Island adventures

Portugal’s wild Azores isles are geothermal wonders — and relatively close to the US

Sete Cidades, a 3-mile-wide volcanic crater filled with lakes and a village, is the most photographed site in the Azores, as seen from Vista do Rei on Sao Miguel Island.
Sete Cidades, a 3-mile-wide volcanic crater filled with lakes and a village, is the most photographed site in the Azores, as seen from Vista do Rei on Sao Miguel Island.

Some visitors consider the Azores a warm Iceland, which is only partly true. But as I hiked a rocky beach path on Sao Miguel Island, I briefly thought I was back in that sub-Arctic country.

All around me lay the kind of black and green landscape I had loved in Iceland: lunar fields of volcanic rock, covered in lichens. On one side, the azure Atlantic; on the other, a mossy cliff wall soared high above. Steam rose from the chunky ground. A faint scent of sulfur wafted in the air.

Delta flies to Ponta Delgada from New York-JFK in the summer. Azores Airlines (aka SATA regionally) flies from Boston and Toronto year-round.

Inter-island flights: Up to $100 one-way on SATA. Be flexible in case of cancellations; try to book connecting flights on the same ticket. If you are flying to or from mainland Portugal, SATA will route you to or from another island within 24 hours for free (see encaminhamentos.sata.pt).

Stopovers: Azores Airlines offers a free stopover for up to seven days on the way to Lisbon, Porto and other destinations (stopover.azoresairlines.pt).

Packages: Many trips (and travel inspiration) are available at azoresgetaways.com and azores.com.

WHERE TO STAY

Casa da Lomba: Villas in Mosteiros, Sao Miguel; booking.com.

Quinta da Meia Eira: Ecolodge in Castelo Branco, Faial; meiaeira.com.

Azoris Angra Garden: Hotel in Angra do Heroismo, Terceira; azorishotels.com.

Below me, people waded in a natural tidal pool. I climbed down a ladder to join them, bracing for a chill. Instead, the brackish water was soothingly warm -- hot in places. Here at Ponta da Ferraria, a hot spring blends with ocean water at low tide, for a thrilling swimming experience.

During a September visit to the Azores ("uh-zores," though the Portuguese say "uhzhuzh"), an archipelago of nine lush islands in the middle of the North Atlantic, I discovered a fantastic respite with a temperate climate and an old Mediterranean feel, a recreational hotbed with friendly bilingual people and precious little commercialism -- all of it closer to North America than any other European turf.

RELAXATION ON SAO MIGUEL

Officially an Autonomous Region of Portugal, the nine Azores rise along 360 miles of continental rifts, giving each island its own geothermal character. That rich, black lava stone is everywhere, showing up on villas, hotels and churches. Black cobblestones even pave the streets of Ponta Delgada, the regional capital, where we arrived one evening after our 2-hour flight from Porto on the Portuguese mainland.

We drove a rental car into the sunset around a corner of Sao Miguel island, taking in villages, the ocean and an abundance of magenta and violet hydrangeas. The big globular flowers, introduced in the 17th century, line virtually every roadside on Sao Miguel, a visual symbol of the island. (Named for the unseen acor bird, the verdant archipelago has no native mammals, except for the Azores noctule, a unique daytime bat.)

In my last-minute search for lodging, I discovered we could have our run of intriguing options throughout the islands, from villas to ecolodges, rarely much more than 100 euros a night. And our Sao Miguel digs did not disappoint: Casa da Lomba, a collection of cottages overlooking the sea above the town of Mosteiros, on the 39-mile island's remote western tip.

After our first morning swim in the heated wave pool, we drove upward on winding roads to Sao Miguel's most famous attraction: Sete Cidades, a three-mile, lake-filled volcanic crater. From the first scenic overlook, we hiked a steep, hydrangea-lined dirt road with sweeping coastal views on one side, and a lakeside village nestled in the bucolic caldera on the other. I realized that the trail we were walking was actually the rim of the volcano, which last erupted around A.D. 500.

Three miles down the trail stands the Azores' most photographed overlook, the Vista do Rei. The view is dominated by a pair of glistening crater lakes, Lagoa Verde (green) and Lagoa Azul (blue). Legend has it the two-tone lakes were formed from the tears shed when a princess and her lover, a shepherd, had to part. I was equally enthralled by the site's mysteriously abandoned modernist hotel, the Monte Palace, which nature has reclaimed and graffiti artists have turned into a work of art. We enjoyed it all for just long enough before busloads of British pensioners overran the place.

We shifted gears for the evening, driving an hour across Sao Miguel to the hot springs of Furnas. On the edge of the compact geothermal resort town was the Poca da Dona Beija, a lush hot spring where a river of iron-red water flows through five steaming stone pools, filled with luxuriating Europeans. This was a more public, sanitized experience than wild Ponta da Ferraria -- like an Azorean Blue Lagoon. But feeling the heat behind a wall of steaming water in one pool, we found pure relaxation.

Later I completed the hot-spring theme at the nature preserve of Caldeira Velha. A 95-degree waterfall slips off the side of a volcano into a lagoon, where glamorous couples took turns showering before retiring to warmer pools surrounded by tree ferns. One pool was too hot for swimming, with the water literally boiling. I lingered, then returned to Ponta Delgada for our one-hour island-hopper flight to Faial Island.

