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Faial
The Azores

Faial’s capital Horta holds a legendary status in the yachting world as the last European landfall for transatlantic sailors. The best-known image of Faial is the vibrant tapestry of paintings on the harbour wall, as sailing superstition decrees that it is bad luck to leave port without completing one. Another maritime ritual is a gin fizz and a gossip in Pete’s Sports Bar on the waterfront, something recommended to all visitors interested in any current local information. Upstairs in the bar is a fascinating collection of whales tooth scrimshaw, a reminder of harsher times for the local mariners.

The Azorean whalers of the nineteenth century were a brave and hardy breed who set sail in the harshest of conditions to do battle with the mighty mammals using only simple harpoons and ropes as weapons.  Happily, the sperm whales are now protected and thriving since tourists armed with cameras and binoculars are the only remaining hunters. 

There are plenty of attractions for landlubbers too, and Horta is one of the most attractive towns in the Azores.  Set against a backdrop of hillside pastures, impressive churches, a historic fort and the layered terraces of houses all face out towards the forest of swaying masts in the harbour and across to the often mist-shrouded Monte Pico on the neighbouring island.  Away from the coast, the luxuriant vegetation is pierced by black volcanic outcrops, cows graze in pastures framed by banks of hydrangeas, old Flemish windmills sit in valleys below craggy peaks and the area around the caldeira is protected.  All this provides walkers and cyclists with more than enough variety and the less energetic can enjoy the views and contrasts from the local bus or by renting a hire car.  In the summer months the beaches of coastal villages are perfect for sea swimming but dedicated bathers can enjoy the thermal springs at Varadoura in the south, with their year-round temperature of over 35C.

One of the most interesting sights on the island is in the far west at Ponta dos Capelinhos where extensive volcanic eruptions in 1957/8 partially buried the former lighthouse and added an extra chunk of land. The lighthouse is now surreally marooned in the centre of a stark and futuristic landscape.  Legend has it that the whale watchers on the hillside above mistook the first signs of the eruption for water spouts from the whales blowholes!

In addition to all the nautical and natural attractions Faial has always had some significance to the outside world – notably as the base for the meteorological station determining the weather heading towards Europe, as a major transatlantic communications link and even as the stop-over for the first transatlantic flight. Despite all this, in the friendly spirit of inter-island rivalry, other Azoreans will always say that the most remarkable thing about Faial is the view of Pico.