The
coast
continues
to be
upmarket
(or "money-raddled"
as
Laurie
Lee put
it)
until
you
reach
ESTEPONA
, about
30km
west of
Marbella,
which is
a more
or less
Spanish
resort -
in as
much as
that's
possible
round
here. It
lacks
the
enclosed
hills
that
give
Marbella
character,
but the
hotel
and
apartment
blocks
which
sprawl
along
the
front
are
restrained
in size,
and
there's
space to
breathe.
The fine
sand
beach
has been
enlivened
a little
by a
promenade
studded
with
flowers
and
palms,
and,
away
from the
seafront,
the old
town is
very
pretty,
with
cobbled
alleyways
and two
delightful
plazas.
The
fish
market
is
definitely
worth
seeing:
Estepona
has the
biggest
fishing
fleet
west of
Málaga,
and the
daily
dawn
ritual
in the
port,
where
the
returning
fleets
auction
off the
fish
they've
just
caught,
is worth
getting
up early
for - be
there at
6am,
since by
7am it's
all
over.
From
May
onward,
Estepona's
bullfighting
season
gets
under
way in a
modern
bullring
reminiscent
of a
Henry
Moore
sculpture.
At the
beginning
of July,
the
Fiesta y
Feria
week
transforms
the
place,
bringing
out
whole
families
in
flamenco-style
garb.
Beyond
Estepona,
8km
along
the
coast,
there's
a minor
road
leading
into the
hills to
CASARES
, one of
the
classic
andaluz
White
Towns.
In
keeping
with the
genre,
it
clings
tenaciously
to a
steep
hillside
below a
castle,
and has
attracted
its fair
share of
arty
types
and
expatriates.
But it
remains
comparatively
little
known;
bus
connections
are just
about
feasible
for a
day-trip
(details
from the
turismo).
Further
west,
3km
inland
from the
village
of
Manilva,
are some
remarkably
well-preserved
Roman
sulphur
baths
. If you
want to
partake
of these
health-giving
waters
you'll
have to
be
prepared
to dive
into a
subterranean
cavern,
and to
put up
with the
overpowering
stench
of
sulphur,
which
clings
to your
swimwear
for
weeks.
The
beaches
beyond
Estepona
have
greyish
sands (a
trademark
of the
Costa
del Sol
that
always
seems
surprising
- you
have to
round
the
corner
to the
Atlantic
coast at
Tarifa
before
you meet
yellow
sand),
and
there
are more
greyish
developments
before
the road
turns
inland
towards
San
Roque
and
Gibraltar