Spain


1-9 of 9 results
  • Sailing in Catalonia
    Catalonia offers a concentrated slice of Mediterranean sailing: wild granite headlands at Cap de Creus, indented Costa Brava coves with translucent water, world‑class urban marinas in Barcelona, and the long, tawny beaches and shallow lagoons of the Ebro Delta. Conditions vary markedly over short distances, so well‑planned routes let you balance breeze and shelter. Expect light mornings, reliable summer sea breezes, and occasional powerful northerlies or north‑westerlies that reward early starts and prudent anchoring choices. Facilities are excellent, distances are manageable, and provisioning is effortless. For skippers seeking clear water calas one day and a cultured city stop the next, Catalonia makes an assured, high‑value alternative to the Balearics.
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  • Sailing in Alicante
    Alicante rewards skippers with clear water, reliable summer breezes and a string of well‑run harbours from Santa Pola to Jávea. The coastline is forgiving by Mediterranean standards—tidal range is negligible, navigation is largely line‑of‑sight—yet it remains engaging thanks to capes that funnel wind, afternoon sea breezes that fill in smartly, and protected marine reserves that invite careful anchoring. Whether you want an easy weekend around Tabarca or a week stepping north through Altea, Calpe and Moraira, Alicante provides the blend of short hops, scenic anchorages and competent marina infrastructure that makes a charter feel seamless.
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  • Sailing in Andalusia
    Andalusia gives you two seas in one region: the open, tidal Atlantic of the Costa de la Luz and the sun-drenched, mostly tide-free Mediterranean from Gibraltar Bay to Cabo de Gata. Expect characterful historic ports, reliable summer sea breezes, and some of Europe’s most dramatic coastal scenery around the Strait of Gibraltar and the volcanic coves of Cabo de Gata. With modern marinas spaced sensibly along the coast and pockets of excellent, clear-water anchorages, it’s a rewarding choice for skippers who want more than a cookie-cutter Med charter. Plan with the Levante and Poniente in mind, choose your coast to suit the forecast, and Andalusia delivers exceptional passages, confident pilotage, and a real sense of place.
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  • Sailing in Galicia’s Rías Baixas & Cíes Islands
    Galicia’s Rías Baixas offer a rare blend of ocean drama and ria tranquillity. A necklace of deep, fjord-like inlets, screened from the Atlantic by protective islands, creates day-sailing passages with character and choice: open-water reaches outside; flat-water pilotage, anchorages and charming towns inside. The Cíes Islands – the turquoise heart of a national park – add pristine anchorages and white-sand crescents that feel a world away, yet lie less than 10 nautical miles from Vigo and Baiona. Summer brings a dependable northerly ‘Nortada’ and clean sea breezes, while the rías soften swell and shorten fetch, making this one of Europe’s most rewarding summer cruising grounds for competent crews. Expect proper pilotage with tides, marks and mussel rafts to thread; expect seafood suppers and stone harbours at day’s end.
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  • Sailing in the Canary Islands
    The Canary Islands offer serious sailors a rare combination: reliable trade winds, ocean‑grade passages between dramatic volcanic islands, and modern harbours spaced at realistic day‑sailing intervals. You can sail here any month of the year. In summer, brisk north‑easterlies create fast reaches with local acceleration zones to test your sail trim. In winter, mild air and cool, lucid light deliver purposeful blue‑water hops and a front‑row seat to the Atlantic rally season. This guide sets out where to go, when to go, and what to expect. It explains island microclimates, identifies wind bullets between the high islands, and highlights the harbours and anchorages that consistently work when swell rolls in. It also outlines charter options and the simple certification you need to skipper legally in Spain, so you can plan with confidence.
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  • Sailing in Spain
    Spain offers an unusually broad canvas for sailors: Atlantic rías, Mediterranean calas and year‑round trade‑wind passages in the Canaries. Distances can be dialled up or down, the marina network is extensive, and weather patterns are well‑documented. This guide sets out where to sail, when to go and how to plan a safe, rewarding cruise—whether you’re plotting a Balearic island‑hop, a culture‑rich Costa Brava meander or a winter sun escape to Lanzarote.
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  • Sailing in Ibiza & Formentera (Western Balearics), Spain
    Ibiza and Formentera offer short-hop, line‑of‑sight cruising through a mosaic of pine‑backed calas, white‑sand anchorages and well‑appointed marinas. Conditions in season are typically governed by reliable sea breezes, with sheltered options on most coasts if you plan your day around wind direction and swell. Navigation is straightforward yet rewarding: you’ll thread islets, respect protected Posidonia sea‑grass, and time your passages through the Freus channel between the islands. Charter bases are concentrated at Ibiza Town, San Antonio, Santa Eulalia and La Savina, with extensive fleets and services. Whether you’re building miles, exploring secluded coves, or mooring beside a walled old town for supper, this compact cruising ground fits a full week or an elegant long weekend.
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  • Costa Brava & Cap de Creus Sailing Guide
    The Costa Brava delivers a compact, high-contrast coastline: pine-cloaked cliffs, pocket coves with startlingly clear water, and well-equipped marinas within easy day hops. Rounding Cap de Creus – Spain’s easternmost headland – adds a sense of expedition, with wild geology, gin-clear snorkelling and a microclimate shaped by the notorious Tramontana. This guide sets out where to sail, how the local winds behave, and which harbours and anchorages work in real conditions. It also explains charter options, seasonal patterns, and the paperwork you genuinely need – so you can plan with confidence and sail with purpose.
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  • Sailing in the Balearic Islands
    Sailing in the Balearic Islands – A Complete Guide for Sailors of All Levels The Balearic Islands (Mallorca, Menorca, Ibiza, and Formentera) form a Spanish archipelago in the western Mediterranean, renowned as a sailing paradise. These islands offer a mix of crystal-clear waters, hidden coves only accessible by boat, and well-equipped harbours, making them ideal…
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