Val d’Aran

heinäkuuta 2025
  • Iain Colville
15-päiväinen seikkaillu — Iain Lue lisää
  • Iain Colville

Luettelo maista

  • Andorra Andorra
  • Espanja Espanja
  • Ranska Ranska
  • Englanti Englanti
Luokat
Retkeily, Perhe, Loma
  • 3,9tajetut kilometrit
Kuljetusvälineet
  • Auto1 377kilometriä
  • Juna106kilometriä
  • Patikointi21kilometriä
  • Bussi11kilometriä
  • Melonta/Soutu11kilometriä
  • Cable car5kilometriä
  • Kävely4kilometriä
  • Lento-kilometriä
  • Polkupyörä-kilometriä
  • Moottoripyörä-kilometriä
  • Tuk tuk-kilometriä
  • Matkailuauto-kilometriä
  • Karavaani-kilometriä
  • Neliveto-kilometriä
  • Uima-kilometriä
  • Moottorivene-kilometriä
  • Purjehdus-kilometriä
  • Asuntolaiva-kilometriä
  • Lautta-kilometriä
  • Risteilyalus-kilometriä
  • Hevonen-kilometriä
  • Hiihtäminen-kilometriä
  • Liftaus-kilometriä
  • Helikopteri-kilometriä
  • Paljain jaloin-kilometriä
  • 29jalanjäljet
  • 15päivää
  • 344valokuvat
  • 116tykkäykset
  • The birthday boy with his ensaimada
    Views from near Arres de Sus, with a couple of roads visible about 500m belowMore views from near Arres de SusMore views from near Arres de SusWe turned around at this point!

    One birthday and countless hairpin bends

    13. heinäkuuta, Espanja ⋅ ☀️ 17 °C

    After a birthday breakfast of ensaimadas, a doughy pastry spiral from Mallorca, we planned to ascend to the car park at Bassa d’ Arres at 1,560m, in order to walk up to the former Victoria zinc mine, high on the opposite side of the valley from the campsite.

    We followed a tiny, incredibly windy road out of Bossost, rapidly climbing higher and higher above the valley floor, with hairpin after hairpin bend. Most of the time there was no barrier before an almost vertical drop on the downhill side of the road. Fortunately we didn’t encounter any cars going the other way, as there were very few places wide enough for 2 cars to pass, although we didn’t encounter any pass a few cyclists going up and one coming down.

    The snag was that, having reached Arres de Sus at about 1,310m, we couldn’t find the right drivable (and paved) road beyond this tiny village. Google offered an impossibly steep track with a no entry sign, or an alternative route via the next high village, Vilamos.

    We descended briefly and then went back up again into Vilamos, which sits at 1,255m. Google encouraged us to take a small road out of the village which turned into a narrow concrete road with a sign recommending only 4x4s should proceed. Knowing that we had seen ordinary cars in photos of the car park for the mines walk, we continued cautiously and with some trepidation. Initially all seemed well for a hundred or so metres when the concrete stopped, leaving only a rocky track ahead.

    We decided that discretion was the better part of valour, and fortunately there was just space to turn around and return to Vilamos.
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  • Inglesa Santa Maria
    Griffon vulture high aboveSlightly nearer ...... and just above the tree lineInside the churchStatue of St James the peregrinoLavadoraEcomuseo Çò de JoanchiquetKitchenKneeding room (and laundry)Small dining roomMain bedroomThe heir's bedroom (next door and only accessible via the parents' room)LandingCourtyard and lavadora belowView south from Vilamos, towards Tuc Aneto, beyond Artiga de Lin (where we were the other day)Closer view of Tuc Aneto (3,404m)

    Vilamos and vultures

    13. heinäkuuta, Espanja ⋅ ⛅ 19 °C

    We decided to stop and have a look around Vilamos, whilst we were up here. This is said to be one of the oldest villages in the Val d’Aran, with origins in the 4th or 5th centuries.

