Níjar (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈnixar]) is a Spanish municipality in the province of Almería, Andalusia. It lies in the eastern part of Almería, in the Sierra de Alhamilla and the south-eastern Mediterranean coast, in the Campo de Níjar, near the famous Cabo de Gata-Níjar Natural Park.
Restaurants in Nijar
5.0 based on 72 reviews
I'm an official tour leader and geologist and I perform nature, culture and geology tours in SE Spaing, ranging from 3 hours and full day trips to tailor made tours of several days. I've no phisical establishment, my office is my home in the villige of El Pozo de los Frailes, and I have fixed meeting points in several places where the usual tours are performed.
5.0 based on 136 reviews
Welcome to “El cortijo subacuatico”Established in July 2007, El Cortijo Subacuatico is a family owned business focusing on diving. It’s also a life project dedicated to saving the enviroment, upholding quality of the formation and havinggreat times after a dive...The school is based in a little village called Las Hortichuelas Bajas, a small oasis between the desert and the ocean in the coastal protected area Parque Natural Cabo de Gata-Níjar. Here you wont find hastiness or crowds. We want you to enjoy yourdiving experiences, your courses and your holiday with us. Welcome to a new form of learning diving
5.0 based on 934 reviews
We are an active tourism company situated in the Natural Park of Cabo de Gata (Almeria). Our commitment is your enjoyment! We do kayaking, sailing in zodiac with snorkeling, always surrounded by amazing landscapes.
5.0 based on 39 reviews
We live an hour and a half away from here, but make the journey regularly. It is mainly a specialist seller of succulents and cacti, plus other xeric type plants and trees. However they also show beautiful avant garde stone statues you won’t find anywhere else. There is a lot of land here, and it has been sectioned off into different types of styles of landscapes. There’s an area to meander through ancient olive trees that are stupendously planted at least 60 cm’s higher than the path we walk on, in dappled shade. Fascinating idea. Plus another area has various water pools fashioned from concrete, and so on. The wonderful sample plantings of agaves, aeoniums, a. Haworthii’s, etc etc are all sensitively placed and without fail get me spending in order to take home the latest plants I’ve fallen in love with. They have a good selection of pots, too and if you need a particular plant potted up in a new pot, they will do it for you, using the correct porous medium. The last time we visited we were walking quietly across the land, looking down into the cañada before us when three baby ibex (a type of goat) walked out in front of us followed by four adults. They look more like deer than goats, I’ve always thought. Beautiful things. They were aware of us but kept walking or trotting slowly, climbing up the rocks and inclines until they disappeared some few minutes later, quite unconcerned. Wonderful! What a spot to go searching for plants, as well as commune with nature. I bought a desert cactus (huge thing, so pleased with it) and several large pots, plus various big succulent specimens to further widen my collection. The guys here are very knowledgable and full of information about their plants and care so it’s a pleasure to chat to lovely people and gain practical help at the same time. We’ve been to a few music gigs here, too. Great layout, different types of music and food too. Ask to go on their mailing list and you’ll then receive emails to find out when their music events are. Forget how much it is, but it’s super-cheap. If you’re interested in Mediterranean gardening, do go along and have a good look around. I read a good review on it in the Financial Times a while ago so google for that to find out their London gardening journalist’s viewpoint, too. Enjoy!
5.0 based on 38 reviews
ThingsTodoPost © 2018 - 2024 All rights reserved.