Going to Spain how to find sites
hi, we are new to our motorhome and would like to go to spain next september, we would love a site right on the beachside we do not mind booking now and assume we just follow the sat nav but do not know where to start any advice would be appreciated thanks
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You'll need to narrow it down a bit to get any meaningful advice. Spain is a very big (roughly) rectangle with coast on three sides. Calais to the Spanish border is 700 miles. It could be another 600 after that depending on where you choose.
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Identify an area that you fancy and then use Google to find sites in the area. You can then look at reviews etc to help you finalise your choice/s.
You can then use Google maps or ViaMichelin to plan the route. A Sat Nav will guide you, just as in the UK, to your destination.
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Campsites take a bit of research to find what you are looking for.
Suggest the CAMC Overseas Holiday Page above these are bookable , or in September you can use ACSI Sites these are low season priced sites. CAMC sells the ACSI Book which contains a card you present on arrival, these are not usually bookable in advance, there is an ACSI website on which you can also see the sites. For a further description of sites CAMC sell a directory`s of sites in Europe see Club Shop.
Its advisable to plan your trip with the aid of your Sat Nav, Google maps and the old faithfull paper map. Blindly following a Sat Nav can end up taking to places you to places you may wish you hadn't ventured to especially in larger vehicles. Google maps will give you routes and you can frequently examine your intended route if you are uncertain of the road via the "street view" accessible via the yellow man in the bottom left of the screen..
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Start by googling Campsites on beach in Spain. There are lists. Locate each one on your map, look at their websites, look at photos, read reviews. Choose.
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I used Archies POI's for most of my directions which you can down load to your Satnav, brilliant and thousands of sites throughout Europe, the clubs touring spain & portugal book is also a good investment around £7 you can buy from club web site.
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not sure what you're specifically looking for but for a first time trip to Spain, try Binterra Park at Benicassim...
great site, pool, bar/restaurant, loads going on, trips etc, beach 500m, lovely safe cycling in both directions for miles, the town is still very much Spanish despite the number of tourists, ACSI or other long term rates.....so don't book through the club!
at 50km north of Valencia its climate is perfect for September, not too hot but hot plenty enough.
i don't know which crossing ypud go for but it's an easy drive from Cherboug (our preferred crossing).....Nantes first afternoon, then on to Irun or Urrugne, then lovely drive across the plain (via Pamplona/Zaragosa to Sagunt and to Benicassim...non toll motorway most of the way....
good luck with the planning.
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In Spain you won't need to book for sites in September! There are many more sites than the C&MC offer. Take a look at www.eurocampings.co.uk for a wider choice, and then have a look at www.campingcard.co.uk for discounts available on some sites.
For a first time beachside side, not too far into Spain, and on the Mediterranean, try L'Amfora at Saint Pere Pescador - direct beach access, great shower and toilet facilties, bar, restaurant(s), and supermarket on site, but some lovely private hedged pitches. You really won't need to book in September.
We holiday outside peak season (May/June and then late August/September) and haven't booked a site in twenty years (since our children stopped holidaying with us) nor have we ever not been able to get a pitch on a site we wanted.
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Well there’s a thing. We left home for Poole ferry on 15 Sep 18 and travelled thru France down to Spain. No problems getting pitches in France but in Spain we headed for L’Amfora, as recommended by “Another David” on here, but L’Amfora was closed, by mid Sep. So we popped down the road to Camping Salata in Roses and were very lucky to get the last pitch. The reception said if we had come the day before we would have been turned away. After a week there we headed for the D’Ebre Delta and found only the last 2/3 pitches left to choose from. We ended up at the site recommended by BB, Bonterra Park and just got in there but for only 3 nights, as it was also full. Probably because BB tells everybody to go there!,
We left home without bookings because so many people on here keep telling us you don’t have to book in Sep/Oct, but it must have changed.
So, Buckos, be cautious. Maybe ring ahead as you move down the Costas. With regard to the climate, apart from 2 days of very heavy rain the weather was perfect down in Bonterra but windy up in Roses for 3 days, too windy to drive a MH. But go for it and enjoy.
BillC
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It may well have been me - we've been there and liked it! Opening dates for 2019 are from April 18th to the 27th September.
I know that later in Autumn lots of sites may fill up with 'over-wintering' retired people heading south to Spain for the winter but we've never had a problem earlier in September.0 -
As you won't have any difficulty in finding a vacant spot in September without booking ahead I'd advise looking around once you get there. Just like you we wanted to stay at a campsite right on the beach but there were several that we didn't like when we got there despite rave reviews, so we just moved on until we found what we were looking for.
