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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 In La Oliva, the administrative centre of the district, the magnificent buildings of the Casa de los Coroneles and of the once sumptuous, now deserted residence of the Manrique y Laras are reminders o [ ... ] |
16/01/2009 On the fertile plain between Antigua and Tuineje lie several little villages that still live mainly from farming. One of them is Valles de Ortega. |
16/01/2009 In the heart of the Malpaís de la Arena, not far from the old coastline on the road from Corralejo to El Cotillo, lies the little town of Lajares. This boasts both a football stadium, built in 1990, [ ... ] |
16/01/2009 is situated between Puerto del Rosario and the Airport of Fuerteventura |
01/06/2009 Sports, Leisure and Excursions in El Cotillo |
16/01/2009 The attraction of the village is on the main road, the OASIS DE LOS CAMELLOS zoo, with dromedaries, horses and donkeys to ride, monkeys and various species of birds to watch, a bar with rustic wooden [ ... ] |
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 [ ... ] |
01/06/2009
Sports, Wellness, Leisure and Excursions in Corralejo
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16/01/2009 The valley and the village of the same name are one of the most beautiful parts of Fuerteventura. Starting from the plaza with the church built in 1666, white and clay-coloured buildings (fincas) run [ ... ] |
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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.




