of archaeological finds, the application and meaning of which have no clear interpretation. Concerts are held in the courtyard of the museum, and there are several very pleasant and tasty family restaurants nearby. If you want some quiet entertainment for the evening and live nearby, then I recommend.
Published May 27, 2016
This review represents the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and is not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
Natalia S
23 publications
Reviewed by: Teide Divers
volcano
we rented a car. The road to the volcano is a serpentine with beautiful views.
Published May 29, 2014
This review represents the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and is not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
TheShamins
Moscow, Russia 465 publications
Review for: Taxi Puerto de la Cruz
Excellent taxi service
Have used taxi services many times while vacationing. Good, clean cars, friendly and polite drivers always came across. Payment strictly according to the counter. The minimum initial cost for August 2019 is 3.15 euros. But in general, within the city, the prices are very pleasant.
No cons found.
Posted on September 11, 2019
This review reflects the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and is not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
Dmitriy V
Moscow, Russia1,596 contributions
Review of: Bee Hive Pub
Pub
Classic English pub with a beach twist Good beer selection. Friendly service. I can’t tell you about the food, because they came mainly for drinks
Published on May 3, 2016
This review reflects the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
Pavel_Anufriev
Tyumen, Russia43 publications
Review for: La Ranilla Espacio Artesano
Very nice
Gift shop. Mostly handmade, interesting and not hackneyed. Prices are above average. Located on a very pleasant street, there are interesting things around.
Posted December 7, 2016
This review represents the subjective opinion of a member of the Tripadvisor community and is not the official position of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor checks reviews.
Attractions Puerto de la Cruz
A centuries-old city with a rich history. It differs from neighboring resorts mainly in the fact that Puerto de la Cruz was not created intentionally for tourists. Many local residents live here, so vacationers have the opportunity to learn more about the life of the indigenous population and get acquainted with their culture.
Puerto de la Cruz is one of the most attractive family holiday resorts in the Canary Islands. There are many natural reserves and attractions, water parks and … Open
One of the attractions of the resort is the beach of Playa Jardin. The sand here is black because it is of volcanic origin. The unique combination of black sandstone, waves sparkling in the sun and lush greenery creates the impression of a fabulous mirage. Not far away is another miracle of nature – a waterfall, which you can admire endlessly.
Not deprived of Puerto de la Cruz and historical monuments. You should definitely take a walk along the main square of Charco, on which there is a statue depicting the Virgin Mary. One of the oldest architectural buildings is the castle of San Felipe. Of the modern establishments, it is worth highlighting Miranda’s house, which houses the most popular souvenir shop in the city. But connoisseurs of art should visit the Abaco House, which today houses a museum of architecture. Copyright www.orangesmile.com
The popular resort is sure to please tourists with a wide choice of restaurants and cafes. Some gastronomic establishments are especially popular with vacationers. One of the most popular … Open
One of the most beautiful religious buildings is the church of Nuestra Señora de la Pena de Francia. Puerto de la Cruz is home to the world’s oldest botanical garden. It was opened in 1788 and presents more than a thousand species of trees and plants to the attention of visitors. In the village of El Sauzal you can find the oldest wine storage, next to which is the Wine Museum and, of course, a tasting room and a large restaurant. Music lovers should visit the largest concert hall Fiesta Canaria, which hosts amazingly beautiful shows and concerts. Nightlife lovers will also not be bored, because the city has discos, nightclubs and casinos for every taste.
An obligatory point of many excursion programs is the ancient tower of Torreon Vintoso, which is part of the surviving defensive structures. The tower has been perfectly preserved to this day. Tourists are offered to climb one of its four balconies and enjoy a panoramic view of the city and its coastal zone. In the immediate vicinity of the tower is Taoro Park, which will be a great place to relax on a hot day.
Residents of Puerto de la Cruz observe a lot of interesting traditions. One of the main embodiments of regional culture is interesting holidays that are held in the resort throughout the year. … Open
Nature lovers will be interested in visiting the local Loro Park, which is considered a landmark of world importance. He became famous for his huge collection of parrots, visitors to the park will be able to see the rarest tropical birds. Ideal conditions have been created for them in the park; a lot of exotic plants are planted here; in addition to birds, you can see beautiful butterflies. Some parrots are allowed to be held and fed.
A kind of historical landmark is the old Anglican cemetery, which was founded in 1667. Today it is of great interest from an architectural point of view. Many prominent political and military figures are buried in this cemetery. Despite the specifics of the object, it is not at all distinguished by an oppressive atmosphere. Visiting the cemetery will be of interest to everyone who is interested in history and ancient architecture.
Puerto de la Cruz is the oldest resort in Tenerife and is very different from neighboring beach villages. It is here that the main part of the indigenous people lives, and there is a huge … Open
One of the most interesting places for independent walks will be the old fishing harbor. Many beautiful old houses have been preserved here, most of which were built in the 17th century. Each of the houses located here is a unique architectural monument. Many historical buildings today house attractive national restaurants, souvenir shops and craft workshops.
A few years ago, the resort hosted the opening of a large entertainment complex Lago Martianes, which offers visitors to enjoy interesting entertainment literally around the clock. The main value of the complex are beautiful pools with sea water and a variety of attractions, they will be a great alternative to the usual beaches. There is also a large casino, various restaurants and bars on the territory of the center, so visitors can relax and have fun until late at night. In the daytime, it will be comfortable to relax with children in the entertainment center.
Cultural attractions in Puerto de la Cruz
Puerto de la Cruz is the oldest resort in Tenerife and is very different from neighboring beach villages. It is here that the main part of the indigenous people lives, and there is a huge number of important historical sites. The symbol of the city is the beautiful Charco Square, the main decoration of which is the statue of the Virgin Mary. All national holidays and important events take place on the square. Nearby, you can find several interesting tourist sites, popular restaurants and shops.
Among the religious attractions, the church of Nuestra Senora de la Pena de Francia is outstanding. Weddings take place here literally every night. The church is distinguished by its attractive appearance and luxurious interior decoration. A lot of romantic legends and beliefs are associated with this attraction. Preserved on the territory of the resort and several important fortifications, including the medieval fortress of San Felipe (San Felipe).
Several centuries ago, it protected the coastal zone from numerous conquerors and pirates; the castle saved the fate of the city and local residents more than once. For hiking, the old fishing port is a great place. Over the past hundred years, it has not changed much, here you can still see the arriving fishermen’s boats, and there is a wonderful fish market near the port area.
One of the most beautiful architectural monuments is the Royal Customs Building (Casa de la Real). Despite the fact that it is a monument of a later period, next to the old buildings, the spectacular building looks very harmonious. Many of the historic houses have now been converted into entertainment venues and shops, making walking around the city even more enjoyable. More about cultural attractions
Things to do in Puerto de la Cruz
Puerto de la Cruz can offer its guests two exotic beaches covered with black volcanic sand. The Playa Jardin beach is the most popular among vacationers. It is fully equipped for a comfortable stay and sports entertainment. The beach has literally everything you need for an exciting pastime: comfortable changing rooms and beach equipment rentals, several excellent restaurants, playgrounds for children and showers.
An incredibly beautiful tropical garden originates a few steps from the coast, so at any time you can change your stay on the sunny coast for a walk through the tropical thickets. Also near the beach is a large complex of pools with sea water. It will be a real find for vacationers with children and those who cannot swim. Playa Martianez is considered a “wild” beach; it has managed to preserve its original natural beauty.
It will not be the best place for a family holiday, since the sea on this stretch of coast is restless, but it will appeal to those who want to relax away from the hustle and bustle. Fans of natural attractions and hiking should definitely look into the local Botanical Garden. It was founded in 1788 and is one of the oldest in the world.
On the territory of the garden there are more than a thousand plants brought from different islands of the Canary archipelago. Connoisseurs of local wine will definitely be impressed by a trip to the Casa del Vino wine storage located in the vicinity of the resort. It is the largest and oldest on the island. In addition to the most interesting Wine Museum, excursion participants will be able to visit a tasting room and buy their favorite wine at a local store. More about entertainment
Puerto de la Cruz attractions for families with children
Puerto de la Cruz is one of the most attractive family holiday resorts in the Canary Islands. There are many natural reserves and attractions, water parks and entertainment centers, as well as other places where you can have a great time with the whole family. The most popular holiday destination for tourists with children is Loro Park – an unusual zoo with an incredibly beautiful design. It is located on the territory of a beautiful tropical garden. Parrots are one of the main inhabitants of this zoo. You can also see larger birds and some species of monkeys here. There is also a wonderful oceanarium on the territory of the zoo. It is very large, in addition to huge aquariums with fish, it has a large transparent tunnel, as well as a specially equipped hall in which penguins live. To see all the sights of Loro Park, it will not be enough for a whole day.
The most unusual entertainment center of the resort is Costa Martianez. It only remotely resembles modern water parks. This recreation center was opened in a unique area, next to healing thermal springs. There are several swimming pools for vacationers, and everyone can rent sun loungers and parasols. The entertainment complex is open from early morning until late in the evening, there is a cafe and a restaurant on its territory, and in the evenings discos are organized for visitors.
Those who most of all like to relax with children in nature should visit the local Botanical Garden. The Canary Islands are famous for their exotic flora. The most unusual representatives of the plant world were collected in this botanical garden. Tropical flowers are of particular interest, some of them are real predators. Children will definitely enjoy walking among the thickets of palm trees, they will be able to see real tropical trees with vines, and also see how bananas and other exotic fruits grow.
Among the natural attractions of the resort, interesting for visiting with children, it is worth highlighting the Parque Taoro park. You can walk around this park for free, it is small, so it is accessible even for visiting with small children. The pearl of this park are the beautiful waterfalls hidden among the dense vegetation, their search for many tourists becomes an exciting event. The park is equipped with several viewing platforms, which offer panoramic views of the resort and the coast. There is also a restaurant where you can have a great family dinner. More about children’s attractions
This guide to Puerto de la Cruz attractions is protected by the copyright law. Full reprinting is permitted only if the source is indicated with a direct link to www.orangesmile.com.
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Sights around Puerto de la Cruz from our guide 9 ‘Extreme places on Earth’1495
Auditorium Tenerife
From the series “Famous Expressionist Buildings”
Check on the map: Distance from Puerto de la Cruz center – 30.1 km.
The construction of the hall began in 1997, and the grand opening took place in 2003. The main feature of the building was an unusual wave-shaped roof, the height of some elements of which is 50 meters. The total weight of such an original roofing roof was 350 tons. Inside the building there are two concert halls, designed for 1,616 and 422 spectators, respectively. In addition to concert halls, the cultural center has two galleries and a spacious hall; the interior decoration is also distinguished by incredible architectural forms. One of the main decorations of the Tenerife auditorium was the organ designed by the Spanish master Albert Blancafort. …
Read more
Pyramids of Guimar
From the series “The surviving pyramids of the planet”
Check on the map: Distance from the center of Puerto de la Cruz – 15 km.
Many scientists, including Thor Heyerdahl, categorically disagree with this theory of the appearance of the pyramids. In addition to round boulders from local fields, pieces of lava were also used in the construction of the pyramids. The ground before the construction of the next pyramid was carefully leveled, and the correct architectural form of the structures is completely incomprehensible: why make the right pyramids out of stones, if you can just pile them in a heap? Today, six ancient pyramids are combined into a large complex, on the territory of which there are several museums and beautiful recreation areas. Many tourists tend to visit the Guimar pyramids on the day of the summer solstice to observe a unique phenomenon – a double sunset – another mystery of strange structures. …
Read more
What to see in Puerto de la Cruz – Kids and Parents Air
Hello friends! Today we will reveal the topic of the “northern capital” of Tenerife. What to see and where to go in Puerto de la Cruz? And, according to tradition, the article is “seasoned” with personal impressions, tips and recommendations from KnPAir.ru.
Article guide:
Climate, features and general information
Climate
Is it worth going here with small children?
How to get there?
What to see in Puerto?
Entertainment for children and parents
Attractions
Climate, features, general information
Climate
I will not tire of repeating about the diversity of the island, if in the South it is dry, there is little vegetation and the swimming season is 365 days a year, then in the North everything is exactly the opposite.
Entrance from Playa Martianez. Foggy and sad
Puerto de la Cruz can be compared with the Baltic resorts. Yes, the winter here is warm and without snow, below 15 degrees does not happen. But, if we ignore the fact that in Jurmala or Klaipeda there is an actual winter and take summer as a basis, then it’s right one to one. It is also humid and chilly, fogs periodically cover the city (regardless of the time of year).
There is a positive side though. Puerto is replete with vegetation, not artificially planted, as in the South, but given by Mother Nature.
Is it worth going here with small children?
Answer: It is necessary to see the city in order to get a general idea of the island. There are also popular entertainment and historical attractions, which we will describe below. But for a long vacation, Puerto de la Cruz is not the best place.
Santa Barbara battery – bottom view. The impression is overshadowed by the rubbish thrown out by tourists from above
In addition to the high humidity, which children endure painfully, there is a very restless ocean, always big waves, rocky entries into the water. More or less suitable beaches for small satellites are at a considerable distance.
How to get there?
By car:
From Los Cristianos take TF-1 towards Santa Cruz until exit 6, where you get off at TF-2 (landmark signs La Laguna and North Airport). Keep to the left near the tunnel to get to TF-5. We drive along it up to TF-31, then follow the signs.
From Adeje and Los Gigantes move to the town of Santiago del Teide, from where you need to get to the turn for TF-373 along the mountain road. After passing El-Tanque on a circle, we move to TF-5. Approaching Puerto, you will see signs, be guided by them.
By public transport:
From Los Cristianos you can take buses 110 and 111 with a change in Santa Cruz on route 103.
From Puerto Santiago there is a direct bus 325 to the city center.
What to see and where to go?
Entertainment that children and their parents will appreciate
Charco Square
For us it is a picturesque playground in the shade of trees, for the Canarians it is the center of the old town (the title photo was taken in front of the children’s area).
As always – soft and safe surface, lots of walkers and children! Arina calmly climbed onto this swing without outside helpSwing for disabled children
Loropark
This is the most exciting and enjoyable activity in the city, or rather on its outskirts. In Loro it will not be boring for sure. Animals, aquariums with various marine reptiles, penguinarium, killer whale shows, dolphins, fur seals and so on.
Article about the zoo
Buy tickets available online .
Pools of Lago Martianes
Huge pool complex with outdoor slides. Entrance is 5.5 euros for adults, 2.5 for children. Sun loungers, catering and other pleasures for an additional fee. Perhaps this is the only place in Puerto where you can really swim with children without compromising your health.
The official website of the complex https://ociocostamartianez. com
Tenerife from A to Z. Complete guide
Attractions
Playa Martianes
Very close to the pools Lago Martianes is the promenade of the same name . In sunny weather, it is very beautiful here, but when clouds hang over the city, you feel so alone.
Don’t forget to use sunscreen! Even in cloudy weather in the Canary Islands, you can get burned. Remember – this is the equator
Sitio Litre
If you go from the promenade inland along Avenue Aguilar and Quesada and turn off at Sitio Litra then guess where you will end up? Correctly! At Sitio Litre Gardens . Opening hours from 9:30 to 18:00. Entrance fee (about 5 euros). This is a private estate, well, a very small one. Love Agatha Christie and orchids – you are here!
