Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
selenak: (City - KathyH)
[personal profile] selenak
Friday and Saturday saw us exploring the east coast of Mallorca, going from the nearly people free peninsula Cap de Formentor to the packed (well, for the season) beach towns like Cala Ratjada, with a lot of fortresses from towns within the country in between. My trusty camera clicked away, sometimes with maternal assistance. (It's tough to take a picture when you're driving and a car behind you on a small road makes it impossible, or at least very impolite, to stop. Thankfully, more often than not, the lack of traffic made other solutions possible.)




This is what you find when you drive all the way up to the most eastern corner of the North Coast, or the most northern corner of the East Coast, as the case may be. First, you arrive at the bay between Port de Pollenca and Cap de Formentor.

2008_0208Photos0055.JPG


This would be Port de Pollenca.

2008_0208Photos0056.JPG


And then, once on the peninsula, you get this:

2008_0208Photos0057.JPG


2008_0208Photos0058.JPG


My mother, having defeated her vertigo, wrestled the camera away from me and told me where to go and pose:

2008_0208Photos0059.JPG


2008_0208Photos0062.JPG


And then we went back to admiring the landscapes:

2008_0208Photos0063.JPG


2008_0208Photos0064.JPG

2008_0208Photos0065.JPG


The light tower (is this the right English phrase) marking the end of the peninsula:

2008_0208Photos0076.JPG

2008_0208Photos0074.JPG


From there, you have this view:

2008_0208Photos0073.JPG


But the sea isn't the only thing making the pensinsula beautiful. Here's what it looks like with no coast in sight:

2008_0208Photos0079.JPG


The very first Hotel on Mallorca was build here, on Cap de Formentor, in 1926, by an Argentinian. Alas, it's closed until April, so we couldn't see it from the inside, but we did walk a bit on the beach of the Hotel Formentor, where you have this view:

2008_0208Photos0080.JPG

The hotel itself:

2008_0208Photos0081.JPG


And one more look back:
2008_0208Photos0082.JPG


Saturday gave us finally a church that was open. St John's in Muro.

2008_0209Photos0006.JPG

2008_0209Photos0005.JPG

2008_0209Photos0003.JPG

2008_0209Photos0004.JPG




Then we visited Arta, where you have a great view over the town with its terracotta roofs. You also have various museums which are closed until March and April, including the one which exhibits the findings from Ses Paisses, the nearby bronze age evacuation sight. However, there is still the outside of Santuari de San Salvador and the view to admire:

2008_0209Photos0009.JPG


2008_0209Photos0011.JPG


Next, we went to Capdepera. Which offered the huge remains of a castle that was meant to keep the entire population of the town inside, if necessary. I couldn't get a photo of the whole area, but here are pieces, and a view:

2008_0209Photos0018.JPG

2008_0209Photos0020.JPG

2008_0209Photos0016.JPG


Then it was time for another light tower, this one at Cala Ratjada:

2008_0209Photos0021.JPG

2008_0209Photos0024.JPG


Cala Cantyamel, on the other hand, went for a 13th century tower:

2008_0209Photos0026.JPG


We also visited Petra, which is a sleepy town in ocre and yellow with just one claim to fame: it's the hometown of Fra Juniper Serra, the No.2 famous monk from Mallorca. Californians, this was your founder, so to speak. Well, he did found just about every mission in California. The house where he was born is now a museum:

2008_0209Photos0028.JPG

2008_0209Photos0027.JPG

2008_0209Photos0029.JPG

2008_0209Photos0030.JPG




And finally, Sineu, our last stop:

2008_0209Photos0038.JPG


2008_0209Photos0033.JPG


2008_0209Photos0034.JPG

Back at the hotel!

2008_0208Photos0085.JPG
This account has disabled anonymous posting.
If you don't have an account you can create one now.
HTML doesn't work in the subject.
More info about formatting

Profile

selenak: (Default)
selenak

February 2026

S M T W T F S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Page generated Feb. 4th, 2026 02:21 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios