La Gomera ★release date★

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Actors: Agustí Villaronga, Vlad Ivanov. Score: 1542 vote. &ref(https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/MV5BMjI4MjM1NTctMmQwYy00ZDE3LTllOTAtODRlNjJkMTg1MDAwXkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyMDA4NzMyOA@@._V1_UX182_CR0,0,182,268_AL_.jpg). Release Date: 2019. Average Rating: 6,7 of 10. Duration: 97Minute.

La gomera film. La gomera hippies. La gomera island dresses. Nice side seeing too, thanx. La gomera island weather. La gomera weather march. La gomera news. La gomera online subtitrat. La Gomera a.k.a. "The Whistlers" is a fun Romanian neo-noir borrowing suspense tropes from James Cain, Robert Siodmak and Jules Dassin. The premise is a cop (no unreliable voice overs here) who had to learn the idiom of the whistling language for communicating with people living in interstitial spaces inside and outside of the law. Offbeat, at times hilarious in a deadpan way and rife with truly beautiful mise en scène, the film is a deconstructed tribute to this specific and particular film genre but operates outside of it. All the characters are vividly drawn, the supporting ones carry out the one-dimensionality of their roles with a certain lived-in freshness. The use of music was also very tasteful and deliberately operatic as counterpoint to the life-and-death situations, quirkily told. Corneliu Porumboiu seems to be having fun directing this story. it shows and I for one was swept by the story and storytelling.
Wow, you two have the whole video thing nailed. You seem to have a natural talent for telling your story in saucy a beautiful way. La gomera 2019 trailer. When that cut you off I felt your pain gutted great video special place you found there lads! ???. Fome culiao. La gomera san sebastian. Yeah!?? Tenerife is incredible island?? Cool video. La gomera maps. La gomera food. La gomera african party. La gomera escuintla guatemala. Lagomere dolmen. La gomera ca c'est fort. La gomera weather january. Stingrays are same as dolphin and yes they get in kill mode when u hurt them, this video clearly shows their good behavior of how lovely they are. La gomera trailer ita. La gomera jardin tecina. La gomera song. La gomera carp fishing. The jeep juddered to a halt on a dusty red mountain path 400 metres above sea level. With a foot to spare at the side of the track, I looked down as if into a kaleidoscope that had broken open. Below was an intensely green and fragmented world of giant palms, banana trees, huge ferns and mossy boulders blanketed by flowering vines. Beyond, the colour of mercury, the Atlantic Ocean seemed to stretch into infinity. A Cleopatra butterfly floated lazily by, its yellow wings tipped by tiny pink spots. It was early December. I was little more than half-a-day’s travel from wet-and-windy London, and just 50 minutes by ferry from the egg-box apartment resorts of southern Tenerife. But standing spellbound on the side of that mountain, on the lesser-known island of La Gomera, I felt light years away from the chaos and brashness associated with the Canary Islands’ more obvious tourist destinations. Bathed in sunshine and silence, with only sea, sky and nature for company, I could have been in a different century. The second-smallest of the seven Canary Islands - near-circular and with a diameter of only 25 kilometres - La Gomera feels like the island that time forgot. You can drive through soaring ravines and sleepy mountain villages down to deserted rocky beaches without encountering a single traffic light. On that morning’s helter-skelter ride into the northwest of the island, the landscape had seemed at times near-biblical in its stillness. And the rituals of rural life playing out along the wayside were as though from another era. The Mirador de Abrante has a glass floor projecting out from the clifftop above Agulo, La Gomera (Alamy) Photo: Alamy ? The best hotels on Tenerife I passed farmsteads on ribbon-thin dirt shelves, where labourers in straw hats were piling huge avocadoes into wheelbarrows. I watched vintners, balancing like tightrope walkers on near-vertical terraces to tend frothy arcades of La Gomera’s rare Forestara grapes. Returning southwards, through the hilltop village of Chipude, I steered through a throng of local women gathering for a gossip around the island’s only remaining municipal washing place. The Garajonay National Park is a stunning wilderness of thick forest and mountain (AP) Photo: AP This wasn’t my first trip to La Gomera, or into its enchanting interior. But getting to know the island is like peeling the layers from