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All information about Valle de Santa Ines - Fuerteventura courtesy of |
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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 back to the 17th century. It contains a baroque altar with san Barolomé and five impressive paintings that are among the most beautiful on the island.
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13/01/2009 Aguas Verdes is literally “at the end of the world”. Beyond Llanos de la Conception, a narrow road leads along a dry barranco to a couple of weekend houses and the holiday club on the west coa [ ... ] |
16/01/2009 This is not the southernmost tip of Fuerteventura, but it is the furthest west and most isolated, accessible only by a 20 km dirt track from Morro Jable, which turns back into narrow tarmac roads at t [ ... ] |
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 [ ... ] |
16/01/2009 The church of Nuestra Señora del Socorro and the cemetery are off the main road. Apart from the Bar La Matilla, there are only a few scattered houses, some of whose patios have tall, thick trees for [ ... ] |
16/01/2009 The name stands for an attempt at more exclusive tourism that was made in 1966. To date, the complex consists of an exclusive hotel with a collection of bungalows, plus detached private houses that ar [ ... ] |
01/06/2009
Sports, Wellness, Leisure and Excursions in Corralejo
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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 [ ... ] |
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 A picturesque little fishing village with a black beach and houses clinging to the hillsides in terraces. Narrow alleyways and sleepy silence during the siesta, when the sun warms the sheltered bay in [ ... ] |
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 [ ... ] |
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