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All information about Pajara - Fuerteventura courtesy of |
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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.
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15/01/2009 Shrouded in mystery, Cofete is in the most isolated corner of Fuerteventura. Even today, the village can only be reached by an exhausting track or along the local people’s [ ... ] |
16/01/2009 Corralejo is filled with colour and bustle, like anywhere where tourism races ahead to fast and the infrastructure is unable to keep up. Most of the shops and restaurants are concentrated alo [ ... ] |
08/04/2009 Arcotrust is a Real Estate business in El Cotillo and is run by a couple from Belgium. You can come to us for advice concerning the buying, selling and renting of apartments, houses, commercial pr [ ... ] |
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 [ ... ] |
26/06/2009
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16/01/2009 The village lies at the foot of the 401 m mountain of the same name. Because of its particularly hard rock, the mountain defies erosion, and in clear weather you can see Teide, the highest mountain on [ ... ] |
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 [ ... ] |
01/06/2009
Bars, Cafe´s, Restaurants and Nightbars in Corralejo / Fuerteventura
The Nightclub Majestic |
01/06/2009
Sports, Wellness and Excursions in Jandia / Morro Jable
Herzlich willkommen bei |
16/01/2009 Coming from Puerto del Rosario, the last few kilometres of road climb continuously, providing a view over the western plain on the right-hand side. The village itself consists of small, clay-coloured [ ... ] |
Other Articles
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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.