Taoro Park
Not far from Sitio Litre is the Taoro Public Park . The place is quite specific, for photographers. The waterfall is a bonus. But in general, you don’t have to climb here (you have to go uphill).
Fishing Harbor
In all guidebooks (ours is no exception), you will be sent to Fishing Harbor . Conventionally, it begins at Charco Square.
Ta-da-dam! Although in this picture we are rather tired of stuffiness and humidity, but how not to take a picture near the monument to the “Rybachka”, especially when she is clearly glad to see us!
Battery Santa Barbara
There are two museums in the harbor, however, we brought you here not for their sake, but for the sake of a historically significant Batteries Santa Barbara .
This fortification was built in the 18th century. The main purpose was protection from pirate raids. The fort is impressive. Cannons (trophies from foreign ships) dating back to the 18th century are also exhibited in the open air.
Walking around the fort If you reach the end, you will come to the Plaza de España and the City Hall. Yes! Every self-respecting major city in Spain should have a square named after itself!
Anglican Church with a memorial complex and Sortiha Park
Welcome sign saying we’ve come to the right place
Located a little further from Taoro Park. We couldn’t stop here. For us, it was not even the church itself that was of interest, although it is very unusual.
The church was closed, but the entrance to the territory is free
Our family pulled in this direction because of the memorial erected to those who died in a plane crash in 1977. For some reason, I decided (probably everything was mixed up in my head) that the memorial was erected in memory of the worst plane crash at Los Rodeos Airport when two airliners collided due to controller error and pilot carelessness in 1977.
So, having arrived, hoping to pay tribute to the memory of the dead, we found that we pay tribute, but for a completely different reason.
In 1980, a British charter flight at full speed crashed into the mountains near Los Rodeos due to a misunderstanding between the pilot and the controller.
The memorial is a small bench and a garden like this.
Playa Jardin
Subjectively, this is the most worthy beach of all in Puerto: dark gray fine sand, gentle sunset and clear water, waves and clouds have not been canceled.
Castillo San Philippe
Adjacent to Jardin Beach is a small castle built in honor of King Philip, the founder of the city. For some reason, without exception, the Spaniards consider it majestic and large, it is not clear why.
Today the castle is used by the authorities for events and exhibitions. In the yard, so to speak, a cannon was installed. And, if you go around it, you will see stone “sculptures” – neatly built turrets made of stones of various sizes.
Such stone turrets, and not too lazy!
Ancient cemetery
Don’t be surprised that such a strange place made it to our list. According to rumors, well-known politicians and figures are buried here. We didn’t go into details. We did not break the silence with our reasoning, as we believe that any cemetery, whether it is ancient or founded yesterday, is sacred in itself. Therefore, we just went in and made sure that the cemetery from the guidebooks exists, and it is different from the ones we are used to.
See also:
Have questions? Feel free to ask them in the comments or by e-mail (contacts). Subscribe to our blog, share with friends.
Always yours, KnPAir.ru team!
What to see in Puerto de la Cruz – Real Tenerife. Real Tenerife.
Puerto de la Cruz is rightfully the pearl of the northern coast, the first resort town of Tenerife and one of the oldest ports. An incredible combination of narrow harbor streets and fortress cannons, modern hotels and cozy restaurants, green squares and breathtaking viewpoints, a unique microclimate that provides comfortable weather conditions all year round, as well as an extensive cultural program of the city attracts tourists from all over the world. Here are the main attractions of Puerto de la Cruz.
1. Loro Parque
Despite the negative publicity regarding killer whale and dolphin parks, Loro Parque is still one of the main attractions in Tenerife. Whether you write it down in the sights depends on how you feel about animals in captivity.
Loro Parque provides 135,000 square meters of subtropical gardens, including 7,000 palm trees, filled with exotic birds and wildlife. It boasts the largest and most diverse collection of parrots ever collected in the world. It is thanks to the parrots that the park is called Loro. The largest artificial iceberg inhabited by penguins, the largest dolphinarium in Europe, and besides, lions, gorillas, jaguars, sloths, red pandas, crocodiles, tigers, flamingos, turtles and many other experiences that allow you to spend almost all day in the park. Also here you can watch four types of performances: with fur seals, dolphins, killer whales and parrots.
Tickets cost €38 for adults and €26 for children (6 to 11 years old) and include admission to all shows.
Address: Av. Loro Parque, s/n
2. Botanical Garden
The “Garden of Acclimatization” (Jardín de Aclimatación) in Tenerife was opened on August 17, 1788 by decree of King Charles III and acted as an intermediate center allowing botanists to acclimatize exotic plants before transplanting them into the royal gardens. It is the oldest botanical garden in Tenerife and the second in Spain after Madrid. Here are collected the main collections of tropical and subtropical plants. There are many plants and trees that are interesting for their beauty, size, age, rarity, or distant origin. One of the puzzles of the botanical garden is how to fit in a photo a fabulous ficus of incredible size, which is royally spread in the very center of this picturesque jungle.
Entrance fee – 3 euros.
Opening hours: daily from 9.00 to 18.00. Address: Calle Retama, 2
3. Lago Martianez and Martianez beach
Designed by Lanzarote architect César Manrique, the pool complex in Lago Martianez impresses with its size and beauty and offers guests a variety of activities for both adults and children. Seven pools, including a large artificial lake of 15,000 sq. m, in the center of which there is an island with a restaurant and a casino. Around are tropical gardens, cascading waterfalls, pedestrian bridges, and, of course, various sculptures and monuments of Cesar Manrique himself.
At night, the pools are illuminated from below and the walkways sparkle, creating a stunning entrance to the Casino. Entrance €5.50 for a full day including sun lounger and free Wi-Fi.
Opening hours: daily from 10.00 to 18.00. Address: Avenida de Colon
Martiánez beach is nearby. Mostly it was chosen by surfers, however, the locals are happy to swim there and even fish. Previously, in the rock to which it adjoins, there was a source of drinking water, to which the locals attributed healing properties. According to the testimonies of seafarers, this water remained fresh in barrels for a long time.
4. Battery
Santa Barbara
Battery Santa Barbara reminds us that Puerto has long been the main port in Tenerife, after the destruction of Garachico by a volcanic eruption in 1706. And it was the main defensive structure of the time when formidable pirates reigned in the seas and oceans. Built in the 18th century, the Santa Barbara battery (Batería de Santa Barbara) was designed to ward off corsairs and pirates from the port. And now you can find a collection of cannons of the 18th and 19th centuries here. And the view of the raging ocean will leave few indifferent.
Address: Calle las Lonjas, 3
5. Fort San Felipe
The fortress of San Felipe is also one of the fortifications that were conceived in the past to protect the city from attacks by pirates and corsairs. The project was created by the engineer Prospero Cassol in 1634 and served its purpose until 1878. It was once surrounded by a moat and had a drawbridge, the place of which is now occupied by a fixed footbridge.
This building served not only to protect the coast, but also to care for the sick, served as an infirmary, warehouse, shooting gallery, restaurant, etc.
Now the fortress is a cultural center where exhibitions and various events are held.
Address: Calle Luis Lavaggi, 10.
6. Jardin Beach
Jardin Beach was also designed by Cesar Manrique and has been Puerto’s main beach since 1993. One kilometer long, it stretches from Punta Brava opposite Loro Parque to Castillo San Felipe. Fine black sand, a picturesque square with exotic plants and a raging ocean are the perfect tandem for walking. On the beach there are cafes and restaurants, as well as showers, changing rooms and toilets.
7. Area
Charco
This square is often referred to as the “heart” of the city. According to one version, it got its name Plaza del Charco (“charco” from the Spanish for “puddle, pond or pool”) thanks to a pool of sea water. According to another version, one of the names of the square sounds like Plaza del Charco de los Camarones, or “Square where there is a shrimp pond.” It is said that earlier, thanks to the tides, the waves rolled from the pier to the square, leaving numerous puddles, some of which were surrounded by stones in order to breed shrimp and fish in them. There are numerous restaurants around the square. And on the square itself, magnificent Indian laurels, brought from Cuba in 1852, have been preserved. There is also a large children’s playground. It is on this square that city events are often held, including the New Year’s Eve.
8. Church Nuestra Señora de la Peña de Francia
The main church of Puerto da la Cruz, Nuestra Señora de la Peña de Francia, was built at the very end of the 17th century. Here you can see Moorish Mudéjar wooden ceilings typical of the Canary Islands. There is also a fairly extensive collection of various silver utensils, made in Cuba in the 18th century by the famous silversmith Escobar. But the main treasure, of course, is the image of the Virgin of Carmen, the guardian of coastal cities and the protector of all sailors, especially revered in Puerto de la Cruz. In front of the church there is a cozy square with a fountain, where you can relax for a while in the shade of palm trees while walking around the city.
9. San Telmo Chapel and San Telmo Beach
Chapel of San Telmo (Ermita de San Telmo) was built in the middle of the XVIII century and its appearance is very authentic. It is consecrated in the name of Pedro Gonzalez San Pedro Telmo. This monk was known as the patron saint of sailors. A small white building with a built-in belfry-arch for one bell, an adjacent courtyard planted with palm trees and flowers. In July, when the city celebrates the feast of the fishermen, the statue of St. Thelma, like the Virgin of Carmen from the church of Nuestra Señora de la Peña de Francia, is solemnly carried out of the sanctuary, and then sent in a decorated boat with the best fishermen on a solemn voyage. By the way, the nearby San Telmo natural pools received this year the Blue Flag, an important international award confirming the quality of the marine recreation area.
Address: Calle de San Telmo, 5
10. El Peñón del Fraile
Peñón del Fraile, or “Rock of the Monk”, a symbolic place for the locals, not only because of the magnificent views of the coast from the cliff, but also because of its history. The rock was formed as a result of the Taoro volcano eruption in 1430. It owes its name to the monk Juan Jesus, who in the 18th century often climbed to its top to pray alone. Luis Lavaggi, a Genoese by birth, fell in love with this corner of the city and ennobled the natural creation by decorating it in 1813 with a cross and a stone staircase. The temple was built in 1855 and was restored in 2003 with a new bronze dome. Of course, there were some legends about pirates here too. It is said that the famous pirate hid his treasures in one of the crevices of the rock 19century of Caraperro.
Address: Calle Luis Lavaggi, 2D
11. Taoro Park
Taoro Park is located on the mountain of the same name, offering breathtaking views of the city of Puerto de la Cruz. On the territory, with an area of more than 100 thousand square meters, there are many gardens, alleys, viewing platforms, fountains and waterfalls.
Taoro Park is divided into three main areas: La Atalaya (watchtower), Camino de la Sortija (ring road) and Taoro Gardens. In the area of La Atalaya is the observation deck “Dulce Maria Loinas”. In the area of Camino de la Sortija, you can almost always see athletes training here every day. One of the main buildings of Taoro Park are the Gran Hotel Taoro and the Anglican Church. Gran Hotel Taoro built in 1890 year, at that time was one of the most important hotels on the island and hosted celebrities such as Agatha Christie.
Address: Ctra. Taoro, 27
12. La Paz observation deck
La Paz Lookout is a great place to enjoy views of Puerto da la Cruz and the ocean. There is also a restaurant there. Great view both during the day and at night of the city.
Next to the viewpoint is the 16th century chapel La Ermita de San Amaro. This is the oldest religious building in Puerto de la Cruz. Saint Maurus, in whose honor the chapel was erected, is famous for his miracles, in particular, walking on water.
Address: Calle Castaño, 1.
13. Sitio Litre Orchid Garden
This is Tenerife’s oldest garden, dating back 220 years. On its territory there is a private mansion built in 1730. According to some sources, the monastery was originally located. In 1774, the English merchant Archibald Little bought this villa, and it became known as Littles Place – “Little’s Place”. The Spaniards remade this name in their own way – “Sitio Litre”. And until now, the villa is the possession of the British. Its owners decided to open the doors of their luxurious garden to the general public. Here is the largest collection of orchids on the entire island, the oldest and largest dracaena in Puerto de la Cruz, as well as exhibits reminiscent of the visits of celebrities such as the famous explorer, encyclopedic scientist and botanist Alexander von Humboldt or Agatha Christie.
The garden has a café and a shop with traditional goods and an exhibition of various paintings donated by the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, with which there is a close collaboration.
Opening hours: daily from 9.30 to 17.00. Address: Camino Sitio Liter, S/N.
Ticket price: from EUR 4.50
14. Archaeological Museum
Housed in a 19th-century Canarian mansion in the maritime area of La Ranilla, the Archaeological Museum houses a large collection of Guanche pottery and mummified remains. Here you can also find a magnificent collection of maps from the 17th century and visit thematic exhibitions dedicated to various historical and cultural aspects of the Canary Islands.
Address: Calle el Lomo, 9ª. Opening hours from Tuesday to Saturday from 10:00 to 13:00 and from 17:00 to 21:00. Sunday from 10:00 to 13:00.
15. Fishing port
Puerto de la Cruz originally developed as a port for the wealthy city of La Orotava, exporting sugar and wine to the New World. From its founding in 1506 until independence from La Orotava in 1651, it was known as Puerto de la Orotava.
Today, the port is easy to spot by the fishing boats that float on the surface or stand on dry land.
During holidays such as the winter and summer carnivals, the port side is filled with drink stalls, hot dog vans and churro bars. At the top of the pebbly beach, a bronze statue of a fisherwoman, the work of local artist Julio Nieto, takes pride of place: a full-length woman with an octopus basket on her head and a bucket of fish swaying beside her. A favorite spot for selfies, it is regularly the focus of tourists’ cameras.
Next to the port is the beautiful former customs house Casa Aduana, built in 1620, which now houses the Tourist Office and the Eduardo Westerdahl Museum of Contemporary Art (MACEW)
90,000 where to settle, where to relax, what to see
Content
History of the resort
Sights of the resort
Puerto de Crus beaches
Playa Martianez
Playa Jardin
,000
9000 9000 la Cruz
BOTANICO 5* GL&SPA
SEMIRAMIS 5*
BAHIA PRINCIPE SAN FELIPE 4*
h20 TENERIFE PLAYA 4*
MELIA PUERTO DE LA CRUZ 4*0006
CASABLANCA CLUB 3 KEYS
MELIA LA PAZ 2 keys
The history of the resort
It is located in the Orotava Valley in the north of the island, 25 km from the Santa Rodeos airport and 37 km from the capital of Tenquerife. The rich and varied flora with evergreen forests (monteverde), extensive banana plantations outside the city is due to the influence of the trade winds, which maintain the resort’s humid climate.
Here life passes at its unhurried pace. It seems that elderly seniors, playing dominoes in the shade of numerous palm trees brought from Cuba, office workers rushing to work, children playing on playgrounds, do not notice the numerous tourists at all.
Puerto de la Cruz began its existence in the 16th century as the port of the community of La Orotava. Soon a square and a church were built in the port, but Puerto de la Cruz remained an inconspicuous fishing village until the eruptions of Mount Teide, the highest point in all of Spain, destroyed the main port of the island of Garachico in 1706.