an onion. Each visit brings with it new discoveries, and this one was proving to be no exception. ? In pictures: 20 destinations for 2016 The previous day, a local friend had introducedmes to one of the island’s quirkiest hidden treasures ? a tiny white-painted chapel perched, a dizzying 950 metres above sea level, on a cliff edge at Guará, near the abandoned village of Gerián. The chapel was built in 1962, she explained, by a farmer called Don Cándido Dorta. His cow was sick, and he’d promised God that he’d build a place of worship as a thank you if the animal survived its illness. The cow perked up; Don Cándido kept his side of the bargain, and a fiesta is now held there every October in joint memory of man and beast. “What you’d call a 'win-win situation’, ” my friend concluded brightly. Villages sit between steep mountain slopes and walls of cacti (Alamy) Photo: Alamy I’d arrived in La Gomera by ferry. The runway of the island’s airport is too short for international flights, which helps explain the absence of tourist hordes ? yet the ferry ride is a delight in itself. Head for the viewing deck as the boat begins its approach, and you’ll get an amazing first glimpse of the scale of the island’s landmass. Ringed by volcanic cliffs rippled with sandstone strata of vivid aubergines and golds, it rises from the ocean to a height of almost 1500 metres: an inscrutable primeval mountain. The village of Agulo sits alongside the island's dramatic coastline (Getty) Photo: Getty It’s not hard to see why director Ron Howard chose La Gomera as a key shooting location for his latest film In the Heart of the Sea, set in 1820, which tells the story of the doomed ship Essex, sunk by a sperm whale in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. Viewed from the water, the craggy coronet of sheer rock that encircles the island could be any time, any place. Likewise, with only a scattered handful of small low-key settlements and no coastal road to link them, the seaboard is almost startlingly void of light pollution. There’d have been no chance of a Coca-Cola sign hoving into view as the ship went down. "The church and Customs House have been destroyed and rebuilt countless times since Columbus’s day, in the wake of pirate raids. " The port of San Sebastián, where the ferry docks, is ? to be honest ? a bit of a let-down. Not even La Gomera’s greatest fan could claim to feel inspired by the hotchpotch of industrial buildings and hillside sprawl of functional housing (albeit in ice-cream colours) that greets new arrivals to its capital. But the place has a special story to tell, as Christopher Columbus’s last port of call in 1492 before his epic sail to the Americas. A stroll through pretty Calle Real, in the oldest part of town, becomes a positive pile-up of Columbus “moments”: the gloomy church where, allegedly, he made his last confession before the voyage; the well in the patio of Customs House, from which he supposedly took the water to baptise the New World, and wooden-balconied “Casa de Colón”, billed at his former lodgings. All this is, of course, shameless smoke-and-mirrors: both the church and Customs House have been destroyed and rebuilt countless times since Columbus’s day, in the wake of pirate raids. His so-called “house” was first built over a hundred years after his death. But ? as we agreed over tapas under Indian laurel trees in the main square’s convivial Las Carabelas café - you’ve got to admire the Gomeros’ breezy disregard for detail when it comes to making the most of their unexpected claim to fame. ? Five best things to do on La Gomera Set high above town, in lush, sub-tropical gardens, is San Sebastián’s elegant Parador de Gomera, a graceful Canarian-style mansion with mesmerising views across to Tenerife’s Mount Teide, the highest peak in all of Spain. (Perhaps strangely, Gomeros regard Mount Teide as part of “their” island. “It’s because we see it nearly all the time, ” my friend explained later in the visit. “For people on Tenerife itself, it’s shrouded in mist more often that not. ”) The parador is one of the most popular hotels on the island, especially among British visitors. Otherwise, tourists-in-the-know tend to head south to the small fishing port of Playa de Santia?o, La Gomera’s sunniest spot, or westwards to the swathe of unspoiled black sand beaches in awesome Valle Gran Rey. Playa de Santiago has been my chill-out spot of choice on most visits. Laid out like a tiny Canarian village, the cliff-top Hotel Jardin Tecina is a haven of tranquillity ? flower-filled and drenched in birdsong. I began this latest visit there, lapping up the luxury of