Spain spring 2022..

May 2022 - May 2024
An open-ended adventure by CL Wanderlust Read more
Currently traveling
  • 92footprints
  • 3countries
  • 723days
  • 694photos
  • 0videos
  • 8.8kmiles
  • 5.8kmiles
  • Day 17

    Fuente de piedra, spain

    May 28, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 33 °C

    the sanctuary was closed but paths still open. we saw flamingos in the distance, but path to the lake was fenced and no access. we ended up finding our way to a bird blind and found other keen birders on the cool of the evening and there they were!! groups of flamingos swimming, padidlng, standing and eating. they were very pink when they flew. almost like a worm with wings. we also saw a white headed duck with a blue bill. and reddish head one called a prichard. some coots and one baby coot with red fuzz ball on its head. there were also pied avocet, glossy ibis, storks and black winged stilts.Read more

  • Day 17

    dolmans of antequerra Tholos de El Romer

    May 28, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 28 °C

    this one we drove to. there was a tour bus ahead of us with a ton of young adults. we had a snack in the shade while waiting to get i think they may have been Uni students. This site is in an industrial area behind an old cemet factory. there is an alley of cypresses that lines up with the corridor and points to el torcal.Read more

  • Day 17

    dolmans of antequera menga dolman

    May 28, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 29 °C

    this is the oldest Dolman with pillars. the guide who was hosting told us that they think it was later used as a livestock pen as there are squared out indentations for wood and some rubbings against the side that indicates goats or sheep may have been there. also gypsy families have lived in it. there are smoke Marks from their fires. there is a well in this as well and it was quite deep.Read more

  • Day 17

    dolmans of Antequera viera dolam first

    May 28, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 29 °C

    we arrive at the museum Archaeological Dolmens of Antequera. lovely grounds and there are some small trees and shade in the parking lot for us to eat our picnic lunch. its around 34 degrees. I had read that the museum had to limit its height to one storey because if it was too high it would block the view from the menga dolman to the rock formation called Peña de los Enamorados. the museum was very good. had a short film on how these dolmans were constructed. The rock was from a quarry about 1/2 km away according to one of the guides. They moved the uprights. this from a website describing the terminoligy:" This dolmen was built using the 'orthostatic technique', which means constructing a wall from 'planting' large upright stones called orthostats and laying across horizontal capstones to form a roof." They moved the stones on rollers, an entire village of people at least probably more. then once all stones were planted and for the menga dolman once the 3 internal pillars were in place they back filled the entire site. then moved the ceiling stones into place and removed the dirt. again. the internal pillars of the menga dolmans, the largest and oldest did not actually touch the tip. good when there is an earthquake once all the stones were in place they covered the entire structure with cobble stones and dirt. am incredible amount of work.
    the menga Dolman ia the oldest around 3500 to 3000 bc or 5500 -5000 yrs ago ( by comparison Mae's howe in orkney is 2800 bc or 4800 yrs ago). its corridor points to the Peña de los Enamorados and at the summer solstice dawn the light illuminates the corridor. this was neolithic farming communities that would have constricted it.
    the viega dolman almost next door was built a bit later and is smaller. still neolithic farming community around 3000 bc or 5000 yrs ago. it points to the sunrise on the spring and summer equinox . a time for sowing and harvesting.
    the last structure, about 3 km away....we drove is the Tholos de El Romeral. it is later construction 2500 to 2200 bc in the copper age. it points to el torcal a mountain range to the east which we will explore later. this ones construction is circular and much smaller stones. beehive I believe. its corridor also points to the winter solstice .
    see this site for even more info: https://www.andalucia.com/antequera/dolmens-de-…
    Read more

  • Day 17

    dolmans of Antequera-drive

    May 28, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

    on the road at the early time of almost noon and it is 31 degrees according to the car. tried to rest the foot a bit and leave it open to the air in the am. also a good chance to catch up on posts. we are heading to the Dolmans of Antequerra. it's just over an hour away. intersting drive. Lots of olives in the fields and I think there may be almonds too. we saw almonds at the museum-Archaeological Dolmens of Antequera-. On getting closer to Antequerra we saw what looked like tour busses parked in the fields. We wondered what they were doing, but on closer inspection it was the buses for the workers in the fields who were harvesting onions. you could small the pungent smell of the onions and see the white bulbs. There were fields of corn and I think sunflowers being irrigated by the same types of overhead sprinklers they use at home. lots of beautiful rock formations all tend to be sloping up like a mesa and then huge drop offs along the sides. lots of caves. there are also towers on the tops of some of the high points. not sure which era they are from.. some are listed as Torre of ...on Google maps.Read more

