logo
The Spanish island that feels more like Mars and flights are just £35

The Spanish island that feels more like Mars and flights are just £35

Scottish Sun10-05-2025
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
GRIPPING my surfboard tightly, I got ready to battle the wave heading my way.
But as the ocean swallowed me up and spat me out for the umpteenth time, I wondered why I didn't just stay in the hotel's adults-only pool.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
5
Tenerife is a haven for surfers — with its year-round waves
Credit: Getty
5
The Los Roques de Garcia night sky
With its year-round waves, Tenerife is a haven for surfers — and I could see that my sister and brother-in-law were doing a lot better than me. They'd even managed to stand up.
It was all worth it, though. When I even­tually caught my first wave, a feeling of euphoria rushed over me as the sea whisked me at speed towards the shore.
I was so shocked at my success that I didn't even try to stand up, much to the dismay of my instructor from Ika Ika Surf School.
A two-hour session costs 35 euros and takes place at Playa de las Americas.
Given the variety of sport on offer on the Spanish island, my partner and I couldn't resist trying our hand at riding with Horse Riding Adventure Tenerife.
We trotted around the countryside taking in the views down to the sea.
A one-and-a-half-hour ride costs 35 euros.
We were staying at The Ramada Residences by Wyndham Tenerife Costa Adeje, which was the perfect place to relax.
The resort boasts a huge family pool with hot tub, as well as a peaceful adults-only pool, plus a restaurant and lovely rooftop bar.
Our two-bed apartment featured a huge terrace overlooking the seafront as well as a well-equipped kitchen, which meant we could keep catering costs to a minimum.
Martin Lewis gives travel advice about checking your passport
When we weren't sipping cocktails at the bar, evenings were spent watching the sun set over the sea, while tucking into plates of home-cooked pasta.
For an exceptional sunset, head to Teide National Park, perched on the third- highest volcano in the world.
Travelling by night bus, we set off on a nine-hour excursion which would finish with a stargazing experience that truly dazzled us.
Our coach trundled up and up until we were 3,715 metres above sea level.
We made a couple of stops for people to acclimatise to the altitude, and then, eventually, we broke cloud cover to reveal a deep, blue sky.
Throughout the journey, our guide Jesper recalled tales of the Guanche people who inhabited the island before Europeans arrived.
They lived in caves while rearing animals and farming the volcanic land.
They thought the Teide volcano held up the sky — and when it erupted, they believed it was Guayota, a demon, trying to escape from his hell-like pit.
Guayota needed to be put back into the mouth of the volcano for the blackened sky to return to blue.
The volcano has lain dormant since its last eruption, in 1909, which I was grateful to learn as we reached its peak.
Big Dipper
It was hard to believe this volcanic island used to be even higher than it is, as I stared out across the sea of clouds below me.
But Jesper told us that an older and much taller volcano, Las Canadas, once stood here, but it crumbled in on itself following an eruption.
Before we got to watch the glorious sunset, we passed Roques de Garcia, where you can observe remains of volcanic activity over the years in the form of oddly shaped rock formations.
Walking up the trail surrounded by mighty rocks, I was reminded of just how small I really am.
The views across the plains and lava fields gave the impression that we had left this island in the Canaries and stumbled on to Mars.
We made our way to the northern side of the volcano for the sunset after a three-course meal at Papillon, the highest restaurant in the national park.
Standing at the edge, clutching a mint tea, I watched as the sun began its descent below the clouds.
It seemed to take a while to move down the horizon, but then in what seemed like seconds it dropped out of sight and the temperatures plummeted.
5
Thea Jacobs saddles up during her trip
Credit: Supplied
5
The adults-only poolside at the Ramada
Credit: The Ramada Residences by Wyndham
5
Thea on dry land
Credit: Supplied
That meant it was time for stargazing.
We all know the nursery rhyme Twinkle Twinkle Little Star, but I had never actually seen the stars properly twinkle until that night.
Guide Jesper asked us where the North Star is.
Not a single one of us gave the right answer, so he pointed it out using a green laser.
He also showed us how to locate the star, also called Polaris, by using the Big Dipper constellation.
We then moved on to the zodiac constellations of Gemini and Taurus, plus Orion.
Despite the chill in the air, the evening felt magical.
Once we finished craning our necks at the sparkling sky, we were led to four telescopes so we could peer at Jupiter and nebulae invisible to the naked eye.
If the rocks had made me feel small before, the stars and planets made me feel even more minuscule.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Garden designer reveals £2.75 Tesco trick to turn plain gardens into lush rainforest paradise
Garden designer reveals £2.75 Tesco trick to turn plain gardens into lush rainforest paradise

