FLORIANOPOLIS
When, on my return from Uruguay, the Brazilian Immigration Officer at the airport of Florianópolis tells me that I am not allowed to stay much longer in Brazil, and he even writes down the maximum number of remaining days, I know that I should not risk the CAN$40 per overstaying day. My tourist visa is clearly approaching its end and it is time to think about my return flight to Vancouver and say my farewells. My longest visit, including my teaching hours, was located in Florianópolis (or Floripa), where I stayed at different addresses, but always at lovely locations.
Florianópolis is a beautiful island just off the coast of Santa Catarina state in the south of Brazil, linked to the mainland by a couple of bridges. The whole of the island is one city, but its centre lies near the main bridge and has a bustling old marketplace, the Mercado.
Away from the centre the main roads curve around the low, forest-covered mountains and past a mix of urbanized and farmland areas. The island boasts 42 magnificent beaches (Wasn't 42 also the ultimate, magical answer to Life, the Universe and Everything in "A Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy"?). However, a long-time, retired resident who happens to be on the same bus as me and who speaks fluent English and German, has informed me that the number is actually about one hundred, if you include all the small and nameless beaches of the island. I definitely have not had the opportunity to see everything, but managed to visit at least a number of them.
Canasvieiras Beach
There are some places overflowing with scantily-clad tourists, bikini vendors and food stall chefs, like the beaches of Canasvieiras and Cachoeira do Bom Jesus. There are a few areas for wealthy visitors staying in expensive accommodation, like the beaches of Ingleses and Jurerê. But wherever you enter the sea, the friendly goddess of the sea Jemanja will welcome you and you can say Hello to her.
ArmaçãoYou can also find long stretches of fine, white sand with only a lone swimmer every 300 meters, like the southern strip at Pântano do Sul or the south-eastern Amarção.
Pantâno do Sul
Santinho BeachThen there are beaches that are exposed to the wild waves of the Atlantic Ocean to the east and where the surfers congregate, for instance Campeche, Santinho, or Matadeiro. On one part of this oceanic coast, Moçambique Beach, a friend unsuccessfully tried to persuade me to join him for surfing ("Sorry, kid, not my cup of tea; it is exciting enough that I saw the traces of a venomous snake on the path to this beach"). He had to ride the waves alone, with nobody else in the water, while I was the spectator with nobody else on the deserted beach.
Matadeiro
But the western side of the island also has some picturesque beaches away from the Atlantic, with magnificent views of the mainland opposite, such as the sands and rocks of Santo Antônio de Lisboa.
And then there are lots of tiny, narrow beaches behind people's houses, on the quiet, south-western side of the island at Ribeirão da Ilha, where charming colonial houses are only a few km away from the continent on the other side of the water, and where the sea water is warm, clear and calm.
Ribeirão
Florianópolis can also offer its residents and visitors a swim in fresh water, because it has a few popular lakes . The largest is the Lago da Conceição, which is lined with lots of small shops, restaurants and cafés, so that you can buy your surfboards, sandwiches and fresh coconut juice nearby. At one place, the lake is only a few hundred meters away from the sea (at the beach of Praia Mole), with the north-south coastal road separating the two bodies of water.
When soon I arrive in winter back home, the Floripa summer will no doubt be missed.
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