Thus, Puerto (as the inhabitants call it for short) became the most important port of the island. The settlement grew and soon became an important trade center for wine, the production of which was facilitated by fruitful vineyards.
At the end of the 19th century, the city with full municipal autonomy came to the attention of moneybags from Foggy Albion, who chose Puerto as a place to relax.
Healthy ocean air and mild climate increasingly attracted guests, for whose accommodation the first Grand Hotel Taoro was built and the old mansions Monopol and Marquesa were converted into hotels. After the development of the island of the sunny south by the government in the 80s of the XX century, numerous tourists rushed there, and the city became the second most important.
Attractions of the resort
It is definitely worth getting into the city, as its embankment is a favorite place for itinerant musicians, artists who bring culture to the masses, and street vendors of contraband goods has been and remains a place for a pleasant walk for couples in love and families with children .
If you need freshly caught seafood and fish, you can go shopping in the morning at the local fishing port (near Harbor Street – Calle de la Marina) or even easier – go to the nearest supermarket. There is also a decent assortment of dairy products and cheeses.
Please note that there is a poor selection of cereals in stores. To buy buckwheat – you still need to look. The same is true for loose leaf black tea. Almost a deficit, who would have thought? Of course, the choice in bags is good, but sometimes you want to drink natural tea as well.
And about the dishes of the local Canarian cuisine, where meat and seafood predominate, we tell in this article.
Such sights of the city as the botanical garden, “Loro Parque” or parrot park, the central square of the city “Plaza del Charco”, the Archaeological Museum, the Anglican Church of All Saints and “Nuestra Señora de la Peña de Francia”, etc. are always attractive not only for old English people, but also for tourists of all ages.
Puerto de la Cruz beaches
The Atlantic Ocean in the north of the island is no longer in check and swimming in it is often dangerous due to huge waves. There are 2 beaches in the resort that deserve attention.
Playa Martianez
The natural beach in the eastern part of the city is covered with black volcanic sand. It is 350 m long and 25 m wide. kitesurfers.
Near this beach, a complex of artificial lakes Lago Martianez filled with ocean water and islands of volcanic lava has become an excellent alternative to swimming in the unpredictable ocean. The complex is the creation of the architect and artist Caesar Manrique, according to whose project the unique lakes were created in 1977.
An artificial lake with an area of 15,000 square meters with fountains occupies almost half of the entire complex. Small pools are for children. Lago Martianez, decorated with numerous palm trees, installations and sculptures of the architect, is open every day from 10:00 to 19:00, but you can only enter until 17:00.
A ticket for one adult will cost 3.5 €, for children aged 4 to 10 years – 0.5 €. Discounts are available for 2-4 week passes.
Playa Jardin
Spacious beach, surrounded by palm groves, located in the western part of the resort and covered with dark volcanic sand.
Architect Cesar Manrique completed the beach by 1993, using 4,000 concrete breakwater blocks and 230,000 volcanic sand.
Its length, with rocks divided into three sections, is 700 m, width – 50 m. There is a botanical garden next to it, from which the beach got its name.
Hotels Puerto de la Cruz
Unprotected from bad weather, clouds and frequent rainfall, Puerto is not so attractive for bigwigs in the hotel business, who prefer to build hotels in the southern part of the island, where the air temperature is several degrees higher.
We talk about the weather in Tenerife by months in this review – you should definitely take it into account when planning your vacation.
Therefore, there are not many hotels in the city, among which these deserve attention.
BOTANICO 5* GL&SPA
The luxurious hotel of the Gran Luxe category is one 6-storey building.
The hotel has 5 bars, 2 swimming pools with sea and fresh water, a luxurious SPA center and a children’s playground.
A distinctive feature of the hotel is that the hotel staff asks guests not to visit bars and restaurants in shorts after 20:00.
Evening dress code is required to visit the Oriental restaurant. There is live music in the lobby in the evenings.
A free bus runs between the hotel and the city center on weekdays.
SEMIRAMIS 5*
The hotel consists of 17 floors and is located on the ocean, but there is no beach near the hotel. All standard double rooms and 2 suites have a sea view. Right in the rocky shore there is a swimming pool with ocean water. In addition to it, there are 2 more swimming pools with fresh water and heating. Distance to the city center – 1.5 km, to the nearest beach Playa Martianez – 1.3 km.
BAHIA PRINCIPE SAN FELIPE 4*
One multi-storey tower building with 260 rooms located 200 m from Playa Martianez beach, next to the Lago Martianez shopping center and the complex of artificial lakes. The hotel has three swimming pools, two of which are heated in winter, three bars, a shop, a hairdresser.
The view from the windows is amazing: some rooms overlook the Atlantic Ocean, while others look out onto the Teide volcano, which is the symbol of Tenerife and is even depicted on its coat of arms.
h20 TENERIFE PLAYA 4*
The hotel, like the previous one, is located near the shopping center and Lago Martianez, 50 m from the beach. The hotel has 2 swimming pools and solariums on its rooftops.
MELIA PUERTO DE LA CRUZ 4*
The hotel building, located 1 km from Playa Martianez beach, was built back in 1973, and its reconstruction was completed by 1998.
On its territory, immersed in greenery, there are 2 swimming pools for adults and 1 for children. In the evening, in addition to watching the show, you can walk to the center or the botanical garden in just 10 minutes.
It is worth mentioning such “fours” as a cozy hotel with a green area SOL PARQUE SAN ANTONIO 4 *, located near Taoro Park, 2 km from the ocean, and the eight-story SOL PUERTO PLAYA 4 *, which deserves special attention, because it is located in 200 m from Playa Jardin beach and only 500 m from the commercial and historical center of the city.
Spain is a country in Southern Europe. It is in the Iberian Peninsula. Spain has borders with France, Portugal, Andorra and Gibraltar. Ceuta and Melilla border with Morocco in North Africa. In Spain’s northeast side are the Pyrenees mountains.
The people of Spain are called Spaniards. They speak Castilian or Spanish (in Spanish, “Castellano”, from Castilla, or “Español”). They speak other languages in some parts of the country. They are Catalan, Basque, and Asturian, Galician, Leonese, Aragonese, Aranese Occitan and even Portuguese. The religion of about 56% of the population in Spain is Roman Catholic.
Since 1975, Spain has had a constitutional monarchy. The King of Spain is Felipe VI; he only does what the constitution allows him to. The parliament is called “Las Cortes Generales,” and has two bodies: “El Congreso” (The Congress) and “El Senado” (The Senate) and it is chosen by the Spanish people by voting. The Prime minister is Pedro Sánchez. The government and the king’s palace are in Madrid, the capital of Spain.
Spain has more than five hundred thousand square kilometres of land. It is smaller than France, but it is bigger than Germany. Almost fifty million people live in Spain. Spain is divided into 17 autonomous communities (this means that they can decide upon some affairs themselves). Each community has its own government.
Spain is known for flamenco which is usually performed by the Caló.
Contents
1 History of Spain
1.1 Early history
1.2 Moorish occupation
1.3 Kingdom of León
1.4 16th and 17th century
1.5 18th century
1.6 19th century
1.7 20th century
1.8 21st century
2 Religion
3 Geography of Spain
3.1 Regions
3.2 Spain, Tapas
3.3 City areas
4 Languages
5 References
5.1 Notes
Main article: History of Spain
Early history[change | change source]
Lady of Elche made by the Iberians
People have lived in Spain since the Stone Age. Later, the Roman Empire controlled Spain for about five hundred years; then as the Roman Empire broke up, groups of Germanic people including Visigoths moved in and took control.
Moorish occupation[change | change source]
In 711, the Umayyads took over, and later groups from North Africa, called the Moors. At first the Moors ruled most of Spain but the reconquista slowly forced them out over seven centuries. They called the land Al-Andalus. They were Muslims, and Muslim Spain was the farthest western point of Islamic civilization. The Caliphate of Córdoba fell apart in the early 11th century and Muslim rulers sometimes fought each other when they were not fighting the Christians. Muslim Spain was focused on learning. The greatest library system outside [[Baghda
Kingdom of León[change | change source]
The Kingdom of León, the most important in the early Spanish Middle Ages, was started in 910. This Kingdom developed the first democratic parliament (Cortes de Llión) in Europe in 1188. After 1301, León had the same King as the Kingdom of Castile in personal union. The various kingdoms remained independent territories until 1833, when Spain was divided into regions and provinces.
In 1492, the Christians took the last part of Spain that still belonged to the Moors, Granada. Boabdil, the last Moorish King of Granada, surrendered to King Ferdinand II of Aragon and Isabella I of Castile on 2 January 1492. Ferdinand and Isabella then ruled all of Spain.
Before this, there were a number of Christian countries in what is now called Spain. Two of these countries, Castile and Aragon, came together when Ferdinand II of Aragon married the queen Isabella of Castile. The King ruled as much as the Queen.
Inside of the Mezquita in Córdoba, a Muslim mosque which became a Christian cathedral.
In the same year, 1492, they sent Christopher Columbus to sail across the Atlantic Ocean. Columbus found the islands of the Caribbean Sea.
When other Europeans explored, like Hernán Cortés and Francisco Pizarro, they found out that there were two continents there – North America and South America. Spanish conquistadores took over very large parts of those two continents. This empire did not make Spain a rich country, for most of the money had to be spent in wars in Italy and elsewhere. Some of these wars were fought against other European countries who were trying to take over parts of the Americas.
Meanwhile, at home, the Muslim manuscripts had been either burnt or taken to other countries. Jews had also been expelled from Spain. Some Jews remained but they had to become Christians. Among the few old things kept and respected in Spain were in music: harmony and stringed instruments. The buildings that had been built by the Moors were kept, and many Muslim religious buildings (mosques) were turned into churches. Some Jewish religious buildings were also turned into churches. Many Arab words became part of the Spanish Language
16th and 17th century[change | change source]
The grandson of Ferdinand and Isabella was Charles. When his grandfather died he inherited Castille and Aragon. He also inherited many territories at the death of his other grandfather, Maximilian I of Austria. Charles received from Maximilian the Austria state and the territories of Burgundy. He was named Charles I in Spain, but he was elected as the emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, and was called Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor. This made the empire bigger than ever. However, it was not a single country, but a personal union of many independent countries with a single King. At first many Spaniards did not want Charles as their king, so they fought against him. However, he won.
Charles did not like the Protestant Reformation, and fought against it.
18th century[change | change source]
In the 18th century some of the parts of that large empire became their own countries, or were taken over by new countries, such as the United States of America.
19th century[change | change source]
Spain (and other European countries) was invaded by Napoleon of France. Britain sent troops to defend the peninsula, since it was so weak. Most of the Spanish Empire became independent in the following decades.
20th century[change | change source]
There was not much peace in Spain during the first part of the 20th century. Some Spaniards tried to set up a government chosen by the people (a democracy), and they made Alfonso XIII leave the country. However, in 1936, two different groups of Spaniards went to war over whether the government should be a democracy, in the Spanish Civil War (although those on the side of the Republic were largely socialist or anarchist), or take orders from one person. In 1939, those who wanted democracy were defeated, and a nationalist dictator named Francisco Franco took over the government.
Francisco Franco died on 20 November 1975. He had decided that Spain should have a monarchy again, and he chose Juan Carlos, the grandson of Juan of Bourbon who had been forced to leave the country, to be king and Adolfo Suárez to become its first Prime Minister. But the king and Suárez did not rule as a dictator; instead, they chose to set up a democracy.
On 23 February 1981 a group of people who had supported the now dead General Franco tried to take control of the democratic Spanish Parliament by force, they entered the building and fired guns in the air. It was seen live on Spanish television and there was widespread fear that this might be the start of another civil war. However, Juan Carlos I, quickly appeared on television and broadcast to the nation that they should remain calm. The persons responsible for the attempt to take over the country were arrested.
Now Spain is a modern democratic country, and does business with many countries around the world. It is the eighth largest economy in the world and is an important part of the European Union.
21st century[change | change source]
On 2 June 2014, Juan Carlos I announced that he would abdicate in favour of his son, Felipe VI.[12] The date of abdication and handover to Felipe occurred on 19 June 2014. He and his wife kept their titles.[13]
Ancient religions in Spain were mostly pagan. Today, however, at least 68 percent of Spain is Roman Catholic.[14] Spanish mystic Teresa of Ávila is an important figure within Catholicism. 27 percent of Spaniards are irreligious. 2 percent are from other religions, this include Baha’i Buddhists, Jain, Muslim,Unitarian Universalism and Zoroastrianism.
Teide National Park, Tenerife
The middle of Spain is a high, dry, flat land called La Meseta. In La Meseta it can be very hot in the summer and cold or very cold in the winter. Spain also has many mountain ranges. The Mount Teide (Tenerife, Canary Islands), the highest mountain of Spain and the islands of the Atlantic (it is the third largest volcano in the world from its base). In the north there is a range of mountains called Los Picos de Europa (The European Peaks). Here it is very cold in winter with a lot of snow but with gentle warm summers.
In the south-east of the country is a range of mountains called La Sierra Nevada (The Snowy Mountains). This range of mountains contains the highest mountain in mainland Spain, Mulacen, at 2952 metres. La Sierra Nevada is very popular in winter for winter sports, especially skiing. Snow remains on its peaks throughout the year. The south coast, has a warm and temperate climate, not very hot or very cold. Since Spain is in the south of Europe, it is very sunny. Many people from Northern Europe take their vacations in Spain, enjoying its beaches and cities.
Spain has a border with Portugal in the west and borders with France and Andorra in the North. In the south, it borders Gibraltar, a British territory. The Spanish territories of Ceuta and Melilla are in North Africa and border onto Morocco.
Regions[change | change source]
Spain is divided into Autonomous Communities, which means that they have their own regional governments. They are Andalucía (capital city Seville), Aragon (capital city Zaragoza), Asturias (capital city Oviedo), Balearic Islands (capital city Palma de Mallorca), Basque Country (capital city Vitoria), Canary Islands (capital cities Santa Cruz de Tenerife and Las Palmas), Cantabria (capital city Santander), Castilla-La Mancha (capital city Toledo), Castile and Leon (capital city Valladolid), Catalonia (capital city Barcelona), Extremadura (capital city Merida), Galicia (capital city Santiago de Compostela), La Rioja (capital city Logrono), Madrid Community (capital city Madrid), Murcia Community (capital city Murcia), Navarra (capital city Pamplona) and the Valencia Community (capital city Valencia).
Spain, Tapas[change | change source]
City areas[change | change source]
In Spain, many people live in cities or close to cities. The ten biggest city areas are:
Pos.
City area
Region
Prov.
population (city + area)
1
Madrid
Madrid
Madrid
5,263,000
2
Barcelona
Catalonia
Barcelona
4,251,000
3
Valencia
Valencian Community
Valencia
1,499,000
4
Sevilla
Andalucia
Seville
1,262,000
5
Bilbao
Basque Country
Biscay
947,000
6
Málaga
Andalusia
Málaga
844,000
7
Oviedo–Gijón
Asturias
Asturias
844,000
8
Alicante–Elche
Valencian Community
Alicante
793,000
9
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Canarias
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
640,000
10
Zaragoza
Aragon
Zaragoza
639,000
Languages of Spain
While Spanish is the most spoken language in the country, other languages like Catalan, Basque or Galician are also spoken in a few territories.