    We were about to have a look inside the church, when we spotted some birds of prey soaring high over the mountain top above the village. We grabbed binoculars, and extended the zoom on my camera, to confirm that they were Griffon vultures, the slightly more frequently spotted of the 2 potential vulture species likely to be seen in the Pyrenees. Whilst we watched for some time, we saw at least 6 or 7 individual birds, and a couple more swooped much lower, just above the treetops.

    The Romanesque Inglesa Santa Maria was lovely, with parts of the building dating back to the 11th to 13th centuries.

    We also found the medieval community lavadora (washing fountain) before visiting the Ço de Joanchiquet. This was the home of the well to do Aunós family from the 16th to mid-20th century, and now a museum about life in the mountain villages. An excellent audio guide (in English, and in part narrated by a family member born in the house) helped bring the many rooms to life.

    The views from Vilamos were amazing, in particular looking south across the valley towards Tuc Aneto, Spain’s third highest mountain and the highest in the Pyrenees at 3,404m, and the big mountain beyond the Artiga de Lin, where we were the other day.

    We stopped for a quick tapas snack and a refreshing drink before tackling the many hairpin bends on the descent from Vilamos, this time on a much larger, but just as windy, road than our ascent to Arres de Sus.
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  • Aftermath of a successful game of Carcassonne, with main game plus extensions 1, 2 and 6
    The new extension was No. 6: The Count, King and RobbersBack to VielhaCroquettes de jamónPizza mexicanaHuevos estrellados con jamón ibéricoEscalopa carbonaraGofre con plátanos y chocolatePiña con fresas y crema catalanaMás gofre con plátanos y chocolateIglesa San Miguel de Vielha - I realised I'd not taken a picture of the outside yesterday

    Carcassonne & a birthday meal in Vielha

    13. heinäkuuta, Espanja ⋅ 🌙 13 °C

    We returned to the campsite to play Carcassonne and in particular a new extension to the game which was one of Simeon’s birthday presents.

    In the evening, we returned to Vielha for a delicious meal together for Simeon’s birthday.Lue lisää

  • Pla de Beret to Montgarri

    14. heinäkuuta, Espanja ⋅ ☀️ 20 °C

    Today took us to the opposite side of the
    Val d’Aran, for a beautiful walk in Naut Aran (High Aran), about 35km from the campsite.

    We drove up to the Pla de Beret ( Beret Plain) a high mountain pasture and the location of the mid level of the Baqueira/Beret ski resort in the winter. In the summer you can drive up to, and park on, the plain at an altitude of about 1,850m.

    After a picnic lunch whilst enjoying the fabulous views on the plain, we struck off north west in order to follow the Noguera Pallaresa river roughly in the direction of the French border and the border between Aran and the next county within Catalunya to the east: Pallars Sobirà.

    Our aim was to walk to the Sanctario de Montgarri, a former monastery, just over 6km from the car park on the plain (and the limit of drivable roads) and the same distance back again.

    We set off on the track and soon picked up the way-marked walking path which led into the edge of the forest above the river which gurgled below. We could frequently hear the sound of cow bells on cattle and on the wild Pyrenean mountain horses or pottioks.

    After about an hour and a half, the steeple of the church came into view and we soon reached the bridge just opposite the sanctuary gate.

    Until the 1960s there was a village, also called Montagarri, a few hundred metres beyond the sanctuary, which was once Aran’s highest inhabited village at 1645m.

    Next to the 11th century sanctuary church stands a refuge in a 16th century slate building, offering refreshments and accommodation.

    After a drink and a snack, we had a look inside the church and then began the return journey, now on the opposite side of the river, to Pla de Beret.

    The views heading back were just as wonderful as the outward journey. We also saw at least one more Griffon vulture (an possiblly a second too).
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  • Views on the way down from Pla de Beret

    14. heinäkuuta, Espanja ⋅ ☀️ 19 °C

    As we descended, we met a group of pottiok blocking the road, until we gradually approach and they moved out of the way.

    A few minutes later, we and several other cars ahead of us encountered a large group of cattle on the road. Those ahead of us pushed through and the cattle began to move along, letting us by.

