Grotta del Bue Marino

Location

Cala Gonone
Italy
40° 14' 48.6204" N, 9° 37' 23.0844" E
IT
General info: 

The Bue Marino Grottos are considered some of the most beautiful grottos in all of Italy, with kilometers of galleries, rivers and subterranean lakes, stalactites and stalagmites, fossils and Neolithic graffiti.
The caves are among the biggest in Sardinia with total length of about 5km. On a guided tour only about 900m meters is visited however. The visitors follow the way the sea penetrates into the mountain creating a salt lake of more than 1squarekilometer of surface. The place is very rich of stalactites and stalagmites. Only underwater speleologists may go further from here.
The name of the cave comes from the presence of Monaca seal, the extremely rare Mediterranean seal (that local people call private://sea oxprivate://, Bue Marino), which till to the '80ies came to grow its puppies in this cave.

Getting there: 

In the harbour of Cala Gonone, there are several companies offering boat trips to the destinations along the coastline, including Grotta del Bue Marino (Bue Marine Cave).

Costs: 

There are many companies but here one price example: Bue Marino: round-trip from Cala Gonone €17, ages 6-12 €10. Bue Marino and Cala Luna: €24, ages 6-12 €16. Ferry fees include guided tour.

Interesting places nearby

BASE: 4117ft
SUMMIT: 5577ft
VERTICAL DROP: 1459ft

NO. OF. LIFTS: 10
Gondolas: 0
Chairs: 1
Surface: 9

BASE: 3444ft
SUMMIT: 7381ft
VERTICAL DROP: 3937ft

NO. OF. LIFTS: 6
Gondolas: 0
Chairs: 6
Surface: 3

Situated at only 4 km from Megève and 30 km from Chamonix, Combloux resort is a charming village overlooking Mont Blanc which has a large ski area particularly well adapted to the needs of families.

BASE: 3280ft
SUMMIT: 6561ft
VERTICAL DROP: 3280ft

NO. OF. LIFTS: 23
Gondolas: 3
Chairs: 10
Surface: 10

Cordon is a typical village of moutain, near the Aravis moutain range and face to Mont-Blanc range. That is why Cordon is called private://Mont Blanc Balconyprivate://.

Bramans, village of Haute Maurienne in Savoie, near the Italian border, settled on the antic Roman way which crossed the Small Mont-Cenis and the Col Clappier.