breakfasting among palm trees and repairing to my gorgeous sea-view balcony for a glass of cava each sunset after my daily inland safaris. For the last few days of my stay, though, I decided to head westwards to majestic Valle Gran Rey (the name means “Valley of the Great King”), by popular consent the most beautiful of La Gomera’s valleys. The drive from Playa de Santiago to Valle Gran Rey, is a cracker ? another roller-coaster ride, this time through deep ravines tiered with palm trees and almost lunar expanses of rocky plateau where weirdly shaped volcanic plugs mark the sites of extinct volcanoes. On the way, I diverted slightly to revisit the island’s astonishing Garajonay National Park, an ancient laurasilva rainforest cloaked in silvery mists and dense with subtropical vegetation - too glorious to bypass, no matter how many times you’ve visited La Gomera. And then it was downhill all the way, through corkscrew twists of sherbet-coloured villages, to Valle Gran Rey’s rugged run of wild-and-wonderful beaches. The Parador de Gomera is one of the most characterful places to stay on the island (Alamy) Photo: Alamy The dappled sky ahead exploded like popcorn into a bubbling pink sunset as I dipped down to the waterfront. The town’s palm-lined strip of pretty neighbourhoods was buzzing with activity. First settled by (mostly German) hippies in the 1960s, Valle Gran Rey has a laid-back atmosphere all of its own ? charming, peaceful and ever-so-slightly dippy: like Glastonbury-on-Sea. Diamond-scored palm tree-trunks were plastered with posters advertising live music gigs or offering reiki healing. A battered van, parked by a makeshift stage, sported a painted rainbow and a splattering of magic mushrooms. But the overwhelming feel of the place was of a single, good-natured community. Middle-aged hikers wearing walking boots and Bill’n’Ben hats rubbed shoulders round market stalls with youthful New Age travellers in dreadlocks and floaty pre-Raphaelite regalia. People walked their dogs. Cafés and pizzerias began to fill up with crowds of chattering locals. For now, this was my journey’s end. I headed for a bar, ord
La gomera national park. Cristi is a middle aged undercover police officer with mommy issues who is trying to find the location of some stolen money. So he goes to a remote island to learn a whistling language that will allow him to communicate with the criminals from a distance. There he rekindles a relationship with his old flame and his priorities change. As both the criminals and his colleagues are onto Cristi what choices will he make to come out clean of his predicament? A clever game of cops and robbers ensues.
Summing up this multi layered, not always coherent plot, is not an easy task. THE WHISTLERS takes a long time to get going but it's many elements come together building up to something special. Heavy on movie references it is heavily inspired by Tarantino movies, although the style of the cinematography is rather dull. The script on paper must look great, but this is the case where a writer should let go of his work and let someone else direct. Cornelliu Porumboiu helmed 13 films but seems to be still searching for his directing style. While all the cast do their job well, the motives of their characters for the majority of the film are obscure to say the least. But if this is the originality you are looking for THE WHISTLERS is for you. With good timing and a genuine sense of wit it is a rewarding experience for those who will stick with it until the end.
La gomera españa. Silbo gomero. Peppa is going crazy 'cause she does not know how to whistle. La gomera canary islands. La gomera online. La gomera island tourism. La gomera hotels. La gomera imdb. La gomera ferries. La Gomera is the second smallest island of the Canary Islands. Cities [ edit] San Sebastian de la Gomera 1 San Sebastián de La Gomera ( East). A very civilized capital and main port ? the ferries from Los Cristianos arrive here. A good base for walking as all the local buses leave (starting at 10:30) from the bus station to the villages of La Gomera. Columbus set sail from here. It has several nice black sand beaches and some historic buildings like the Count's Tower or the Church of La Asunción. Throughout the years it has grown over the hills and inside the valley. 2 Agulo ( North-East). Compact small town divided in two parts by Hermigua, it is surrounded by massive mountains. It has a charming town center and great views to Tenerife. On the rainy season you can get to see waterfalls from each mountain. 