↑ Presidency of the Government (11 October 1997). “Real Decreto 1560/1997, de 10 de octubre, por el que se regula el Himno Nacional” (PDF). Boletín Oficial del Estado núm. 244 (in Spanish). Archived (PDF) from the original on 24 September 2015.
↑ “The Spanish Constitution”. Lamoncloa.gob.es. Archived from the original on 25 March 2013. Retrieved 26 April 2013.
↑ “Instituto Nacional de Estadística. Población (españoles/extranjeros) por País de Nacimiento, sexo y año”. ine.es. Instituto Nacional de Estadística.
↑ CIS.”Barómetro de Enero de 2022″, 3,777 respondents. The question was “¿Cómo se define Ud. en materia religiosa: católico/a practicante, católico/a no practicante, creyente de otra religión, agnóstico/a, indiferente o no creyente, o ateo/a?”.
↑ “Anuario estadístico de España 2008. 1ª parte: entorno físico y medio ambiente” (PDF). Instituto Nacional de Estadística (Spain). Archived (PDF) from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 14 April 2015.
↑ “Surface water and surface water change”. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). Retrieved 11 October 2020.
↑ “INEbase / Demografía y población /Padrón. Población por municipios /Estadística del Padrón continuo. Últimos datos datos”. ine.es. Retrieved 11 February 2021.
↑ 8.08.1“Population Figures at 01 January 2019. Migrations Statistics. Year 2019” (PDF) (in Spanish). National Statistics Institute (INE). June 2020. Archived from the original on 28 June 2017.
↑ 9.09.19.29.3“World Economic Outlook Database, October 2020”. IMF.org. International Monetary Fund. Retrieved 11 February 2021.
↑ “Gini coefficient of equivalised disposable income – EU-SILC survey”. ec.europa.eu. Eurostat. Retrieved 3 August 2020.
↑ “Human Development Report 2020” (PDF). United Nations Development Programme. 10 December 2019. Retrieved 10 December 2019.
↑ Goodman, Al; Mullen, Jethro; Levs, Josh (2 June 2014). “Spain’s King Juan Carlos I to abdicate”. CNN. Retrieved 2 June 2014.
↑ “Spain will have two kings and two queens”. Retrieved 18 June 2014.
↑ “Centro de Investigaciones Sociológicas (Centre for Sociological Research) (October 2017). “Barómetro de septiembre de 2017″ (PDF) (in Spanish). p. 41. Archived (PDF) from the original on 28 September 2017. Retrieved 13 October 2017” (PDF).
Notes[change | change source]
↑ In Spain, other languages are officially recognised as legitimate autochthonous (regional) languages under the Spanish Constitution. In each of these, Spain’s conventional long name for international affairs in Spanish laws and the most used (Spanish: Reino de España, pronounced: [ˈrejno ð(e) esˈpaɲa]) is as follows:
Catalan: Regne d’Espanya, IPA: [ˈreŋnə ðəsˈpaɲə]
Basque: Espainiako Erresuma, IPA: [es̺paɲiako eres̺uma]
Galician: Reino de España, IPA: [ˈrejnʊ ð(ɪ) esˈpaɲɐ]
↑ The official language of the State is established in the Section 3 of the Spanish Constitution of 1978 to be Castilian. [2] In some autonomous communities, Catalan, Galician, Basque and Occitan (locally known as Aranese) are co-official languages. Aragonese and Asturian have some degree of official recognition.
↑ European Union (EU) since 1993.
↑ On 1 January 2020, the Spanish population was 47,330 million, an increase of 392,921. In the same period, the number of citizens with Spanish citizenship reached 42,094,606. The number of foreigners (i.e. immigrants, ex-pats and refugees, without including foreign born nationals with Spanish citizenship) permanently living in Spain was estimated to be at 5,235,375 (11.06%) in 2020.[8]
↑ The Peseta before 2002.
↑ The .eu domain is also used, as it is shared with other European Union member states. Also, the .cat domain is used in Catalonia, .gal in Galicia and .eus in the Basque-Country autonomous regions.
a quirky guide for travellers
A brief, fun guide to Canary Islands’ history. Before your next holiday, pick up a few fun facts about the geology and history of the Canary Islands.
I wouldn’t mind betting that you have, in the past, spent a holiday, or maybe even multiple holidays in the Canary Islands. And I’m sure you had a wonderful time. But you may well have looked up to those soaring peaks and across the volcanic soil and wondered about how it all came into being. How were the islands themselves shaped, and who were the first people to set foot on them? Well, if it’s Canary Islands’ history you’re looking for, you’ve come to the right place.To get you started and introduce you to the stories of this fascinating archipelago, we thought we’d share a few interesting, quirky facts about the history of the Canary Islands, including their geology and their social and cultural histories.If this whets your appetite, then there’s no better way of finding out more about the Canary Islands’ history and culture than planning your very own voyage of discovery.
Canary Islands’ history: fun facts
These facts will be fantastic for impressing your family or travel buddies with over dinner on your next trip to the Canaries.
1. The Canary Isles weren’t named after the birds…
… but the birds were named after the islands. If you’ve been asking yourself after which animals are the Canary Islands named, then you’ll be interested to know that the name for the islands actually came from the Latin term for the island, Insula Canaria, meaning ‘Island of the Dogs’.The jury is still out on exactly where that name came from, but many people think it’s a result of the large population of ‘sea dogs’, as the Romans called them, living on the island at the time, which were actually monk seals. These days, these seals can’t be found on the Canary Islands anymore, as they’re critically endangered.On the other hand, there is a legend that the first inhabitants of these islands once worshipped dogs, so some of the earliest visitors named the people ‘the ones with dogs’.
2. Canarian people have been inhabiting these islands for at least 3000 years
And on the subject of the Canary Islands indigenous people, they were called the Guanches. It’s been confirmed that they were genetically similar to the Berber people that lived on the North African mainland, and that they made it to the archipelago as far back as 1000 BCE, or maybe earlier.Interestingly, they were the only native people to have lived in this region before the Europeans showed up, as it seems that the Azores, Cape Verde and Madeira were uninhabited.The Guanches were, over the years, assimilated into the general population, but many of their customs and traditions have survived.
The Spanish finally claimed the 7 Canary Islands in the 15 century
Before the Spanish conquered the islands, they had been visited by an expedition from Mauritania, the king of which recounted the story to Pliny the Elder. That was how the Romans learned of the existence of the ‘Islands of the Dogs’. The Arabs landed and traded on Gran Canaria in 999, and over the 13th and 14th centuries, they would be visited by Genoese, Majorcan, Portuguese and French sailors.French and Portuguese forces occupied several of the islands, but they were handed over to the Spanish in a treaty in the 15th century, and the Spanish would have control of all the islands by the time the 16th century rolled around, using them as their base for their explorations to the west.
3. Fascinating facts about the Canary Islands: they’re far closer to Africa than Spain
If you look at a map, you might be surprised by just how close the Canary Islands are to the African mainland. They sit on the African tectonic plate. They’re so close that the eastern-most islands are only just over 100km from the African coast, whereas mainland Spain is 1,056km away.In fact, it’s widely believed that the sand that makes up the incredible Corralejo sand dunes on the island of Fuerteventura was blown here from the Sahara. That’s been proved not to be the case, but it still makes a great story, and the dunes are a spectacular sight to behold.
4. Geology of the Canary Islands: Mount Teide is the third-largest volcano in the world
The majority of the Canary Islands were all formed by ancient volcanic activity, but some are far less ancient than others. The oldest of the islands are Lanzarote and Fuerteventura, the eastern-most islands.From there the chain stretches westwards with the islands gradually getting younger as you move to Gran Canaria, Tenerife, La Gomera, La Palma and El Hierro.Mount Teide, or El Teide, on Tenerife, is the third-largest volcano in the world and Spain’s highest peak, 3,718m high.It’s only La Palma and El Hierro that are still above the hotspot that forged these dramatic islands. Cumbre Vieja on La Palma is the most active volcano in the archipelago, having erupted in 1949 and 1971, but they’re closely monitored, so it’s quite safe to enjoy a holiday on these more out of the way, lesser known, slightly different Canary Islands.
5. Canary Islands’ culture: the famous whistling language
On the subject of the quietest Canary Islands, not overrun with crowds of tourists, La Gomera is a gem of an island that’s famous for a special reason.The local population developed a whistling language, known as Silbo Gomero, as a means of communication across the ravines and valleys. It’s still taught in schools, used for announcements, and has been awarded UNESCO status as a ‘Masterpiece of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity’.This language already existed before the arrival of the Spanish settlers, and although it has been adapted to blend it with Spanish, it’s still very much a part of the original culture of the islands.
There’s so much more to discover about the Canary archipelago
Whether you’re fascinated by geology or you’re a bit of a culture-vulture, there are huge amounts for you to uncover when it comes to the Canary Islands’ history.Dive right in and discover the landscape, get to know the people and sample the cuisine, and we’re sure you’ll be back for more.
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Our World: The Canary Islands – 1
Our World: The Canary Islands
Introduction
The Canary Islands, also known as the Canaries (Spanish: Canarias), are a Spanish archipelago located just off the northwest coast of mainland Africa, 100 kilometres (62 miles) west of the southern border of Morocco. The Canaries are one of Spain’s 17 autonomous communities and are among the outermost region of the European Union proper. The islands include (from largest to smallest): Tenerife, Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria, Lanzarote, La Palma, La Gomera, El Hierro, La Graciosa, Alegranza, Isla de Lobos, Montaña Clara and Roque del Oeste.
The archipelago is a major tourist destination with over 12 million visitors per year, especially Tenerife, Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria and Lanzarote. The islands have a subtropical climate, with long warm summers and moderately warm winters. Due to their location above the temperature inversion layer, the high mountains of these islands are ideal for astronomical observation. For this reason, two professional observatories, Teide Observatory on the island of Tenerife and Roque de los Muchachos Observatory on the island of La Palma, have been built on the islands.
The capital of the Autonomous Community is shared by the cities of Santa Cruz de Tenerife and Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, which in turn are the capitals of the provinces of Santa Cruz de Tenerife and Province of Las Palmas. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria has been the largest city in the Canaries since 1768, except for a brief period in 1910. Between the 1833 territorial division of Spain and 1927 Santa Cruz de Tenerife was the sole capital of the Canary Islands. In 1927 a decree ordered that the capital of the Canary Islands be shared, as it remains at present. The third largest city of the Canary Islands is La Laguna (a World Heritage Site) on Tenerife.
Geography
Tenerife is the most populous island, and also the largest island of the archipelago. Gran Canaria, with 865,070 inhabitants, is both the Canary Islands’ second most populous island, and the third most populous one in Spain after Majorca. The island of Fuerteventura is the second largest in the archipelago and located 100 km (62 mi) from the African coast.
The archipelago consists of seven large and several smaller islands, all of which are volcanic in origin. The islands are considered as a distinct physiographic section of the Atlas Mountains province, which in turn is part of the larger African Alpine System division.
Geology
The originally volcanic islands –seven major islands, one minor island, and several small islets– were formed by the Canary hotspot. The Canary Islands is the only place in Spain where volcanic eruptions have been recorded during the Modern Era, with some volcanoes still active (El Hierro, 2011).
Volcanic islands such as those in the Canary chain often have steep ocean cliffs caused by catastrophic debris avalanches and landslides.
Demographics
The Canary Islands have a population of 2,117,519 inhabitants (2011), making it the eighth most populous of Spain’s autonomous communities, with a density of 282.6 inhabitants per km². The total area of the archipelago is 7,493 km2 (2,893 sq mi). Items in red denote ethnicity; items in yellow denote citizenship/naturalization; items in blue denote place of birth.
Nationality Population Percent
Canarian 1,547,611 91.5%
Mainland Spanish (Peninsulares) 178,613 8.5%
Total Spanish 1,802,788 85.7%
Foreign nationals 301,204 14.3%
Spanish-born 1,726,315 82.0%
Foreign-born 377,677 18.0%
Total 2,103,992 100%
Islands
El Hierro
El Hierro, the westernmost island, covers 268.71 km2 (103.75 sq mi), making it the smallest of the major islands, and the least populous with 10,753 inhabitants. The whole island was declared Reserve of the Biosphere in 2000. Its capital is Valverde.
Fuerteventura
Fuerteventura, with a surface of 1,660 km2 (640.93 sq mi), is the second-most extensive island of the archipelago. It has a population of 100,929. Its capital is Puerto del Rosario.
Gran Canaria
Gran Canaria has 845,676 inhabitants. The capital, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (377,203 inhabitants), is the most populous city and shares the status of capital of the Canaries with Santa Cruz de Tenerife.
La Gomera
La Gomera, has an area of 369.76 km2 (142.77 sq mi) and is the second least populous island with 22,622 inhabitants. Geologically it is one of the oldest of the archipelago. The insular capital is San Sebastian de La Gomera. Garajonay’s National Park is here.
Lanzarote
Lanzarote, is the easternmost island and one of the most ancient of the archipelago, and it has shown evidence of recent volcanic activity. It has a surface of 845.94 km2 (326.62 sq mi), and a population of 139,506. The capital is Arrecife, population 56,834.
Chinijo Archipelago
The Chinijo Archipelago includes the islands La Graciosa, Alegranza, Montaña Clara, Roque del Este and Roque del Oeste. It has a population of 658 inhabitants, all of them on La Graciosa. La Graciosa, is the smallest inhabited island of the Canaries, and the major island of the Chinijo Archipelago.
La Palma
La Palma, with 86,528 inhabitants, covering an area of 708.32 km2 (273.48 sq mi) is in its entirety a biosphere reserve. It is the second-highest island of the Canaries, with the Roque de los Muchachos 2,423 metres (7,949 ft) as highest point. Santa Cruz de La Palma is its capital.
Tenerife
Tenerife is, with its area of 2,034 km2 (785.33 sq mi), the most extensive island of the Canary Islands. In addition, with 906,854 inhabitants it is the most populated island of the archipelago and Spain. Two of the islands’ principal cities are located on it: The capital, Santa Cruz de Tenerife and San Cristóbal de La Laguna (a World Heritage Site). San Cristóbal de La Laguna, the second city of the island is home to the oldest university in the Canary Islands, the University of La Laguna. The Teide, with its 3,718 metres (12,198 ft) is the highest peak of Spain and also a World Heritage Site.
Wildlife
Terrestrial wildlife
Terrestrial fauna includes geckos (such as the striped Canary Islands Gecko) and wall lizards, and three endemic species of recently rediscovered and critically endangered giant lizard: the El Hierro Giant Lizard (or Roque Chico de Salmor Giant Lizard), La Gomera Giant Lizard, and La Palma Giant Lizard. Mammals include the Canarian Shrew, Canary Big-Eared Bat, the Algerian Hedgehog (which may have been introduced) and the more recently introduced Mouflon. Some endemic mammals, the Lava Mouse, Tenerife Giant Rat and Gran Canaria Giant Rat, are extinct, as are the Canary Islands Quail, Long-legged Bunting, and the Eastern Canary Islands Chiffchaff.
