Hi
We go to Malta every February to catch up with my parents while they are there on holiday.
We always stay in Qawra/Bugibba area and have returned recently from the Soreda Hotel which is a couple of streets back from the seafront at Qawra.
I don't know what it is about Malta but I can never get my bearings on the direction I'm travelling and even though they drive on the same side of the road there as they do in UK and here in Cyprus, it's totally put me off hiring a car. Saying that, the bus service from Bugibba bus station (10 minutes walk from Qawra) is superb. You can buy a day return ticket for 2.60EUR per person and go anywhere on the island for that.
I can thoroughly recommend taking the Two Harbours boat cruise from Sliema seafront - not the Captain Morgan boat. Take one of the small brightly coloured Latini boats instead. They can get into parts the bigger boat cannot access. I've put some footage here on my blog and there's a link on that post to my photos from this February on my Flickr account:
http://wp.me/p1uja5-1nz
We travelled to Marsaxlokk on the bus this time and I've put a few bits of info on another thread on here:
http://www.holidaytruths.co.uk/viewtopic.php?f=23&t=154517&start=60 (It starts with "Bus to Marsaxlokk from Bugibba/Qawra - update") and there's some more info on posts after that if you follow the thread about the new Arriva bus routes.
We've been going every year now for about 7yrs and haven't had the need to hire a car at all. We always go to Valletta and Sliema by bus, have taken a day excursion to Gozo (we paid 10 EUR per person for the tour) but you have to pay for your own return ferry crossing which was a little over 4EUR per person but was an excellent day out. Also been to Mdina and Mosta all by bus from Bugibba bus station.
The only difference now is the routes aren't quite the same. Before, we could take a bus to Sliema and then catch the bus at the same place we got off to come back. Now, the bus travels on to Valletta so it's a bigger bus and the stop is on the opposite side of the road.
Shell
Limassol, Cyprus