3 Hermigua ( North-East). The first stop of the north route departing from San Sebastián. Formerly a wealthy agricultural valley, it still has many banana and exotic fruits plantations, and due to this bucolic landscape it now has become a destination for exclusive travellers. The town is stretched out down the valley. It features the island's only natural swimming pool, several charming beaches with views to Tenerife and is a great trekking base to discover Garajonay National Park and the island's green north due to its proximity to San Sebastián and El Cedro Forest. 4 Playa de Santiago ( South). Small tourist resort dominated by large hotel complex owned by Fred Olsen, the ferry company. Formerly a fishing port with a canning factory, it has become the island's second largest touristic area thanks to the large hotel Tecina. The island's only golf course sits here. 5 Valle Gran Rey ( South-West). Main tourist resort, thanks to its beaches. It is a former hippie hangout that retains an alternative feel in places. It is in the westernmost part of the island. It's named after the "Great King", who ruled for a brief period over all the kings of the island. 6 Vallehermoso ( North). A small town, it is the last stop of the northern route. Its symbol is the Cano Rock, the largest eroded volcano chimney remaining in the island. As Hermigua and Agulo, it has evolved from agricultural-based economy to a slow tourism destination linked to trekking. Roque Agando, in La Garajonay Park Understand [ edit] Undeveloped, unspoilt, beautiful island just 40 minutes by fast ferry from Tenerife. Ideal for walkers. Contrast between lush forests around the summit and in the national Park with dry vegetation on the flanks of the island. Of real interest to botanists for its variety of plant life and number of endemic species. Good climate all year round, especially in the south. La Gomera is one of two Canary Islands without direct tourist flights from mainland Europe, the other being El Hierro. Talk [ edit] Spanish is the main language. English is widely understood in Valle Gran Rey, where German is easily the second language after Spanish. Most menus are printed in three languages. It is famous for El Silbo - whistling language which was used to communicate across the deep valleys. The local council are trying to revive El Silbo; it is now a compulsory (and popular) subject in schools on the island. Get in [ edit] By plane [ edit] Most people fly to Tenerife South ( TFS IATA, Reina Sofia), then get a ferry from nearby Los Cristianos. Buses 451, 111 and 343 drive from Tenerife South Airport to 2 Los Cristianos bus station. The ride costs ?3. 70 (April 2018). The buses stop by the roundabout close to the Los Cristianos bus station. From there you need to walk about 1. 5?km (0. 93?mi) down to the port where the ferries leave from. By boat [ edit] By ferry from Los Cristianos in Tenerife to 3 San Sebastian de la Gomera port or directly to Playa Santiago or Valle Gran Rey. An advance day return costs around ?80 for the short 40-minute crossing. Two ferry companies are providing service: La Gomera is in the Atlantic. This means that even in moderate windy weather the waves may become pretty big. In that case the catamarans may not sail. Particularly, the small Benchi Express is vulnerable. In the event the Benchi Express cannot sail, Fred Olsen will drive you to or from Gran Val Rey by bus. But, you need to be at the harbour 30 min earlier, and you sail on Olsen's big catamaran. Get around [ edit] By bus [ edit] There are regular bus services (4 or 5 per day, M?Sa; fewer on Su) to the main centres ( Valle Gran Rey, Vallehermoso, Santiago) from the capital San Sebastian. Departures don't usually coincide with the ferry arrival times. Journey time to Valle Gran Rey is around 1?hr?45?min. These buses are popular and it isn't always possible to get on especially at the port when boats come in. Buses returning to the tourist centres late in the afternoon tend to get full of walkers and likewise the ones heading into the mountains early in the mornings. Fares vary by distance, but are very reasonable. Drivers do not like to pick up or set down between stops for tourists even though you may see them do it for elderly locals. The public buses are a blue/turquoise colour and are run by Servicio Regular Gomera S. L. Tickets are purchased from the driver. There are many other private coaches darting about the island which will not stop for you. The timetables do change and tourist offices will have up-to-date versions. A reliable source should be the official website. By car [ edit] Reputable car hire companies include CICAR or. One of the companies that accept debit cards is Pluscar. Most