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A tourist boom in the orchard of Spain 25/01/2008 00:00

The unspoilt Murcia coast is a welcome alternative on the Mediterranean.

Murcia has traditionally been known for producing a great deal of the country's fruits and vegetables. Its plentiful orchards (known as huertas) are in contrast with other parts of the region, which boasts Spain's very own badlands and steppes. Rain is scarce around here, with as many as 300 days out of the year clear and sunny.

Murcia is also home to another natural wonder: the Manga del Mar Menor, a narrow strip of sand separating the Mediterranean proper from what locals call the "minor sea." This area was one of the preferred destinations for the massive development that hit Spain's Mediterranean coast in the 1960s, and whose epitome was - and continues to be - Benidorm in nearby Alicante province.

La Manga and the municipalities near it, including San Javier, have profited from this boom and are now magnets for foreign residential tourism. Coastal towns offer everything that one can expect from this type of resort, from yachting marinas to beachfront promenades, as well as a cosmopolitan calendar of cultural events. Murcia region boasts 192 beaches, with La Manga alone offering 21 kilometres of sand, each side facing a different sea.

Lately, developers have set their sights on inner parts of Murcia that had been previously off limits - mainly due to the scarcity of water. In a 2006 report, Barclays Bank indicated that Murcia and Almería province in Andalusia were the new property hotspots following the saturation of the Costa del Sol.

While developers and environmentalists slug it out over the right to build here, visitors to Murcia can opt for several tourist attractions besides the sun-and-sea option. With carnival coming early this year – 26 January to 9 February - it might be a good idea to drop by Lorca, Águilas and Cartagena, where the carnival and Easter celebrations have been declared of international tourist interest.

Caravaca de la Cruz, in the northwest of the region, is one of the five holy cities of Catholicism, along with Jerusalem, Rome, Santiago de Compostela and Liébana. Its Real Alcázar houses the famous Cruz de Caravaca, a cross with two horizontal arms (instead of one), which holds what is allegedly a sliver of the actual cross on which Jesus Christ was crucified.

Gastronomes will be happy to know that the variety of Murcia's fresh produce means that its diet is varied and healthy. Meanwhile, proximity to the sea also means that Murcian cooking relies heavily on fish and seafood. All of these ingredients are successfully combined in dishes such as caldero, an iron pot full of rice and fish (typically grey mullet, monkfish or grouper), with a side serving of alioli, a garlic mayonnaise favoured throughout the eastern Mediterranean coast.

January 2008

[Copyright EL PAÍS / SUSANA URRA 2008]

Subject: Spanish tourism, Murcia, travel

4 reactions to this article

shithead posted: 26-04-2008 | 3:31 PM

I guess now the Brits will ruin this lovely place also. "English Breakfast 24 hours a day" How revolting.

fokite posted: 20-05-2008 | 10:08 AM

I guess that with a name like yours, the only reason you are not here is because there is no oil.
Hooray.

lulu posted: 25-06-2008 | 6:51 PM

Unspoilt? Garden? What kind of rose-tinted glasses are you wearing? The whole area is one sea of concrete!

Lolita posted: 26-06-2008 | 2:35 AM

You may have been at the Manga (Murcia) Lulu, but that is just a small corner made to cover tourists needs; or at Murcia capital, a city as any other city. But Murcia is much more. It is a beautiful place. Its beaches, its casttles, its magic nites full of stars, its history and art, its smells to azahar and alheli, its flee markets, its good food, its open country people.... yes, Murcia is a very worth it place to know. You still can find spots with no tourists, virgin places that still haven't been ruined "by every one or any one". In fact, you find there is still a lot of tradition there. And yes, you find a lot of British people, even in the smallest aldea (town) with no even 1000 population... yes, a british will be there, no just for holidays, but for living. Because Murcia gives you the quality of life of a country place, having so close the good things you may need from a big city. Obviously, the weather, the sea and the good food have a lot to do. Well, and the social security. A lot of Europeans come to retired to Spain because that way they have access to a free health system. But, it is not that easy now days to find a good way of life anywhere in Spain, the job situation is hard, that's why, most of the British that emigrates to Spain are retired people (as I said before).

One thing is true, Murcia is different.

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