Alright if you like that sort of thing

 I’m not a fan of Los Cristianos. I am sure it is fine. Spain flourished on the northern need to import the cuisine of their motherlands and seek Blackpool but with guaranteed sun. It is just not my favourite side of Greater Iberia.  Never mind.  We are here so lets have a look about.



About 22000 people live here permanently.  It sits, with its sibling settlement, Playa de las Americas, but unlike The American Beaches it had an existence before the tourist boom of the 70s.




Going back to the 16th century the place gained a port but appears to have been barely occupied.  In the 1860s  Pedro de Olive described it  "a hamlet in Arona, with three one-storey houses, a two-storey house and a hut." It was officially recognised in governmental documents as being established in 1888 by 29 houses and a cave.




The Twentieth century saw growth. In 1909 a quay was built and the growing port served the local salt mines and fish packing industries.  After 1914 irrigation brought agriculture, especially tomatoes and bananas.    The bananas were replaced by tourists in the 1990s.





So we end today









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