12/21/2011

Unusual beaches by Lonely Planet

Nov 28, 2011 2:03:23 AM

The world’s most unusual beaches

Bowling Ball Beach in the Point Arena area.
  • The beautiful coral pink sand of Pink Sand Beach in Eleuthera on Harbour Island
  • Detail of Glass Beach.
  • Kayaker on sound with snowy hills in background.
  • Red Ghost Crab (Fiddler crab) on Chandipur beach.
  • Time out of the rat race on the black sands of Perissa beach on the east coast of Santorini island.
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Candy sands, disappearing waves, transformed trolls – if life’s a beach, these are its strangest days. These 10 beaches from Lonely Planet’s 1000 Ultimate Sights might not all be swimmable, but they are all extraordinary.

1. Bowling Ball Beach, California

Compared to green sand or vanishing tides, ‘round rocks’ don’t initially sound like reason enough to visit this Californian beach. And yet, when you get down there and see the ‘bowling balls’ sitting like some tidy giant’s game on the sand, you can’t help but get a thrill. Best seen at low tide, the rocks are freakily round and freakily regular, and clustered together as if they’ve been placed there. The truth is, they’re stubborn. The softer rock around them washed away, but these tough customers withstood the waves.
If you’re driving, take Highway 1. The Bowling Balls are on the Mendocino Coast; take the Schooner Gulch Road off the highway.

2. Harbour Island, Bahamas

Blink your eyes. Are you in some kind of Lucy-in-the-Sky, fairy-floss and cream-pie hallucination? Or is that sand really…pink? Yep, it is. The colour is caused by tiny particles of coral mixing in with the white sand. Pink-sand beaches occur all along the east coast of Harbour Island. As if that’s not enough to make it your new favourite island ever, you’ll also find the classic sighing, lucid, blue Bahamas seas. You can leave the rose-coloured glasses at home for this one.
Afternoon cocktails on your private balcony looking out onto the petal-coloured sands? Lash out at Pink Sands Resort.

3. Glass Beach, California

This beach is a testament to nature’s amazing ability to turn trash into treasure. Overlooked by cliffs, this place was once seen as just a convenient dumping ground for Fort Braggs’ garbage. Up until the late 1960s, folks would hurl their refuse – including old cars and appliances – straight over the cliffs and into the oceans. Finally the authorities put a stop to it. Over the ensuing decades, the sea performed a remarkable conjuring act, acting like a huge tumbler to winnow out the glass and turn it smooth. These days the beach resembles a gem shop. People used to collect the glass, but that’s now forbidden.
Follow Fort Bragg’s Elm Street to its end and then hike down the dirt trail to the beach. Take care, the path can be treacherous.

4. Prince William Sound, Alaska

This close to the northernmost point of the Gulf of Alaska is where beaches get truly otherworldly. Tidewater glaciers spilling into the sea. Cold clear air. Mountain peaks reflected in the pure waters. And black sand framed by green hills and blue ice. That’s before you even get to the wildlife of the region – harbour seals, sea otters, whales, eagles and bears, to name but a few. It’s no wonder this is heaven for kayakers.
If kayaking around a calving glacier sounds a little hair-raising for you, consider aglacier cruise instead.

5. Papakolea, Hawaii

When it comes to beaches, the volcanic islands of Hawaii aren’t content to leave it at sugar-white. They mix it up with ebony black, Mars red – and green! Papakōlea’s not exactly blazing emerald, but it does have a distinct green tint from olivine crystals deposited on the beach by a volcanic explosion about 10,000 years ago. These crystals are heavier than the rest of the volcanic materials, so as the water washes the rest away, the beach gets greener. Eventually the olivine will run out and the beach will be grey, but not any time soon in human terms.
Papakōlea is in the Ka‘u district. You’ll have to hike in and climb down the cinder cone. But hey, it’s green!

6. Chandipur, India

The sea here has a magic trick – it disappears! At low tide it waves goodbye and heads out for some 5km (yes, that’s unusually far; when you see it happen you’ll know how freaky it is). That in itself may not be enough to draw you here, but while you’re waiting for the sea to come sloshing back in with a ‘just kidding!’ you’ll be able to explore the seabed, complete with shells, driftwood and little red crabs. And when you’re in Orissa, why not check out some of its other off-the-tourist-trail beaches?
While you’re at it, visit the Orissan town of Puri in June or July for the stunning Rath Yatra festival.

7. Perissa, Santorini, Greece

Don’t expect to get this one to yourself – with a beach this famous, you have to share. Perissa is probably the most beautiful of Santorini’s black-sand beaches, overlooked by the huge rock Mesa Vouno, which is lit up at night. The beach is long so you won’t be too squashed in with the hordes, but if you do feel like some time out, the ruins of Thira, an ancient city, are just a sprightly hike away. Bring flip-flops to this beach – the black sand holds the heat.
Stay close to the action at Stelios Place, just metres from the beach; it has white balconies, a pool and good breakfasts.

8. Giant’s Causeway, northern Ireland

It’s easy to see how legends grew up around this masterwork. Volcanic eruption has shaped thousands of basalt columns into precise hexagonal shapes, grouped together like organ pipes. It’s almost impossible to believe that they haven’t been carved by human hands. The mythology of the place has the famed warrior Finn McCool swapping shouted threats with a Scottish giant over the sea. They started to make a causeway so they could get their hands on each other. (Geology supports the myth: there are similar structures on the Scottish side of the sea.) Don’t miss particularly sculptural structures like the Giant’s Boot and the Chimney Stacks.
The Causeway is near Bushmills in County Antrim. Ulsterbus 252 goes on a circular path from Belfast to the Antrim Glens.

9. Rainbow Beach, Australia

Not content with merely taking on an unusual colour like red or green, Rainbow Beach takes on a myriad. On Fraser Island (the world’s largest sand island) off Australia’s east coast, the beach is backed by exquisite cliffs where you can see the rainbow colours most clearly in edible-looking striations of nougat, rose, honey and cream. Aboriginal legend has it that a spirit personified in the rainbow dived into the cliffs during a fight over a woman, staining them with his colours. The sand looks gold from a distance but scoop up a handful and you’ll see the rainbow.
Get up early to hand-feed wild dolphins at nearby Tin Can Bay. There is only one feeding a day, at 8am sharp.

10. Vík Beach, Iceland

The little town of Vík has three distinctions. One, it’s Iceland’s southernmost point. Two, it’s the rainiest place on the island. And three, it has one of the most beautiful beaches in the world. Obviously it’s for looking at, rather than swimming in… White waves wash up on jet-black sands, like a beach seen in negative. The cliffs above glow green from all that rain. And strange basalt figures stand here and there like sculptures. They’re traditionally believed to be ill-fated trolls that got caught out in the sun.

1 comment:

Travel said...

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