Gran Canaria Beach Guide: Recognising a Local Beach

Local Gran canaria beachs have high budgie smuggler counts Local Gran canaria beachs have high budgie smuggler counts

Only a few of Gran Canaria's 100 beaches are touristy. The rest, spread out around the coast, attract a local crowd and have a different vibe: Canarians will pay for seafood but not for sun loungers. If you want to spend time on a Canarian beach, something we wholeheartedly recommend, then use these tips to judge if you have found your spot. 

 

Do a Bermuda shorts count

Tourists wear shorts while Canarians wear thongs. If your beach has a high proportion of budgie smugglers then you are mixing with the locals. Tell tale signs of tourist activity include bum-bags, panama hats on people under pension age, and children who don’t know how to walk on hot sand.

The general skin tone

Canarians on the beach are all one colour: Brown. Tourists on the other hand range from pure white through pink to an amazing range of reds and even purples. They are rarely all one colour. After two days in the sun their skin starts to look like 1970s wallpaper.

White boobs on topless beaches are a sure sign of tourists.

Look at the restaurants

Canarians love eating seafood by the ocean. If the restaurants by your beach advertise English breakfasts and Irish coffees on chalkboards then you are too close to a resort for comfort. Local restaurants smell of fried squid and write their menus (Spanish only of course) on whiteboards. Local beach restaurants also tend to be basic as Canarians care more about the quality of the food than the decor. Any restaurant with table decorations other than plastic flowers is aiming for tourists.

A long dessert menu is a sure sign of a tourist restaurant as local joints do two puds and a selection of ice creams. No self-respecting Canarian ever eats a banana split in public.

Observe the beachgoers

Tourists go to the beach in couples or small family units. Canarians hit the sand en masse and aren’t happy unless at least three generations are represented. They build temporary shelters out of parasols, tents and tables and then cram themselves into the smallest space possible. Canarians also bring crates of food and drink, as well as board games, surfboards, and fishing equipment.

Big groups of people on the beach, with a sleeping granny parked on a deckchair, are a sure sign of a local beach.

Pedalos, loungers, jetskis

If your beach has rows and rows of matching parasols and loungers, they are there for the tourists. Ditto pedalos and all other plastic beachcraft, jetskis etc. Canarians don't rent things on beaches, they bring things to beaches: Look for cars with kayaks or surfboards on the roof, and dogs, grandparents, etc. hanging out of the windows.

Decibels and sand attitude

The decibel level on a Canarian beach is a sure way of gauging whether it is popular with locals or tourists. The louder the beach, the more local it is.

Tourists and their children seem to think that sand is dangerous. They will play in it but wash themselves thoroughly before returning to their towels. Canarians prefer to roll around in the sand and often don’t bother with towels at all. Local teenagers break all the Anglo-Saxon beach rules by charging around lobbing handfuls of sand at each other.

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