companies have their office right next to the San Sebastian ferry terminal. Since the number of cars at the pier is limited (compared to, e. g., TFS airport), it's probably best to book upfront. Petrol is relatively cheap - about 1/10 less than in mainland Spain. However, bear in mind that the roads are very winding indeed, so driving is slow - don't expect to go faster than 50 km/h most of the time. For example, air distance is only about 22 km across the island from San Sebastian to Valle Gran Rey, but the distance by road is over twice that, and it will take you an hour and a half to drive it. Many people combine walking with hitchhiking. Taxis are not prohibitively expensive especially if there are several of you sharing. See [ edit] 1 El Castillo del Mar ( at Playa de Vallehermoso). Former loading station (mostly for bananas), restored and turned into a venue by long-time resident German photographer. Has intimate atmospheric concerts, with the sound of the waves in the background 2 Los Organos cliff. Striking basalt columns, similar to the Giant's Causeway, but only visible from the sea. Boats departing from Playa Santiago and Valle Gran Rey offer weekly trips around the island to visit it. It's name is because of the rocks, shaped by water and lava as church organ tubes. 3 Mirador Cesar Manrique ( on the road between Arure and Valle Gran Rey, marked by a metal, kinetic sculpture). Stunning views into the valley through the huge windows in this strangely formal establishment. Very hard to spot this place from the road below except at night when the lit windows float eerily in the darkened mountains. There is a nice well-kept garden and a beautiful view. 4 Mirador de Abrante ( Mirador de Agulo). Viewpoints towards Tenerife, a bar with a glass extension hanging over cliff over Agulo. Great panoramatic view and a road through red-colored mountain Do [ edit] Note: Wildfires in the summer of 2012 burned over 3, 000 hectares on the island, including over 10% of Garajonay National Park. Officials estimated that it would take at least three decades for the burned areas of forest to recover. View of the façade of Church of Our Lady of the Assumption and the town of San Sebastián de la Gomera Garajonay National Park. A UNESCO World Heritage site - extensive forested area on the top of the island. It protects the largest laurel rainforest remaining on Earth, "almost as old as the island itself" ? the vegetation type has stayed the same for millions of years. The forest is made up of different evergreens flourishing under the mild temperatures. Trees are irrigated by the mist which sometimes covers the top of the island, especially in winter. The trees are covered in mosses and lichens. This environment extended all around the Mediterranean Sea in the Tertiary Era, so the National Park is considered a living relic. Several species endemic to the Canary Islands live here, including the Gomeran lizard, Gomeran skink, stripeless tree frog, laurel pigeon and Bolle's pigeon. Crisscrossed with footpaths of several difficulty levels, it is known as the green heart of La Gomera. Highlights include: 1 Alto de Garajonay. The summit of the island, at 1, 487 m elevation with a stunning 360° view. Visit when the mist clears. Good views across to Mount Teide (Tenerife) and to El Hierro and La Palma 2 Laurisilva Forest ( between Las Hayas and Las Creces). Very eerie in the mist if the trees are creaking. Beautiful carpets of pink flowers in spring. For even more "old forest" experience, an easy extension of the hike is possible - go from Raso de la Bruma (TF-713 road parking) to Las Hayas and back. 3 La Laguna Grande. A small park with playgrounds and a few footpaths towards a viewpoint of Alto de Garajonay. Good place for a short hike with kids, with a restaurant at the parking spot. 4 El Cedro Forest. Despite the name, these are not cedar woods (the name refers to a long gone lone cedar tree). One possible way is starting on top and going to El Cedro (or even to Hermigua) - the landscape changes from small, mostly dry vegetation to a dense forest with tall trees, and beautifully calm. There are many other walking routes around the
La gomera-film. Etwas Massentourismus. La gomera tenerife. La gomera english trailer. La gomera valle gran rey. La gomera island map. La gomera. La gomera carp. La gomera holidays. Dice te vas. dice te vas. para la gomeeeera. dice te vas. dice te vas. pero no me lleva. Magica Gomera, habe dort 4 Jahre gelebt, und durchschnittlich zwei Frauen pro Tag gebumst ( 90% deutsche) Gli italiani erano pochi ma buoni. Un saluto al Mago che non esiste piú da circa 25 anni.