With a range of habitats, the Canary Islands exhibit diverse plant species. The bird life includes European and African species, such as the Black-bellied Sandgrouse; and a rich variety of endemic (local) taxa including the:
Canary
Graja, a subspecies of Red-billed Chough endemic to La Palma
Blue Chaffinch (endemic to Tenerife and Gran Canaria)
Canary Islands Chiffchaff
Fuerteventura Chat
Tenerife Goldcrest
La Palma Chaffinch
Canarian Egyptian Vulture
Bolle’s Pigeon
Laurel Pigeon
Plain Swift
Houbara Bustard
†Canary Islands oystercatcher (extinct)
Marine life
The marine life found in the Canary Islands is also varied, being a combination of North Atlantic, Mediterranean and endemic species. In recent years, the increasing popularity of both scuba diving and underwater photography have provided biologists with much new information on the marine life of the islands.
Fish species found in the islands include many species of shark, ray, moray eel, bream, jack, grunt, scorpionfish, triggerfish, grouper, goby, and blenny. In addition, there are many invertebrate species, including sponge, jellyfish, anemone, crab, mollusc, sea urchin, starfish, sea cucumber and coral.
There are a total of 5 different species of marine turtle that are sighted periodically in the islands, the most common of these being the endangered loggerhead sea turtle. The other four are the green sea turtle, hawksbill sea turtle, leatherback sea turtle and Kemp’s ridley sea turtle. Currently, there are no signs that any of these species breed in the islands, and so those seen in the water are usually migrating. However, it is believed that some of these species may have bred in the islands in the past, and there are records of several sightings of leatherback sea turtle on beaches in Fuerteventura, adding credibility to the theory.
Marine mammals include the Short-Finned Pilot Whale, Common and Bottlenose dolphins. Hooded Seals have also been known to be vagrant in the Canary Islands every now and then. The Canary Islands were also formerly home to a population of the rarest Pinniped in the world, the Mediterranean Monk Seal.
Climbing, Hiking & Mountaineering : SummitPost
Page Type:
Area/Range
Lat/Lon:
27.96000°N / 15.84°W
Activities:
Hiking, Mountaineering, Sport Climbing, Canyoneering
Season:
Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter
Elevation:
12199 ft / 3718 m
Sign the Climber’s Log!
Overview
Teide seen from Pico Viejo
The Islas Canarias, Canary Islands, Islands of Everlasting Spring are Europe’s version of the Hawaiian Islands in the Pacific – a holiday getaway with guaranteed good weather and a great abundance of beautiful beaches all at a distance of about 4-5 flight hours from any European International airport. While most visitors stay at or near the beaches the Islands have more to offer than sun, sand and sport. All islands are of volcanic origin and many volcanoes have been active quite (geologically speaking) recently. The last eruption occurred on Volcàn Teneguìa on La Palma in 1971. The Canarias are home to Spain highest mountain, Pico del Teide, the world’s largest erosion crater, Caldera de Taburiente, impressive volcanic plugs like Roque Bentayga or the desert-like Parque Nacional de Timanfaya on Lanzarote.
There are seven large islands (and six smaller ones) which can be divided in two groups. The easertn islands of Lanzarote, Fuerteventura and Gran Canaria were formed about 25 – 15 million years ago while the four western islands Tenerife, La Gomera, La Palma and El Hierro were formed much more recently – and are volcanically much more active still. Politically, the Spanish government has divided the Canarias along the same lines with the Province of Las Palmas (de Gran Canaria) governing the eastern islands while the province of Santa Cruz (de Fenerife) governs the western ones.
El Hierro, La Gomera and La Palma as seen from Tenerife
The Islas Canarias are located close to the African mainland but have politically always been considered a part of Europe. In fact – before Amarica got discovered El Hierro was the westernmost known spot on earth which resulted in the zero meridian being located there, exactly 20° west of Paris. Many of the European governments still used this meridian until the 1990ies. The ocean floor beneath the islands is down to 3500m deep making the straights between the islands some of the deepest on earth. Moreover the true altitude of the volcanoes gets even more impressive if you count their elevation from the ocean floor. The islands are considered as leftovers of the continental drift when South America and Africa drifted apart.
Today the main industry on most of the islands is tourism, together with agriculture (mostly banana monocultures). The large islands have fallen victim to the usual excesses – large concrete tourist hotels around the beaches while the three smaller western islands of El Hierro, La Gomera and La Palma are relatively untarnished yet. The main season on the Canarias is in winter, when northern and central Europeans flee snow and fog to bake a bit in the sun. Still the hotels on the islands are busy all year around.
The Islas Canarias on SP
Overview Map Islas Canarias
Lanzarote introduction (this page)
Lanzarote (separate page)
Fuerteventura introduction (this page)
Fuerteventura (separate page)
Gran Canaria introduction (this page)
Gran Canaria (separate page)
Tenerife introduction (this page)
Tenerife (separate page)
La Gomera introduction (this page)
La Gomera (separate page)
La Palma introduction (this page)
La Palma (separate page)
El Hierro
1 – Lanzarote
Coordinates: 29. 03N / 13.63W
The area of Montañas del Fuego (Mountains of fire) in the natural park of Timanfaya
Lanzarote (850 square km) is the north-easternmost of the Islas Canarias and as such only 140km away from the Moroccan mainland. It is also one of the oldest of the islands being formed 19 miliion years ago by volcanic activity. Since then much of the island has eroded again. Lanzarote therefore is the lowest of the Canaries with tow mountainous regions, Famara (671m) in the north and Los Ajaches (608m) in the south. Between both regions you find Parque Nacional de Timanfaya and the Parque Natural de los Volcanes, two parks which cover the area of the most recent eruptions on Lanzarote.
Between 1731 and 1736, for five years hundreds of craters erupted and covered 147 square kilometres – today’s national parks – with lava, cinder and scree. Much of the agricultural areas were covered, forcing the inhabitants to emigrate to others of the Canarian Islands. 8 million cubic meters of cinder and lava were deposited during that eruption. The center of the eruption was Maciso del Fuego in the center of the parks, a 525m high cinder cone. Even today the area within the parks is active – the earth’s crust is just about 2m thick with temperatures of up to 400° C underneath. Park rangers like to demonstrate this by pouring water down a metal tube which evaporates explosively.
Lanzarote can be easily reached by charter jet from any European airport. The island has an international airport near Arricife, its capital, on the eastern coast. Most of the tourist beaches are located there too. Thanks to the lack of elevation Lanzarote gets only very few drops of rain which makes water one of the most looked after commodity of the island. It is either shipped by tanker from the other Canarian Islands or produced by a saltwater conversion plant in the north of the island. Tourists consume about five times the amount of water than the inhabitants of the island.
Lanzarote is surrounded by a number of smaller volcanic islands – see the section below for more information.
2 – Fuerteventura
Coordinates: 28.35N / 14.03W
Fuerteventura seen from Punta del Papagayo on Lanzarote
With 1660 square km Fuerteventura is the second largest of the Islas Canarias and the oldest. It was formed 20 million years ago with the bulk of the material created 5 million years ago however. The last eruptions occurred 4000 – 5000 years ago. Its highest point is Pico de Jandía (807m) on the equally named peninsula in the south of the island.
Fuerteventura is mainly known for its beaches on the east coast and is actually one of the main tourist islands of the Canaries. You find massive wandering sand dunes near Corralejo to the north east of the island, easily demonstrating the proximity to the Moroccan Sahara across the sea to the east.
The island has an international airport south of its capital Puerto del Rosario on the east coast. Numerous charter lines touch down there at all times of the year.
3 – Gran Canaria
Coordinates: 27.93N / 15.43W
Roque San Jose, El Fraile (The Friar) and Roque Nublo
With roughly 1500 square km Gran Canaria is the third largest of the Islas Canarias. It is an almost perfectly shaped circle, clearly indicating its volcanic origin of 15 million years ago. However, though volcanism is present everywhere on the island, there have been no recent outbreaks, which makes Gran Canaria a much greener island than either Lanzarote or Fuerteventura. Moreover Gran Canaria reaches an elevation of 1951 in Pico de las Nieves which impedes the north-easterly trade winds which generally sweep right over the lower islands. By being forced to rise high above the sea level the moisture condenses in heavy clouds which deposits in rain or fog on the northern and eastern sides of the island while leaving the western and southern parts bone dry.
Consequently you can find much more flora on Gran Canaria than on Lanzarote or Fuerteventura like laurel forests in the north. Additionally you’ll find deeply eroded Barrancos (canyons) which have carried much of Gran Canarias substance out to the sea already. Witness to this erosion are the huge erosion craters of Caldera de Tejeda to the east and Caldera de Tirajana to the west of the island. They connect in Gran Canaria’s highpoint, Pico de las Nieves.
Gran Canaria’s landmarks are two volcanic plugs which have withstood the erosion: Roque Nublo and Roque Bentayga. Both are located in or near the large cauldron of Caldera de Tejada and are basalt monoliths. Roque Nublo offers several interesting climbing routes as does the nearby Montaña del Asserador.
While the east and south of the island are touristically developed much of the centre and the north-west are quite lonesome. Most of the interesting hikes can be found in there and there is no need to visit the tourist centers if you came for exploring the island on foot. Gran Canaria’s international airport is located to the far east of the island, far away from the capital Las Palmas de Gran Canaria.
4 – Tenerife
Coordinates: 28.27N / 16.59W
Teide , Pico Viejo and Guajara as seen from Volcán Martin on La Palma
Everything that can be said about Gran Canaria can also be said about Tenerife, only far more pronounced. Among the Canarias Tenerife is the island of superlatives. It is the largest island with 2050 square km and the highest. Spain’s highest mountain, Pico del Teide is located right in the centre of the island. The island was created 7 – 5 million years ago when the Teno and Anaga mountainous regions to the north-west and north-east were created. Speaking of regions – a large island like Tenerife may be allowed to have more of them.
To the far north-east there are the Anaga Mountains, a wild area covered in lots of laurel forests. It offers great hikes from the steep coast to the mountains at almost 1000m
Still in the north-east of the island, south of Puerto de la Cruz you find the Cumbre Dorsal, a ridge running from south-west to north-east. There are a number of easy hiking trails with great views towards the coasts and towards Teide.
Las Cañadas del Teide is a giant Caldera, a part of which has been washed away towards the north-west. Located in the center of the island, the most impressive feature is Pico del Teide at its northern rim. The mountains along the rim are the highest ones you can find in all the Canarias. Apart from Teide Pico Viejo needs to be mentioned as well as Guajara on the southern caldera rim. The caldera itself is a huge plain filled with lava, the Llano Ucancos. Huge walls of Lava have been pushed up the most impressive forming the bizarre forms of the Roques de Garcia. In the Cañadas everything shimmers in every conceivable colour!
To the north-west of the island there is the small region of the Teno mountains. Covered with laurel forests the area is quite remote and lonesome though near the coast you encounter the omnipresent banana plantations. Teno is home to one of the most rugged canyons on earth, the winding Barranco de Masca. Carved out of the volcanic rock by a small creek you rarely get to see the light until you quite suddenly come out onto the small Playa de MAsca at the sea.
The huge Pico Viejo crater
The whole southern part of Tenerife is dedicated to tourism. Since the trade wind clouds rarely are able to cross the Cañadas you have sunny weather almost at all times. The north of the island is far less touristical though certainly very beautiful (whenever the clouds let you see anything). There are two international airports on Tenerife, one in the south at Los Abrigos, one in the north near the capital Santa Cruz de Tenerife.
5 – La Gomera
Coordinates: 28. 11N / 17.24W
La Gomera as seen from Volcàn Martin on La Palma
La Gomera is the second smallest of the Islas Canarias reaching 380 square km. It looks like a smaller replica of Gran Canaria, showing the same quasi circular shape a high plateau at its midst and its deep barrancos leading out to the sea. La Gomera is far less touristically used than the larger islands, mainly because large charter jets cannot land on its small airport. Therefore the regular routine to get to the island calls for a switchover at Tenerife with the second leg either by plane or one of the fast ferries (which take only 30min to reach La Gomera).
La Gomera’s highest mountain is Garajonay which reaches an elevation of 1487m. Around the mountain a national park, the Parque Nacional de Garajonay has bee established in 1978. 10% of the island’s area have been set aside for the park which is home to the largest consecutive piece of laurel forest on earth. 50% of all laurel forests on the Canarias can be found here. Like on most other Canarian Islands the 1500m high high plateau serves as weather divide. Wet and foggy in the north and west the weather in the south remains dry and sunny.
La Gomera’s moment in the spotlight came when Christopher Colombus stayed at the island just before he set out to discover America. Today mostly hikers spend teir vacations on the island. The capital is San Sebastian de la Gomera at the south coast
6 – La Palma
Coordinates: 28.68N / 17.85W
Montaña Pelada (1441m), Volcán Martín (1597m) and Volcán Cabrito (1864m)
La Palma takes a special place among the Islas Canarias. It is the third smallest island with its 730 square km but the most mountainous one. The highest summit, Roque de los Muchachos reaches 2426m giving the La Palma the highest mass to area ratio of all the islands of the earth. La Palma is the north-westernmost of the Canaries and thanks to the lack of large beaches you will almost only find hikers out there. It is also the island with the most, and most recent volcanic eruptions, the last of which took place at its southern tip creating Volcàn Teneguìa. In all, together with El Hierro, La Palma is the youngest of the Islas Canarias being about 2 million years old.
The Island has three mountain ranges which are all interconnected.
Caldera de Taburiente is the world’s largest erosion crater at 28km in circumference, 9km in diameter and down to 1500m in vertical drops to the inside of the crater. The caldera has been washed out to the south-west by the Canarias’ only river, Rio de Taburiente. It is home to all 2000ers of the island culminating in Roque de los Muchachos.
The Cumbre Nueva is the remaining part of a huge and old erosion crater, the bulk of which slid down to the western side of the island in prehistoric times
The Cumbre Vieja is the southernmost of the ranges, the only one which is stil volcanically active today. More than 100 volcanoes and craters make up the range, which culminates in Volcàn de la Deseada.
Volcàn Teneguìa as seen from the east
La Palma gained some notoriety after the South Asian tsunami in late 2004. Scientists stepped up to present an old theory which claims that the island of La Palma will be the origin of a huge mega-tsunami sometime in the future. During one of the last eruptions in 1941, when three volcanoes erupted simultaneously, the western part of the range dropped by several meters. Since the rock of Cumbre Vieja is porous a lot of water is supposed to have accumulated in the cavities beneath the surface. Another huge eruption like the 1941 one would evaporate the water explosively to detach the western part of the range altogether. That would tumble into the sea creating huge shockwaves which would travel towards the American continent at almost the speed of sound and devastate all coastal regions from New England to Brazil. When and even if such an event will take place is anybody’s guess. But you might want to take a look at the map of El Hierro (see below), where exactly such an event occurred 15000 years ago, creating the huge circularly shaped Bahia de los Pozos.
La Palma is famous for its two trekking trails, the Ruta de la Cresteria around Caldera de Taburiente and the Ruta de los Volcanes along the ridge of the Cumbre Vieja. The Island has an international airport south of its capital, Santa Cruz de la Palma.
