Ładowanie…
Ładowanie…
Malta from the sea is a completely different experience — cliffs, caves, and turquoise lagoons
Malta from the water is a completely different island. The bastions of Valletta rise from the sea like a golden fortress. The cliffs at Dingli drop sheer into deep blue. The Blue Grotto glows from within when the morning light hits right. None of this is visible from the road.
Tourist boats (traditional dghajsas, catamarans, or small motor vessels) depart daily in season from Sliema ferry landing, Bugibba, and St Julian's.
South route: Blue Grotto, coastal caves, Filfla islet, back North/Comino route: Blue Lagoon, Crystal Lagoon, swimming stops Price: €25–45/person, duration: 3–5 hours
Advantage: cheap, easy to book. Disadvantage: large groups, music, little flexibility.
Private charters with skippered yacht from Grand Harbour Marina (Valletta) or Marina di Corinthia (St Julian's).
A typical boat (6–8m, capacity 6–8 people):
Recommended routes: 1. Valletta → Three Cities → Blue Lagoon → return: fort views, swimming 2. Sliema → Blue Grotto → Dingli Cliffs → return via Freeport: dramatic scenery 3. Gozo → Comino → Azure Window area → return: green island + turquoise water
Only if you hold an IYT/RYA certificate. Malta requires a licence for vessels over 7.5m. Prices from €150/day (small motorboat) to €400+/day (10m sailboat).
Malta at golden hour from the water — Valletta glowing, calm sea, glass of Maltese wine. Around €60–90/person in groups of 10–15. Romantic and memorable.
May–October: ideal. Warm, light winds, calm sea. November–April: windier and more swell — experienced sailors love it; casual tourists should probably stick to summer. Avoid: August for Blue Lagoon — dozens of boats anchor simultaneously, it's crowded and chaotic. Go before 9am or after 5pm.
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