Paradise islands of Cape Verde will capture your heart hook, line and sinker

Paradise islands of Cape Verde will capture your heart hook, line and sinker

Before flying to Cape Verde we were being told it’s the new Caribbean. To be honest, we had some serious doubts. The horseshoe cluster of 10 islands and eight islets are stunning but they don’t resemble the palm-fringed half moon bay of Sandy Lane, Barbados, or party central Montego Bay in Jamaica.

The good thing is that thanks to Mother Nature’s kindness and its colourful history, Cape Verde doesn’t need to make a claim to be anything other than what it is – a West African paradise with aquamarine seas rolling onto stretches of endless pristine beaches, on which tourists join locals chilling in bars playing soulful music.

Discovered by the Portuguese in 1456, the volcanic islands were uninhabited. Now there are international airports two hours’ flying time south of the Canaries and around 350 miles from Senegal on Africa’s mainland.

We chose Sal island as the base for our stay, at Thomas Cook’s four-star Oasis Salinas Sea hotel, where our balcony opened up enchanting views of brightly-coloured, fishing boats at Santa Maria.

Waves pound the wide beach without making it too dangerous for a dip, while constant winds keep sunbathers cool and give kitesurfers perfect conditions to skim the Atlantic.

Locals told us that beneath the waves there’s an abundance of fish and that a man called Ubaldo was the best contact to arrange half a day’s fishing.

Having found him in the cramped office of the Cape Verde Sport Fishing Company, we boarded the Lady Di 11 to join Cape Verdean captain Silvestre and his Italian mate Danny to try and find tuna, amberjack, wahoo and possibly newly arrived blue marlin – the favourite sport fish of my hero writer Ernest Hemingway.

Once we were over a reef, we started trolling lures from the five rods Danny strapped to the boat. An hour out and I struck while standing on the deck and rolling with the waves. Danny was sure from the fight it was a tuna and he was right.

Fruits, vegetables and spices in the market

Swimming in the lagoon at Olho Azul, the Blue Eye, at Buracona(Anne-Marie Palmer / Alamy Stock Photo)

The wonders of Sao Vicente

Get there

Oasis Salinas Sea hotel, in Sal Island, Cape Verde(Thomas Cook)

Source link : https://www.mirror.co.uk/travel/africa/cape-verde-paradise-island-holiday-7912229.amp

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Publish date : 2016-05-10 07:00:00

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