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Wat te zien

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A Four-Star Collection Of Tenerife Hotel Destinations
Bask in the warm, but never uncomfortably hot climate making our Tenerife hotels the perfect destinations in which to enjoy the exhilarating sea, dazzling sun, and limitless activities.

But this is not the only option; overlooked by the Teide, the highest mountain in Spain, and its lunar magic, the island is a small jigsaw puzzle of landscapes that seem to compete in a beauty contest: impressive gullies, lush forests and deep valleys with picturesque, blooming villages proving the ability to adapt to the environment of its inhabitants.

The Extraordinary Is Everyday At Our Tenerife Resorts
Make the dream of paradise a reality at our Tenerife resort hotels. The refined gastronomy, varied range of leisure activities and tourism know-how combine with the wonders of the environs to offer you everything you could wish for from a holiday destination.

RIU recommends

Our favourite

El Teide National Park

The rooftop of Spain dominates a lunar landscape of other-worldly tones and shapes, created by the violence of its own eruptions. An authentic wonder for eyes and mind.

Costa Adeje

Playa Fañabé beach: The tranquil waters of this beautiful stretch of pale golden sand are perfect for both children and adults to have fun in. Set in one of the most tourist-orientated places on the island, in its waters you can enjoy a wide range of activities: sailing, windsurfing, jetskis, banana boats and water scooters, amongst others.
Nearby there is a wide variety of shops and bars, the latter always livened up with music. The restaurants here offer a broad range of culinary options and above all, fantastic views of the sea. The Aparthotel Riu Adeje, with its swimming pools and pleasant bars, is located 600 metres away.

Playa del Duque beach: This beach has characteristics very similar to those of the previous one, as it is right beside it. A series of dykes protect its sand from the large waves, so it is an ideal spot for the whole family. The best thing here is the spectacle offered by the waves breaking against the large rocky cliffs, with the island of La Gomera as a backdrop and the majestic Teide behind.

The two RIU hotels in the area are the Hotel Riu Palace Tenerife and the Hotel Riu Arecas.

Playa Paraíso beach: Its main attraction is not the beach in itself, which is small; the best thing here is the spectacle offered by the waves breaking against the large rocky cliffs, with the island of La Gomera as a backdrop and the majestic Teide behind.

The area is also one of the best places on Tenerife for a diving "baptism", that is, your first immersion with bottles. The ClubHotel Riu Buena Vista is set on the rocks, with direct access to the small cove of grey sand.

Puerto de la Cruz

Playa Jardín: The fine volcanic sands of this beach are protected by a large breakwater that penetrates the sea, protecting them from the currents. Puerto de la Cruz has always been a special tourist destination. It has welcomed visitors since the beginning of the last century, but always striving to preserve its identity and a certain exclusivity. The seafront promenade that borders the beach has fountains, sculptures, exotic gardens and benches to admire it all from, making this a very pleasant place, not only for bathing but also for relaxing and enjoying oneself.

Another singular attraction is Lago Martiánez, a network of 8 saltwater swimming pools sculpted from therock by Canarian artist Cesar Manrique. The creator always had a good relationship with nature and this is yet another example of it. The volcanic-rock lagoons adjoin the sea and are fed by it through channels, and bathed by turquoise waters. One must understand that this is no artificial creation, but the product of an artist who tamed the sea. Whilst the ocean's wave break violently against the walls of the complex, children bathe in the calm waters of what is a singular, beautiful and safe place to spend a day of one's holidays.

The Hotel Riu Garoe is located 1 km. from here and from the beach, affords privileged views and is surrounded by subtropical vegetation.

RIU recommends

Our favourite

El Teide National Park

The rooftop of Spain dominates a lunar landscape of other-worldly tones and shapes, created by the violence of its own eruptions. An authentic wonder for eyes and mind.

