Intro: Tarifa’s a Breeze - Tarifa, Spain Travel Guide


Playachica: The Tarifa port and the African coastline from Tarifa’s Playa Chica.

Intro: Tarifa’s a Breeze

When I told my Spanish friends that I was headed down to Tarifa for the summer they told me that I was going to go nuts. Wind, they said, the wind will drive you absolutely crazy. But I didn’t care. I’d seen the pictures. Long, beautiful stretches of white, sandy beaches, and undulating African coast seeping through the mist on the opposite side of the Strait of Gibraltar. It’s the southernmost tip of Spain and you’ve got ocean on all sides, how could you go wrong? I’d lived in land-locked places my entire life, and just the thought of living on the coast lit me up like the Spanish sun.

But even the guidebooks were against me. Wind, wind and more wind was all I read about. One guidebook even mentioned that Tarifa had, at one time, been known for having one of the highest suicide rates in all of Europe. I’ll admit that made me a little apprehensive.

Somehow, though, I managed to escape the insanity.

It’s true, the wind is ferocious. There are days when the wind is so strong the windmills lining the coastal hills can’t even be turned on. The wind makes it so that going to the beach means getting sandblasted and knocked silly by the powerful waves. On these days, the old women in town make sure to tell you to shut up the house for fear of shattering windows and doors.

But there are also days in Tarifa when the ocean’s so still and calm that you can see your toes waving carefree in the sand below you. On these days you can sit and build sandcastles without getting a face full of sand, and all you feel is the warm, soothing caress of the sun. These days come more often than the guidebooks make it seem.

But this isn’t necessarily good news for all. A lot of people who travel to or live in Tarifa prefer the wind. When most people would be inside, Tarifeños and tourists are out in the surf taking advantage of the obstacle course of waves that the current brings with it. The beaches are covered day after day with surfers, windsurfers and kite surfers, each waiting for their chance at the unpredictable ocean.

Tarifa is known as the windsurfing capital of Europe, but the town isn’t exclusively for those who want a place to ride the waves. In the summer months, people come from all of over Europe to enjoy the relaxing, small-town environment and impressive scenery that are simply hard to find anywhere else.

The Tarifa breeze may have a life of its own, but it doesn’t rule yours unless you let it.

Back to Tarifa, Spain Guide

Questions?
If you want more information about this area you can email the author or check out our Europe Insiders page.


Place a comment
Name (required)
Email (will be not published)  (required)
Website


Now you can also comment with your Facebook Account

topright
Rate this story
 
 
topright

topright
topright

topright
Follow Us

topright

topright
Subscribe to the BootsnAll articles RSS feed
topright

Submit your story!

 
Most popular articles

Many consider the Northern Territory to be the “true Australia” of our dreams. Steve Bramucci has spent plenty of time there and he gives us his ten things not to miss in this magical part of the world.

[Read more]

 

Have you ever wanted to see what the inside of a volcano looks like? You have more options than you probably realized, and here are 11 interesting volcanoes you can climb, just in the Americas.

[Read more]

 

For some people, a sport isn’t really a sport unless it’s considered weird or dangerous by other people. Katie Hammel takes us on a tour of 8 of these unusual activities.

[Read more]

 

You may know what you want to do during your Italy trip this summer, but don’t leave home without these 5 Italy travel tips from BootsnAll writer & Italophile Jessica Spiegel.

[Read more]

 

Until you actually get to Thailand, the infamous Banana Pancake Trail sounds like fun, but it’s also wise to go beyond that, so Steve Bramucci shares expert tips for pulling that off.

[Read more]