Insight Guides Pocket Algarve
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Insight Guides Pocket Algarve

Insight Guides

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Insight Guides Pocket Algarve

Insight Guides

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About This Book

Portugal's southern coastal region is one of Europe's premier beach destinations, known for its magnificent year-round weather, superb golf facilities and top sports holidays. Be inspired to visit by the brand new Insight Guide Pocket Algarve, a concise, full-colour travel guide that combines lively text with vivid photography to highlight the best that the Algarve has to offer.

Inside Insight Guide Pocket Algarve: The Algarve has many pleasures to tempt the visitor: discover glorious stretches of golden sand of leading resort Albufeira, ocean-skimming golf courses and the excitement of big-game fishing, horse riding or tennis. Or for something more sedate, explore the shops to find hand-painted ceramics in towns such as Faro, Lagos and atmospheric Tavira - one of the region's most historic cities. Handy maps on the cover flaps help you get around.

To inspire you, the book offers a rundown of the Algarve's Top 10 Attractions, followed by ideas for how to spend the Perfect Day. The What to Do chapter is a snapshot of ways to spend your spare time, from nightlife and shopping to sports.

The book provides all the essential background information, including an overview of the Algarve's history, sporting facilities, and suggestions for excursions to Lisbon. There are carefully chosen listings of the best hotels and restaurants and an A-Z of all the practical information you'll need.

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Publisher
Insight
ISBN
9781786717009
Where To Go
The Algarve stretches from the Atlantic Ocean to Spain, but it’s actually a small region. Faro, the capital, is just 50km (30 miles) from the Spanish border, and it is only 112km (70 miles) west of what was known in medieval times as o fim do mundo (the end of the world) at Sagres. Along this 160km (100-mile) coastal strip, resorts and holiday villages of all types have sprung up, so wherever you are based, you’ll never be far from a good beach, a reasonably sized town, village, or resort, shops and nightlife.
The following pages cover the Algarve from west to east, though you could of course do the reverse or begin in the centre, in or around Faro, and embark on day trips both east and west from there. The A22 motorway, or IP1 (toll payable), provides fast access across the region, running north of the slow-going, but toll-free, coastal N125. For those with additional time and an interest in seeing the Portuguese capital, a brief section on Lisbon is included. Lisbon is about two to three hours by train or car (and 40 minutes by plane) from Faro; it should be conceived of as an add-on to your visit to the Algarve rather than a day trip.
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Picturesque rock formations at Praia de Três Irmãos
Getty Images
Western Algarve
The Sagres peninsula
If you begin your journey at Sagres 1 [map], you’ll be in for a surprise. Rather than the built-up tourist resorts the Algarve is famous for, it has a remote, rugged, undiscovered feel. There is only a relative smattering of hotels, restaurants and other facilities aimed at tourists here, making it like an outpost of the Algarve – which is precisely why it has so many admirers. In particular, it is favoured by surfers.
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The rocky peninsula near Sagres
Lydia Evans/Apa Publications
Sagres’ connections to the sea are strong. Prince Henry the Navigator established his Navigation School here (though some suggest that it was further east, near Lagos). The town has a picturesque working harbour, where small, brightly painted fishing boats bob and larger vessels haul in daily catches of lobster, eel and mackerel. A couple of restaurants are clustered around the harbour, with impressive views. Inland, a cute little square, Praça República, is ringed by informal (and, in summer, heaving) nightspots.
The best beaches near Sagres are sheltered and not overcrowded. Mareta, down below the pousada (government-owned inn), is the most popular. Martinhal, just east of the harbour, is a wide, curved beach. Beliche (also written Belixe) is a sandy expanse protected by the Cabo de São Vicente. Tonel, just before Beliche, and Telheiro, about 9km (6 miles) up the west coast from Sagres, are also well-regarded beach spots. There are plenty of companies offering watersports in this area, particularly surfing.
Beyond the village of Sagres, a great, rocky peninsula hangs above a brooding ocean. You’ll understand why, in the days before the great Portuguese explorers set out from here seeking to discover the great beyond, it was known as the End of the World. Those wishing to put a positive spin on things called it Sacrum Saturni – Holy Promontory – and believed that the gods slept here.
Henry’s Sagres
Henry the Navigator – Infante Dom Henrique – was bequeathed the land around Sagres in 1443 by his brother. Henry lived within the castle and died in Sagres in 1460, though his remains were later transferred to the Batalha monastery north of Lisbon.
Since time immemorial this forlorn place has stirred the imagination. Henry and his sailors are said to have set up camp at the Fortaleza de Sagres (Fortress; daily May–Sept 9.30am–8pm, Oct–Apr 9.30am–5.30pm; free 1st Sun of month) that fills the promontory. Unfortunately, not much of the original has survived. Most of it is a 17th-century fort that was insensitively restored: the walls have been resurfaced with grey concrete and whitewashed, masking the external character of the building, though it still has an imposing, wind-buffeted appeal. The fortress’s principal building, which may have been Henry’s headquarters, no longer exists. What you’ll find inside is a small 16th-century chapel, Nossa Senhora da Graça, and what looks to be a huge stone sundial, known as the Rosa dos Ventos (Rose Compass). A modern hall on the fort’s grounds houses an exhibition area with a rewarding view over the coastline.
A couple of kilometres (1 mile) west of Sagres are the more authentic remains of another fortress, Fortaleza do Beliche. This small, attractive 17th-century castle houses a white, domed chapel (Santa Catarina). Both the fort and chapel, however, threaten to collapse because the surrounding cliffs are eroding at a frightening rate and the site, at one time a hotel, is now considered dangerous and off-limits.
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The lighthouse guards the coast at Cape São Vincente
Lydia Evans/Apa Publications
The windswept cliffs of Cabo de São Vicente, the most southwesterly point in Europe, were once surely even more bleak than they are today, when supertankers and small yachts heave into view. But even on the calmest of days, the Atlantic thunders below and the wind whips around the cape. At the tip of the point, the light­house, built in 1904 on the site of a convent chapel, has a beam visible up to 96km (60 miles) away. Visitors can climb the stairs to a hot, enclosed lookout (Wed summer 2–5pm, winter 1.30–4.30pm; free).
The first settlement of any size outside Sagres is Vila do Bispo, situated 7km (4 miles) to the north. Take a break in the peaceful town’s pleasant, flower-filled garden square and pay a visit to the 18th-century parish church. The walls are covered with azulejos (tiles) and the ceiling decorated with frescoes.
About halfway between Sagres and Lagos, Salema is a nicely small-scale, laidback resort, popular with independent travellers, with a lively sprinkling of bars and restaurants, and a lovely wide sandy beach.
Burgau, 3.2km (2 miles) east, is small and sleepy, though it gets busy in July and August. It has another appealing sandy beach, backed by craggy cliffs, with the road down to it lined by fishing boats. The small village retains its easy-going local character.
Luz is a pleasant seaside town, another low-key, attractive small resort. All that remains of old Luz is the church and, opposite, the fortress, which has been renovated and converted into a restaurant (www.fortalezada...

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