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| SPOTLIGHT | | Sandy
beach, is great for diving, swimming, sailing, snorkeling, and windsurfing. |
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Most Beautiful Beaches |
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France Cap CorseTravel Information
Overview
Cap Corse is a 25-mile (40km) peninsula known for its Genoese watchtowers, and edged with quiet and quaint fishing villages and pretty harbour towns. On the east side of the mountain spine a series of small villages cuddle into coves, while on the west coast the settlements cling precariously to rugged cliffs battered by wild waves.
Until Napoléon III had a coach road built around Cap Corse in the nineteenth century, the promontory was effectively cut off from the rest of the island, relying on Italian maritime traffic for its income – hence its distinctive Tuscan dialect. Many Capicursini later left to seek their fortunes in the colonies of the Caribbean, which explains the distinctly ostentatious mansions, or palazzi, built by the successful emigrés (nicknamed "les Américains") on their return. For all the changes brought by the modern world, Cap Corse still feels like a separate country, with wild flowers in profusion, vineyards and quiet, traditional fishing villages.
For those without transport, a circular-tour bus operates daily from Bastia during the summer. There are also buses throughout the year to Erbalunga , a placid fishing village on the east of Cap Corse where the buildings, ending in one of the ruined lookout towers for which the cape is famous, rise directly from the sea. In addition, sporadic services run from Bastia's gare routière to Macinaggio (Mon, Wed & Fri), on the far north tip of the cape, and to Canari (Mon & Wed), on the northwest side.
Forty kilometres long and only fifteen across, the peninsula is divided by a spine of mountains called the Serra, which peaks at Monte Stello, 1037m above sea level. The coast on the east side of this divide is characterized by tiny ports, or marines, tucked into gently sloping river-mouths, alongside coves which become sandier as you go further north. The villages of the western coast are sited on rugged cliffs, high above the rough sea and tiny rocky inlets that can be glimpsed from the corniche road. |
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Top Beaches of France |
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Bonifacio |
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Bonifacio (Bonifaziu) enjoys a superbly
isolated situation at Corsica's southernmost point, a narrow peninsula of dazzling
white limestone creating a town site unlike any other. |
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Cap
Corse |
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Reached by a flight of six hundred
steps, Nonza's long grey beach is discoloured as a result of pollution from the
now disused asbestos mine up the coast. This may not inspire confidence, but the
locals insist it's safe. |
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Cargese |
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The best beach in the area,
plage de Pero, is 2km north of the village - head up to the junction with the
Piana road and take the left fork down to the sea. Overlooked by a Genoese tower,
this white stretch of sand has a couple of bars and easily absorbs the crowds
that descend on it in August. |
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Golfe de Porto-Vecchio |
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A few kilometres
further along the same road takes you to Santa Giulia, a sweeping sandy bay backed
by a lagoon. Despite the presence of several holiday villages and facilities for
windsurfing and other noisier watersports, crowds are less of a problem here,
and the shallow bay is an extraordinary turquoise colour. |
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Campomoro |
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The main attraction here
is a two-kilometre-long beach, overlooked by an immense and well-preserved Genoese
watchtower. In late July and August, it's swamped by Italian families from the
adjacent campsites, but for the rest of the year Campomorro remains a tranquil
enough place. |
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Propriano |
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The nearest of these, plage de Lido, lies 1km west, just
beyond the Port de Commerce; it's patrolled by lifeguards during the summer and
is much safer and more appealing than the grubby plage de Baracci, 1km north of
town, where the undertow is precariously strong. |
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Desert des Agriates |
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A couple of rough
pistes wind into the desert, but without some kind of 4WD vehicle the only feasible
way to explore the area and its rugged coastline, which includes two of the island's
most beautiful beaches, is by foot. From St-Florent, a recently inaugurated pathway
winds northwest to plage de Perajola, just off the main Calvi highway (N1197),
in three easy stages. |
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Porto-Vecchio |
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Today a third of Corsica's
wine is exported from Porto-Vecchio, but most revenue comes from tourists, the
vast majority of them well-heeled Italians who flock here for the fine outlying
beaches: spectacular stretches of shoreline lie to the south, with Palombaggia
the most popular and Golfe de Santa Giulia coming a close second, while to the
north |
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Ajaccio |
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The town has none of Bastia's sense of purpose and can seem to lack a definitive identity of its own, but it is a relaxed and good-looking place, with an exceptionally mild climate, a wealth of cafes, restaurants and shops. |
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Bastia |
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A better alternative is the long beach of L'Arinella at Montesoro, a further 1km along the same road, the beginning of a sandy shore that extends along the whole east coast. A bus to L'Arinella leaves from outside Caf? |
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