LAKE OF STARS
The world's first Starlight Tourism Destination, Portugal's Alqueva region offers round-the-clock adventure - from dawn flights by hot air balloon to a kayaking tour under a dazzling night sky. Words: Orla Thomas
In Alqueva, rush hour kicks off at 9.30pm. The area's roads remain as empty at night as they are by day, but 340 miles above, a queue of Starlink satellites is starting to form. "There's the International Space Station," says astronomer Nuno Santos, directing his green laser pointer south. "Give the three people on board a wave!"
After a few more minutes, my eyes have adjusted to the utter blackness over the Dark Sky Alqueva Observatory, allowing more celestial bodies to appear. First startlingly luminous Venus, then an orange-hued Mars. The backdrop to these scene-stealing planets is an incomprehensible number of stars, twinkling like a handful of glitter tossed into the night sky.
To orientate myself, I search for the most famous of the animal constellations: Ursa Major. "Can't see the shape of a great bear?" says Nuno. "Don't worry, me neither. Remember, the people who named them drank really good wine."
Mastery of the stars was the making of Portugal. The country dominated the Age of Discovery in the 15th and 16th centuries, when European nations began exploring the world by sea. I've been using GPS to find my way around the Alqueva Dark Sky Route - a road trip stitching together stargazing spots, accommodation and activities - but for early navigators the equivalent was the North Star. "The light we see from it now was cast when the astronomer Galileo was still alive," Nuno tells the small group attending one of his nightly sessions. "Look at the night sky, and you're looking at the past."
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