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My trip to Lanzarote

by Dimi on December 26th, 2009

In the first week of december I made a trip of to Lanzarote together with my travel partner from Thomas Cook/Neckermann. The idea of this trip was to see the entire Island and its beautiful volcanic nature. With approximately 60 kilometers from north to south it hasn’t been a problem to discover about every aspect this island has to offer.

As we had a rental car we were not bound to excursions organised by our tour operator so we had the freedom to explore the island on our own rate and combine different excursions. The first trip we made was to the Jardin de Cactus, created by the island’s main architect César Manrique. This is a garden which has over more than 1000 types op cactuses from over the entire planet. It’s a beautiful thing to see all these kinds of cactuses which you couldn’t imagine they existed.

As I mentioned before César Manrique is the main architect of the island Lanzarote and his architectural ideas were used as a standard all over the island. We visited his home where he used to live until his fatal car accident in 1992 and I must say that his home was impressive. This house was build on and even through a coagulated lava field as you can see in the following images.

Another trip we made was to the Timanfaya National Park whis is a large area mainly populated with coagulated lava and craters from volcano eruptions. This was impressive to see but personally I wasn’t very keen on the mandatory bus tour. Tourists cannot explore this area on their own so you need to take a bus tour which only stops at certain times but doesn’t let you leave the bus. This same day we also went to El Golfo which is a crater and laguna located in the west of Lanzarote. Personally this was one of my Lanzarote-favorites as you can see in the next images. I could stand there all day just to watch the water move and clank to the rocks.

After these trips we decided to go on another kind of tour of Lanzarote; the wine-tour. La Geria is a zone of vineyards in the centre of Lanzarote and has 7 bodega’s where you can taste some wines, created in these vineyards. Out of these 7 bodega’s, 6 are located within a zone of 500 metres and we checked afterwards to notice that it took us about 3 hours to get past of this zone. But in the meanwhile we had tasted a lot of different wines La Geria has to offer. I’m not a wine connoisseur but I tasted a lot of difference between the wines and I loved it :) .

On our last day of trips we went to Jameos Del Agua which is a small cave known for its white blind crabs. Personally this was somewhat of a disappointment. It is a small dark cave, you can see the very tiny crabs but after 5 minutes you have seen it all and the museum attached to this place is in my opinion only built to justify the 8 euros entry fee. Afterwards we headed to Cueva de los Verdes which is a cave of approximately 6 to 7 kilometers built by a large lava-stream underneath the island. This is very impressive to see but the most impressive part of the day came later on as we visited the Mirador Del Rio, a viewpoint in the very north of Lanzarote. The view up there is amazing but in this case images speak louder than words.

Previous information was only the nature-part of our holiday but you cannot go to spain without eating some tapas and in our case, a lot of tapas. We visited tapas bars every day and we can say that we found some very good ones. My favorites were Bodega, located in the center of Puerto Del Carmen (Calle del Roque Nublo 5, to be more specific) and a small one in the center of Yaïza (I’m not sure but I believe it was called La Terracita).

Other than this we also enjoyed the weather which was averaged to a bit more than 20 degrees during our stay of a week. For me it was awkward to walk between christmas decoration wearing sunglasses and a t-shirt.

If you want to see more images than provided in this article you can always check the entire collection at http://www.dimitri.eu/gallery2/v/lanzarote/.

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