La gomera guatemala. This article or section does not match our manual of style or needs other editing. Please plunge forward, give it your attention and help it improve! Suggested fixes: None specified. Please use the article's talk page to ask questions if you are not sure why this tag was added and whether it is safe to remove it. La Gomera is the second smallest island of the Canary Islands. Regions [ edit] La Gomera is divided in several municipalities or regions which might seem to have little logic but whose division was inherited from the former aborigines' tribal kingdoms. Nowadays these are: San Sebastian (where the main seaport and island's capital are located), Hermigua, Agulo, Vallehermoso, Valle Gran Rey and Alajeró. Towns [ edit] San Sebastian de la Gomera - Capital and main port. Columbus set sail from here. It has several nice black sand beaches and some historic buildings like the Count's Tower or the Church of La Asunción. Throughout the years it has grown over the hills and inside the valley. Hermigua - The first stop of the north route departing from San Sebastian. Formerly a wealthy agricultural valley, it still has many banana and exotic fruits plantations, and due to this bucolic landscape it now has become a destination for exclusive travelers. The town is stretched out down the valley. It features the island's only natural swimming pool, several charming beaches with views to Tenerife and is a great trekking base to discover Garajonay National Park and the island's green north due to it's proximity to San Sebastian and El Cedro Forest. Agulo - Compact small town by Hermigua divided in two parts, it is surrounded by massive mountains. It has a charming town center and great views to Tenerife. On the rainy season you can get to see waterfalls from each mountain. Vallehermoso - Much improved small town, it is the last stop of the northern route. It's symbol is the Cano Rock, the largest eroded volcano chimney remaining in the island. As Hermigua and Agulo, it has evolved from agricultural-based economy to a slow tourism destination linked to trekking. Valle Gran Rey - Main tourist resort, thanks to its beaches. Formerly a hippie hangout retaining an alternative feel in places. It is located in the westernmost part of the island. It's named after the "Great King", who ruled for a brief period over all the kings of the island. Playa de Santiago - Small tourist resort dominated by large hotel complex owned by Fred Olsen, the ferry company. Formerly a fishing port with a canning factory, it has become the island's second largest touristic area thanks to the large hotel Tecina. The island's only golf course sits here. Other destinations [ edit] Garajonay National Park - World heritage site. It protects the largest laurel rainforest remaining on Earth. This environment extended all around the Mediterranean Sea in the Tertiary Era, so the National Park is considered a living relic. Crisscrossed with footpaths of several difficulty levels, it is known as the green heart of La Gomera. Los Organos Cliff - A landscape only visible from the ocean, this cliff is located by Vallehermoso, in the north of the island. Boats departing from Playa Santiago and Valle Gran Rey offer weekly trips around the island to visit it. It's name is because of the rocks, shaped by water and lava as church organ tubes. An impressive view from the ocean. Understand [ edit] Undeveloped, unspoilt, beautiful island just 35-60 minutes by ferry (it depends which ferry you take) from Tenerife. Ideal for walkers. Contrast between lush forests around the summit and in the National Park with dry vegetation on the flanks of the island. Of real interest to botanists for its variety of plant life and number of endemic species. Good climate all year round, especially in the south. La Gomera is still one of two Canary Islands without direct tourist flights from mainland Europe, the other being El Hierro. Talk [ edit] Spanish is the main language. English is widely understood in Valle Gran Rey, where German is easily the second language after Spanish. Most menus are printed in three languages. Famous for El Silbo - whistling language which was used to communicate across the deep valleys. The local council are trying to revive El Silbo; it is now a compulsory (and popular) subject in schools on the island. Get in [ edit] By plane [ edit] The airport near Playa Santiago is served only by local planes from Tenerife Nord Airport. Most people fly to Tenerife South, then get a ferry from nearby Los Cristianos. By boat [ edit] By ferry from Los Cristianos in Tenerife to San Sebastian de la Gomera Since the smaller company Garajonay Express was forced out, Fred Olsen Fares have rocketed. During the boat-war, fares on both were around ?25 return from Los Cristianos. Now, even an advance day return costs around ?80 for the short 40-minute crossing. Although residents of the Canary Islands have a discount of 50%, many on La Gomera consider these fares to be destroying visitor numbers and their small economy. Two ferry companies are providing service: Naviera Armas. 32 Euros one way, 64 Euros return, travel time ~60 minutes. Large ferry, taking around an hour to San Sebastian. Very nice ship with a big terrace on the upper deck and a lot of bars and saloons inside. Fred Olsen. 