Bem-vindos ao Litoral Sul de São Paulo

 

Welcome to the Southern Shores of São Paulo

Bienvenue à la Côte de la Forêt Atlantique
 
 

 

ACTIVITIESBEACHES

CUISINEDAILY PIC

FORECASTHISTORY

LEGENDSLODGING

MURALNEWS

OLD PICSPEOPLE

REGIONROADS

TIDESTOURS

WELCOME

 
   
 

 
 

      We Speak English Here!    

The Region

 
 
 

 

Introduction

Some consider the Southern Shores as a region that stretches from the city of Bertioga (north of Santos) to Cananéia (near the border of the State of Paraná, in the South, in fact another region called Ribeira Valley); some others  consider it as a the coast that stretches from Bertioga to the city of Peruíbe, a region formerly known as "Baixada Santista" and nowadays called as The Coast of the Atlantic Forest which is nothing more than the Southern Shores of the State of São Paulo, the Southern Littoral. A bit confusing? Not at all! This plain is limited on the East by long beaches with small dunes and sometimes little beaches separated from each other by a set of hills. On the West, it is limited by the heights of the Sea Mountain Range that forms the base of the Plateau where the City of Sao Paulo is located over the mountains. This plain is very thin near the Northen Shores (Cities of Paraty, in the State of Rio de Janeiro, and Ubatuba, in the State of São Paulo) and also around the City of Santos, where the Mountains meet the Sea. But southwards, these Mountains get more distant from the sea, getting its farthest point at 80 km into the countryside in the region of the Ribeira River and around the City of Iguape.

The Sea Mountain Range

The Sea Mountain Range is the second biggest unit on the Paulista (name meaning "from the State of São Paulo", as New Yorker, etc.) relief. It's an area full of mountains with cliffs and uttermost heights that is located in between the littoral plain and the plateau. In some parts on this littoral plain, the Mountains seem to fall in the sea, almost vertically, as much like those mountains in Tahiti. In some other regions as in the South, near the border of the State of Paraná, the mountains are located more distant from the sea, as already explained, but there are much more profound valleys carved in the rocks and mud by ancient rivers such as Ribeira de Iguape and some other creeks.

The State of São Paulo is crossed by the Tropic of Capricorn that assures a tropical climate during the year. The Tropic crosses cites as the own Capital of São Paulo and the City of Ubatuba, on the Northen Shores. The Littoral Plain has its own microclimate and temperatures with an annual media far above 20º C.

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 
   

click on the images to enlarge

   

The Historical Cities

Cities of historical importance as Saint Vincent (São Vicente) and Itanhaém, have developed after the discovery, right in the beginning of the Brazilian History. Many others such as Long Beach (Praia Grande), Mongaguá, Peruíbe, Iguape and Cananéia (that may be hard to say in English) were indeed formed from the base that was established by the Portuguese in Saint Vincent in the 16th century and also with the administrative separation from counties (Brazil uses a different system called Municípios, each city is an own Município and not a county) that formerly belonged to Itanhaém. For instance, the cites of Mongaguá and Peruíbe were separated from Itanhaém last century, due to administrative reasons. The cities of Iguape and Cananéia are much older, located far in the South, more spared from these cities. Cananéia in fact was also one of the first places where the Portuguese arrived after Saint Vincent and Itanhaém, almost 500 years ago. Both Iguape and Cananéia are located in a very important region, that has the most preserved set of the Atlantic Forest in this country, sheltering endemic species, some of them also found on the hills and Mountain Ranges around Itanhaém.

Resources

The region is very rich in terms of natural resources such as fishing, since the waters are brought to the open sea from currents that arrive directly from the South Pole, making the Southern Shores a place with extremely rich biodiversity, where there are many species of fish, crabs and shellfish. Many fishermen from others cities on the shores of The State of São Paulo, including others from other States, come here to fish because there are so many variety of fish. Some fishermen also come from other countries and fish illegally here, hidden in the vastness of the sea, not respecting the State Parks around the islands, fishing with their huge nets that traps everything on their way. Most of them come form Oriental countries, specially from Japan, and the Brazilian Navy as well as the Government, are taking severe measures to stop and punish this illegal practice. Anyway, there are abundant species of fish, feeding the ones who have on the fishing industry their only one mean of survival.