Cetacean sighting

Eco-tourism is in fashion and on Tenerife, they know it. From different points in the south of the island, whale and dolphin-sighting excursions leave on a daily basis to seek out these cetaceans that populate the strait between the coast of Tenerife and La Gomera. The most common species are pilot whales and bottlenose dolphins but one can also see sperm whales and white whales.
Approach is regulated and restricted, but the vessels that go really do draw near, to the extent that at any moment one of these animals may splash you with a flick of its tail or after leaping out of the water.

Golf

North Coast
Real Club de Golf de Tenerife: Spain's second-oldest golf course still has a typically British air to it. Its extensive, undulating fairways are shaded by imposing, ancient pine trees. The spectacular views of the Teide are another one of the gifts this course offers.

South coast
Golf Abama: Forests of palm trees and fantastic views of the island of La Gomera await you on this delightful course.

Golf Costa Adeje: The course respects the changing levels so typical of this area to perfection, and also the ancient farming terraces that dominate the surroundings. The sea and the island of La Gomera will accompany you all along the course. 
 
Golf Las Américas: Set in the heart of Playa de las Américas, this course is designed like an amphitheatre and affords fantastic views of the immense ocean and the mountains.

Fishing

The rich, abundant marine fauna of the waters of Tenerife offer fishing enthusiasts more than one lure, the most famous one being the great blue marlin. Also known as the 'picudo' here, it can exceed 600 kilos in weight and is perfect for recreation, demanding an exciting exercise of skill. Other very common species on the coasts of Tenerife are tuna, swordfish, mako and gilthead bream.

Canoeing

This sport is increasingly popular and has become a habitual activity amongst visitors to the island. The routes and itineraries along the coast offer adventure, sport and plenty of fun. Enjoy the coast of Tenerife as you visit beauty spots that are inaccessible by land, or disembark on small, hidden beaches.

Diving

Its biodiversity, privileged climate and the sea which is nearly always calm make Tenerife a divingparadise. Sunken ships, caves and volcanic tubes are the ideal hiding place for coloured fish, enormous mantas, moray eels and many other species. The island has a complete network of centres available for experienced divers or beginners.

The waters of Playa Paraíso are highly recommended for beginner divers. Off the beach there is an immersion where you can swim amidst octopi, trumpetfish, sepias and above all enormous, playful spotted eagle rays.
Another extremely interesting spot is in El Puertito. Octopi and moray eels hide amongst its rocks, but the highlight is the two turtles that have chosen this place to make their home in.

Specialities

Fish: Tenerife's cuisine is fuelled by traditional food. The simple yet delicious dishes are a faithful reflection of this. As in the rest of the Canary Islands, "el viejo" is one of the most typical fish. Stuffed and baked and served with the traditional wrinkly potatoes, its flesh is exquisite. Other fish found very frequently on local tables are sea bream, island grouper, sardines, tuna or wreckfish.

Meat: Rabbit and pork are the most popular meats. They can be accompanied by the omnipresent wrinkly potatoes, chestnuts - also frequently found on the island - and gofío, which is basically toasted ground cereals. This latter ingredient is one of the few used by the aboriginal islanders still to be consumed by modern Canarians.

Shopping

Puerto de la Cruz: The historic town centre of Puerto de la Cruz has a wide and attractive range of shops. The lively atmosphere of the port streets and their terraces, cafeterias and restaurants are sufficiently attractive to encourage you to shop and make use of your credit card.

Costa Adeje: There is a host of modern shopping centres in this tourist resort. In Costa Adeje, as in all shopping areas located in tourist resorts, there are many establishments selling electronic goods, perfumes and cosmetics, jewellery and international fashion, with a great many articles at relatively low prices due to the special tax regime that governs the Canary Islands.

RIU recommends

Our favourite

El Teide National Park

The rooftop of Spain dominates a lunar landscape of other-worldly tones and shapes, created by the violence of its own eruptions. An authentic wonder for eyes and mind.

