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Breathtakingly beautiful and blessed with a climate that's as warm as it's welcome to visitors. Majorca is the biggest, many believe the best, of the Balearic islands and the Mediterranean's favourite holiday destination ...
Average flight time: 2 hours
Language: Spanish
Currency: Euros
Tourist office: Spanish Tourist Office, PO BOx 4009, London, W1A 6NB

Breathtakingly beautiful and blessed with a climate that's as warm as it's welcome to visitors. Majorca is the biggest, many believe the best, of the Balearic islands and the Mediterranean's favourite holiday destination. As many a holidaymaker will testify, this is an island you could visit a dozen times and find different every time.
Glorious sun-soaked sands stretch for miles all around the coast, shelving gently into clear blue sea and indented by many a soft sandy cove for more secluded sunbathing. inland, towering mountains sweep down into pine-clad valleys, fertile fruit orchards and lightly wooded glades. Majorca offers everything under the sun for holidays entertainment too, whether it be the bright lights and hectic lifestyle of the west coast towns, the family appeal of beach resorts such as Cala San Vincente, Puerto Pollensa and Cala d' Or or the cosmopolitan sophistication of the island's capital city, Palma.
The HistoryThe 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.