    The views on the way down were amazing, as you can see. As the valley back toward Vielha came into view, a low level cloud hung over the valley far below and above Vielha and the surrounding villages.

    We spotted another couple of probable Griffon vultures, soaring high above us as we descended.
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  • Vultures for lunch

    15. heinäkuuta, Ranska ⋅ 🌫 17 °C

    We awoke yesterday to find the valley full of low clouds, covering even the lower peaks. We therefore decided to head north, out of the valley in order to visit Saint-Bertrand-de-Comminges (about which more later), roughly 40km (25 miles) from the campsite.

    Just across the border into France, we spotted a number of vultures wheeling on their broad wings just below the cloud level. We found somewhere to park beside the Garonne river in Saint Béat, a small village squeezed between cliffs on the opposing sides of the valley.

    There were loads of Griffon vultures, a number of Red Kites and a large black crow which might been a Raven or (less excitingly) a Rook!

    Some of the vultures came in to land at the top of one of the cliffs, where we also saw what appeared to be a big chick or near fledgling (and this is the right sort of time of the year for Griffon vultures to fledge).

    We also saw another bird which my phone’s nature recognition ai thinks was an Osprey, but it definitely wasn’t a vulture.

    After watching the vultures swirling around for quite a time, we decided to eat our lunch at a convenient picnic table beside the river, whilst keeping an eye on the vultures and other birds.

    St Béat is known for several marble quarries in the nearby hills, first exploited by the Romans. They have an annual marble sculpture festival, with sculptures dotted around the village.
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  • Saint-Bertrand-de-Comminges

    15. heinäkuuta, Ranska ⋅ ☁️ 20 °C

    We continued on to Saint-Bertrand-de-Comminges a little further into France, a little medieval fortified village on a hilltop, and the seat of the former Diocese of Comminges from at least the 6th century until the French Revolution.

    We parked at the foot of the hill and climbed up past the fortifications to pass through a gate into the old “city”. Finally we found ourselves in front of the (former) Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Saint-Bertrand-de-Comminges, mostly built in the 12th and 14th centuries, with a few later additions.

    Behind the altar lays the shrine of St Bertrand, originally known as Bertrand de l'Isle-Jourdain, who was raised in the late 11th century to become a knight but instead became a priest and ultimately bishop of what was then known as Lugdunum Convenarum for nearly 50 years. In this time, Bertrand built the cathedral, adopted pope Gregory VI’s reforms regarding the morality and spirituality of clergy and laity, and revived the city that would later bear his name. At around this time, the city also became a stopping point for pèlerins on their way across southern France to Santiago de Compostela.

    We had a drink and ice creams in a cafe on one of the winding, narrow streets that spread out from the cathedral at the top of the hill, before heading to the local Musée de Archéologie.

    The recently refurbished museum is housed in the former Gendarmerie, and features a small fraction of the treasures of Lugdunum Convenarum unearthed from the surrounding fields in the plains around the current hill top village.

    Lugdunum Convenarum is thought to have been founded as a colony by Pompey in 73 BC when returning to Rome after campaigning in what is now Spain. Over the next couple of centuries, this became a large and important settlement with a population of some 30,000 (today’s village has some 230!), part of the Roman province of Gallia Aquitania (and later Novempopulania). At this time, the Val d’Aran fell within the area administered from Lugdunum Convenarum. The city declined in the 5th century, as the (Western) Roman Empire crumbled under attacks from Vandals and other Germanic tribes.

    Legend has it that Herod Antipas (the local ruler of Galilee in at the time of Jesus’ ministry) and his wife Herodias were exiled there under the orders of the Emperor Caligula in AD 39, until their deaths a couple of years later (but there is much confusion between this Lugdunum (Convenarum) and the Lugdunum which is now the French city of Lyon.

    Extensive excavations have taken place all around Saint-Bertrand from the 16th century onwards, but more rigorously from the early 20th century, and continue to the present day.

