Simon Maurice suggests some alternative goodies that UK visitors’ best-loved Balearic Island has to offer.
In 2020 Sarah Drane described her favourite places to go to in Mallorca and offered some excellent recommendations. With travel due to open up later this and Mallorca being a long-established favourite of British travellers, Simon Maurice suggests some alternative goodies that UK visitors’ best-loved Balearic Island has to offer:
Railway to Soller: Take the scenic route and let the train take the strain
YOU CAN BOOK A TOUR OF THIS PLACES HERE
The Rafa Nadal Academy, unsurprisingly, majors on Tennis, with courses of various types for all levels – both indoor and outdoor. It also offers football, various gym/athletics training activities, a full spa and its own restaurant. You can even stay there, with a range of accommodation available at the attached Rafa Nadal Sports Centre.
The complex has 26 tennis courts – including a show court – and it regularly hosts Professional ranking tournaments. In 2019, we watched Andy Murray play in a comeback tournament there and admission was free – the tournament being paid for by a local sponsor!
There is also an excellent Museum, (great for rainy days!), which celebrates sport of all types and, of course, has a section dedicated to tennis – and to Rafa Nadal himself. The Museum experience, however, goes much further than this, offering more than a dozen opportunities to try sport virtually. These range from Pro-cycling, through Hockey and Rowing, to trying your hand as a Tennis Umpire or driving a Formula 1 car.
Admission is typically €15 for adults and €10 for children (8-12).
Cocktails at the bizarre bar of Abaco in Palma
If you have the chance to get into Palma and aren’t worried about waking up early in the morning, one of the capital city’s most interesting late-night spots is Abaco, which is located in the Old City of Palma, not far from the city’s imposing cathedral.
From the outside it is pretty much a large door in a wall however, on entering, you are greeted by piles of fruit, and flowers everywhere, in an entrance lobby bar which, amazing as it truly is, still gives little clue about what the place is actually about
Moving through the bar leads you naturally to a courtyard with more tables, which is a good place to base yourself while you sample Abaco’s list of cocktails, desserts and pastries. From time to time people will appear on the balconies that face onto the courtyard (from the beautiful rooms of Abaco’s interior, which you can also visit while at Abaco) singing Opera arias to entertain the clientele. It’s certainly not cheap, and it doesn’t really get going until late, but the atmosphere is always cordial, buoyed by the music and it is certainly unlike any other cocktail bar you will find on the Island – or, for that matter, most anywhere else!.