There are Five Excellent Golf Courses In the
Province of Valencia. Below you will find all of the information
for contacting them.
Enjoy your game!!
Escorpion Golf Club Tel: 961 60 12 11
· Ctra. San Antonio de Benage’ber-Be’tera,
Km.3, 46117 Be’tera Valencia
· Approximate Drive Time From Flora Villa = 40 minutes
· Designer: Ron Kirby, Opened in 1975
· Number of Holes = 18, Par for the Course = 72
· Designed for senior players with higher handicap. The
Course is flat with wide open fairways, with several small lakes.
Manises Golf Club Tel: 961 52 38 04 / 961 52
18 71
· Ctra. Ribarroja, Km.4, 46940 Manises, Valencia
· Approximate Drive Time From Flora Villa = 30 minutes
· Designer: Javier Arana, Opened in 1954
· Number of Holes = 9, Par for the Course = 72
· Designed with a family feel, Ideal Beginners Course.
The greens are surrounded by bunkers with pine trees lining
the narrow fairways.
El Bosque Golf Club Tel: 961 80 41 42
· Ctra. Godelleta, Km. 4,100, 46370 Chiva, Valencia
· Approximate Drive Time From Flora Villa = 20 minutes
· Designer: Robert Trent Jones, Opened in 1975 (Redesigned
1989)
· Number of Holes = 18, Par for the Course = 72
· Designed within a deep natural valley, with uneven
slopes, ravines and lakes coupled with narrow, shallow greens.
Even an experienced golfer will find this course Technically
Very Challenging
El Saler Golf Club Tel: 961 61 11 86
· Ctra. Nazaret-Oliva, Km.19, 46012 El Saler, Valencia
· Approximate Drive Time From Flora Villa = 40 minutes
· Designer: Javier Arana, Opened in 1968
· Number of Holes = 18, Par for the Course = 72
· One of the Top 50 Golf Courses in the World. Perfect
for hard hitting players with a low handicap. Famous for it’s
wide fairways, punishing rough, and difficult greens. Very Challenging.
Oliva Nova Tel: 962 85 59 75
· Partida de Aigues Mortes, s/n, Urb. Oliva Nova Golf,
46780 Oliva, Valencia
· Approximate Drive Time From Flora Villa = 65 minutes
· Designer: Severiano Ballesteros, Opened in 1995
· Number of Holes = 18, Par for the Course = 72
· A relatively new course but one of the Best. Designed
to include numerous trees, and eight lakes strategically located
around the course.
Cities & Towns

Valencia is a modern, dynamic city, with a splendid historic
centre, which you should visit with lots of time to spare.
Fine examples of the city's rich architectural heritage are
the Cathedral, the Miguelete tower, and ancient Silk Exchange,
the serranos and Quart Towers, the Railway station, the Central
Market, the Palace of the Marquis of Dos Aguas and more.
The climate will surely encourage you to get out and about,
stroll along the golden sandy beaches in the cosmopolitan
Malvarossa district or the maritime esplanade of Las Arenas,
just a few minutes from the city centre. These areas provide
a beautiful view of the Mediterranean, and offer a range of
entertainment facilities in the summer. For enjoying nature
close to the city, visit the El Saler Beach to the south of
Valencia, a unique eco-system flanked by sand dunes, and pine
forests. Or the Albufera, a freshwater lagoon, connected to
the sea with a highly valuable ecology. Just North from Valencia
City is Alboraya which offers golden sandy beaches, at the
weekends there are various stalls selling items and Alboraya
also offers a breath-taking Marina, which is situated in the
town, look out for the arch ways, you can walk through and
see the beautiful marina.
Along the coast is Cullera, and is the only mountain spur
near the sea in the entire gulf of Valencia. It was crowned
with a castle that offers fine views over the flat fields
and gardens surrounding it. Troubled by barbary pirate attacks
for many decades, it still conserves its Marenyet tower to
the south and a lighthouse to the north, near the Dragut &
Volcan cave with its prehistoric remains. A visit to the southern
side is recommended to see the estany or inland lagoon. Where
various restaurants offer rice dishes, and tapas of all kinds
in pleasant surroundings.
Further down the coast line is Gandia, the Splendour of the
borjas. Originally an iberian settlement, Gandia became famous
in the 15th century as a courtly outpost on the coast thanks
to Juan de Borja,second Duke of Gandia. It is to this century,
that the town owes much to its rich heritage, which we can
discover on a brief tour: the Santa Maria College, the Duke's
palace, the San Marcos hospital, the St. Clare Convent and
the Ayuntimento or Town Hall. Outside the town is the castle
of Bayren, and the farmstead (alqueria) of the Duke of Gandia.
This is a cradle of the noodle Paella called Fideua, which
can be savoured at any of the restaurants along its famous
5km long fine sandy beaches.
