Saturday, 28 March 2015

Top 5 Eminently Beautiful Towns of Portugal





Picture courtesy - Colliers.com

With more than 800km of coastline, Portugal can hold you captive when it comes to beaches. Generally a large portion of Portugal's outskirt is formed by its long Atlantic shoreline, and there's a shoreline for every taste – from serene moon-molded bays to rough shores hit by gliding over the surf, from kilometers of almost untouched sand to gathering shorelines where tourists pack in like sardine.

Lagos

Picture courtesy - blogs.iesabroad.org


Picture courtesy -  wikimedia.org

Resort; Picture courtesy - weloveportugal.com 

Lagos overflows life. A lively, sunny town, its cute cobbled avenues abound with bistros, restaurants and bars. It's a magnet for hikers and surf men, who swing between its clubs and adjacent majestic shorelines and striking seaside bays. Lagos additionally has a historic clout, having dispatched many sea operations amid Portugal's Age of Discoverie.

Vila Nova De Milfontes

Picture courtesy - http://greenwayrooms.pt

Picture courtesy -  static.panoramio.com

One of the loveliest towns along this stretch of the coast, Vila Nova de Milfontes has an appealing whitewashed centre, shimmering beaches  in close vicinity and a laid-back populace who cannot think of living at a better place than here. Milfontes stays a to great deal all the more relaxed than most resort towns, besides in August when its stuffed to the grip with surfers and sun-seekers (up to 50,000 individuals around the local area). It's placed amidst the lovely Parque Natural do Sudoeste Alentejano e Costa Vicentina which is still a port nearby an exquisite, sand-edged appendage of estuary.

Zambujeira Do Mar

Picture courtesy -  notesfromcamelidcountry.files.wordpress.com

Picture courtesy - wikimedia.org

 Enchantingly wild shorelines upheld by tough bluffs build the setting of this lethargic ocean side town. The fundamental road ends at the bluff, ways lead to the alluring sands beneath. Quieter than Vila Nova, Zambujeira draws in hikers, surfy swarms, however in August the town is a gathering place and hosts the monstrous music fest, Festa do Sudoeste. The high-season swarms obscure Zambujeira's out-of-season charms: crisp fish in family run restaurants, raving precipice top strolls and a romantic, vacant coast.

Costa da Caparica

Picture courtesy - miguelclaro.com

Picture courtesy - 1.bp.blogspot.com

Picture courtesy -  orgd.netii.net

 Costa da Caparica's apparently ceaseless shoreline draws in sun-worshippers, surfers desperate to ride Atlantic waves, and holidaying families looking for clean ocean and delicate sand. It hasn't skipped commercialization, however travel south where the elevated buildings submit to pine woods and smooth shoreline shack bistros. The town has the same name as the coastline, and is a sprightly place with shops and loads of inflatable ocean side tack.

Viana do Castelo

Picture courtesy - c1.staticflickr.com

Picture courtesy – info.goodbytravel.com

Picture courtesy -  wikimedia.org

The gem of the Costa Verde, Viana do Castelo is honored with both an engaging medieval town and beautiful shorelines just outside the city. The old quarters showcase verdant, nineteenth century streets and narrow paths packed with Manueline estates and extravagant castles. The town's setting just by the Rio Lima estuary implies that Viana do Castelo is just a short jump from some brilliant shorelines, furthermore it makes it a  convenient base for exploring the lower Lima valley and the close-by Serra d'Arga mountain.

Courtesy - TraveleZ


No comments:

Post a Comment