MAIS SOBRE O SEU DESTINO

DE MAJORCA
Os nossos embaixadores locais revelam-lhe os recantos mais autênticos.
PODE HAVER ALGO MAIS ROMÂNTICO DO QUE PERDER-SE POR MAIORCA?
In recent years Majorca has shaken off its cheap and cheerful image of the kiss-me-quick package holiday. Those willing to leave the tourist-courting coastal resorts will find an idyllic and unspoiled island, blessed by a perfect Mediterranean climate. Capital city Palma counts among Europe’s most fashionable cities – a pocket-sized Barcelona with a lively café society, designer boutiques and a flourishing arts scene. By contrast time appears to stand still in Majorca’s rural interior, with its honey-coloured villages, welcoming people and astonishing breadth of scenery. From craggy mountains and citrus groves to deserted coves, photogenic fishing harbours and marshy wetlands famed for rare birdlife, little wonder Majorca is the Mediterranean’s most popular holiday island.
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Pilar and Joan Miró Foundation
The Catalan abstract artist Joan Miró lived on Majorca for most of his life, and his house and studio, in the rarely-frequented Palma suburb of Cala Major, have now been turned into a museum of his work. The Pilar and Joan Miró Ga…
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Valldemossa
For serious travellers, Valldemossa is the place you must visit in Mallorca. Set in the Sierra de Tramuntana, the village is an enchanting maze of narrow streets, cobbles and pine trees, decorated with traditional tiles and earthe…
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Can Joan de S’Aigo Café
Hidden amidst the narrow sun-baked streets of Palma de Majorca’s old town, Can Joan de S’Aigo is a 200-year-old local café-cum-chocolatería, with a tiled floor, gilt-mirrored walls and marble tabletops, and is well worth the hunt.…