Valencian cuisine, a mixture of imagination and popular wisdom,
will help you to regain your strength after visiting some
of the sights. Discover typical rice dishes, try some fresh
vegetables from the huerta, fresh seafood and fish from the
Mediterranean. For Dessert why not taste the local fruit and
ice cream, or have a refreshing drink of horchata (tiger nut
milk) made in Alboraya.
Golf, Yachting, horse riding or tennis.... whatever you want,
there's a place for you. If you are looking for a quieter
time, the ancient Turia riverbed, now converted into a 10km
park flanking the city, has many spots for some rest and relaxation,
or a quiet stroll. Other parks and gardens (Viveros), Monforte,
or the Botanical Gardens are also worth visiting.
For music the major attraction
is the music auditorium called the Palau de la Musica, the home
of the Valencian Orchestra and a stage for many prestigious
names, conductors, and interpreters on the international music
panorama. The Palau starts its season every October, and the
so-called Festivales de la tardor, or evening festivals, and
a concert and opera cycle that runs until the following Summer.
In the summer months, the patios of the University, La Benficiencia
Cultural centre, and the Viveros Gardens become stages for classical
concerts, or perhaps some jazz, blues or rock 'an' roll.
Music is not the only cultural
attraction that Valencia has to offer. There are a number of
theatres where dance festivals and plays are staged, ranging
from the classics to the latest avant-garde creations.
As for the cinema, Mediterranean cultures of all kinds are
usually represented at the Mostre de Cine del Mediterranean
Film festival, which is held each year in the month of October,
filling the city with the glamour of Actors, and Directors.
The Filmoteca Valenciana stages film cycles to complete the
cinematographic lineup throughout the year and round out the
already extensive movie offering the local cinemas. Heron
city is just outside Valencia city and offers a very large
cinema, bowling alley, plenty of American restaurants, and
is recommended to visit in the evening.

The Universal Oceanographic park is the largest cultural
leisure park in Europe, which combines interesting scientific
diffusion contents with fun items for all kinds of people.
An original building in the shape of a human eye, where you
can enjoy three different audio visual shows on a large size
screen. Planetarium, and laserium. An impressive water space
which allows the visitor to submerge into the oceans to get
to know fauna and flora or our planet's most representative
climate zones. Restaurants, shops, Car parks, rest areas &
Spaces for children......, all the services required to have
a pleasant visit are available to you.
Ricardo Tormo Racing
Circuit.

The Ricardo Tormo Motor Racing Circuit at Cheste
(a 20-30 minute drive from Flora Villa) is one of the finest
in the world.
There are two ways to get to the circuit: -
The Scenic route
Turn Left at Flora Villa, take a left at the
junction and follow the road towards Godeletta from here you
should see the signs for Circuito, follow these to Cheste. Keep
following these signs and you will see the Ricardo Tormo Circuit.
The distance is 28 Km, and should take about 30 minutes.
The Motorway route
Turn right at Flora Villa out of Montserrat
and head for the signs listing A7 Motorway (Barcelona). The
circuit is well sign-posted from the A7 motorway that loops
around Valencia. Cheste is a short distance up the A3 motorway,
which is the Madrid turning of the A7.The distance is 28 Km,
and (on a quiet day should take about 20 mins).
The circuit os easy to find, and once there
you will find it hassle free due to the road system. There are
no frustrating long queues, and a large hard core car park.
Fiestas
The Fallas invade the city
and transform it into an authentic spectacle that crescendos
to its climax. Whoever visits Valencia in the lead up to March
19th will find the whole city adsorbed in the festive atmosphere.
People come out to see the parades and processions, hear the
marching bands, wave to the Falleras and Falleros in there traditional
costumes, and tour the city on foot to see Fallas on every street
corner.
The Origin of the Fallas goes back to the 15th century, when
city carpenters would clean out their workshops in the spring
to celebrate the patron saint's day - St Joseph - by lighting
bonfires in the streets, burning up all of their refuse, odds
and ends, and their wooden candle holders used during the
winter evenings while they worked. Soon, many began decorating
these piles of wood, and gradually giving them shape and form.
Today, over 350 fallas, or monumental papier-mache constructions
are built in the streets on the night of March 19th during
the traditional crema (Burning), these impressive creations
begin to appear about March 15th - setting up and vie with
one another in ingenuity, beauty, and flammability - from
pyramid shapes that burn up perfectly, to stranger shapes
satiring a politician or social or cultural events, that require
great care in being set to the torch.
Festivals
La Tomatina Bunol
There are many stories behind 'La Tomatina ' but no one seems
to know what exactly happened. Some say it all began in 1944
as simple tomato fight between a group of friends in the town's
main square - The Plaza del Pueblo; others claim the tradition
was started at an anti-Franco rally. One the most likely accounts
is that brawling bystanders at a carnival parade seized the
contents of nearby vegetable stall, and began throwing tomatoes
at their opponents. Apparently the local Spanish authorities
did their best to ban what quickly became an annual battle,
but in 1959 they eventually entered in to the spirit of the
event and it became the worlds largest food fight.
