Skip to content

Things to see and do in Sal Island (West Africa)

Sal Island of Cape Verde is small. It is 35 km long (which is as far as my working route from Rotterdam to the Hague) with 12 km wide. In principal, you can drive around the entire island in less than a day. Dutchie and I rented a car for a day and visited the touristy places, and we had the mission accomplished in half day 😀 (ended in Kite Beach).

Sal Island Map wordpress

Our starting point was Santa Maria, a small town in the southern part of the island. The town has beautiful white sandy beach with numerous dive centers, hotels, restaurants and shops. Majority hotels or resorts are situated in or nearby Santa Maria thus most touristy activities are located in this town. But Sal offers unique places to explore and excellent water activities  to do, wouldn’t it better to check them out once we are there 😉

“Pedra de Lume”
swimming in the salty pond inside of a (volcanic) crater

Pedra de Lume is an area where salt evaporation ponds located, and they are actually inside a crater. The volcano is no longer active though,  not much suspense when visiting the area. For five euro, you can swim in the salt pond. You will float as you swim in one of saltiest body of waters in the world. Perhaps this reminds you of the Dead Sea.

 “Baia da Parda”
to see the Lemon sharks

This is the place where visitors can see the lemon sharks without snorkeling or scuba diving. The sharks are swimming nearby the coast and their dorsal fins exposed above the surface. The bay is nurseries area for the lemon shark pups where they stay safely from other big fish that can eat the pups.

The sharks were far from the beach area and we had to walk through the corals and stones to get closer to see the sharks. We saw three fins sticking up through the water, at least three sharks were there and maybe several unseen pups swam underwater. While it was exciting to see the dorsal fin of the sharks for some people, but I did not enjoy the sight. I felt guilty to the corals and possible small marine species that could be accidentally stepped on.

“Mirador in Espargos”
to see the aerial of Sal Island

Esparagos is the capital city of Sal Island. Esperagos means asparagus, the vegetable. It appears the asparagus grows rapidly there.  It is a very small city, in fact, I don’t feel it is a city 😀 This place is perfect to see the island’s aerial. As you can see, the whole island looks like dessert island. Rains are very rare in Sal Island, maybe only two or five times annually.

After having lunch in Espargos, we drove to the Mirador, a telecommunication tower in the middle of the city. The tower was guarded by military officers, and we were the only visitors. There was a souvenirs stall with a friendly salesman who was extremely happy to see us. He offered everything with half prices. ‘Half’ price as he claimed of course, but then I already fell on his friendliness and not pushy attitude.

“Buracona”
to swim or to dive

I wrote about my scuba diving experience in Buracona – Buracona Cave Diving: Underwater Light Shows. Buracona is an area of lava rocks coast with beautiful ocean view. There is a hole in the middle of the coast and as the sun hits the water inside the hole, it will show the ‘Blue Eye’ reflection. The area has a natural swimming pond – it’s bit greenish but certainly a nice pool to cool down after hot days.

Lucky us, the place was empty! Dutchie had the luxury to jumped into the natural swimming pool without other tourists around 🙂

“Kite Beach”
to see, get inspired, learn and do Kitesurfing

Have you seen kitesurfers in action? They can “fly” high! This beach is popular for kitesurfing due to its strong winds. Many Europeans come to Sal Island especially for kitesurfing holiday. Well known kitesurfers, Airton Cozzolino and Matchu Almeida Lopes are actually coming from Sal Island. I bet they have been practicing many times in Kite Beach.

Kitesurfing requires training. It needs physical strength and it is a serious water sport. At least we need one week to get familiar with it. A training for a beginner in Sal Island requires a minimum of 8 hours. The kitesurfing season is at the peak in October to March. We were there during the low season thus we did not see many surfers, but the beach was truly beautiful and the wind, boy oh boy, it was strong (even stronger during the peak season).

Here is a movie of kitesurfing at Kite Beach in Sal Island to inspire you (if you click the link of Airton and Matchu, you will see a short documentary of their life in Sal and their strapless kiteboard styles). I can watch the kitesurfing, again and again, those kitesurfers are super cool!

If you are not sure about the kitesurfing, do try the windsurfing. It is easier and also available in Santa Maria beach.

Last place with recommendation to visit is “Murdeira Bay”. This bay is known as the best snorkeling spot in Cape Verde. We did not visit this place so I could not really say much about the quality of its snorkeling. However we have been diving in a dive site nearby to Murdeira and it was awesome.

In short, Sal Island offers excellent water activities for active beach goers, from snorkeling to superb kitesurfing area. For those who just want to relax, the white sandy beach of Sal Island is always there to enjoy. “No Stress” is the motto of the Island that suits to the character of Cape Verdeans: easy going and relax. The food and the local wines are dangerously delicious. And 90% chance that you will have your holiday free from rainy days 🙂

Santa Maria Beach

Santa Maria white sandy beach

TingNewBlue

google-plus long

104 Comments »

  1. These places are surely can’t be missed when someone travels to Cape Verde, Mbak. Beautiful! Maybe they provide walking tour in seeing the sharks to accomodate visitors who can’t swim (like me) :hehe, but I think they should find a way to sustain the corals as well as other species in that place. But, spending time just sitting and enjoying the sunshine at Santa Maria is a very good activity, too. Reading some books, getting tanned… :hehe. There are a lot of activities we could do in a beach :)).

  2. That’s amazing Indah!! I was dying to learn more about Cabo Verde from you!
    These beaches are stunning, and it’s great news that it almost doesn’t rain. Does that mean that we can dive all year round? I mean, is the water to cold while here in Europe is winter?
    Loooove all your pictures! I want to go there!! 😀

    • Hi Allane, yes, it is possible to dive in Cabo Verde all year round..but the water in the winter time is colder – at least you have to use semi dry suit in January to February. The best timing is June to December because the sea is not too rough and water temperature is around 23 to 25 degree. I wore 5.5 mm wetsuit and it was fine. And they speak Portuguese 🙂 BTW, I saw in Sal’s airport, there is a direct flight to Munich..Oh, I think there is season where you can see humpback whales (March and April).. and in August to October is great months to see turtle mating and their offspring in Kite Beach..I will write about that as well later on, but now you know first 😉

      • Ohhhhhhh that’s amazing!!!!!
        It’s great to know that!! Did you find 23 degrees cold? I did my OWD at 16 😦 so nowadays anything above 20 is warm hahaha
        I would loooove to see the humpback whales!!!
        ❤ thank you for all the info!!

  3. It looks like an amazing place ! I would have felt bad for the corals as well …. When is the best time to go there you reckon ? Is there a direct flight to this island ?

    • Thanks you! I heard from a British colleague that Cape Verde is somewhat popular destination from UK. I met some British in Sal and they had direct flight – 7 to 8 hours. From Amsterdam, we had a stop over in Gambia, but it was only for 45 minutes 🙂

      • Hmm that sounds awesome ! We are hesitating a bit… we were thinking about taiwan as well… for November. Have you ever gone on holiday in November ? What would be the perfect destination ?

        • Taiwan sounds excellent choice! I did travel to Bali and Sulawesi in mid October to mid November…and the weather just perfect 🙂 I am not sure if you’d like to visit Indonesia though 😀 but I can tell you the weather during those months are less hot compared to summer time..

    • Indeed! It is closed by the Netherlands 🙂 Yes, as Indonesian passport holders, we do need visa prior to arrival but the visa process was very efficient. It was perhaps the fastest visa process I have ever had! It can be obtain in Cape Verde consulate in Rotterdam and last for 6 months. The Dutch can get the visa on arrival..

Share your thoughts

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.