7 – El Hierro
Coordinates: 27.73N / 18.01W
El Hierro during sunset from La Gomera
El Hierro is the smallest of the Islas Canarias, covering an area of 290 square km. Nevertheless it reaches a height of 1500m, which gives it an incredible mass to area ratio, much like neighbouring La Palma. Both islands share a lot of history – they are the youngest islands of the Canaries with El Hierro being 3 million years old. The island first developed in the Pliocene when volcanoes erupted along two lines shaping a large Y. Over the years the lines converged and more mass built up until in a second period of activity a large volcano built up where today you find Bahia de los Pozos and El Golfo. For some unknown reason that volcano became unstable slipping into the ocean, probably creating a huge tsunami in its wake. A similar scenario is predicted for the Cumbre Vieja on neighbouring La Palma.
El Hierro’s highest mountain is Pico de Malpaso, reaching 1501m. In general, though quite high for such a small island it is hardly considered being mountainous. The main reason is the large high plateau, which hosts one of the largest agriculturally used areas on the Canarias. There is not much tourism on the island – the local government tends to keep the total number of hotel beds below 2000. There is an airport but – like the one on La Gomera it is too small to cater to large charter jets. Therefore only the local Canarian carrier serves the island.
Formerly El Hierro was the westernmost place in the known world, that is before Christpher Columbus sailed for the Americas. Therefore – for a long time the meridian was located on the island – defined to be located exactly 20° west of Paris the then known centre of the earth. Many systems (e.g. Gauß-Krüger) and countries kept using that definition up to the late 1990ies.
8 – The Small Islands
It has already been mentioned in the overview section that there are several small islands and rocks scattered around the eastern islands of Lanzarote and Fuerteventura. The following table gives an overview:
Name
Area
Highest Mountain
Coordinates
Thumbnail
Alegranza
10.2km²
Montaña de Alegranza (289m)
29.40 / -13.49
Graciosa
27km²
Montaña Bermeja (157m)
29. 25 / -13.51
Los Lobos
6km²
Montaña de Lobos (127m)
28.75 / -13.82
Montaña Clara
1.3km²
Montaña Clara (256m)
29.30 / -13.53
Roque del Este
0.06km²
Roque del Este (84m)
29.28 / -13.34
Roque del Oeste
0.02km²
Roque del Oeste (41m)
29.31 / -13.53
Traffic & Accommodation
As said repeatedly above you can reach the large islands Lanzarote, Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria and Tenerife from almost any major European airport on a daily basis. La Palma is a bit more difficult to get to – the airport is so small that I only can take in a few large aircraft at a time. Moreover you might have to switch planes before you get there.
La Gomera and El Hiero can only be reached by a relayed flight schedule or by using one of the ferries from Tenerife or La Palma. For the flight schedules look at the websites of the large charter airlines (e.g. Thomas Cook or Hapag Lloyd).
Almost the same holds true for accommodation on the islands – you can rent hotel rooms and apartments from any travel office in Europe (overseas might be a bit more difficult). Many of the large companies have their own web sites so that you might look them up there as well (for example again the above mentioned companies). For fincas you can try to contact locals from a web based search – many expatriates offer their own houses for use by tourists. It takes a bit of research on the web however.
Local transport is available by bus. There are bus lines on all of the islands which will bring you close to your starting point in anyway. However often a given busstop is only served a couple of times per day. Therefore it pays to get a rental car, especially on the larger of the islands. Obtaining a car is easy, prices are quite high though. If you don’t stay at a hotel you’ll be sure to get a run down rig for the same price.
Red Tape
Canarian Pine on La Palma
On almost each of the Canarian Islands there are National or Natural Parks around the points of interest. These parks serve two purposes:
to protect tourists from getting into danger around the active volcanoes
to protect the environment – especially the scarce laurel forests ore the ealily eroded volcano craters – from the tourists.
The obvious rules apply – keep animals and plants where they are, don’t enter volcanic areas without supervision, etc. However, the rules are applied and enforced quite differently. While the Timanfaya Natural Park on Lanzarote and the summit of Teide on Tenerife can only be visited with guides or permission, the inside of the Caldera de Taburiente on La Palma or the Garajonay Natural Park on La Gomera can be freely visited but are nevertheless supervised regularly by park rangers. The Tamabada mountain range on Gran Canaria on the other side has rather the aspect of a large picnic site.
Park rangers prowl the parks. Depending on the popularity of the parks these guys can be very short fused – which might explain the difference in approach to questions of rule enforcement. On Teide everybody tries to sneak by them to get to the summit and they are clearly sick of it. In La Cumbrecita on La Palma the rangers have to help otherwise clueless tourists to park their cars – and these guy have had it, too.
Never try to camp out where you are not supposed to. While you might get off without a fine you are setting the example of the nasty tourist. Often part of the land in a national park belongs to local farmers or to large estates. And most of the times the next village is less than an hour away.
Weather Conditions
Trade wnd clouds oozing into the Caldera de Tejeda on Gran Canaria
The Canarian Islands are located in the trade wind zone. You almost always encounter northeastern winds which carry a lot of humid air. Being forced to climb to higher altitudes this moisture condenses into clouds. This in return means that most of the time the northeastern parts of the islands are covered in clouds from altitudes of 1000m through 2000m.
The mountains themselves – being mostly of the same altitude – finally stop the clouds so that on their southeastern slopes the clouds “run out”. In the case of Tenerife the Cañadas del Teide are so high that rarely ever do you encounter fog or clouds. For Lanzarote and Fuerteventura on the other hand it means that the foggy clouds sweep over the islands without leaving much rain. Many parts of the islands therefore are arid and desert like.
Also never underestimate the weather on the Canarias. This especially applies to Tenerife and La Palma, the highest islands. Always remember that a hot day near the coast can be freezing cold at 2500m and higher. Moreover the trade winds at higher altitudes are more than fresh – they are regular gales. Many a climber was forced to retreat from mountains like Pico Viejo due to high winds while even at 2000m everything seemed hot and sunny.
Maps & Books
Maps
Kompass has the best (that is complete) selection of maps on the Canarian Islands. However, while I love their maps of the Alps I have had quite a number of bad experiences on the islands. Anyone who knows better maps please step up and let us know.
Lanzarote
Kompass Map WK241
Kompass Verlag
1:50000
ISBN 3-85491-175-0
Fuerteventura
Kompass Map WK240
Kompass Verlag
1:50000
ISBN 3-85491-174-2
Gran Canaria
Kompass Map WK237
Kompass Verlag
1:50000
ISBN 3-85491-114-9
Teneriffa / Tenerife
Kompass Map WK233
Kompass Verlag
1:50000
ISBN 3-85491-038-X
La Gomera
Kompass Map WK231
Kompass Verlag
1:30000
ISBN 3-85491-015-0
La Palma
Kompass Map WK232
Kompass Verlag
1:50000
ISBN 3-85491-029-0
El Hierro
Kompass Map WK242
Kompass Verlag
1:30000
ISBN 3-85491-194-7
Digital Maps
Kompass is the only company known to me which offers GPS digital Maps. Here is their selection
Lanzarote
Kompass GPS4241
Kompass Verlag
ISBN 3-85491-223-4
Fuerteventura
Kompass GPS4240
Kompass Verlag
ISBN 3-85491-222-6
Gran Canaria
Kompass GPS4237
Kompass Verlag
ISBN 3-85491-219-6
Teneriffa / Tenerife
Kompass GPS4233
Kompass Verlag
ISBN 3-85491-218-8
La Gomera
Kompass GPS4231
Kompass Verlag
ISBN 3-85491-425-3
La Palma
Kompass GPS4232
Kompass Verlag
ISBN 3-85491-217-X
El Hierro
Kompass GPS4242
Kompass Verlag
ISBN 3-85491-224-2
Books
My recommendation is a set of by Rother Verlag, all available in German, four of them available in English. The books are excellent hiking guides covering all the interesting areas of the islands. Since they come with small maps for each excursion they might even be used without a map to support them.
Lanzarote
Rolf Goetz
Rother Verlag
ISBN 3-7633-4302-4 (only German)
Fuerteventura
Rolf Goetz
Rother Verlag
ISBN 3-7633-4303-2 (only German)
Gran Canaria
Izabella Gawin
Rother Verlag
ISBN 3-7633-4000-9 (German) ISBN 3-7633-4816-6 (English)
Teneriffa / Tenerife
Klaus Wolfsperger / Annette Miehle-Wolfsperger
Rother Verlag
ISBN 3-7633-4016-5 (German) ISBN 3-7633-4809-3 (English)
La Gomera
Klaus Wolfsperger / Annette Miehle-Wolfsperger
Rother Verlag
ISBN 3-7633-4007-6 (German) ISBN 3-7633-4823-9 (English)
La Palma
Klaus Wolfsperger / Annette Miehle-Wolfsperger
Rother Verlag
ISBN 3-7633-4246-X (German) ISBN 3-7633-4808-5 (English)
El Hierro
Klaus Wolfsperger / Annette Miehle-Wolfsperger
Rother Verlag
ISBN 3-7633-4072-6 (only German)
Images
View Islas Canarias Image Gallery – 41 Images
A Guide To Island Hopping Around The Canary Islands
The Canary Islands lie approximately 100 kilometres from the south coast of Morocco. An archipelago of seven main islands, they may be part of Spain, but seem to have more in common with the Caribbean due to their laid-back vibe, island time and stunning beaches. Many of the Canary Islands have been awarded UNESCO Biosphere Reserve status because of their unique volcanic landscapes and national parks. Here’s our guide to island hopping between them.
Lanzarote may be a famous package holiday and clubbing island, but look beyond this and you’ll soon discover what it’s really about. An alien-like landscape of red and black volcanic rocks, Lanzarote is also known for its excellent wines, of the Malvasia variety. Don’t leave without visiting some of its otherworldly lava tubes, some of which you can even go inside. Its excellent climate, long sunny days and dramatic landscapes also means that Lanzarote is popular with athletes and sports teams, many of whom come here to train for Olympic swimming, running and cycling.
Getting there
Lanzarote is the northernmost Canary Island and is home to Arrecife Airport, serving many European destinations, as well as flights to mainland Spain. There is one ferry route from Lanzarote to Fuerteventura, operated by three different ferry companies and offering daily sailings, taking just 25 minutes.
Fuerteventura is known as the Canary Islands’ beach, with over 150 kilometres of white sand coastline to explore. Its beaches and dramatic volcanic landscapes mean that it’s the ideal holiday playground. Just offshore you’ll also find plenty of entertainment options such as windsurfing and kitesurfing. And if the beaches don’t do it for you, Fuerteventura’s famous cheeses definitely will.
Getting there
Situated just south of Lanzarote, Fuerteventura’s main airport, El Matorral, serves many European destinations via both low-cost and international carriers. There are two ferry routes between here and Gran Canaria (situated southwest of the island), offering 33 sailings per week.
Home to the capital of the Canary Islands, the historic and vibrant Las Palmas, Gran Canaria is known as a continent in miniature. In one day here you can see lush volcanic craters, desert-like sand dunes at Maspalomas, beautiful beaches and rocky barren hills. It’s also a top wellness destination, offering many spa hotels as well as some of Europe’s biggest thalassotherapy centers.
Getting there
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria international airport is the busiest in the Canary Islands in terms of cargo and passenger traffic. It’s served by many airlines from all over Europe and also has many connections to West Africa. There are two ferry routes that run between Gran Canaria and Tenerife, mostly between the towns of Las Palmas and Santa Cruz de Tenerife, offering a total of 64 sailings per week.
The largest island in the Canaries, Tenerife is known for its party vibe and wild clubs, but it has so much more to offer, whether it’s nature, sports or beaches that you’re after. Tenerife is home to a total of eight golf courses with modern facilities, which you can enjoy all year round, and is also one of the Canaries’ top whale watching destinations – 26 species have been spotted off the coast here, including pilot whales, baleen whales and even the mighty blue whale. Tenerife also boasts Spain’s highest mountain, and the third highest island volcano in the world – Mount Teide, located within the UNESCO World Heritage Teide National Park.
Getting there
Tenerife is home to two international airports, the largest of which is Tenerife Sur, the second biggest in the Canary Islands and served by many international and budget airlines to a variety of European destinations. Tenerife also lies within easy reach of Gran Canaria and La Gomera by ferry. Ferries go from Los Cristianos de Tenerife to San Sebastián de La Gomera and take around 40 minutes.
La Gomera is one of the most enchanting and magical of the Canary Islands, where some of the streets are made of sand and there’s an ancient whistling language called Silbo. Explore La Gomera via its 650 kilometres worth of walking trails, taking you to some of its most stunning locations.
Getting there
La Gomera has one domestic airport, serving Tenerife North only, and offering two return flights per day. There is just one ferry between La Gomera and La Palma, operated by two ferry companies and taking around one hour 50 minutes.
La Palma is called the beautiful island due to its stunning landscapes of soaring volcanos, verdant forests and paradisiacal beaches. Because of its clear skies and lack of pollution, La Palma has also become known as one of the world’s best locations for star gazing, and was certified the first Starlight Reserve on Earth by the UNSECO Starlight Initiative.
Getting there
La Palma has one main airport, which is served mainly by Binter Canarias and CanaryFly, with island-hopping flights from Tenerife and Gran Canaria. It also serves a variety of other European destinations such as the UK, France, the Netherlands, Belgium and Germany. There are two ferry routes between Tenerife and La Palma, offering a total of 28 sailings per week.
El Hierro may be one of the smallest and most rural of the islands, but it’s also one of the most forward-thinking, with schemes in place to become completely self-sufficient in electrical energy. It’s also one of the best islands for for diving, boasting a marine reserve, home to an incredible 46 dive sites and a large variety of marine life.
Getting there
El Hierro has one domestic airport offering flights to Tenerife North and Gran Canaria only. There is one ferry route between El Hierro and Tenerife operating weekly and taking around two hours 15 minutes.
Gastronomy empowers people to learn more about a certain culture. Located just off the west coast of Africa, The Canary Islands were for centuries the crossroads between Europe and America. Surrounded by stunning beaches, this archipelago is renowned for the variety of seafood on offer, as well as its many healthy side dishes. Read on to discover the taste of the Canary Islands, with its unique blend of flavors influenced by the cuisines of Africa, Europe and America – a one-of-a-kind combination of freshness and flavor.
Mojo picón is a spicy sauce composed of garlic, olive oil, red or green pepper, cumin, salt and vinegar. For those who like a little spice, adding a little hot chili is the perfect extra touch – and fits the hot weather of the islands. This traditional sauce is served with nearly every dish on the islands. While visiting the Canary Islands, you will find handmade mojo on markets at inexpensive prices, but make sure to try some of the best mojo dishes at local restaurants – Amigo Camilo Restaurant in the beach of Las Canteras in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria serve some of the best on the island.