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There are some very useful campsite guide books including one published by the Club and of course ACSI Camping Card which comes with books giving details of sites.
Through such books and the websites already mentioned by other folk it really is easy to do your own research. I would also recommend that you buy a good road atlas of Spain and also one of France if you plan to travel through France as they give you a wider picture than just a satnav.
Don't forget that you will need to stop at other campsites on route so it isn't just a matter of identifying a beach site in Spain, setting the satnav and following its instructions!
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I've only ever used the Clubs' guides and the ACSI card and book. I do some research beforehand on the web or using an App especially about motorhome Aires as neither of the above include these. You have the advantage of a motorhome and do not need to book in September and unlike a caravan it is easier to move on. Make a rough plan before you go as to where you might stop and just take off and if you don't like a site move on quicker than intended.
peedee
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If you want to go anywhere on the Med. coast from September on then booking ahead is essential. When we went to Bonterra Park a couple of years ago in early September we had booked so we were ok but within about 10 days of our arrival the site was turning people away if they didn't have a reservation. This September we visited some friends on the rally at La Manga, we hadn't booked and we could only stop for a couple of weeks as the site was fully booked from October onwards. All the sites down the coast are full with long stayers who go for several months to avoid winter in the UK, so booking becomes essential.
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I wouldn't be so pessimistic about having to book ahead. We arrived in Spain in mid-October and had absolutely no difficulty in getting a pitch anywhere all along the Mediterranean coast although towards the end of November they were starting to fill up. In fact, when we arrived at our final destination, Aguilas, the site was less than half full, but there were still vacant pitches available when we left.
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There are "honeypot" sites here in the UK, and we all know which they are.
There are similarly some very popular sites in the south of France where it is wise to book in September too.
And La Manga and Bonterra Park are probably in that category for the Spanish coast too - sites to which hundreds of visitors flock. But as Lutz says, there are always other options if you stop following the crowd.
Isn't the case everywhere ?
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As they say, "one man's meat is another man's ......". The very thought of close to 1000 pitches at La Manga put us off completely. All the sites that we stayed at along the coast had less than 150 pitches and yet they were all most accommodating, even without a reservation. Our favourite was Bellavista - minutes walk from a very quiet beach and the town of Aguilas was also within easy walking distance, but such a quiet site may not be everybody's cup of tea. The only criticism I have of that campsite is the size of the pitches. With the awning in place we had to park the car a bit further down on the site.
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For a motorhome Bonterra Park is an ideal site for your first time in Spain. It's a very safe site with closed gates and a night watchman all night. The bus stop is outside the gates as is two supermarkets. But I would book early because it get's full though out the winter months. The gold pitches are the best for size but are the most expensive, the cheaper pitches at the top of the site under the tree's but are smaller and not on hard standing, great site with lot's of brit's and dutch in the winter.
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Hello AD and Valda,
Sorry David, I was mistaken in saying you recommended L’amfora, actually, what I should have said was, you visited that piece of coastline and stayed at Camping Las Palmeras, which is next door to L’amfora. Anyway, using your notes and photos on your web site of your visit to the Costa Dorada was what attracted us to going there this Autumn. And we loved it!
BillC
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we've stayed at LaGaviota, next door again....a very popular place!
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For several trips we have used the Club booklet on overseas sites, the Club website, ACSI's comprehensive web site (small fee payable) and U.K. Campsites website (which despite its name has many European sites with reviews and website links). This has also been useful for the Algarve in Southern Portugal easily accessible from western and southern Spain.
Be careful of the sites in Northern Spain, (Asturia etc.), we found some lovely beachside sites, (Noja), but experienced some very wet cool weather in June and September They don't call it the Costa Verde for nothing!
You may also want to consider the direct ferries from Portsmouth and Plymouth to Santander and Bilbao. We almost always use them as they save us a long drive through France; others like to dawdle down through France, if they have the time and inclination. On one occasion we took Brittany Ferries to Caen, drove down through France and came back via Santander to Plymouth, which was a nice cruise back after our holiday.
Best wishes,
Peter.
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As the request was so vague and "buckos" has not responded to any of the suggestions does it mean that it was not a genuine request?!!
On this and other forums there are sometimes posts which request information (often available easily elsewhere or very vague requests) to which people genuinely reply and the questioner never responds.
It makes me wonder why some people do this.
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