On the last Wednesday of August each year an estimated 20,000
people gather on the small Spanish town of Bunol (approx.
20 Minute drive from Flora Villa, thirty kilometres from Valencia)
to get 'ketchup-ed' with 125,000 kilos of ripe, ammo. La Tomatina
is the ultimate free festival, just turn up and get dirty.
The festivities are in honour of the towns' Patron Saint Luis
Bertran , and the Virgin Mary, With La Tomatina being the
highlight of a weeklong festival. During the week leading
up to the world famous tomato war, parades, fireworks, music,
dancing and paella cook-off contest draw visitors to Bunol
for the annual fiesta.
It all begins and ends between 11am and 1pm. Wear old clothes
and be warned people wearing baseball caps or carrying cameras
are considered prime targets for everyone, a see-though waterproof
bag is essential for cameras. Many people turn up in Fancy
Dress (optional), most wear goggles of some sort.
Early Wednesday morning when the day of the great battle
dawns shopkeepers along the Plaza line their storefronts and
doors with plastic sheeting. Within hours the Town Square
is filled with the seasoned locals and excited visitors from
all over the globe. Around noon, a number of huge trucks carrying
the red edible bombs make their way into the main Town Square
to the chant of "tomatoes, tomatoes, tomatoes" from
the crowd. The trucks begin unloading their cargo, then bingo
'ammunition!' and before you know it and totally to plan,
you've got the worlds largest food fight and everyone becomes
fair game. The streets are awash with juice, pavements are
spattered with pulp and no one escapes.
The rules of tomato throwing are that tomatoes must be squashed
in the hand before throwing. And it may be worth noting that
the locals tend to rip each other's clothing, so you may lose
your T-shirt, but is officially forbidden for a visitor to
do it. The aftermath looks a little like the world's largest
Bolognese sauce. As soon as the siren signalling the end of
La Tomatina is sounded, the locals then start their massive
clean up operation, and temporary showers let you start yours.
Water is pumped from a nearby Roman aqueduct and within hours
the Plaza Del Pueblo returns to its former glory except for
the stench of Tomato lingering in the streets.
Semana Santa Marinera - Holy Week
The best known holy week celebrations are held in the port
district. They are called Semana Santa Marinera, the sailor's
holy week. They include religious celebrations, Masses, stations
of the cross, and processions. These are held from Ash Wednesday
until the week after Easter.
The impressive procession of silence, held at 24:00 on the
Monday and Thursday, and the holy Burial held at 18:30 on
the Good Friday, and the events that attract the most spectators,
and participants. The holy images or icons that belong to
the 27 guilds and brotherhoods who take part in the processions
(The Madonna, the Nazerenes pilatus, and Christ of silence
(or the Holy Sepulchre) are carried on portable platforms
through the streets of this quarter facing the sea, accompanied
by 5000 penitents and the music bands, trumpeters and drummers.
Feria de Julio - July fair all month.
Summer is the time for spectacles,
pageantry, and open air concerts, staged during the July fair
located at the Paseo de la Alemadaand the Viveros Gardens. It
is also the time for spectacular bullfights. The Culmination
of the fair is a "Flower Battle" held along the Alemada
Boulevard.
Open air concerts, fireworks, poetry recitals,
and modern music...... Night entertainment is greatly influenced
by the climate. People turn out and stay out until late, filling
bars, cafe terraces, and night spots that start up for the
Fallas festivities in March, and continue well into October.
There are many sites in different quarters of the city, and
lots of action on the beach, along the seafront promenades
that has made the Malvarossa beach a major night time entertainment
area.
Monserrat
The village of Monserrat holds its own festivals
too, mostly in July/August. It holds a big Classical Music
festival (last week July), the whole week is filled with the
music from all over Spain. From 11pm the open air concerts
starts and cost a minimum charge.
The Monserrat "bones festes" bull
run festival is held mid August for a whole week, where the
bulls run through the small streets of Monserrat, dare to
challenge a bull?
Please note no animals are hurt in the festival. In the evenings
there is a temporary bull ring for shows, incorporating music,
and comedy (again no animals are hurt in this festival). There
are fireworks, night market stalls, and fair rides. Concerts
are also held this week in the village but be warned they
don't start till very late.
Torrente
Las Fallas is traditionally a Valencia festival,
so don't be surprised to find that all the surrounding villages
and towns hold their own Fallas. Torrente Fallas is held the
same week as Valencia and is a quite large, but Monserrat
Fallas is held a week later, and is considerably smaller.
The Last Friday in July is normally the festival
of the "Moors and Christians" with parades and costumes,
fairs and music and of course fireworks.
The 5th January the Spanish celebrate the
three Kings, where they present the children with presents.
There are more festivals and celebrations
in the local area, please ask for further information.