34 Euros one way, 68 Euros return, travel time ~35 minutes. A ferry/catamaran named Benchi Express. The boat 40 metres in length and can carry more than 300 people with a speed of greater than 30 knots. Bus connection to/from Santa Cruz de Tenerife is available for no extra cost. Please notice, La Gomera is situated in the Atlantic. This means that even in moderate windy weather the waves may become pretty big and crossings can be rough. In that case the catamaran may even not be able to sail. Both ferries sail onwards at least once a day (except on Sundays) to La Palma, leaving in the evening on most days. Be warned, some of the return journeys depart La Palma in the early hours of morning. There are plenty of companies offering day trips. The prices started at 49 Euros and went up to 64 Euros. The day trips include pick-up and drop-off wherever you're staying, transport to and from the ferry dock in Los Cristianos, a 5 hour or so coach tour of La Gomera with a guide, and lunch with wine. Get around [ edit] By bus [ edit] Public transport has improved in recent years with regular bus services (4 or 5 per day Mon - Sat; fewer on Sundays) to the main centres (Valle Gran Rey, Vallehermoso, Santiago) from the capital San Sebastian. Note that departures don't usually coincide with the ferry arrival times. Journey time to Valle Gran Rey is around one and three quarter hours. These buses are popular and it isn't always possible to get on especially at the port when boats come in. Buses returning to the tourist centres late in the afternoon tend to get full of walkers and likewise the ones heading into the mountains early in the mornings. Fares are very reasonable. Drivers do not like to pick up or set down between stops for tourists even though you may see them do it for elderly locals. The public buses are a blue/turquoise colour and are run by Servicio Regular Gomera S. L. Tickets are purchased from the driver. There are many other private coaches darting about the island which will not stop for you. The timetables do change and tourist offices will have up-to-date versions. Plenty of websites reproduce these but they may not be up-to-date. By car [ edit] Reputable car hire companies include CICAR or. One of the companies that accept debit cards is Pluscar. Most companies have their office right next to the San Sebastian ferry terminal. Since the amount of cars at the pier is limited (compared to e. g. TFS airport), it's probably best to book upfront. Petrol is relatively cheap - about 1/10 less than in mainland Spain. However, bear in mind that the roads are very winding indeed, so driving is slow - don't expect to go faster than 50km/h most of the time. For example, air distance is only about 22km across the island from San Sebastian to Valle Gran Rey, but the distance by road is over twice that, and it will take you an hour and a half to drive it. Many people combine walking with hitchhiking. Taxis are not prohibitively expensive especially if there are several of you sharing. See [ edit] [ add listing] Wildfires in the summer of 2012 have burned over 3000 hectares on the island, including over 1/10th of Garajonay National Park. Officials estimate that it will take at least three decades for the burned areas of forest to recover. Garajonay National Park - a UNESCO World Heritage Site - extensive forested area on the top of the island. Trees are irrigated by the mist which sometimes covers the top of the island, especially in winter. The trees are covered in mosses and lichens. The forest has an amazing atmosphere in the mist. Highlights include: Alto de Garajonay - The summit of the island, at 1487 metres above sea level with a stunning 360° view Visit when the mist clears. Good views across to Mount Teide (Tenerife) and to El Hierro and La Palma. ' El Cedro Forest - Despite the name, these are not cedar woods (the name refers to a long gone lone cedar tree). But the forest here is densest with tall trees and a beautiful calm. There are many walking routes around the forest here. Don't miss the water tunnel through the mountain (take a torch and mind your head! And boots as the water can be six inches deep or more). The waterfall on the path between El Cedro and Hermigua. Laurisilva Forest, between Las Hayas and Las Creces. Very eerie in the mist if the trees are creaking. Beautiful carpets of pink flowers in spring. La Fortaleza - An outcrop of rock looking like a fort, or a bit like table mountain. El Magro (the lion) and El Sombrero - two rocks resembling a lion and a sombrero. Los Roques - five or six volcanic plugs at the center of the island. Benchijigua, the
La gomera canarias. Great video - thanks for sharing! I'm just planning my first ever trip to the Canary Islands and was looking for some tips as to which island I should go to and I think I know now. La gomera airport. Merci Féloche pour ce magnifique documentaire, j'aime encore plus ta chanson qui tournait en boucle déjà... La gomera images. La gomera fishing. La gomera language. La gomera ostrov.
La gomera 4k. La gomera playa de santiago. La gomera movie. La gomera hiking.

Creator: Fran MF
Resume: Buscador impenitente de la sabiduría, la concordia y la felicidad. Maestro de nada, aprendiz de todo. Padre.Escribe en Gomera Actualidad.

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