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Resort: Majorca
Region: Puerto Pollensa
Accom Ref: 3528
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  • Accommodation

    Located in the Cana Volantina area, this is a spacious villa reached by a long driveway leading from a quiet country lane within a couple of kilometres of the nearest shops and restaurants and the golden beach.

    Sharing the grounds with a large pond which is home to some ducks and a family of swans, the large swimming pool in front of the house has a separate children's section. This has been designed with the double bedroom and an en suite shower room in a guest suite with direct access to the poolside terrace, but no internal door to the main house. In the villa itself, a double and a twin bedroom share a bathroom and a split-level lounge/diner adjoins an open-plan modern kitchen and has glass doors leading out to the delightful poolside terrace.

    • Open-plan lounge/diner with TV & DVD player
    • Kitchen with microwave
    • Washing machine
    • 1 twin & 2 double bedrooms
    • 1 bathroom & 1 shower room
    • Swimming pool with children's section (0.6m)
    • Barbecue

  • Resort & Region

    Resort: Puerto Pollensa

    Most of our Pollensa villas can be found in a triangular area of about ten square kilometres stretching from the old town of Pollensa across to our apartments in Puerto Pollensa, and along the coast from Alcudia to the twin beaches of Cala San Vicente. Whether you choose a Puerto Pollensa apartment, Puerto Pollensa villas or rent a villa in the Pollensa area, you'll discover that the old town offers a variety of places in which to enjoy both local and international cuisine, a selection of shops and supermarkets and a popular nine-hole golf course. Cala San Vicente is a small coastal resort with two pretty beaches and just a few bars and places to eat and to the south, Sa Pobla is a tranquil rural village, lying at the foot of the Tramuntana mountains. Wherever you rent a villa in the Pollensa and Puerto Pollensa area, the distance from the airport is approximately 58 kilometres along uncongested, properly sign-posted roads.

    We offer a great range of villas from one to five bedrooms in Puerto Pollensa and the surrounding area, all with their own swimming pools.

    Region: Majorca

    The History
    Like all the Balearic islands, Majorca has welcomed, or at least attracted, many a foreign visitor over the centuries, from the Phoenician and Cartheginian traders of the seventh and eighth centuries who stopped here en route to neighbouring Ibiza, to successive occupation by the Romans, the Moors and the Spanish, interspersed by regular raids by North African pirates. At the beginning of the nineteenth century, the Napoleonic wars on the mainland drove many Catalan refugees to Majorca, resulting in huge social and economic change. Today, the island tradition of hospitality, albeit sometimes reluctant, has encouraged its people to welcome with open arms the birth of tourism. Mallorcans are a warm and sociable people who are fiercely proud of 'La Isla de la Calma' (the Peaceful Island) and work hard to promote and encourage its reputation as Europe's favourite holiday island.

    The Island
    Glorious sun-soaked sands stretch for miles all around the coast of Majorca, shelving gently into clear blue sea and indented by many a soft sandy cove for more secluded sunbathing. Inland, the island boasts an unexpectedly dramatic natural splendour as towering mountains sweep majestically down into pine-clad valleys. The picturesque countryside around the old town of Pollensa on the north coast is a colourful patchwwork of fertile fruit orchards and lightly wooded glades, bordered by gently rolling hillsides to the south and the dramatic soaring rocky outcrops of Majorca's northern mountains. Then suddenly the countryside changes to rolling fields and rippling wheat fields, dotted here and there with working windmills and occasional rocky outcrops, often with a monastery or shrine built at the top.

    The Resorts
    From the beauty and tranquillity of the stylish resorts along its northern shores, to the more hectic lifestyle of the west coast and the golden sand-fringed coves of the south, this wonderful island offers a holiday resort to suit all ages and inclinations. Not content with some of the best and softest beaches in the Mediterranean, Majorca offers everything under the sun for holiday entertainment too, whether it be the bright lights of Magaluf and Arenal, the family appeal of towns such as Cala San Vicente and Cala d'Or or the cosmopolitan sophistication of the island's s capital city, Palma.

    The Nightlife
    Evening entertainment on the island is legendary, with mouthwatering restaurants, friendly bars, tempting cafés and stylish nightclubs in all the main coastal towns. Some resorts are quieter, with after-dark activities revolving around eating out and a few drinks at a local bodega, but others enjoy a more colourful, non-stop nightlife. the island's eating places cater for every taste, from fast food to haute cuisine. International dishes are served everywhere, whilst local specialities include pizza, seafood dishes and fresh fish or, of course, paella.

    GENERAL INFORMATION

    Average flight time: 2 hours
    Language: Spanish
    Currency: Euros
    Tourist office: Spanish Tourist Office, PO BOX 4009, London W14 6NB
    Telephone: 0845 940 0810
    Website: www.tourspan.co.uk

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Sat: 9am - 5pm
Sun / Holidays: 11am - 4pm
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