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Polop de la Marina, Spain: Rural Mediterranean

Polop de la Marina is a Mediterranean village in rural Spainn

Discovering Polop de la Marina, Costa Blanca (Spain).

Polop de la Marina is a Spanish Mediterranean village in rural Alicante, a few kilometres inland from the well known Costa Blanca resorts of Altea and Benidorm.

Rural Mediterranean Spain – Polop de la Marina

If you live in the Marina Baja area of the Costa Blanca, you’ve no doubt seen picturesque Polop poised on a rocky mount, just a few miles inland from Benidorm on the Mediterranean coast… a scenic location encircled by valleys terraced with nispero trees against a backdrop of mountains. Polop de la Marina is an enchanting little town with an impressive history!

Polop de la Marina, Spain

Polop de la Marina

The town originates with the construction of a fortress around the 12th century. The strategic position was first held by the Moors, and subsequently became the scene of battles as the different Monarchs that reigned in Spain fought for control of the area. Polop went on to become a feudal barony in the XIII century.

Plaça de Les Fonts, Polop de la Marina

Polop is a peaceful, traditional place where villagers politely nod and say ‘buenos días’ when you pass them in the street, in the old-fashioned way. Famed for ‘Plaça de les Fonts’ the village square where there are 221 water spouts, for decades people have come from afar around to fill containers with pure mountain water.

Village street in Polop de la Marina, Spain

Walk around the typical streets and you can appreciate how modern properties have been built to a design that blends with the traditional architecture of the original character town houses. Discover the various town squares – plazas lined with restaurants and bars, meeting points for friends and families, and if I’m not mistaken the local expat community; small plazas with play parks for the kiddies, and the main church square where the old folk stop to chat awhile.

View to church in Polop de la Marina, Spain.

The magnificent parish church was built in 1723, the reminder of a past when the catholic religion was the hub of Spanish village life. From here a maze of steep, narrow streets climb the hill and a kind of pilgrimage trail to the ‘castle’ at the top, which was once used as a cemetery. You can see the remains of the medieval walls, and the ancient tombs in ‘the garden of crosses’.

Garden of Crosses cemetery, Polop de la Marina

Before you reach the summit, a rustic stone restaurant café with a large shady terrace offers a temping respite from the sun if you visit in summertime. Nearby there are signs indicating several walking routes.

Views to Mediterranean Sea from Polop de la Marina

Leon Dormido Mountain

On your way back down, stop to admire the views in all directions…over the orchards to Sierra Bernia ridge in the distance, or the Mediterranean coast at Altea, to the neighbouring town of La Nucia, or westwards across the rooftops of Polop to impressive Ponoig mountain (1,181m) which resembles a sleeping lion straddling the skyline (known locally as ‘el leon dormido’!

El Leon Dormido mountain, Polop de la Marina

That’s another great facet of Polop, the surrounding countryside is ideal for hiking and the Ponoig itself a great place for rock climbing (you can book a room at a typical local hostel for a few days, and discover the marvels of the Marina Baja at your leisure).

Xirles Village

Nispero plantations near Polop de la Marina

Three miles from the town itself, you’ll find the hamlet of Xirles, locally known for a typical restaurant hidden by trees beside the riverbank on the site of an old mill. Xirles has been beautifully maintained – an old church, a sprinkling of prettily painted traditional houses and a smart new development that surprisingly doesn’t spoil the environment.

Xirles village, Polop de la Marina

At the end of the ‘main’ street a rural lane leads towards Callosa, past nispero plantations (this is a unique area in the world where loquats are cultivated in an ideal climate) and the occasional ‘finca’ estate. A leisurely walk, where we were only over taken by the occasional horse-back rider and a couple of cyclists!

Polop de la Marina, Costa Blanca, Spain

How to Get to Polop de la Marina

By road: A7 motorway or N-332 main road, exit at Benidorm, then take the CV-70.
Nearest Airport: Alicante airport: 64.5 km

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