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Pestana Delfim Hotel

The Hotel

The Pestana Delfim Hotel offers you a great panorama of Três Irmãos beach, which is only a three minute walk away, and is an excellent choice for couples and families looking for a four star hotel that provides extensive leisure activities. Most of the bedrooms have balconies from which you can enjoy superb views, and all rooms are ensuite with satellite television, telephone and video/games system. The hotel has a large outdoor swimming pool with a swim-up bar, tennis courts, watersports at the Pestana Nautical Centre on the nearby beach, and full health and fitness facilities including an indoor pool, sauna, jacuzzi, turkish bath, and a massage and beauty salon. You can enjoy its indoor games room with snooker table, table tennis, giant floor chess, and golf simulator. A driving range is available for practice and there are 15 golf courses within easy driving distance. At the Pestana Dom Joao II hotel nearby there is a kid's club (for 4 - 12 year olds) and during the daytime the hotel organises free activities like volleyball, pool games, local walks, petanque and Portuguese lessons. The Algarve, which is Portugal’s southernmost province, is a 150 km long coastal region of outstanding beauty, long golden beaches, dramatic sandstone cliffs, picturesque villages and undulating landscape covered with fig, almond and olive trees. Rich in history, the Algarve is noted for the friendliness of its people and its mild climate, which is ideal for outdoor sports almost all year around.   Please note that this property will be closed from 1st November 2009 until 31st March 2010 for improvement works.

Local Area

 ALGARVE

The southernmost region of Portugal, the Algarve, is without a doubt the best-known to visitors to the country from overseas thanks to its popularity as one of Europe’s main holiday destinations. Certainly the Algarve’s attractions are many, and not least its enviable climate with sunshine virtually year-round.

The region is probably most famous for its beaches and its numerous golf courses. The Algarve has around 100 miles of coastline, stretching from the border with Spain in the east right across the south of the country to Cape St Vincent in the west (this is the most south-westerly point in Europe), and then north for about 30 miles up to the border with the Alentejo region. And it’s a wonderful coastline with a mixture of extensive beaches of fine golden sand, small sandy coves and, in places, dramatic cliff-faces and rock formations. Inevitably, since the sixties and seventies there has been a lot of development centred on the main resorts such as Albufeira, Praia da Rocha and Vilamoura with the construction of hotels, apartments, marinas and so on, but in the extreme east and west of the Algarve coast, smaller towns – Tavira and Sagres as examples - while still offering the same glorious beaches remain almost untouched by the frenetic activity of the tourist centres.

The Algarve is not, however, just about beaches and golf. Inland the region is largely rural – hilly, and in places mountainous – and many of the picturesque little towns and villages in the interior appear to have changed little over the centuries and still retain their quiet, unhurried and relaxed way of life. Like the rest of the Iberian Peninsulathe Algarve became part of the Roman empire in the second century BC (there are important Roman remains on the coast in Lagos), but the longest occupation of the region was by the Moors who named the region Al-Gharb and who were finally expelled in 1250, completing the reconquest of Portugal. As in Andalusia in Spain,he archtectural legacy of the Moorish occupation is much in evidence throughout the region.

The principal, and by far the largest, city of the Algarve is Faro. Practically every visitor arrives here thanks to flights into its airport from all over Europe, but very few actually stay in Faro. But it’s an elegant coastal city with a medieval wall and many monuments, museums and churches and it definitely deserves a visit. Away from the coast two particularly attractive towns are Monchique, up in the hills about 20 miles from the resort of Portimao, and Loulé, an active market town a short drive inland from Vilamoura.

Apart from high-quality ‘international cuisine’ stemming from the tourism so important to this region, there are plenty of delicious local dishes available throughout the Algarve. Pork and chicken are the main ingredients for meat dishes, notably ‘Cataplana’ (pork with lots of clams and garlic) and ‘chicken piri-piri’ ranging from mild to very hot and spicy. But fish and seafood reign supreme here; grilled sardines are excellent on the Algarve coast and available practically everywhere while swordfish, bass, bream, squid, clams, lobsters and prawns are all of the highest quality and fresh as can be. Wines from all over Portugal are freely available, but the local wines from Lagos, Tavira and Lagoa are all good and the region produces several local varieties of liqueur.

Pool

For Pousada pool information please visit our information on pools page.

Restaurant

Atlantic Gardens Restaurant: Breakfast 7.30 to 10.30 Lunch 12.30 to 15.00 Dinner 19.00 to 22.00 Luigi Restaurant: 19.00 to 0.00 Tucano Bar: 12.30 to 19.00 Sunset Bar: 19.00 to 22.00

Nearby Hotels

Sorry, this hotel cannot be booked online at the moment. Please contact our customer service at
+44 (0) 207 199 6360

Facilities

  • Air conditioning
  • Lift
  • Bar
  • Restaurant
  • Wi-fi
  • Breakfast
  • Easy access facilities
  • Parking
  • Seasonal outdoor swimming pool
  • Safe
  • Mini-bar
  • TV in guest rooms
  • Telephone in guest rooms
  • Hairdryer in guest rooms
  • Gym
  • Accepts credit cards
  • Nearby tennis
  • Kids Club

Location

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