ALJEZUR is in two parts on either side of a fertile valley with a patchwork
of fields of various crops. The original village clung close to the
hillside, atop which there has been a fortress at least since Moorish
times. The stream around the base of the hill was once infested with
mosquitoes which spread malaria, formerly a killer disease in the Algarve,
long since eradicated. To encourage villagers to move away from the
stream, Bishop Francisco Gomes of Faro ordered the building of a new
church on the far side of the valley in the mid-18th-century.
The
best overall view of the valley and the two sides of the town is from
the castle ruins which you can walk or drive up to. Legend has it that
the Knights of Santiago under Dom Paio Peres took the castle without
a fight one night in 1249 when a Moorish maiden opened the door and
let them in.
The beaches are the big attraction in the area. They are all fabulous.
Just south of Aljezur a turnoff leads to the beaches at Arrifana and
Monte Clérigo. Just north, there is a turnoff signposted praia to
Amoreira beach.
There
are obscure beaches along tracks out of ROGIL, but another easily accessible
one is reached from the village of ODECEIXE. Follow the praia
signs through the centre of the village and continue along the road
running westward next to the Odeceixe river which enters the sea at
the beach. Accommodation in the village comprises an inn, and privately-run
rooms-for-rent.
After
Odeceixe going north, it's goodbye Algarve, hello Alentejo and a whole
different scene and way of life.
See
the official
Aljezur council site for more information (Portuguese language)