Site icon Becky in Portugal

‘A Garden Growing by the Sea’

So said Luís Vaz de Camões, Portugal’s greatest poet, of his country in the 16th century, and it is still probably true today. As unlike much of Western Europe, there are still swathes of undeveloped countryside in Portugal, something much highlighted by Barry Hatton in his 2011 book ‘The Portuguese‘.

Portugal is one of the smaller European countries, slightly bigger in area than Austria but not even a quarter of the size of its neighbour Spain. Portugal’s population is also small compared to other western European countries, currently estimated at 10.4million compared to Spain’s 46million and the UK’s fast approaching 65million. No wonder the countryside feels so open and undeveloped, and so much remains of the native vegetation.

We’ve only explored a tiny portion of Portugal’s countryside, but what we have seen has been stunning. Although we know not everyone agrees. We bumped into some fellow English tourists in Alcoutim earlier this year who expressed their disappointment at the ‘natural parks’ of the Algarve. They had explored a tiny bit of the Ria Formosa and also ‘Reserva Natural do Sapal de Castro Marim’ from their base in Monte Gordo, but clearly they had been expecting something quite different. When we met them in Alcoutim they were en route to Parque Natural do Vale do Guadiana, a few miles further north in Alentejo, in the hope it would be (in their words) a ‘proper park’. I suspect they were going to be disappointed yet again as during our brief chat I got the impression they were looking for more managed scenery with lots of well-marked easy trails. Parque Natural do Vale do Guadiana in Alentejo, just a few miles north of Alcoutim, is stunning but as its name suggests it isn’t a managed park. We’re planning a stay in Alentejo early next year mainly to see the Great Bustards again, but also to explore more of Parque Natural do Vale do Guadiana. We can’t wait as we love the tranquillity and beauty of these steppe plains.

I’m also looking forward to returning to the beauty of the Ria Formosa, and to exploring more of Portugal’s long coastline. Not sure we’ll make it to Cabo da Roca, west of Lisbon, the most westerly point of continental Europe, but we will definitely be heading west to the Atlantic. I know it is also the Atlantic off Olhão da Restauração but this south east coastline feels more Mediterranean than North Atlantic. In fact Portugal as a whole has a Mediterranean climate, and is one of the warmest countries in Europe with around 2500 to 3200 hours of sunshine a year. That’s around 6hrs per day in winter and 12 hours plus in summer in the far south. All of which nicely leads me onto the original purpose of this post, the geography of Portugal.

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