
Street drinking and rough sleeping: What you could now be fined for in Albuferia
Holidaymakers can face significant fines for actions including wearing swimwear outside beach or pool zones, drinking alcohol in the street, and public urination.
The new code of conduct aims to prevent 'excessive behaviour' and protect the municipality's image as a tourist destination.
Signage will be installed throughout the resort, and an initial grace period will involve warnings before fines are issued.
This initiative follows a viral video of naked dancing and aligns with similar measures adopted by other European tourist cities like Barcelona and Dubrovnik.
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The Sun
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Five great hacks to master hand luggage packing and save serious cash on plane tickets
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Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Play golf where there is 24 hours of sunlight in one of the most breathtaking locations in the world... Lofoten Links has to be on your golfing bucket list
As far as raw beauty goes, precious few golf courses in the world can compare to Lofoten Links. Course design? Every single hole is full of character and challenges that force you to think your way around the majestic course rather than just playing it. Even the flair of a thespian couldn't overstate the gorgeous surroundings in Lofoten, Norway. It's hard to fathom who had the bright idea to put a golf course at one of the most northern points of Europe, much less how they managed to tackle the perpetuity of rock to make it happen. Night golf is a thing, yes. But playing golf where the sun doesn't set is an entirely different beast. This is what Lofoten offers; around six weeks a year where there is 24-hours of daylight and the golf course never closes. A golfing experience like no other, Mail Sport had to make the trip to Norway to see what links golf is like under a sun that doesn't set. 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Only the biggest hitters or the clinically insane would try and cut this corner off the tee because there's not much wiggle room even if you can make it. Straight after that you have to take a short walk up a hill to the elevated teebox to their prized par three three with the North Sea serving as a breathtaking backdrop. Once again, if you don't hit the green or the stingy 10 yards to play with in front of it, your ball is bound for the rocks. If you haven't lost half a dozen balls, then you head back up to the same hill to hit a downward tee shot onto the third. You ave to naviagate the rocks again, but it's a shorter hazard than the first at about 80 yards. It's a fantastic three hole run to kick things off. To be honest, every hole has character and nothing is formulaic. In the UK we so often see straight up and down par fours in and around 350 yards with nothing much else to them, but not here. Every hole has either hazards to give you something to think about off the tee or narrow fairways that seem to shrink every time you glance at them. Many of the fairways squeeze as they approach the green meaning you have to make a choice: go for it or layup. The two par fives that play back-to-back at the close of the front nine can make or great a round with their elevated greens, but staying out of the water and/or rough as you play to a left bend and then a right is the toughest challenge. The 17th hole is essentially a cousin of the patented second, another par three but this time facing in the opposite direction but with equal risks. Following that, a nice wide fairway will great you (for once) on the 18th with a raised teebox to savour the last hits. It is nothing short of a stunning golf course. Granted, some of the tee boxes and many of the greens are not in the best condition, certainly opposed to the delightful fairways. That's part of the game with the climate, though, as the course itself is only open from April to September thanks to the weather and as we saw, they still see a fair bit of rain during those months too. Look at the views! Plenty of tee boxes have hazards directly in front of them to test you Snow sits atop of many of the mountains and when the wind picks up, you'll feel it! The clubhouse has a charming, local feel and the people who run it all day and night could not be more helpful. It's a great set-up; being able to play in daylight at midnight with nobody up your arse or hounding people in front of you on a course of that magnitude? Perfection. Hopefully Cabot plan to just enhance Lofoten's offerings. We're told they have no desire to rob the unique corner of golfing paradise of what makes it so special. In my mind, Lofoten is in the top 10 golf courses in the world, perhaps top five. 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Daily Mail
5 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Plus-sized traveler says people 'constantly stare' as she journeys through Europe, particularly in Monaco
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