Introducing a Strangely Detached Piece of Portugal
More Information than Anyone Wants
The Why
In February we were forced, for the second year running, to cancel our long-awaited visit to Costa Rica (see Not Going to Costa Rica), this time on the morning of departure. When Lynne was better, we booked
a week in Madeira as a consolation, a journey in the same general direction, though not quite so far.
The Where
Portugal |
Madeira |
Where is Madeira? |
The What
Despite the map above, Madeira is neither circular nor red. It measures 50km from east to west, 20km from north to south and rises to
1,861m (6,106 ft) at Pico Ruivo. It was once entirely
forested (‘madeira’ means ‘wood’ in Portuguese) but the indigenous laurel forests
now cover only the high ground.
Madeira |
The island is home to 250,000 permanent residents, half of whom live in the capital, Funchal; like England, the southeast corner is
densely populated. The climate is extraordinarily benign, making Madeira a
twelve-month holiday destination attracting 1.5m tourists a year, and more cruise liners than you can shake a stick at. Hotels, restaurants and cafés have colonised the coastal strip from Central Funchal to the outskirts of Câmara de Lobos. It would be unkind to describe Madeira as ‘Benidorm for the
older, slightly better off tourist’ but there is some truth in that. From my
seat near the back of the plane I could see row upon row of grey heads, as
though you had to be certified 65+ to buy a ticket. Being a volcanic island
with many cliffs, the few beaches have either pebbles or black sand leaving Madeira unequipped
for family beach holidays.
Funchal with two cruise ships in the harbour |
Madeira is the main island of a thinly spread archipelago. Porto Santo, 43km northeast of Madeira and home to 5,000
people, is 12km long by 4km wide, and has a sandy beach 6km long. It is a
favoured location for Madeirans seeking escape from the tourist infested summer
on their own island.
The Ilhas Dersertas, two large and one smaller island stretch in a thin north-south line, starting 25km southeast of Funchal. They
live up to their name, being rocky and largely free of vegetation. The only
inhabitants are the wardens of the nature reserve covering the islands and surrounding waters.
As Ilhas Desertas |
The Who
The Pete Townshend and Roger Daltrey of Madeira were two Portuguese sea captains called João Gonçalves Zarco and Tristão Vaz
Teixeira. Blown off course by a storm in 1418 they were relieved to find a
hitherto unknown island with a safe harbour. In gratitude they named it Porto Santo.
They returned two years later for a proper look and were disappointed to find the island arid and unsuitable for settlement (today’s
population rely on a seawater desalination plant). With better weather than on
their previous enforced visit, they observed a much larger island on the horizon.
A statue of João Gonçalves Zarco marks the centre of Funchal |
That island had mountains to catch the clouds and trees to absorb the moisture. Water was present in abundance, all that was
missing was flat land for farming. Settlement started around 1420 when Zarco
and Teixeira returned with their families, a mixed group of gentry and others
and a collection of convicts – well somebody had to do the hard work. Ground
was cleared, terraces and irrigation canals created and Madeira’s population
began to grow.
Tristão Vaz Teixeira in Machico, Madeira's first capital city. A drive-by snapping (the bus did not stop) straight into the sun! |
Portuguese mariners like Zarco and Teixeira kicked off the ‘Age of Discovery’ which would last until the 17th century, but did they
really discover Madeira? For centuries rumours, legends and tall tales had been
told about islands out in the Atlantic; Romans, Greeks, Phoenicians, Arabs
and Vikings must all have sailed past and occasionally landed. None
ever settled or gave the island a name, so when the two captains claimed Madeira
for Portugal there was no-one to dispute it and no-one else who could claim the discovery.
The Other Who of Madeira
There is another ‘who’ it is difficult to avoid on Madeira. Cristiano Ronaldo is, according to some the greatest living Madeiran. Madeira
airport is known as Cristiano Ronaldo International Airport, a Funchal museum is
dedicated to his exploits, his face leers down from the back of buses and at a
miradouro in eastern Funchal the first thing the guide pointed out was his
birthplace. On the 5th of February 1985, he told us, a bright star hung in the
sky over the Funchal suburb of Santo António.
The red apartment block (ringed) is on the site of the building where Cristiano Ronaldo was born. He received his first communion at the church of St Anthony, opposite |
I would not say it out loud in Madeira, but I am not a Cristiano Ronaldo fan. Yes, he is extravagantly talented, but I dislike his
arrogant and self-centred approach to the game, I prefer Lionel Messi. I may
never be able to return to Madeira now.
17-Apr-2023
We Arrive
Madeira (Cristiano Ronaldo International) Airport
Madeira airport was built across a headland with a back drop of cliffs and mountains. It opened in 1964, with two 1,600 m runways,
steep drop-offs on both sides, water before and after, and cliffs close by. The
approach from the north with a tail wind involves flying over the São Lourenço peninsula at the island's eastern extremity,
passing the airport while over the sea, then doing a sharp about turn towards the mountains and
dropping swiftly onto the runway. The airport is frequently closed because of
cross winds. The runway, much of it perched on pillars above the coastal road,
has been lengthened twice, and is now a more comfortable 2,700m, but Madeira is
still regarded as the ninth most dangerous airport in the world and the third most
dangerous in Europe. We survived (as did all 4m passengers who arrived last
year).
Driving under the runway, Madeira Airport |
The Lido District
A transfer arranged by the airline whisked us to Funchal and thence to our hotel in the Lido district, 2.5km west of Funchal
centre, where we could check-in but not have our keys until 2 o’clock. We strolled
down to the front. Funchal has no beaches but there is an open-air salt water
swimming pool, the Lido, set in a rocky promontory. We studied restaurants menus
for the evening, watched some people jumping or diving into the sea from wall (just left of the picture below) and lunched on beer and a toastie at one of the cafés.
Near the Lido, Funchal |
That filled in the time nicely, so we returned to the hotel, took possession of our room and photographed the view from our ninth floor balcony.
The Lido District of Funchal |
Then, as we had risen at silly o’clock to catch a 07.30 flight from Birmingham, we had nap. It is what we old people do.
We awoke in time to see the cruise ship AIDAperla, carrying up to 4,350 passengers, bearing down on Funchal.
The AIDAperla approaches Funchal |
Later we walked to our selected restaurant and enjoyed an excellent meal. I ate black scabbard fish and Lynne had salt cod. We worked
hard during our stay to eat as many typical Madeiran dishes as possible and
instead of describing them here, I have collected them all in one post Madeira: Eating and Drinking.
After dinner we sat on our balcony, had a nightcap and took and another picture of the view.
The Lido district of Funchal |
Introduction
Part 1: A First Look at Central Funchal
Part 2: Mercado and Monte Palace Gardens
Part 3: Funchal to Santana
Part 4: Eira do Serrado and Câmara de Lobos
Part 5: Photography Museum and Madeira Botanical Garden
Part 6:Eating and Drinking
If you remember, you said that Madeira was for old people when we went for our 25th. wedding anniversary- how time catches up eventually! Holary
ReplyDeleteThat should be Hilary!
DeleteWas it that long ago you went? Wow, I would have guessed it was 5 or 6 years ago. I stand by my observation of the serried ranks of grey heads on the plane, while admitting time has indeed caught up. I am currently working hard to thwart an overtaking manoeuvre.
Delete