    Key finds now on display in the archeological museum include part of a reconstructed Triumph or monumental marble sculpture celebrating a victory in Spain or Gaul - although the specifics of the victory or victories being celebrated are the subject of some debate and speculation. The current view is that the Triumph was most likely associated with Proconsul Marcus Valerius Messalla and his conquest of the Aquitani people, including the Convenae (from which the second part of Lugdunum Convenarum’s name comes).

    There are also many other objects from the daily lives of those who lived here. There are also a number of funerary monuments, the inscriptions on which enable much detail to be gleaned about the individuals being commemorated and their lives.
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  • Plan showing the excavations, with the hilltop village at the bottom and St Just away to the right
    Looking down from the city walls towards the forum (in front of the turreted building on left)Theatre - the semicircular wall was the back of the seating areaBathhouse complexForumEarly Christian basilicaBasilica of St Just de ValcabrèrePortico featuring early Christian martyrs St Pastor & St Just (outside pair)Christ triumphant, flanked by the gospel writersThe stone with sculpted heads has been reused from elsewhere in the Roman cityInside the basilicaAltarAnother reused stone, a masked actor perhaps from the theatreApse and chancel from outside930 km to SantiagoWe also finally got round to putting candles on Simeon's birthday cake!

    Lugdunum & Saint-Just de Valcabrère

    15. heinäkuuta, Ranska ⋅ ☁️ 20 °C

    After descending from the hilltop Saint-Bertrand, we had a quick look at some of the nearby Roman and excavations of Lugdunum Convenarum, including:

    - theatre (this was set into the very foot of the hillside)
    - bathhouse complex
    - forum or central square
    - early 5th century Christian basilica

    The latter is said to be connected to an early and small Christian community present in Lugdunum Convenarum from the end of the 3rd century. The church became the centre of the Diocese of Comminges.

    We then drove a couple of km to another church, the Basilique Saint-Just de Valcabrère, built just outside the Roman city. The basilica is said to be the most beautiful Romanesque church in south west France. The present building was built in the 11-12th centuries with re-used stones from Lugdunum but may have replaced an earlier building on the site, and excavations are underway of a much earlier cemetery just across the road from the church.

    We benefited from an online audio guide in English that we could access on our phones.

    Like the (former) Cathedral, St Just de Valcabrère was recognised as a key place on the Camino de Santiago for medieval pilgrims to visit and, accordingly, is now recognised as a. UNESCO World Heritage Site linked to the Camino. There’s also a sign outside indicating the distance to Santiago.
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  • Aran wildlife park, Col de Portilhon

    16. heinäkuuta, Espanja ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

    After the low clouds the day before, we awoke to clear blue skies and a v warm day. After a leisurely morning in the shade of
    the campsite, including getting some washing done, we set off for the road up to the Col de Portilhon.

    However we weren’t going to cross this pass into France today. Rather, our destination this afternoon was the Aran Park - Parc Animalier, a wildlife park containing about 20 species from the Pyrenees and the Val d’Aran in particular, in large enclosures on the mountain side.

    The group of Griffon vultures in the park were each irreversibly injured by flying into power cables,

    Although there are Brown Bears in the valley, this was going to be our most likely sighting at least on this trip! As we arrived at the bear enclosure, the keepers brought what appeared to be frozen cantaloupe melons, which they threw to the 2 bears. The melons bounced and sounded like rocks hitting the ground - which is why we thought they mus have been frozen.

    I’ll let the photos speak for themselves!
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  • BossostLooking north, across Bossost and beyondHydroelectric power station, there are lots of these along the valley, fed from high pools or lakesLooking south and southeast (our campsite is just around the corner)"Our" terrace in the campsiteTerraces above usOur nearest washing blockSteps down to the bar, pool, shop and receptionPoolBar/restaurant

    Views from the Bossost mirador

    16. heinäkuuta, Espanja ⋅ ☀️ 23 °C

    On the way back down from, we stopped to enjoy the views from this view point, just above the large village of Bossost.

    Here are a few more pictures of the campsite too.