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Post by account_disabled on Mar 4, 2024 1:40:15 GMT -5
All beaches in Spain Ballota beach, Asturias. By Cristian Zamfir The former Magrama (Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Environment) classified Spanish beaches as urban, semi-urban and isolated. Isolated beaches are those that are far from the cities, in a natural environment a few kilometers around: quiet beaches. There are 3,552 beaches in the country, of which 1,464 are isolated beaches (2021). We paint the data of all the beaches in Spain so that you know where they are, what access they have, their size and their influx of visitors. In the graph, the size of the bubbles indicates the length of the beaches and the color, their degree of occupancy. You can filter by province and Autonomous Community. Regarding each beach, we also tell you what type of sand it has, the regular sea conditions and if there is an area to practice scuba diving. 11 very rare beaches in Spain A Coruña, the province with the most isolated BTC Users Number Data beaches and the least occupancy. Rhodes Beach Rhodes Beach. By StockPhotoAstur In terms of the number of beaches with low occupancy, the province of A Coruña is in the lead with 164 isolated beaches, of which 124 are low occupancy. It is followed by Pontevera (78) and Asturias (66). Regarding percentage, Castellón is the province with the least occupancy on all its isolated beaches (100% of them have low occupancy). La Gomera (87.5%), Guipúzcoa (84.62%) and El Hierro (83.33%) occupy the first positions in the ranking. Below, Barcelona is the province with the most occupancy on its isolated beaches (only 10% have low occupancy. This: Malgrat de la Conca beach). They are followed at the bottom of the ranking by Formentera (33%), Vizcaya (41.67%) and Cádiz (43.48%). The number of people residing in Campillo de Ranas – which is made up of five population centers – has grown considerably since the 80s of the last century, although Maroto points out some nuances. “We are 200 or so on the register, but really living every day of the year, we will be between 70 or 80 people. Right now there are 17 rural houses, four restaurants and a bar , which means jobs. “You can live here.” Although almost more than two decades have passed, Campillo de Ranas continues to be an LGTBI oasis in the rural area, where it is still not easy to be part of said group. “Not in our case, far from it. But this is like when we talk about the LGTBI movement in Madrid, Barcelona or Bilbao and we forget that Teruel exists. At the level of a town where 15 people live due to depopulation, coming out is very complicated,” explains Maroto.
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