The land, is also rich and diverse! There are small farms and small cultures called roças assuring all kinds of food such as tomatoes, beans, green leaves and fruit and also extensive banana and passion fruit plantations around Itanhaém and Peruíbe and enormous tea plantations in the Ribeira Valley belonging to Japanese immigrants that arrived there in the beginning of the 20th century. Banana, manioc and the fishing industry have long been the base of the local economy, which can be observed on the products of the local industry such as the banana candies produced in Itanhaém for more than a century. Nowadays the region offers a great variety of goods and services, since most of the biggest stores in the Capital have branches on the Southern Shores.

In fact, all this commerce is favored by modern freeways and roads that link the region to the capital of São Paulo. During weekdays, when the traffic is not intense (what not happens in the weekends for obvious reasons), the trip Itanhaém to São Paulo can take as long as 50 minutes or up to 1 hour. The new descending way from the Immigrants Complex (Imigrantes) represent a great effort of the world's human engineering, built in the middle of the Atlantic Forest, bringing more progress and shrinking distances with the minimal ambient impact. As one's traveling on Immigrants, it's impossible not to remember the old days of the Tupiniquim Indians' Paths in the beginning of the 16th century through which the Jesuits came from Saint Vincent to Piratininga, founding the City of São Paulo on the mountains. The city began to grow around a small Catholic School for the Tupiniquim and Gauianás Indians, friends of the Portuguese colonizers in the 16th century. The place was safe because it was located on a hill and this way the priests could watch anyone or anything moving eastwards, from where the enemies of the Portuguese, the Tupinambá Indians, used to attack the village. Nowadays the city of São Paulo is the home for more than 12,000,000 people.

The Language: Brazilian Softened Portuguese

During the colonial times, the Portuguese language was taught at the catholic schools as well as the faith in the real God (the Indians' God is named Tupã). At that time the language spoken in Brazil, from north to south was the Tupi, also called Tupinambá Language. With the extinction and the assimilation of the Tupinambá Indians as well as other groups, the original ancient Tupi language began to evolve to a new form of language called Nheengatu. To illustrate the transformation that took place, we can give the following example: the name Uwattibi (uba = canoes; ttibi = a lot of; lots of canoes) was transformed in Ubatuba; and this happened with all the Tupi vocabulary. In spite of the fact most Indians were extinct or assimilated in the Southeastern Brazil, the colonizers began to realize that the Tupi/Neengatu was in fact spoken by most of the population even in the 18th century, so they banned that language, making everyone learn Portuguese. As anyone could forecast, this kind of law could not work since no one could ban a language all of a sudden, so the Tupi and its evolved form, the Nheengatu began to interact with the Portuguese Language evolving later to what is known nowadays as The Brazilian Softened Portuguese, our National Secret Code. The language also received a lot of foreign influences in the second part of the 19th century. With the end of the slavery, most coffee farms in the State of São Paulo and in Southern Brazil needed a new workforce that was supplied with Europeans immigrants. Most of them came form Italy and Germany, but then later a bigger wave of immigration took place bringing people from all over the world. There were people arriving form Japan, China, Korea, Italy, France, Germany, Spain, Sweden, Africa, Russia, Poland and even from the United States (at the end of the Secession War - they founded a city in Brazil named Americana). This makes Brazil looks very, very  different from other South American countries; in fact, a real melting pot, so one who's traveling southwards may be surprised finding so many blue eyes and blondes everywhere.

In spite of the fact we are in the 21st century, many North Americans as well as some Europeans still think that Spanish is spoken in Brazil, what is totally inaccurate and wrong. In fact, as many other Latin languages, the written Brazilian Portuguese may look like Spanish or even Italian, but the stress, rhythm, intonation and pronunciation makes the language totally different from these other languages. If it were so similar to Spanish, anyone living in other South American countries would understand what a Brazilian says. They just do not understand anything or being very lenient, most of the things we say. And the difference becomes even bigger because of the Tupi and Nheengatu languages that were introduced into the Portuguese Language. This difference makes Brazilian Portuguese sounds different from the language spoken in Portugal too. Compared to English, the difference between Brazilian Portuguese and the language spoken in Portugal is much bigger than the one between American English and British English. For instance, words as abacaxi (pineapple) and macacujá (passion fruit) can only be recognized in Brazil since in Portugal these fruits are respectively named ananás and fruto da paixão. But those are not the only differences; this happens with thousands and thousands of other words and expressions. So, some foreigners may be asking themselves now what Brazilian Portuguese sounds like. If we can compare it, the language sounds as a mixture of Indian vocabulary as the one in the USA (Miami, Sioux, Chattanooga, etc.) and French, Italian and Spanish (from Spain and not the other language spoken in South American countries), all wrapped in one language.