Papas is the local short form for ‘potatoes’ on the Canary Islands and other places in South America. However, because of the volcanic climate on the islands, these potatoes gain a different texture and flavor, which make this dish so special. Without peeling them, the papas are boiled in water with a lot of salt for around 20 or 30 minutes. After boiling them, locals remove the water from the pan and add more salt over the potatoes until they dry. Serve them with a generous serving of mojo picón and voulá. A simple but unique dish, which beautifully sums up the archipelago in one bite.
Almogroteis a flavorsome dip typical of the small island of La Gomera and is made with the leftovers of matured cheese, hot pepper and paprika, all blended together with the iconic Spanish ingredients: olive oil and garlic. Just like the character of the local people of La Gomera, the almogrote has a strong and spicy feel to it. To enjoy it like the locals, butter it onto bread in thick layers and don’t hold back. One of the best places to try this regional delicacy is the La Montaña – Casa Efigenia, a true locals’ favorite located just next to the Garajonay National Park, one of the island’s many natural gems.
Canarian children have always heard from their grandparents that ‘a glass of milk with gofio will improve your health.’ Although this particular combination might not be the most tasty option for travelers, gofio is a highly versatile food which can be used in many forms, being served with soups, sauces and even as ice cream. A flour made from roasted grains, mainly wheat and some varieties of maize, gofio became an important part of the diet of locals during the Spanish Civil War due to it being rich in essential vitamins, fiber and proteins. If some places in the archipelago (such as La Orotava in Tenerife) have a sweet scent in the air, it may be a gofio mill producing this delicious flour.
Don’t get confused, while miel maymean honey in Spanish, miel de palmaisnot a type of honey (it is in fact more nutritious than honey) and its provenance is not from the island of La Palma. The miel de palma is in fact the sap which comes from palm trees and it’s made on the island of La Gomera. This sauce is used as a condiment on some side dishes, as well as being served with cheese, desserts and even with meats. If on Gran Canaria, visit Nelson Restaurant for the chance to sample some fine examples of how miel de palma is used in local cooking – and to soak up the relaxing atmosphere of this seafood restaurant located on the water front.
Confusing names are commonplace Spanish gastronomy. Ropa vieja means ‘old clothes’ in Spanish, however don’t be put off from trying this dish because of its name, no old clothes were used when making it. Originally, the reference to ‘old clothes’ may have originated from the idea of using leftovers from the popular Spanish dish puchero. Since both recipes have the same basic ingredients in common (chickpeas, meat, onion and potatoes), this idea makes sense. On The Canary Islands, ropa vieja is a very popular dish despite it taking so long to elaborate. You will never taste the same recipe twice as each household makes theirs differently, but try it at the restaurant Parador de las Cañadas del Teide, on the biggest peak of Spain, if you want to sample a traditionally made ropa vieja.
This local specialty beautifully gathers several of the gastronomic influences of the archipelago. The recipe for sancocho canario was exported to several places in Latin America because of the huge migratory movements which the population of The Canary Islands suffered. The dish is made with fish cooked whole and served with sweet potato, gofio and papas arrugadas. It’s a simple and healthy plate, and adding mojo picón is an absolute must in order to taste the contrast between sweetness, spiciness and the touch of saltiness.
Bienmesabe is another instance of an imaginative name for a typical Canarian dish. This dessert is a traditional sweet made on the island of Gran Canaria, in the city of Tejeda, renowned for the abundance of almond trees which are used to elaborate bienmesabe. The recipe requires eggs, sugar, lemon zest and of course, almonds. The Canarian version is quite probably an adaptation of the traditional Spanish dessert called bienmesabe Antequerano from the province of Málaga. Now that you know the ingredients of the dish, can you guess the spanish meaning of bienmesabe? It translates literally as ‘it tastes good to me.’ Not an arduous name to remember when visiting the archipelago.
Like the rest of the countries of Europe, Spain has certain products which are granted the label of Protected Designation of Origin (PDO) to protect and promote the quality and authenticity of certain regional dishes and foods. Back in the 16th century, colonizers imported a variety of non-native vines to the Canary Islands, which then adapted to the volcanic nature of the land. As a result, there is a large variety of protected designation of origin (PDO) wines unique to the Canary Islands. Take a stroll under the sun of Abona and sample the white wine of this region, one of a kind.
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The capital of the island of Gran Canaria – Las Palmas (full name – Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria) lies on the north coast and is considered the center of nightlife.
The city was founded on June 24, 1478 under the name of Real de las Palmas, and already in 1492 Columbus ships anchored in its harbor. Now it is a bustling tourist center filled with hotels, restaurants and nightclubs.
Landmarks of Las Palmas
In the heart of the city are the historical quarter Vegeta with Santa Ana Cathedral (1497), Casa de Colon (“House of Columbus”, in fact the residence of the first governors of the island ), hermitage of San Antonio Abad (it was here that Columbus prayed before sailing to the shores of the New World), Museum of the Canary Islands (a good exposition on the archeology and pre-Hispanic culture of the islands), Museum of Science and Technology , as well as many old residential buildings with multi-colored facades and closed internal patios (a special pride of local houses are the characteristic carved balconies made of precious Canarian pine).
Carved balconies in Las Palmas
Monument to the dog in Las Palmas
Watchtower at San Cristobal in Las Palmas
Sandy beach in Las Palmas
South of Las Canteras beach begins the area of Ciudad Jardin (“Garden City”), which houses Doramas Park, on whose territory the typical flora of the archipelago is planted, beautiful alleys with waterfalls and special lighting are laid out, a typical Canarian village is recreated with Museum of the artist Nestor de la Torre , numerous galleries, studios and shops are equipped.
Patio in Las Palmas, Gran Canaria
Windsurfing in Las Palmas
Doramas Park in Las Palmas
Alfredo Kraus Auditorium in Las Palmas
Nearby are Julio Navarro Municipal Pool and Hotel Santa Catalina with the casino of the same name.
Beaches in Las Palmas
The beauty of the city is an excellent beach lying on the isthmus Las Canteras (length 4 km with a width of almost 100 m), closed from the sea by a reef, and therefore completely safe for swimming. Nearby are two other famous beaches of the city – Las Arcaravaneras and San Cristobal .
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Tours Las Palmas Spain 2022, ✈ hotel reservations and prices for vacations
High season
May – October
Temperature
Air: +26…+29 °C +20…12 °C 9021 C
Type of holiday
City Family Excursion
Currency
euros
Time
-2 hours to Moscow
LAS Palmas
Las Palmas -a city on the island of the Grand Channelia in the Atlantic Ocean, Spain.
Warm sunny weather, comfortable beaches and the rich underwater world of the island bring a lot of pleasure to vacationers.
Low prices, a wide range of goods and sales seasons make Las Palmas a paradise for shopaholics.
Those who like to combine business with pleasure go to the El Muelle shopping gallery, where fashion boutiques coexist with clubs, restaurants and cinemas.
The Museum of the Canary Islands, the historic Santa Catalina Hotel from 1890, the Diocesan Museum of Sacred Art and the Perez Galdos Theater attract connoisseurs of cultural relaxation.
Description of hotels
About the resort
Tours to this resort
About the resort
Reasons to go
Beaches. The mild climate throughout the season makes the coast of Las Palmas a desirable holiday destination. Alcaravaneras is known for its sports infrastructure. The landscaped area of Las Canteros provides maximum comfort, while the Confital is equipped with wheelchair ramps and a separate area for naturists.
Surfing. The beaches of Las Palmas allow you to practice your favorite sport all year round. Connoisseurs say that there are good ocean currents off the coast of La Laya, an annual professional championship is held on Confital, and Las Canteros has the best waves in Europe. At the Mojo Surf School, vacationers take private lessons and attend group classes.
Diving. The coastal waters of Las Palmas are interesting for lovers of diving to sunken ships. The most famous on the coast, the 110-meter Arona sank in 1972. The hull is overgrown with corals and anemones, and flocks of barracudas, minke whales and golden scorpions frolic inside.
Shopping. The Canary Islands is a duty-free zone, so shopaholics from all over the world flock here. Las Arenas and La Ballena are the largest shopping malls in Las Palmas. Shops of clothes and shoes, toys, perfumes and sporting goods are open here. The main sales area in the city is in the Triana area. The streets of Calle Cano and Plaza de Hurtado Mendoza are full of boutiques and outlets of famous brands: Armani, Chanel, Hugo Boss, Calvin Klein, Levi’s, Gucci, Escada.
Carnival. Every year, tourists in Las Palmas are waiting for a bright and noisy event. It runs for three weeks at the end of February. Fun competitions, performances by actors, musicians, jugglers and magicians are organized in Santa Catalina Park. The culmination of the festival is the selection of the Carnival Queen, the Burial of the Sardine, a grandiose costumed parade and a fantastic pyrotechnic show.
Did you know…
Laurel forests grow around the city.
Las Palmas is one of the sunniest places in the world. The number of cloudy days in a year is from 3 to 13%.
Travel hacks
A ferry from Gran Canaria to Tenerife costs from 35 € one way.
Shopping malls and districts scattered throughout the city. In order not to get lost, use the map of the resort.
From Las Palmas to Maspalomas – the island’s second most important resort – there is an intercity bus. Ticket price – 4 €.
Sales seasons in Las Palmas last from January 6 to the end of February and all summer. There are no restrictions on the export of clothing.
The cost of a surf lesson is from 40 € per person.
What to drink/eat?
Meat:
Conejo al salmorejo. Ragout of rabbit meat with tomatoes.
Vegetarian:
Papas arrugadas. Boiled potatoes in uniforms.
Snack:
Tapas. Assorted cuts: cheese, ham, sausage, olives, peppers.
Dessert:
Bienmesabe. Cream of yolk, almond, cinnamon and lemon.
Beverage:
Tropical. Local beer.
What to buy?
National souvenirs. Casa del Perfume Canario produces exclusive signature perfumes from natural essential oils without the use of preservatives. It also sells photo frames and handmade magnets, figurines made of clay and glass.
Local handicrafts. Artisans sell woven banana leaf baskets, hats and wicker bags. Particularly popular are carved mini-balconies made of Canary pine, embroidery, and traditional ceramic crafts.
Textile. The resort sells white and cream colored lace with sun prints, abstract patterns or Mediterranean patterns. Tablecloths decorated with openwork braid, curtains, scarves, cushion covers are popular purchases among tourists.
Tax Free
Canary Islands – duty free zone.
Where to photograph/what to photograph?
St. Anne’s Cathedral. The first Catholic church in the archipelago. The 15th century basilica is interesting because of the combination of three architectural styles: Gothic, Renaissance and Neoclassicism.
Parks. The city garden of Doramas originated in 1922 during the reconstruction of the hotel next door. His plan served as the basis for the development of the Canarian architectural style. Santa Catalina Park is more like a lively square – the center for the city’s mass events.
Museo Atlantico. Europe’s first underwater gallery of 300 statues made by British sculptor Jason de Caires Taylor. The purpose of the museum is to draw public attention to environmental issues. The figures are at a depth of 12 m.
Historical quarters. Triana – the main shopping center of the city. Buildings of the 18th-20th centuries are located along the street. The Vegueta area is home to most of Las Palmas’ main attractions – medieval buildings, squares and churches. Tourists come here to plunge into the atmosphere of the ancient city and take memorable photos.
Where, why?
History – Casa de Colon. Three-storey museum dedicated to the history of the Canary Islands, Las Palmas and the voyages of famous sailors. Since 1952, objects of the pre-Columbian era, paintings of the 16th-20th centuries have been exhibited here. A separate room presents a reconstruction of a fragment of the interior of the ship of Christopher Columbus.
Art – Atlantic Center for Contemporary Art. Located in a modernized building of a former hotel with marble stairs and lots of glass. The gallery has its own collection of paintings by influential Canarian artists and one of its aims is to make explicit the relationship between the cultures of three continents: Africa, Europe and Latin America. Here modern avant-garde works are shown and lectures and seminars on exhibitions are held.
Shopping – Mercado de Vegueta. A cluster of small stalls and shops located in the old quarter of the city. Here they sell meat, vegetables, fruits and fish, communicate with residents and look for local souvenirs – honey and wine.
Geography and landscape
Las Palmas is the capital of the province of the same name on the island of Gran Canaria. Belongs to the archipelago of the Canary Islands, Spain. Washed by the Atlantic Ocean.
The landscape is flat, hilly.
Tropical desert climate.
Emergency phone numbers
Police: 133.
Ambulance: 151.
Additional emergency room: 999.
Unified Emergency number: 112.
of the embassy and consulate No. The nearest diplomatic representation is in Madrid.
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Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Port of Puerto de la Luz
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria or simply Las Palmas is a beautiful, cosmopolitan, bustling city where intertwined cultural traditions of Spain, England, Holland, African countries. For all its modernity, it continues to maintain a certain amount of conservatism; here, in the old areas, like nowhere else in the Canaries, you can feel the real colonial atmosphere.
This city, large not only by island, but also by European standards, lies in the north-eastern part of the island of Gran Canaria, in a picturesque, beautiful place. It is one of the two administrative capitals of the Canary archipelago. The population of Las Palmas is constantly growing and has almost reached 400 thousand inhabitants. Today it is a large, important economic, political and cultural center of the islands, an international airport is located 25 km from the city, and the city port of Puerto de la Luz, due to its exceptionally favorable location, is one of the busiest not only in Spain, but also throughout the Atlantic Ocean.
Night Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Thanks to the favorable location of the island of Gran Canaria, Phoenicians, Carthaginians, Moors, and Genoese landed here, in a convenient harbor, where the city later arose. The first permanent settlement here in 1478 was founded by the Castilian military, who defeated the local population – the Guanche tribe. It was laid not on the coast, but a little to the south, on the site of modern Vegueta (Vegueta) – the old urban area. It is known that in 149In the year 2, Christopher Columbus once again stopped here, on his way to America, a hundred years later English pirates repeatedly attacked the harbor, the Dutch put forward their claims to the Canary Islands – in a word, the history of the city is full of bright, often tragic moments.
Its rapid development began only in the 19th century, after Sir Alfred Levy Jones opened the Gran Canaria Coal Company here, and a port was built near the city. It was at this time that Las Palmas began to expand to the north, the coastline began to be built up. At 19In the 70s, tourism began to actively develop in the Canary Islands, and this served as another impetus for the development and renewal of the city.
Today Las Palmas is a cluster of vibrant historical monuments, modern entertainment centers, shopping malls, office and residential buildings, many luxurious and modest hotels, restaurants, bars and cafes. And you can also find several wonderful beaches near the city, the most famous of which are Las Canteras and Las Alcaravaneras – long, wide, covered with golden sand and incredibly picturesque. Well, it’s not even worth talking about the opportunities for entertainment of any kind: surfers, divers, fishermen, lovers of hiking and extreme travel, noisy discos and colorful shows are waiting for a lot of discoveries.
Las Canteras beach
Moreover, the climate of Gran Canaria and the region around the resort of Las Palmas, after long studies, has been recognized as one of the most favorable in the whole world, although winter time is inferior to the climate in the south of the island. In total, the island has 18 climatic zones. Seasonal temperature fluctuations are not particularly noticeable here, it is almost never too hot (only when the wind brings the hot breath of the Sahara, which is only 180 km from here). The average summer air temperature is +27 degrees, winter is about +24. Of course, it is simply a sin not to use such conditions for medicinal, recreational purposes – in the Las Palmas area, there are many health centers where hydro and aromatherapy, salt baths, thalassotherapy, pressure and reflexology, massages, treatment with algae and mud are practiced.