FAIAL ADVENTURE

I chose Faial as our next Azores island because of its history as a seafaring haven, and because of its proximity to two other central islands: Pico, with its towering volcano, and Sao Jorge. I booked two nights at the Quinta da Meia Eira, an oceanside ecolodge and slice of paradise co-run by the friendly Francisco Ribeiro, who I learned was also the man behind two different sailing charter companies on Faial. I wondered if Francisco was the mayor of the island.

Faial was a good call. Its main town, Horta, was our kind of place, with a festive marina scene, lively bars and restaurants, and a network of old Dutch-style windmills. Across the water, Pico Island's namesake volcano looms over the town. Banners celebrated the 100th anniversary of "Peter" -- the name of a famous whale and the best bar in town, featuring a signature gin and tonic and festooned with sailing flags from around the world.

Craving a great sit-down meal, we wandered into a busy waterfront spot called Genuino. An older gentleman appeared -- perhaps Genuino himself. "No reservation?" he cried in mock horror. "Ah, where are you from?"

"Minneapolis."

"All the way from Minneapolis?! Wait one minute." Genuino disappeared, and in a few moments we were seated at a table for two. Through the place mats, menus and memorabilia on the walls, we learned the legend of Genuino Madruga: the first Portuguese (and 10th person overall) to sail around the world solo -- and in both directions. The restaurant is a shrine to his exploits. I absorbed all this while dining on a plateful of pungent steamed prawns the size of my hands, returning the next night for a delectable grilled swordfish. Genuino-and-Peter became our routine on both nights in Horta.

When in Faial, then, I had to spring for a sailing tour. Francisco set us up with one of his captains, Ze Miguel from Lisbon, on a 37-foot cruiser. "Can you sail?" Miguel simply asked when we arrived on the dock.

"I can tack," I offered.

"Then you can sail." And for four hours, Miguel mostly let me take the helm as I unlocked the achievement of sailing between two Atlantic islands. An unremitting swell, from a distant western storm, made it a blast. We set course for Pico and its volcano -- at 7,713 feet, the highest mountain in Portugal and third-highest in the Atlantic. As it grew ever closer, Miguel guided me into the harbor of Madelena -- and then it was time to turn around. Pico's hiking trails and UNESCO-listed vineyards would have to wait for next time.

Faial has its own natural wonders, including one that had a major impact on its people. In the morning we circled the island in our rental jalopy, in search of one of the most astonishing sights in the Azores: the Capelinhos volcano, or what remains of it. On the scarred western tip of Faial, a black-sand wasteland twists into the Dali-esque contortions of a volcano that erupted underwater in 1957-58. An 1894 lighthouse, partly buried in ash, sits beside it on the shore, gutted but iconic. Steps lead to a modern underground museum.

As we continued along the serenely depopulated north side of Faial, the story of the Azores started to come together. Because of that seminal '50s eruption, thousands of Azoreans were forced to resettle in North America as refugees. It's why we later met a Denver family in the tiny Horta airport; their dad left Faial as a child. It's why Azores Airlines now re-connects the islands with cities that have big Portuguese populations, such as Boston and Toronto. And it's why Faial and the Azores have only recently begun to bounce back, partly through tourism.

UNSCHEDULED ISLE

We ended up socializing with Coloradans at the airport because, after a bruising argument with the rental car company over a pre-existing dent, we learned that our island-hopper back to Ponta Delgada had been canceled. Several of us would miss our connecting flight to Boston. The good news? The airline dutifully rerouted us via yet another island -- Terceira -- with a complimentary hotel room and meals.

A free bonus day of vacation on an unexpected Azores island? We'll take it.

Terceira is noted for outdoor adventure, and its main city, Angra do Heroismo, is a historic beauty dating before Columbus. Our free taxi delivered us to the Azoris Angra Garden hotel on the city square, where this "city of festivals" was having an ethnic food fete.

We rented a car to take in more sights -- an 1856 stone obelisk relating to the Portuguese Civil War; and the Furnas do Enxofre, a volcanic park with smoking active geysers connected by boardwalk trails. And in the morning I took a self-guided walking tour that ended with the Fort of Sao Joao Baptista, an imposing 1567 lava-rock castle that still maintains some military presence. (I thought I glimpsed a U.S. uniform -- there are still some 2,000 Americans on Terceira, a legacy of the Cold War.) This island seems to have it all.

photo

Minneapolis Star Tribune

Vacationers relax in hot-spring pools at Poca da Dona Beija in Furnas, Sao Miguel Island.

photo

Minneapolis Star Tribune

The town of Horta on Faial Island is a seafaring haven in the Azores, with lively bars and restaurants.

photo

Minneapolis Star Tribune

Swimmers ride incoming waves at Ponta da Ferraria, where Atlantic Ocean waters blend with hot springs during low tide on Sao Miguel Island.

photo

Minneapolis Star Tribune

The Church of St. Nicolau in Sete Cidades, Sao Miguel Island, is an example of the lava-stone structures seen throughout the Azores.

photo

Minneapolis Star Tribune

A lighthouse sits partially buried in ash after the cataclysmic 1950s eruption of the Capelhinos volcano on Faial.

Travel on 05/26/2019

Upcoming Events