Craig’s Race

September – October 2024
  • NattyE
  • Craig Maude
Trip to Err for the Trail du Puigmal Read more
  • NattyE
  • Craig Maude

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  • Spain Spain
  • France France
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Camping, Couple, Nature, Short trip, Tours, Vacation, Wilderness
  • 539kilometers traveled
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    September 25, 2024 in France ⋅ ⛅ 11 °C

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  • Lac de Matemale

    September 25, 2024 in France ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

    Lac de Matemale is an artificial lake in the commune of Matemale in the Pyrénées-Orientales, France. At an elevation of 1541 m, its surface area is 2.23 km2.

  • Formigueres & Les Angles

    September 26, 2024 in France ⋅ ⛅ 16 °C

    À la boucherie pour poitrine fumée et au Spar supermarché pour de l’eau et un petit chocolat chaud au café dans Les Angles ☕️.

  • Trail de Puigmal Troisième Édition

    September 28, 2024 in France ⋅ ☀️ 5 °C

    https://tracedetrail.fr/en/event/trail-du-puigm…

    https://www.lindependant.fr/2024/09/25/err-cest…

    "This Saturday, September 28, the third edition of the Puigmal trail will take place, with 250runners starting in Cotzé. The Puigmal sports and cultural association is renewing the experience with this 17 km trail and 1,160 D + with an exceptional panorama. The route remains unchanged, it is mainly on the hiking routes already traced and marked, with a departure at 10:30 a.m. from Cotzé (1,890 m) for a first rolling kilometer. This will be followed by the climbof the small peak of Sègre (2,810 m) to reach the ridges and the summit of Puigmal (2,910 m) before tackling the 10 km descent through the resort, with a remarkable view of the Cerdan plateau and Spain. The two favourites from previous editions will be present for the occasion: Gabin Ageron and Émilie Menuet, with their record times of 1 h 35 (2022) for Gabin and 1 h 49 (2023) for Émilie.''Read more

  • Morning Ride Ur & Llivia to Font Romeu

    September 29, 2024 in France ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    Font-Romeu-Odeillo-Via is a commune in the Pyrénées-Orientales and Cerdagne near the Spanish border in the south of France. It comprises the villages of Odeillo and Via, as well as Font-Romeu, one of the oldest ski resorts in France and the oldest in the Pyrenees.

    Font-Romeu-Odeillo-Via is located in the canton of Les Pyrénées catalanes and in the arrondissement of Prades. It is bordered by the communes of Angoustrine-Villeneuve-des-Escaldes, Targasonne, Égat, Estavar, Saillagouse, Eyne and Bolquère.

    The names of Odeillo and Via appear in 839 as parrochia Hodellone et parrochia Avizano.

    The name Font-Romeu means in Catalan "fountain of the pilgrim".

    History
    Odeillo and Via were both mentioned for the first time in 839 among the places paying a fee to La Seu d'Urgell church. Nevertheless, Odeillo was at the time part of the County of Cerdanya, while Via was a property of the Urg family.

    On 15 July 1035, Wifred II, Count of Cerdanya, gave Odeillo to the Abbey of Saint-Martin-du-Canigou, where he retired himself a short time before his death. The Abbey of Saint-Michel-de-Cuxa also owned a few allods in Odeillo, as recognized by a papal bull from Sergius IV in 1011.

    Via remained a property of the Urg family until the 13th century. It was then bought by Peter of Fenouillet, viscount of Fenouillet and then viscount of Ille.

    A chapel was mentioned for the first time in Font-Romeu in 1525, on the territory of Odeillo. It already hosted a statue of the Virgin Mary from the 13th century, and a hermitage was built from 1693 to receive the pilgrims.

    Odeillo and Via both became communes in 1790. The commune of Via was abolished and included into Odeillo on 10 July 1822.[5]

    In 1881, a wildfire caused by arson spread throughout 267 hectares of the forest of La Calme in the north of the commune.

    The world's largest solar furnace in Odeillo can reach temperatures of 3,500 °C (6,330 °F). The THEMIS Solar Power R&D center is 3 km (1.9 mi) away in the village of Targasonne.
    Read more

  • Morning Ride to Puigmal

    September 30, 2024 in France ⋅ ☀️ 12 °C

    Puigmal d'Err1 or simply Puigmal (pronounced Poutchmal) is a summit in the Pyrenees culminating at 2,910 m. It is located on the French-Spanish border, in the commune of Err in the Pyrénées-Orientales, and that of Queralbs in the province of Girona.

    It is the highest point of the Puigmal massif and the second highest summit in the Pyrénées-Orientales after Pic Carlit.

    It gives its name to the Err-Puigmal ski resort, located on its northern slope.

    The groups -uix- and -uig- from Catalan are pronounced like "outch".

