|
All information about Pajara - Fuerteventura courtesy of |
|
Considering its administrative importance - this is where the major tourist centres on Jandía are administered - Pájara has a surprisingly rural and tranquil air. At the edge of town there are picturesque, clay-coloured farmhouses long exposed to the ravages of time, and in the centre, myriads of birds twitter in the tall, shady trees and bushes. There are lawns, and even a freshwater swimming-pool with eight 25 m lanes.
|
01/06/2009
Bars, Cafe´s, Restaurants and Nightbars in Corralejo / Fuerteventura
The Nightclub Majestic |
14/01/2009 This is where Jean de Béthencourt and Gadifer de la Salle disembarked in 1402. The two conquerors pushed on through the valley of Vega de Río Palmas, tall palm-trees above them, |
16/01/2009 Once an isolated fishing village accessible only by rough tracks, over the last few decades Morro Jable has grown into one of the largest holiday centres on Fuerteventura. This is not surprising, as t [ ... ] |
16/01/2009 On the way to the sea, to Giniginamar, the carefully tended plants on either side of the road are striking. The young trees are protected from goats by wire meshing. The old town of Giniginamar contin [ ... ] |
16/01/2009 The village, and the valley, got their name because of a private donation. In 1589, Ines Peraza had the first little church built and dedicated to the saint of her name. The present-day chapel goes ba [ ... ] |
16/01/2009 The history of the village has been shaped by its nearness to Puerto de Rosario. From 1835 to 1930, Tetir was an independent district, until along with Casillas del Angel, it was annexed to the capita [ ... ] |
01/06/2009 Sports, Leisure and Excursions in El Cotillo |
16/01/2009 In the centre, the magnificent church and the nondescript administration building, serving a district that includes the town of Gran Tarajal, stand facing each other. There is a black memorial plaque [ ... ] |
16/01/2009 The narrow tarmac road winds down through the Barranco de los Molinos to the west coast. Where the road ends lies the idyllic fishing village of Los Molinos, with a sheltered bay between steep dark cl [ ... ] |
16/01/2009 Once upon a time, this valley was rich in water and rain, and even today is one of the rare spots on Fuerteventura where the sight of green terraced fields full of vegetables, mulberry bushes, carob t [ ... ] |
Other Articles
|


tourist centres on Jandía are administered - Pájara has a surprisingly rural and tranquil air. At the edge of town there are picturesque, clay-coloured farmhouses long exposed to the ravages of time, and in the centre, myriads of birds twitter in the tall, shady trees and bushes. There are lawns, and even a freshwater swimming-pool with eight 25 m lanes.




