Palma in three days. The longer you stay, the more Palma’s essence will enthral you. Three days is enough to lose yourself (and that is what it is all about) in Palma’s old town, taste its traditional dishes and products, go to Palma Beach, lose track of time in the cathedral and the Palace of La Almudaina, discover Joan Miró’s workshops
Go Snorkelling in one of Mallorca's best beach coves at Calo des Moro. Take an evening stroll along the tree-lined promenade Passeig Des Born. Get up early and visit the renowned food market - Mercat de I'Olivar. Ride the 100-year-old railway from Palma to Soller. Visit the stunning Arab Palace - Palau de L'Almudaina. Start your first day in Palma de Mallorca with a stroll and breakfast in Casco Antiguo of Palma, the historic Old Town. You can grab pastries and coffee from Can Joan de S’Aigo, one of Europe’s earliest ice cream makers and chocolatiers, at its 300-year old patisserie — make sure you order the house speciality, the creamy almond horchata.
Pretty coastal village on the west coast of Mallorca. Deia is an idyllic village of green-shuttered, honey-coloured houses that has become a millionaires' hideaway in the shadow of the Teix mountain, part of the Serra de Tramuntana mountain range. Although it could have been just another pretty Mallorcan village in the west of Mallorca had
Mallorca is at its scenic best in the gnarled ridge of the Serra de Tramuntana, the imposing mountain range that stretches the length of the island’s western shore, its soaring peaks and plunging sea cliffs intermittently intercepted by valleys of olive and citrus groves and dotted with some of the island’s most attractive towns and villages.
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