Pictures from The Canary Islands

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Here are some pictures of The Canary Islands – an amazing travel destination.   Continue reading Pictures from The Canary Islands

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The Canary Islands

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The Canary Islands

Population: 2.099.000

Area: 7447 km2

Seven islands, six little isles, four national parks, hundreds of volcanoes, nearly all which are now inactive: this is a brief outline of an archipelago that lies off the West coast of Morocco, near the Tropic of Cancer. Annexed to Spain between the XIV and XV centuries when the earliest inhabitants, the Guanches, were still there, then transformed into a flourishing trading centre on the shipping and trade routes to the American and African continents, these islands are nowadays two distinct Spanish provinces: the Western Islands (Tenerife, La Palma, El Hierro and La Gomera) and the Eastern Islands (Gran Canaria, Lanzarote, Fuerteventura). The fantastic scenery, pleasant climate and beautiful sea have all made this place a paradise for tourism, though tourists seem to prefer the easternmost islands; La Palma, El Hierro and La Gomera are practically still free of important resorts. Tenerife is the most popular; its name derives from the Guanches dialect name for “Snow-clad Mountain”, clearly referring to the imposing Pico del Teide, which is the 3718 metre high inactive volcano that dominates this triangular island and is the highest in the whole of Spain. Beside seeing the capital of Tenerife, Santa Cruz, with its white beaches, its churches and interesting museums, the great Parque Nacional del Teide is definitely worth a visit: the park stretches fot kilometres in the barren, lavic scenery that skirts the two volcano cones of the mountain, interrupted only here and there by defiant but rare and beautiful and plants.

Continue reading The Canary Islands

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