Scottish Sun

timean hour ago

  • Scottish Sun

Garden designer reveals £2.75 Tesco trick to turn plain gardens into lush rainforest paradise

Scroll down to win a Garden on a Roll border plan with plants - worth £195 Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) DID you know there are rainforests in Britain? Nope - me neither. But you may well have visited one without realising if you've holidayed in Cornwall, Wales or along the Atlantic Coastline. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 3 Zoe Claymore with her Rainforest inspired show garden at Chelsea Flower Show Credit: Clive Nichols 3 Moss is a great indicator that you could be in a temperate rainforest in the UK Credit: Not known, clear with picture desk 3 Adding any kind of water feature into your garden will help create a rainforest theme Credit: free for devon wildlife trust use. Especially if you remember walking through green woodland packed with ferns, moss and lichen - with a really memorable earthy, damp scent. They once covered more than 20 per cent of the UK - but history devoured them - and now there's less than one per cent. So the Wildlife Trust, sponsored by Aviva, has just launched an epic 100-year restoration project to bring them back. The temperate rainforest restoration programme will restore approximately 1,755 hectares of temperate rainforest across the British Isles. Some of the new sites created through this programme include Bowden Pillars in Devon, Bryn Ifan in North Wales, Creg y Cowin and Glion Darragh on the Isle of Man, Trellwyn Fach in Pembrokeshire, and – most recently - Skiddaw in Cumbria. Garden Designer Zoe Claymore, won a silver gilt medal at RHS Chelsea for her British Rainforest Garden. She told me: 'I didn't know it at the time - but I played in a British rainforest as a child. The end of my grandparents garden in Devon went into Lidford Gorge which is one of the last existing rainforests. 'In the UK they're found in the Goldilocks zone - not too hot, not too cold - and by rivers, gullies and gorges, because you also need the moisture from the river creating that ecosystem.' But there are ways of recreating one in your own garden, she said. 'Even if you don't live in an area suited to creating a rainforest there's other plants that will create the same vibes. Mums are raving about an indoor tropical rainforest attraction in the UK 'Create shade with Hazels - they're a great small tree which gives a real native-feel and perfect for small gardens. Or include hollies, birch or willows. 'Create a water feature - from a little stream with a few rocks or simply as an old-school rock water bowl - to create that sense of humidity. "But even if you just did a pond in a pot surrounded by some fun little logs, that will create habitat, that will bring wildlife, and it will create that kind of feeling of rainforest-y wetness." It's easy to make a home made pond - using old washing up bowls. Tesco's are currently selling one for just £2.75. First choose a spot that's sunny but not in direct sunlight all day - otherwise the water will evaporate. Then all you have to do is put some logs around it, and a few stones, so wildlife can climb in and out easily - almost like a ramp. Ideally fill it with rain water rather than tap. And then put in about three water plants - like mini water lillies or water forget-me-not and sit back waiting for the wildlife. Zoe added: 'Then use British classic woodland plants and really focus on ferns - the unsung beautiful heroes of shade