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The coast continues to be upmarket (or "money-raddled" as Laurie Lee put it) until you reach ESTEPONA , about 30km west of Marbella, which is a more or less Spanish resort - in as much as that's possible round here. It lacks the enclosed hills that give Marbella character, but the hotel and apartment blocks which sprawl along the front are restrained in size, and there's space to breathe. The fine sand beach has been enlivened a little by a promenade studded with flowers and palms, and, away from the seafront, the old town is very pretty, with cobbled alleyways and two delightful plazas.

The fish market is definitely worth seeing: Estepona has the biggest fishing fleet west of MA?laga, and the daily dawn ritual in the port, where the returning fleets auction off the fish they've just caught, is worth getting up early for - be there at 6am, since by 7am it's all over.

From May onward, Estepona's bullfighting season gets under way in a modern bullring reminiscent of a Henry Moore sculpture. At the beginning of July, the Fiesta y Feria week transforms the place, bringing out whole families in flamenco-style garb.

Beyond Estepona, 8km along the coast, there's a minor road leading into the hills to CASARES , one of the classic andaluz White Towns. In keeping with the genre, it clings tenaciously to a steep hillside below a castle, and has attracted its fair share of arty types and expatriates. But it remains comparatively little known; bus connections are just about feasible for a day-trip (details from the turismo).

Further west, 3km inland from the village of Manilva, are some remarkably well-preserved Roman sulphur baths . If you want to partake of these health-giving waters you'll have to be prepared to dive into a subterranean cavern, and to put up with the overpowering stench of sulphur, which clings to your swimwear for weeks.

The beaches beyond Estepona have greyish sands (a trademark of the Costa del Sol that always seems surprising - you have to round the corner to the Atlantic coast at Tarifa before you meet yellow sand), and there are more greyish developments before the road turns inland towards San Roque and Gibraltar


Other useful information for tourists (each section contains more specific sub-sections):




Spain,
Estepona