    The word "Puigmal" is made up of the Catalan word Puig meaning "summit" (a term from the Latin podium which also gave the Old French puy and the Occitan puech). The second part of the word may come from a pre-Latin root *mal also meaning "mountain" or "pile of stones", but more probably from mala "bad, evil". The tonic accent on the first a, the second a has been muted. Mal is still used in the Pyrenees in the sense of "bad", it is also found in other places (pastures, springs, summits, slopes, etc.), hence the overall meaning of "bad summit", in reference to the nature of the soil made up of Cambrian sandstone schists, not very suitable for grazing.
    Read more

  • Morning Ride - Ur to Spain

    October 1, 2024 in Spain ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

    Puigmal d'Err or simply Puigmal (pronounced Poutchmal) is a summit in the Pyrenees culminating at 2,910 m. It is located on the French-Spanish border, in the commune of Err in the Pyrénées-Orientales, and that of Queralbs in the province of Girona.

    It is the highest point of the Puigmal massif and the second highest summit in the Pyrénées-Orientales after Pic Carlit.

    It gives its name to the Err-Puigmal ski resort, located on its northern slope.

    The groups -uix- and -uig- from Catalan are pronounced like "outch".

    The word "Puigmal" is made up of the Catalan word Puig meaning "summit" (a term from the Latin podium which also gave the Old French puy and the Occitan puech)5. The second part of the word may come from a pre-Latin root *mal also meaning "mountain" or "pile of stones", but more probably from mala "bad, evil"[ref. needed]. The tonic accent on the first a, the second a has been muted. Mal is still used in the Pyrenees in the sense of "bad", it is also found in other places (pastures, springs, summits, slopes, etc.), hence the overall meaning of "bad summit", in reference to the nature of the soil made up of Cambrian sandstone schists, not very suitable for grazing.
    Read more

  • Nathalie’s Hike & Craig’s Run

    October 2, 2024 in Spain ⋅ ☁️ 12 °C

    Llívia is a town in the comarca of Cerdanya, province of Girona, Catalonia, Spain. It is a Spanish exclave surrounded by the French département of Pyrénées-Orientales.

    In 2023, the municipality of Llívia had a total population of 1,511.[5] It is separated from the rest of Spain by a corridor of about 1.6 km (1.0 mile) wide, which includes the French communes of Ur and Bourg-Madame. The Segre River, a tributary of the Spanish Ebro, flows through Llívia.

    History

    Llívia was the site of an Iberian oppidum that commanded the region and was named Julia Lybica by the Romans. It was the capital of Cerdanya in antiquity, before being replaced by Hix (commune of Bourg-Madame, France) in the Middle Ages. During the Visigothic period, its citadel, the castrum Libiae, was held by the rebel Paul of Narbonne against King Wamba in 672. As the "town (or 'city') of Cerdanya," 8th century Llívia may also have been the scene of the siege by which governor Abdul Rahman Al Ghafiqi of Muslim Spain rid himself of the Moorish (Berber) rebel Uthman ibn Naissa ("Munnuza"), who had allied himself with Duke Eudo of Aquitaine to improve the chances of his rebellion, ahead of the Battle of Tours (732 or 733), also known as the Battle of Poitiers.

    Following the Franco-Spanish War (1635–1659), the Treaty of the Pyrenees in 1659 ceded the comarques of Roussillon, Conflent, Capcir, Vallespir, and northern Cerdanya ("Cerdagne") to the French Crown. The treaty thus established the Pyrenees as the border between France and Spain, while separating Northern Catalonia from Catalonia. However, the treaty stipulated that only villages were to be ceded to France, and Llívia was considered a town (vila in Catalan), since it had the status of the ancient capital of Cerdanya. So Llívia remained a Spanish enclave within France and did not become part of the Kingdom of France. This situation was confirmed in the subsequent Treaty of Llívia, signed in 1660.

    Under the Nationalist government of Francisco Franco, residents required special passes to cross France to the rest of Spain. Today, with these countries in the Schengen Area, there are no frontier formalities and cross-border infrastructure is the only issue. The two countries share a hospital in Llívia, as well as other local initiatives.

    The enclave is accessible from Spain via a 1.8 km (1 mile) long road that up until the implementation of the Schengen Area in 1995 was considered a "neutral road" as defined in the Treaty of Llívia. The road was designated as being a custom-free route across which the French were allowed free access from one part of the corridor to another and for the Spanish to travel freely between Puigcerdà and Llívia.[9] This road is the joint property of Spain and France and is designated in Spain as part of the N-154 and in France as jointly part of the Route nationale 20 and the RD68. The road has been the subject of controversy over the years, particularly due to a number of stop signs placed by the French authorities and removed overnight by those opposed to them. This lasted for several years and became known as the war of the stop signs.[12]

    During the vote for Catalan independence in 2017, 561 out of 591 votes cast in Llívia were in favor of independence. The referendum was deemed illegal by the Spanish courts, but the Spanish police did not intervene to stop the vote in the town.
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