gardening - as well as bluebells, foxgloves, primulars, ivy, bananas and - if you've got a wet area - moss - which is the jewel in the crown - so your garden will be green all year round." For a 'how to' guide adapted to all UK gardens - as well as a rainforest-inspired pot combination - head to - and a share of the proceeds will go the Wildlife Trust. Also in Veronica's Column this week... Gardening tips, news, plant of the week and a competition to win a garden border worth £195 PLANT OF THE WEEK! Dierama Wind Nymph Pink - pictured above - clump forming perennial with slender arching stems with soft pink blooms and evergreen foliage. Bees love it. Plant in direct sunlight, likes well drained soil but might need protection in Winter. NEWS! A dad's 60-year-old lawnmower has taken its place in gardening history as the UK's oldest Flymo - after he read a plea in Sun Gardening. Pete Goddard's monumental mower was inducted into the British Lawnmower Museum in Southport, Merseyside, last week after Flymo sent out a request for old mowers. The rare blue Flymo was unveiled last month - taking its place in the museum alongside King Charles, Brian May, and Nicholas Parsons' former mowers. It came after a nationwide search for the UK's oldest Flymo to celebrate 60 years since the iconic hover mower was invented. The 79-year-old retired Highway Maintenance Operative's Flymo was originally bought in the 1960s by his father-in-law and lovingly maintained across three generations - and still works today. NEWS! Great Comp Gardens will show off some salvias not released to the general public before - at it's annual Summer Show next weekend. The seven acre garden in Platt, near Sevenoaks will be at it's best - with the hot and cool border in bloom, salvias bringing swathes of colour to the perennial borders and the Italian Garden in full flower in time for their annual two-day flagship event. The weekend event features a group of talented artists, craftspeople, award-winning nurseries and garden ornamental suppliers plus live jazz bands on the lawn. Curator William Dyson says: 'We can't wait to share the garden with our Summer Show visitors - it looks particularly splendid in August with the salvias in full flow. 'We've also introduced lots of new and interesting plants to the garden this year including a collection of new world salvias that we've inherited from Lindsay Pink (a collector in Portsmouth) that people won't have seen before. "We urge people to come along and see our revamped planting schemes which help to showcase new salvias that we have been keeping under wraps until now. There are salvias that I've only seen once before and can't wait to show people. We are mixing in drifts of South American annuals like Cosmos for interest and colour and Tagetes erecta (Mexican marigolds) plus lots of varieties of dahlias." For more info visit WIN! Garden on a Roll - which provide ready-made garden border paper templates, and the plants to put them in - are offering three £195 borders at 3m x 60cm of any style - including the 'Wildlife border' for bees and butterflies. To enter visit or write to Garden on a Roll competition, PO Box 3190, Colchester, Essex, CO2 8GP. Include your name, age, email or phone. UK residents 18+ only. Entries close 11.59pm. August 16, 2025. T&Cs apply JOB OF THE WEEK! Stake your dahlias, trim your lavenders, take fuchsia cuttings, prune climbing and rambling roses, add tomato food to corn and peppers. For more gardening content follow me @biros_and_bloom

