La Horta Azores cruise port guide
Far adrift, in the Atlantic's vast sweep, Horta serves as a welcoming island respite for some truly epic ocean voyages. One of the most westerly parts of Europe, these Portuguese islands lie a full 1,100 miles from the coast of the mainland. The bustling marina here serves as the perfect stopover and a welcome respite for tired sailors and yachts embarking on transatlantic crossings. View less The colourful harbour is decorated with a multicoloured patchwork of their stories and flags, and adding to this massive, ever-growing mural is said to offer sailors protection while out on the seas. While Horta's clientele may come and go with the waves, there's nothing transient about the stunning volcanic cones and soaring wildflower-splashed hills that make up this beautiful Atlantic island pit-stop. Horta is the main city, and a charming welcome to dry land, as you step onto the pentagon-shaped island of Faial. On the frontier of continents, the violent meeting of the European and North American tectonic plates forged this beautiful archipelago - and the rich volcanic scenery here is ripe for exploration and adventure. The busy harbour lies before the dramatic backdrop of the neighbouring Pico Island's cloud-wisped peak - head up to Espalamaca Lookout for the best view of Horta's busy harbour and islands emerging nearby. Horta has a grand volcanic caldera of its own, and you can journey up through threads of cloud, to look down into the island's immense, bowl-shaped crater. The Lighthouse of Ponta dos Capelinhos is an island icon, having survived 1957's dramatic eruption. It now occupies a scenic location on a headland, surrounded by vast swathes of charred new land, which were churned out from the depths.
About La Horta Azores
Horta is the largest town on Faial Island in the Central Group of the Azores, with approximately 7,000 inhabitants. The port's protected harbor, whose dock construction began in 1876, grew into a storied waypoint for trans-Atlantic maritime traffic. Faial is celebrated as the "Blue Island" (Ilha Azul) for the sweeping hydrangeas that bloom along its roads and fields every summer.
Faial's most iconic natural feature is the profusion of hydrangeas that bloom each summer, lining roads, bordering fields, and forming hedges across the island — a sight so striking that Portuguese poet Raul Brandão wrote extensively of their intense blue, giving rise to the island's enduring nickname, Ilha Azul (Blue Island). At the island's western tip, the Capelinhos volcano marks the westernmost point of Europe from a geophysical standpoint (excluding the Monchique Islet). Together with the neighboring islands of Pico and São Jorge, Faial forms the famed Triângulo (Triangle) at the heart of the Central Azores group.
Quick facts
Cruises visiting La Horta Azores
Prices per person · incl. taxes & fees.
Sailing soonest
Lisbon to Fort Lauderdale
Crystal Serenity · Mediterranean · 15 nights
from $7,000
$466 / night
Caribbean Highlights and Atlantic Discovery
Renaissance · Caribbean · 18 nights
Call for price
Miami To Venice Transatlantic Grand Voyage
Azamara Journey · Western Mediterranean · 37 nights
from $9,999
$270 / night
Transatlantic Cruise: Bermuda, The Azores & Lisbon
Azamara Journey · Bermuda · 12 nights
from $1,909
$159 / night
15-Day Transatlantic from Jacksonville to Lisbon: Funchal & Ponta Delgada
Norwegian Dawn · Caribbean · 15 nights
from $1,329
$88 / night
Lisbon to Miami
Marina · Europe · 11 nights
from $2,749
$249 / night
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