Sea Breaks | Travel | The Guardian Five Best ... Black - Beach
A small cluster of bars and tea gardens sits at the base of the castle walls, and the seafront promenade beyond is lined with restaurants serving fresh bass and mackerel. AmasraOne of the Turkish Black Sea coast's most relaxing experiences is sipping tea while watching the sunset from the northern reaches of the citadel at Amasra. But Odessa's forte is its excitability, best experienced at Arkadia beach, "Ukraine's Ibiza", where Crimean champagne and iced vodka cocktails are served until the sun rises. It was last updated at 00:08 on May 03 2008. It was last updated at 00:08 on May 03 2008. Its famous beach is still something of a bohemian enclave, where tents and makeshift bars are erected on the sand and there are impromptu gigs at weekends. KaZantip on Ukraine's Crimean peninsula is one of the world's longest music festivals1. KaZantipFounded by local windsurfers looking to kick back at the end of the day, KaZantip has snowballed into one of the world's longest music festivals. NessebarThere are large swathes of questionable development on Bulgaria's Black Sea coast, but the old town of Nessebar is Unesco-protected. OdessaLong tree-lined boulevards lined with neoclassical palaces and museums pin Odessa's city centre, and on the streets around the city's hub, Deribasovskaya, you will find some of the Ukraine's best restaurants and bars. Perched on a beautiful peninsula for over 3,000 years, today it houses a bustling collection of 14th-century churches, wooden houses, cobblestone lanes and tiny squares. The event is based on a beach near Shelkino on Ukraine's Crimean peninsula, billing itself as a "virtual republic" - this year's festivities are scheduled to run for five weeks. The original was created by Franz Alekseevich Roubaud ("Rubo") (1856-1928) in three years in Munich,Posted by ChristopherGunningJul 24 2006Yalta: The sea frontVisiting here now puts one in mind of the heyday of the typical English seaside resort. To the east, dozens of small villages and beaches line the coastal road to Sinop. Vama VecheThis small Romanian village close to the Bulgarian border has been a counter-cultural oasis since the days of communism when it was (somewhat uncharacteristically) tolerated by Ceausescu as a hangout for intellectuals.
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