The island’s capital, Las Palmas, located in the north of Gran Canaria, has a completely opposite climate, environment and lifestyle compared to the south of the island and the unofficial capital of Maspalomas.
Canaries Cathedral
The most famous sights here are the Canaries Cathedral, also known as the Cathedral of St. Anne, the Museum of the Canary Islands, the House of Columbus, the Doramos and Santa Catalina parks, the Bishop’s Palace, the Atlantic Center for Contemporary Art, the Canary Village Museum. Fans of theatrical art should visit the Perez Galdos theater, which has been operating for almost 130 years!
The best time to visit Las Palmas is… any month of the year! Many people prefer to go to Gran Canaria in winter, when we have cold, cloudy days, but here the sun shines and the streets of the city are full of bright greenery and flowers. If you are lucky enough to be in Las Palmas in February, you should definitely wait for the famous carnival, during which the whole city turns into a huge venue with incessant music, various competitions are held, where clowns and jugglers, magicians and acrobats constantly perform, fireworks thunder, fireworks shine and Wine flows like a river, every local resident and a knowledgeable tourist are looking forward to this bright event all year long, and while waiting, they pick up costumes and outfits in which they will join the festive atmosphere for several days! Carnival Las Palmas can be compared if only with Rio de Janeiro!
In a word, whenever you come to Las Palmas, you will definitely not be disappointed! This city enchants and falls in love with almost everyone!
Las Palmas and its historic center, Triana & Vegueta, we planned to see it for sure, so we went there first same trip. We started with Triana.
24 6 larabi June 2018
838
photo album
From ship to ball and funeral
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria – Spain
In February we were on a cruise to the Canary Islands on a Spanish cruise company’s economy class liner, although this cruise was expensive due to the annual February Canary Carnival, the cruise was called so – Carnival. But we sailed not because of the carnival, but mainly because of the amazing. ..
18 8 Ege February 2018
619
story
Charming towns and the botanical garden of Gran Canaria.
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Agüimes – Spain
The old centers of small towns in Gran Canaria have hardly changed since the Middle Ages, many look the same as they did 300 years ago.
24 21 Astro4ka November 2017
1200
story
Mountainous Gran Canaria. Shrines of the Guanches.
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria – Spain
Gran Canaries is an island of mountains of volcanic origin. When lava was ejected, nature created many rocks of amazing diversity, which the Guanches, the first inhabitants of the island, considered sacred. Even now, some rocks look so that you look at them. ..
28 20 Astro4ka November 2017
1353
photo album
Gran Canaria 2015 (4) City sketches
Canary Islands, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria + 1 city – Spain
There are many wonderful towns in Gran Canaria, perhaps even villages. Very different, but all cozy, quite quiet and picturesque. These are Firgas, the “water” capital of the island, and Arrucas, with its cathedral, as if transferred from somewhere in the center of Europe, and quiet Teror with a basilica and Canarian balconies ……
4 Anna_Vikulova May 2015
331
photo album
Gran Canaria 2012 (2), Las Palmas
Canary Islands, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria + 1 city – Spain
The capital of the island, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria deserves a separate photo album)))
The old, picturesque part of the city of Vegeta, the cozy shopping Triana, the huge beach of Las Canteras. .. I will be happy to return to this city, walk along its streets, admire the colorful houses and sit in quiet squares…
3 Anna_Vikulova May 2012
577
story
Canary Islands + Madeira: first island cruise experience, part 3
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Tenerife – Spain
In the final part of the February cruise, I share my impressions of those visual impressions and emotions that filled my time during the last two days of traveling in the Canaries.
11 3 OldSam February 2017
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story
Canary Islands + Madeira: first island cruise experience, part 1
+ 4 cities – Spain, Madeira – Portugal
A week-long cruise to the islands of the Canary archipelago plus Madeira – a lot of experiences and not easy to digest. But if you try and take into account some skills of previous travels, you can make a picture of each of the islands for subsequent travels….
18 4 OldSam February 2017
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story
The many-sided island of Gran Canaria
Maspalomas, Teror, Arucas + 2 cities – Spain
A story about pleasures, surprises and difficulties during the honeymoon trip
19 14 Schnapi October 2013
6613
story
Me gusta!
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria – Spain
Here I would like to tell you about my first independent romantic trip to the island of Gran Canaria. The purpose of my visit to the island of eternal spring was to meet a loved one, and either under the influence of love chemistry, or from some unknown . ..
8 Tanya_Gurina November 2015
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photo album
Canarian winter.
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria – Spain
How nice it is to plunge into the warmth and magic of the ocean in winter! Now every winter I want to go to different Canary Islands.
I bought tickets from Warsaw to Gran Canaria and back through ryanair, accommodation – airbnb (I used this service for the first time and was very pleased with the cleanliness of the room and the responsiveness of the hosts)….
44 20 skyblessed December 2015
1496
Review of the hotel
4.7 /5
Hotel Bull Reina ISABEL & SPA
Bull Reina Isabel & SPA-Las Palmas de-granarium
NOT OF NOT OF THE OF THE OF disappointed. The view from the room was on the street, but the room was good. Excellent soundproofing. The room is cleaned every day. Very convenient location of the hotel. From the hotel you can immediately go to the promenade and the beach. On the beach, you need to ask about the availability of free sunbeds at …
0 nordicos November 2013
224
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Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain – all about the city with photos
What to see
The northern part of the city is Santa Catalina Park. In many cafes under lush palm trees, there are a lot of people day and night. In the port part of the park there is an interesting Elder Museum (open: Tue-Sun 10.00-20.00, admission fee) – a well-organized museum of science and technology. From the museum, a landscaped pedestrian area stretches past a futuristic sail that hides a bus terminal to Muella Santa Catalina. The sparkling yellow and blue shopping center “El Muelle” houses shops, cinemas, discos, restaurants and cafes. On the other side of the square, a stone’s throw from the 3 km beach of Playa de las Canteras. Thanks to this beach, Las Palmas became the first tourist resort in Gran Canaria. However, today the golden days of the resort are in the past, and young people have moved to the south. A wide promenade lined with palm trees stretches along the entire beach. Hotels and restaurants lined up here, some of which have been operating since the 60s. 20th century A few hundred meters from the shore is the natural reef of La Barra, which turns the beach into a calm lagoon, where children and all those who cannot swim feel absolutely comfortable.
Return by bus from Santa Catalina to the picturesque Doramas Landscape Park, named after the Guanche chief. The park is surrounded by the Catalina Hotel. Next to it is the “Canary Village” – Pueblo Canario. Here you can buy handicrafts and see the performances of folklore groups (Sun 11.30, admission is free). The village was built by local modernist artist Néstor Fernández de la Torre (1887-1938) and his brother Miguel, a renowned architect. The Nestor Museum exhibits works by the artist, but now the museum is under restoration and is closed to the public.
To the south is San Telmo Park, where the main bus terminal of Las Palmas (underground) and the beautiful little chapel of Ermita de San Telmo are located. An elegant Art Nouveau kiosk decorated with shiny tiles marks the beginning of one of the city’s oldest districts, Triana. On Mayor de Triana, a long pedestrian street, you will find many magnificent Art Nouveau houses. There are a wide variety of shops and shops here. There is also the House Museum of Perez Galdos (open: Tue-Fri 10.00-16.00, Sat, Sun 10.00-14.00, admission is free). The writer was born in Gran Canaria in 1843. He is rightly called the Spanish Balzac. The house itself is a fine example of Canarian architecture.
Next to the museum you will find two beautiful squares, Plasoleta de Cairasco and Hurtado de Mendoza, more commonly called Las Ranas (The Frogs) because there is a fountain with two frogs in its center. On Plasoleta de Cairasco, there is a real masterpiece of Art Nouveau – Gabinete Literario, which is considered an artistic and historical monument.
Cross the busy street of Juan de Quesada and you will find yourself in the oldest part of Las Palmas, Veguete. The Spaniards set up camp here in 1478. It is said that Christopher Columbus prayed in the chapel of Hermit de San Antonio Abad before sailing to the New World. Many monuments of colonial architecture have been preserved in this area. You will be pleased to walk along the cobbled streets, admiring the white houses, entwined with bright bougainvillea. The area comes alive in the evenings, when bars and restaurants open almost until the morning.
There is a beautiful 15th century mansion on Colon Street. — House of Columbus (open: Mon-Fri 9.00-19.00, Sat, Sun 9.00-15.00, admission fee). The house is the residence of the first governor of the island. It is believed that Columbus stopped here, although there is no evidence for this. Today it is a curious museum with a beautiful courtyard. The exposition tells about the era of great geographical discoveries. Displayed here are navigational instruments, maps and weapons, a replica cabin on Columbus’ Niña caravel, and pre-Columbian artifacts from Mexico and the Ecuadorian island of La Tolita.
The massive Cathedral of Santa Ana rises around the corner (open: Mon-Fri 10.00-16.30, Sat 10.00-13.30, admission is paid, only through the church museum). The appearance of the cathedral combines elements of Gothic, Renaissance and neoclassical style. Nearby is the Diocesan Museum of Religious Art (open, like the cathedral; entrance from Via Espiritu Santo). See the beautiful cloister and the orange patio, where the silence is broken only by the singing of birds. A modern elevator will take you up to one of the cathedral’s two towers, from where you can enjoy a beautiful view of Las Palmas. On Santa Ana Square, opposite the cathedral, there is a magnificent administrative building – Casas Consistoriales.
Not far from the square you can see the Atlantic Center for Contemporary Art (CAAM) (open: Tue-Sat 10.00-21.00, Sun 10.00-14.00, admission free), which presents the work of young Canarian artists. The neighboring Canary Museum (open: Mon-Fri 10.00-20.00, Sat, Sun 10. 00-14.00, admission fee) displays a collection of objects dating back to the period before the Spanish conquest. In one of the halls you can see the skulls and mummies of the Cro-Magnons.
Market
Especially popular in Las Palmas is the Begueta Market, which is located on Medisabel Street (open: daily 6.30-14.00). They sell fruits and vegetables, fresh fish, smoked meats and cheeses. There are many good eateries and bars in the market and neighboring streets.
See also: Photos of the British Virgin Islands, Sights of Switzerland, Cities of Nauru, Vatican City, Alaverdi, Kanazawa, Sea of Azov, Tash Rabat
Las Palmas is a dream office for digital nomads. Spain in Russian
The ability to solve your work issues from anywhere in the world, including on the beach or in the mountains (if only there was an Internet connection), “remote” work for yourself or a company – all this sounded like something fantastic not so long ago, but in the modern world, it has become quite commonplace, which allows you to travel and almost simultaneously do your favorite things.
In the last couple of years, the capital of the island of Gran Canaria, the city of Las Palmas, has become a big “office” for the so-called “digital nomads” – professionals who can work without being tied to one workplace. These contemporary “freelance artists” from around the world are transforming Las Palmas into a cosmopolitan city with a comfortable environment to live and work. Today we will find out why digital nomads choose the Spanish islands, and in particular the city of Las Palmas, as a place that serves them as both an incredibly beautiful office and a cozy home. Carefully! After reading, there is a risk of wanting to start a new, adventurous life as a “remote worker” …
Why Las Palmas?
This is the first question that comes to the mind of those who start to think about choosing a place to work remotely with a lot of options. The simple answer given by the “remote workers” themselves is that they are attracted to the climate of the Canary Islands. This factor unites the Canary Islands with California, which is often chosen by specialists in the famous Silicon Valley when they want to escape from the office on the coast. But unlike the cities of the US West Coast, the prices for renting and buying a home in Las Palmas are much lower.
To get the perfect cocktail, you need to add other components to good weather: a convenient geographical location, numerous direct flights from many European countries and other cities in Spain at attractive rates, a developed network of co-working centers, as well as the opportunity to play sports, the most popular type of which is here is surfing. Many employees note the quality and affordable prices of the Internet, which is vital for remote work.
Best co-working centers
Remote workers choose a variety of ways to organize their work: a home office with an ocean view, local bars and cafes with free internet access, co-working centers. Usually all this is combined depending on the needs. The advantage of coworking centers is that you can work here in a relaxed business environment and at the same time get to know other specialists, share experience, and create joint projects. This option is also convenient for a group of employees who are engaged in one project, but do not have an office.
GoCoworking
This center is located in the commercial area of Las Palmas and offers its customers comfortable workspaces, a separate meeting room, stable high speed internet, office equipment and in addition a rooftop terrace for relaxation. It often hosts master classes from leading experts, refresher courses and meetings of creative workers.
Address: Calle Perojo, 25, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria.
Tariffs:
The Sandbox
A great option for fans of outdoor activities after work, located within walking distance from the beach area. The bright interior design, where surfboards and bicycles organically fit in, persistently reminds of a dynamic lifestyle. The center even has its own shower room, where you can go after the beach before the start of the working day. A flexible tariff system allows you to plan your work schedule without overpaying for days of absence.
Address: Calle Fernando Guanarteme, 111, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria.
Tariffs:
Hashtag WorkSpace
Workspace in the historic part of the city with its own hostel, cooking area and bike rental. The working areas are decorated in a calm style and equipped with all necessary equipment. Here you can rent an individual office and meeting room.
Address: Calle Juan de Quesada, 22, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria.
Tariffs:
What to do in your spare time in Las Palmas?
Watching the traffic in the areas closest to the Las Canteras beach, you can see that the remote working day of the island workers begins in the morning and ends in the afternoon. After lunch, the beaches begin to gradually fill up, and workers leave the nearby co-working centers, cafes and bars towards the sun and waves.
In addition to the boom in telecommuting, Las Palmas is experiencing a boom in surfing, and the two phenomena are closely intertwined. Surfers and other active sports enthusiasts come to the island to hone their skills, and then find remote work and return here to never again have to choose between work and hobby. The beach area of Las Canteras is considered the best for water sports, both for beginners and professionals. This area is home to the well-known Ocean Side company, which includes the Quiksilver Gran Canaria surf school, which welcomes students of all ages and skill levels, as well as a specialty store, an active travel agency and entertainment services.
Refresh yourself with a cold cocktail or a cup of coffee after work in the numerous bars of the beach area. The most popular among locals are Mumbai Sunset and The Block Café, which has a dedicated area for surfboards and quiet corners for working with a laptop. Nightly dance events in this area are held almost daily and often delight guests with master classes in Latin American dances.
Canarian cosmopolitanism
Beach Las Canteras
It doesn’t immediately come to mind that the boom in remote workers on the islands is leading to the development of cities. But this is happening quite quickly, and we can see the change in the example of Las Palmas, where local residents note the improvement of infrastructure, the construction of new sports fields and the beautification of the beaches. In addition, schools of foreign languages are opened under the guidance of native speakers, exhibitions and concerts are held with the invitation of foreign artists.
Mixing culinary traditions of the peoples of the world leads to the creation of new unusual dishes. The gastronomy of the Canary Islands remains at the head of the menu of each restaurant, complemented by other Mediterranean dishes.