Four cost-free measures to secure your home and stop burglars when you're on holiday
Four cost-free measures to secure your home and stop burglars when you're on holiday

Scottish Sun

time7 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Four cost-free measures to secure your home and stop burglars when you're on holiday

Read on to find out how to track down some cheap drinks this weekend SUN SAVERS Four cost-free measures to secure your home and stop burglars when you're on holiday Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) HOLIDAY season can mean rich pickings for thieves, so make sure your home is secure when you go away. These measures cost nothing but should help save you the heavy price of a break-in. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up KEEP SCHTUM: Don't tell the world when you're going away for a few days. You never know who is listening, so avoid broadcasting an upcoming holiday to friends in the pub or telling half the town in the local shop. The same goes for social media. If you can't resist sharing your sunny pictures, make sure your posts aren't public so that they can only be seen by your friends. Better still, hold off posting until you're safely back home. SWAP FAVOURS WITH A FRIEND: Making your home look lived in is an important line of defence against thieves. Ask a friend if they can pop by to pick up your post, park on your drive and close the curtains after dark. If it seems like a big ask, offer to return the favour when they take their own trip. You can also put your lights on a timer switch to make it look like someone is home in the evening. SECURE YOUR STUFF: Don't put valuables on display. Hide tech and other expensive items, or leave them with someone you trust. Place keys out of sight, shut away in a drawer, and clear your hallway of handbags. Lock away ladders and tools so they can't be used to get into your home and bring expensive bikes and outdoor kit inside. Why You Should Blur Your Home on Google Maps – Safety Tips for Homeowners Take photos of jewellery and register your precious items for free at the national property register ( CHECK, MATE: Make sure you have up-to-date building and contents insurance. Read your policy in case you should take specific measures before you go away. And while you are at it, you may as well unplug all unnecessary appliances to save on energy bills and cut the risk of electrical fires. All prices on page correct at time of going to press. Deals and offers subject to availability. 6 Want to keep your home safe while away? Don't broadcast to all and sundry that you're enjoying some pool time Credit: Getty Deal of day 6 Kick off the deal hunting with big savings on these Kickers Credit: M&S LOOK after little feet in the sturdy Kickers rip-tape leather shoes, down from £50 to £30 at M&S. SAVE: £20 Cheap treat 6 Track down £3 Aperol Spritzes this weekend with the Greene King app for National Spritz Day Credit: Greene King USE the Greene King app to track down £3 Aperol Spritzes this weekend. They are being served to celebrate National Spritz Day. SAVE: Up to £6 WHAT'S NEW UNTIL August 20 at Lidl, scan the Lidl Plus app at the checkout with any purchase for the chance to play spin the wheel and win a free croissant or cake. Top swap 6 Sweep on Benefit's £27 mascara, left or try Aldi's £5.99 dupe for bold lashes on a budget, right SWEEP Benefit's Bad Gal Bang mascara, left, £27 from through your lashes or open your eyes to Aldi's Lacura Girl Gone Bad mascara, right, £5.99. SAVE: £21.01 Shop & save 6 Drop into Sainsbury's for weekend deals on Laila – 10kg basmati rice now £9.50 with Nectar card Credit: Sainsburys HEAD to Sainsbury's this weekend for savings on 35 Laila products. A 10kg bag of basmati rice is down from £19 to £9.50 with a Nectar card. SAVE: £9.50 LITTLE HELPER FILL the freezer with eight for £10 on family favourites at Iceland and The Food Warehouse, such as Goodfella's pepperoni pizza, £2, and Birds Eye crispy chicken dippers, £2.75. Hot right now GET ready for next school term with three selected stationery products for the price of two at Ryman. PLAY NOW TO WIN £200 6 Join thousands of readers taking part in The Sun Raffle JOIN thousands of readers taking part in The Sun Raffle. Every month we're giving away £100 to 250 lucky readers - whether you're saving up or just in need of some extra cash, The Sun could have you covered. Every Sun Savers code entered equals one Raffle ticket. The more codes you enter, the more tickets you'll earn an

These 10 beach destinations are trending harder than the heatwave
These 10 beach destinations are trending harder than the heatwave

Time Out

time8 hours ago

  • Time Out

These 10 beach destinations are trending harder than the heatwave

Turns out, the best way to escape a sweltering summer is to lean into it—preferably with your toes in the sand and a cold drink in hand. Airbnb just dropped its list of the top 10 trending beach destinations for late summer getaways, and it's clear that travelers are chasing water, waves, and breezy relief. According to a new survey from Panterra, nearly half of global respondents named beaches as their number one destination type this season—and search data backs it up. From the surfer shores of Brazil to the dune-lined roads of Rhode Island, these spots are heating up in all the right ways. Leading the charge is Saquarema, Brazil, where search interest spiked over 170% year-over-year thanks to its rep as the surf capital of the country. New Shoreham, Rhode Island (aka Block Island) also saw a 160% lift, with visitors biking to the lighthouse and seal-watching between dips at quiet beaches. Meanwhile, Conil de la Frontera, a Spanish charmer on the Atlantic coast, is winning over travelers with both family-friendly stretches and hidden coves—searches are up 140%. Palermo, the Sicilian hotspot mixing history and Caribbean-blue waters, jumped over 90%, while Hossegor, France's favorite wave town, is up 70% thanks to its barrels, beachfront cafés and breezy promenades. Surprise newcomer Northumberland, in the United Kingdom, made the list too, drawing summer travelers to its golden sands and castle-topped coastline, with searches up 50%—alongside Fukuoka, Japan, where beach-hopping is just a ferry ride away. Also trending: Big Bear Lake, California (for freshwater fun), Port Aransas, Texas (for sunset strolls and sandcastles) and Portland, Maine, where tidepools and lighthouses define coastal calm. Each destination includes Airbnb's 'Guest Favorite' listings—translation: You'll find stays that are just as chill as the setting. So whether you're into surfing, snorkeling, seal-spotting or sun-lounging, there's still time to beat the heat without breaking a sweat.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store