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The Moors called it Al-Gharb, and, in
truth, many centuries after they left, the Algarve has still remained
more North African than European. It is an exquisite collision of
cultures.
Meals here might start off, in Portuguese style, with fish from
a cataplana, a hinged copper cooking vessel, but you will soon taste
the Arabic influence in the sweet almond and honey deserts. The town
of Tavira might have thirty-seven churches but it is still the fret-cut
chimneys, mosque-like cupolas and cubist houses dotted across the
Algarve that draw the eye.
Following in the footsteps of the long-departed Moors is a new civilisation
of sports lovers, delighting in the year-round sunshine. In the resort
of Quinta do Lago, golf is king, with no less than four magnificent
championship golf courses.
The beach at Quinta do Lago stretches as far as the eye can see
and provides the perfect setting for a healthy morning hike or a
day of fun with the family amongst the waves. But this is also a
land of tranquil, natural beauty with a network of dunes, sand banks,
canals and marshes forming the ragged horizon of the Formosa estuary
and a natural habitat for all forms of bird and wildlife. |
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