The City of Itanhaém

The City of Itanhaém has an unique relief among the vastness of the beaches formed with small dunes on the Southern Shores. It has a set of hills and a rocky coastline ad its rivers are also unique in terms of the amount of the flow of freshwater. The Itanhaém River is formed by The Black and The White Rivers and their banks make up a very important wetland due to the many species of flora and the fauna that shelters there. The waterfalls hidden in the deep bluish green of the Sea Mountain Range make an unforgettable spectacle of grandeur. Even in the urban area you can cross a street and find a pristine River or an Island covered with the Atlantic Forest, full of native natural life as it really happens with the Sapucaitava Hill, the Givurá Island and with the set of beaches that surrounds these places.

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 
   

click on the images to enlarge

   

The incredible vastness of the Cibratel Beach contrasts on the background with the Juréia and Itatins Mountain Ranges in Peruíbe, a city next to Itanhaém. The Cibratel Beach is crossed  by the Gaivota River which its mouth is located right across from the Gaivota Island, a place where the visitor will realize the exact dimension of the infinity of vastness of the place. Juréia with its mountains on the background, seems to fall in the sea with its pristine beaches, home of rare endangered species of the flora and the fauna what made the government create a State Park there a few years ago.

The Juréia and Itanhaém with their sets of hills and Mountain Ranges are in fact the same region, the same Southern Littoral, part of the same shores that have the most preserved portion of Atlantic Forest in the State of São Paulo. The region is also linked to the Ribeira Valley, located a bit far southwards. It's a huge region of nature preservation where you'll find banana and tea plantations, where a train that transported the goods used to honk in the starry nights...That sound seems to echo until today, making us remember the past, even after the its end at the end of the 90's.

On The Southern Shores, the visitor will find famous beaches, some others pristine, totally empty, still, some of great extension and some too thin, which sands are compressed between the water and the rocky coastline. Some other beaches have a rough sea and some others are indicated for that soothing  relax. So, there are beaches on the Southern Shores for all moods and tastes.

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 
   

click on the images to enlarge

   

Diving - The Islands

Some people think that the waters on the Southern Shores are not fit to a good diving. On the contrary, the waters can be crystal clear and definitely good for diving and underwater fishing, but their clarity and transparency are subject to seasonality due to the currents that arrive from the deep South. Although there's this seasonality of the waters, the best diving spot in Southeastern Brazil is found in Itanhaém.

Those are the Islands of Queimada Grande and Queimada Pequena (fishing/disembarking is forbidden - State Parks, even though you can dive around the islands only for observation). In Queimada Grande's waters, the blue is intense and untouched during all year long; the island waters has the so-called  "international visibility", therefore also known as one of the best diving spots in the world. The marine life there is abundant and untouched. Queimada Grande is also surrounded by many shipwrecks that have become, during the years, the home and shelter for many species of fish. These islands and the islet called Laje da Conceição can be easily reached by one of the boats that covers this itinerary, leaving the Small Port (Portinho in Brazilian Portuguese) on the bank of the Itanhaém River, near the ancient train bridge. So, come with us to discover and get to know everything about one of the most beautiful regions of the State of São Paulo, located in Southeastern Brazil. Welcome to the Southern Shores!

SORRY FOR THE INCONVENIENCE - MOST MENUS IN ENGLISH ARE UNDER CONSTRUCTION - THANK YOU

 

Activities | Beaches | Cuisine | Daily Pic | Forecast | History | Legends | Lodging

 

 Mural | News | Old Pics | People | Region | Roads | Tides | Tours | Welcome

 
   
Google
   

         

 
   

   

The Southern Shores Guide

 

this site is better viewed at 800x600 or superior at 1024x768

editor@itanhaemvirtual.com.br

© 2005 DIGITAL VIDEO SITES - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

NON AUTHORIZED DUPLICATION IS A VIOLATION OF THE APPLICABLE LAWS