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Michelin The Green Guide : Spain
Michelin
  This comprehensive and practical travel guide to Spain offers suggestions on what to see and what to do, backgound on history and culture of the country. It includes maps and itineraries, making the planning of trips easier.
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walking mallorca

Walking in Mallorca
by June Parker
  Includes both easy coastal walks and tough mountain trails for the experienced walker.
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Mallorca and Menorca

"Time Out" Guide to Mallorca & Menorca
  Mallorca and Menorca - two of Europe's most popular holiday resorts - are often unfairly maligned as overdeveloped package tour playgrounds. This guide seeks to redress the balance by revealing the variety to be found on these small islands.
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The Rough Guide Ibiza and Formentera, Second Edition
by Iain Stewart
  Ibiza is an island of excess. Widely acclaimed as the world’s clubbing capital, it’s a unique and almost absurdly hedonistic place, where the nights are celebrated with tremendous vitality. Thanks largely to the British tabloid press, the popular perception of Ibiza is of a charmless, high-rise party destination, but, while it’s true that high-octane techno tourism is central to the local economy, there’s much more to the island than the club scene.
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The Balearic Islands

The Balearic Islands consist of three large islands - Mallorca, Minorca and Ibiza; two smaller islands - Formentera and Cabrera; and a number of small islets. The population is approximately 825,000. Politically the islands are part of an autonomous province of Spain with its administrative capital in Palma, Mallorca. The language is derived from Catalan. The Michelin Green Guide Spain distinguishes between the three largest islands in the folowing way:

"The Balearic Islands are one of the country's most popular tourist destinations. Of the three main islands, Mallorca and Ibiza attract large numbers of Spanish and foreign (particularly German) visitors who come here to enjoy their magnificent landscapes and beaches and lively nightlife. Menorca tends to be quieter, finding popularity with those in search of a more relaxing holiday."

The Balearic islands are a continuation of a Spanish mountain chain known as the Balearic Cordilleras. Over millions of years, earth movements have pushed these mountains up and down, at times providing a land bridge with the Spanish mountains, at other times - the last 5 million years - isolating them as islands in the Mediterranean. They are mainly made of limestone and red sandstone with a small amount of volcanic rock.

The Michelin Green Guide also describes the landscapes:

"The lush vegetation produced by the Autumn rains is one of the sunny islands' greatest attractions. Pines shade the indented shores, junipers and evergreen oaks cover the upper hillsides, while almonds, figs and olives cloak the plains."

Tourism is concentrated on the coast whereas, inland, the islands are far more tranquil.

Unlike the other islands, Mallorca (Majorca) can offer winter tourism as well as the usual summer 'sun and sangria'. Read more about Mallorca.

Menorca, sometimes spelled Minorca, is the wettest of the three major islands, with a strong and sometimes cold and northerly wind in the winter months. As a consequence, tourism is highly geared towards May-October when it is much warmer and often hot and sunny, Most of the accommodation is on the coast in hotels, apartments and holiday villas.

Ibiza's tourism is highly concentrated in the peak summer months with almost half of the visitors being young and British - the other half being mostly young and not-British. Most of the resorts are virtually shut outside the 'season' with the inhabitants away in the Canary Islands and elsewhere finding work.

Formentera i s a much drier island than the other Balearics.

More about the Mediterranean islands


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Majorca - 3* All Inclusive holiday with a lively and friendly atmosphere

Majorca - 3* All Inclusive holiday with a lively and friendly atmosphere

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