El Teide National Park

The volcanic violence of the Teide, which at 3718m is Spain's highest mountain, created volcanic cones, badlands, rocks, ash and twisted tongues of lava that lend a very particular arid, rather startling appearance to the zone. The colours, shapes and landscapes have a singular kind of beauty, all under the attentive vigilance of the great volcano that dominates the scenery, which the indigenous Guanches called the "Echeyde". 

By means of a cable car you can clinb up to a height of 3550m, coming close to the summit. The spectacular views from its different viewing platforms will ensure you make the most of your camera.

A wide variety of paths run through the park, although if you are in a car you will also be able to enjoy beautiful spaces such as the Valley of Ucanca: a broad depression dominated by high crags that create a lunar-type landscape.

The apparently austere surroundings are the habitat of important species of endemic vegetation such as the 'tajinaste rojo', or tower of jewels, the 'rosal del guanche' (bencomia exstipulata), 'retama' (lygos sphaerocarpa) and the Teide violet. Although their names sound strange, these plants are beautiful and above all, unique. Invertebrates are the most important species in the park - there are over 700 of them, and 50% are endemic species.

The Forest Crown (La Corona Forestal)

The green ring that surrounds the Teide will delight you with spectacular woodland panoramas with the silhouette of the great volcano as a backdrop. One of the most characteristic images of this protected zone covering 46,500 hectares is Los Altos de Granadilla: white, cone-shaped rocky outcrops that result from the action of the wind and the sea on the volcanic rock.

The interior

The villages of interest hidden in the valleys and mountains here are so many, and so beautiful, that it would be impossible to name them all. Unlike today, in other ages people fled from the coast, preferring the more rugged, but also more fertile lands of the interior.
Their conception and location, on the crest of a ravine or in the depths of a valley, are proof of the ingeniousness the inhabitants were forced to develop in order to subsist. Narrow mountain roads will take you to end-of-the-world landscapes, where you will forget the beach for a day and discover a hidden facet of the island, greener and wilder.

If you are in the south, visit the high areas in the municipalities of Arona and Adeje, where the villages have preserved their traditional architecture, flower-lined streets and above all the laughter of the local people. Another extremely beautiful route is the one from Guía de Osora to Santiago de Teide, with small farmhouses that seem to defy the mountains.

In the Puerto de la Cruz area we recommend the valley of Orotava, with its gentle slopes dotted with palm trees and tropical flowers tumbling down into the sea with the majestic Teide as a backdrop. The old town of Orotava is the highlight of this trip, with its beautiful cobbled streets that contain the best examples of civil and religious architecture on the island. Don't miss the rural scenery of Realejos either, truly picturesque for its vegetation and photogenic farmsteads.

Los Gigantes cliffs

These huge vertical walls that plunge abruptly into the sea are one of the most spectacular scenes on the island. Some of them reach heights of up to 600 metres. Near-tropical vegetation dominates the area, lending it a touch of exoticism.
The profile of these great colossuses is imposing, with their grand silhouettes that plunge into the water one after another. The indigenous inhabitants of the Canary Islands, the Guanches, attributed magical properties to this place. When you visit it, you will understand why.

Parrot Park (Loro Parque) in Puerto de la Cruz

As its name in Spanish suggests (Loro Parque means 'Parrot Park'), this complex contains an important collection of parrots, to be specific the most important one in the world with around 353 specimens. But the diversity of animals does not end here: Loro Parque is also a complete zoo, with tigers, gorillas, chimpanzees, caimans, pelicans, jaguars, flamencos, sea lions and even a giant Galapagos turtle.

If you don't like to see caged animals you won't feel comfortable here, but the enormous selection of parrots and other species, which ensures a burst of colour, usually delights children.

Loro Parque can also boast the most important dolphinarium in Europe. The daily shows are extremely impressive and include both dolphins and seals.

RIU recommends

Our favourite

El Teide National Park

The rooftop of Spain dominates a lunar landscape of other-worldly tones and shapes, created by the violence of its own eruptions. An authentic wonder for eyes and mind.

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