RE: The Azores: My Dream Drive

RE: The Azores: My Dream Drive

Tuesday 26th September 2017

The Azores: My Dream Drive

PH heads to the Hawaii of the Atlantic



Name: Nikolai Attard
Where: Sao Miguel, Azores
Car used: Mazda2 GT

The route:
The journey is a single solid six-hour drive, making a figure of eight across the largest of the Azorean islands - although it could easily be broken up into separate legs and then spread across a number of days.


Starting from Ponte Delgada, follow the EN1-1A as it snakes along the edge of the island. Leaving the picturesque town behind you, take a right onto the EN9-1A which steadily becomes a series of hairpins in the usual European vogue - albeit with rows of towering ferns lining the road. Once out of the foliage, you'll realise just how high you've climbed. In fact you'll have ascended Lagoa Azul; a stunning volcanic crater with a pair of equally breathtaking lakes, one blue and one green. The road descends past the water becoming easier as you go and taking in the kind of villages which appear cut and pasted from postcard covers.

Having returned to the EN1-1A on the north side of the island, you'll need to take the ER3-1 - another challenging section of hairpins which takes past black sand beaches along the south coast. There's no foliage to spoil the view this time, and the lunch stop takes in the spectacle of the hot springs at Furnas.

After lunch, head towards Nordeste on the EN1-1A again. The road will return quickly to type: corner after glorious corner, all the while encompassing a 1000m elevation change. To complete the loop, you'll need to cut back inland down the M521 towards Furnas, eventually arriving back to the starting point of Ponte Delgada.


Why it's a dream drive:
Despite the multitude of hairpins, no part of this 250km journey feels the same as what's gone before. The stunning white buildings and narrow cobbled streets of Ponte Delgada evoke the Med, but once up in the hills the road becomes a dead ringer for the most spectacular of alpine passes. And then when you've become accustomed to the Alps, you arrive at the crater at Lagoa Azul and you're suddenly transported to Hawaii; complete with its volcanic black sand beaches. Best of all, the roads are quiet (bar the odd tractor) and are generally of good condition - albeit speckled with the odd cobbled section.

Highlights and lowlights:
I suspected the Mazda2 GT might be a lowlight, it not being particularly PH-y or even objectively brisk. But as is often the way with small island roads, the super mini seemed scaled perfectly to fit and (thanks to the manufacturer's continued devotion to natural aspiration) took to being repeatedly revved to 7000rpm in second and third gear on twisty roads like a gull to a cliff face.

The section of road from Furnas to Nordeste was a particular highlight, going from sea level up to about 1,000m and back down again with every other turn being a chassis-testing hairpin.

The only word of warning relates to the driving habits of the locals, who are wont to pull over at any point without indication. Lane discipline isn't at German autobahn standard either so be prepared for a few evasive manoeuvres on the twistier sections.


Sights, stop-offs, and diversions:
Ponta Delgada is a great place to begin, being close to the airport as well as the largest town on the island. Heading west toward Mosteiros and Sete Citades caldera, there is an abandoned hotel called Miradouro da Vista do Rei. Only open for a year in the late 80s before it was abandoned, it is definitely worth exploring; even if only for the view from the roof of the island's two famous lakes.

As mentioned, the lunch stop in Furnas boasts thermal springs - in which you can choose to have your corn on the cob cooked - and nearer the end of the route, it's certainly worth stopping at one of the only two tea plantations in Europe.

View the route here


 

 

 

 

   
   
Author
Discussion

culpz

Original Poster:

4,882 posts

112 months

Tuesday 26th September 2017
quotequote all
Looks like a really nice route with some sweet roads to boot. I just don't think i could choose that specific car for the job though. Nothing particularly wrong with it but if it needed to be a similar warm hatch, i think it'd be so much more entertaining in something like a Swift Sport.

Nik Attard

71 posts

183 months

Tuesday 26th September 2017
quotequote all
culpz said:
Looks like a really nice route with some sweet roads to boot. I just don't think i could choose that specific car for the job though. Nothing particularly wrong with it but if it needed to be a similar warm hatch, i think it'd be so much more entertaining in something like a Swift Sport.
The roads are absolutely fantastic, the 90hp struggled a little when we got to the top of some of the peaks but the 115hp coped better.

Yeh hot hatches or something like the MX-5 will do really well.

Nik



cookie1600

2,109 posts

161 months

Tuesday 26th September 2017
quotequote all
How or why did you take a British registered, RH drive Mazda all the way to The Azores though? Why didn't you use a local, LH drive hire car or was this all courtesy of Mazda UK?

Edit: Sorry yes, I see now this is a press car:



https://www.pistonheads.com/news/ph-japanesecars/m...

So is the article actually an advertorial based on a jolly with Mazda UK rather, than your personal dream drive Nik?


Edited by cookie1600 on Tuesday 26th September 12:23

JaseB

857 posts

261 months

Tuesday 26th September 2017
quotequote all
Love it, did most of those roads a few years back in a Seat Ibiza hire car, same weekend the rally was on, gotta love a hire car...

edc

9,234 posts

251 months

Tuesday 26th September 2017
quotequote all
I drove San Miguel a couple of years ago in a rental Clio. Some of the better roads are the ones that cross north to South of the island rather than the more Dual carriageway or A road style coastal roads. The even better ones are the unmade ones which go up and or around the mountains. I was there a week before the rally and was driving gravel compacted roads just being prorated by the local heavy machinery biggrin

San Miguel isn't a driving destination from the UK though whatever the car you have.

cookie1600

2,109 posts

161 months

Tuesday 26th September 2017
quotequote all
Not alone on the dream drive:

http://www.eurekar.co.uk/articles/2017-09-25/mazda...

https://twitter.com/SteveFleetNews/status/91166761...

At least they were up front about it being a Mazda press event for the Mazda 2


Trophy-GTA

101 posts

98 months

Wednesday 27th September 2017
quotequote all
Those pics of the car seem awfully brochure-like. Is someone pretending to be something they're not?

DerekMc

2 posts

63 months

Thursday 23rd January 2020
quotequote all
I drove those roads for a week in a Nissan Pathfinder 5 speed. My left leg got REALLY STRONG! The views are astounding and the roads seem to be never-ending. There's a new "expressway" to break up the trip East (or back) if needed. I'll be back there in May(!!)