  • Day 16

    paella then drive Mirador La Hoya

    May 27, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

    after dinner I wanted to go back to the west side of ronda for the sunset. I would have preferred to walk but I now have yet another blister on my foot so we decided to drive. we got onto the same road we had walked down yesterday ctra las molinos but it was so busy due to the fair ronda romantics that we decided after we had stopped at the Mirador La Hoya Del Tajo (Lookout Point) did some birding and took our sunset pic that we would return going around the north side. it was a very very narrow road. lots of farms in this depression in front of the huge sandstone that ronda sits on. you have to go up and through a cleft in the rock to get back onto the road that we had taken earlier in the day to get to the cave pileta (road a374) it was a bit nerve racking but we made it. Google had us follow something that took you above a374 luckily we didnt follow Google. itbis very much like a sloping mesa as you go through the cleft on the north west side. we saw eurasian goldfinch, stone chat and lots of swallows in the meadow at the lookout point. the stone chat is a black headed bird with a red breast and white shoulder neck area. he sits on the tall stalks perching then hovers over his prey, catapillers and dragonfly the returns to his perch. there were quit a lot of them. rough guide says there are eurasian crag Martin's also here and I suspect what I thought were swallows may have been these ones too.Read more

  • Day 16

    river walk

    May 27, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 28 °C

    the tour of the caves was 2 hours. we had our lunch up there after under the shade of some trees on the path. I though I nay have seen a brown deer like animal across the way on the limestone but not sure. after we went to this tiny hamlet of estacion de jimera de libar. I had hoped the walk in the andalucia book was in the shade but it was not. it s 32 degrees and probably the hottest part of the day. we saw a path in the shade on the other side of the river and we had passed a bridge so we backtracked but the bridge did not go over the river only over the train tracks. this walk was a bit cooler but by now we were cranky and colin was concerned we wouldn't be back in time to make dinner so we walked under the train tracks in the village and back to the car. the team did go by us just after 1600 so it would be possible to do this walk 7 km starting at benaijan the next village and taking the train back as recommended in the book. but not for us today, it was too late when we started and we were at the wrong end.Read more

  • Day 16

    cueva la pileta

    May 27, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 23 °C

    we have reservations for the 1300 English tour of these prehistoric caves. pileta is a Roman pool. these caves were discovered in 1904 by a local farmer Jose bullon Lobato when he noticed thousand of bats 18,000 coming out of the caves in the eve. he was after the guano to fertilize his olive trees. eventually a French anthropologist visited in 1912 and the caves have been well known ever since. the original farming family who discovered it are still the caretakers and visits are restricted to 20 per visit and maybe 5 tours a day. there was a bus on this narrow winding road ahead of us and we wondered if they were heading to the cave...they were it was a bus full of school kids. the caves are 15 degrees and humid. there are rails and you have a light between 2 people. you have to be careful as the stairs are very slippery but what a magical place. there are stalagmites that grow up at a rate of 1 cm every 100 yrs and stalacites, drapery that hang down. there are drip stones cascading down. the mountain is limestone and calcium carbonate is the mineral that precipitates out to form these structures. there is iron in some of them causing a red/brown colour, black in others from manganese. there is also black caused by black smoke of the prehistoric inhabitants. the 1755 earthquake caused some of these stalacites to break off. the paleo art dates from at least 30,000 yrs ago. there is ongoing dating research verifying the dates using both carbon 14 methods and uranium. a Quebec university is involved and took samples 3 weeks ago. they take the pigment from the paints to check when that pigment was created. animal fat is used as a binder. ochre for red, black is used later in neolithic period , and I'm not sure what the brown pigment was. they would actually clear a space on the walk to create a canvas to create their images. many images of horses, goats and even fish in paleo. considering we are a bit away from the ocean this is interesting. there has been a bit of rope found. I wondered how they got into these caves as there are many off shoots. there is also evidence of them using oyster shells as a type of candle.
    there is both paleolithic 30,000 yrs with the red paintings and then neolithic with black paintings and more black lines they think to make lunar calendars. there was also a birdman.....very similar to ones we have seen at writing on stone and at mesa verde.
    there are pottery shards from bronze or copper age, and stone mills similar to what we saw in mexico...so maybe in the early agriculture era. our guide said the earliest inhabitants paleo were probably an extended family group of 40 people the later groups were only around 11. they calculate this based in excrement analysis and charcoal from the hearths. there was one point where the guide 'played' the stalacite. and it had a beautiful harmonic sound depending on where the fingers tapped. early paleo music??? this spot was opposite a pic of a stick man with a bow and arrow so neolithic at least. the next hall, the hall of fishes he had had us all turnout the lights for 10 sec and be perfectly quiet. it was so quiet. I dont know how they would have found their way if their candles went out...the guide also stamped his foot on the floor....after the lamps were back on and the echo was amazing. like a big base drum. under this hall of the fishes that is open to the public there is another cave that descends down 40m called the big pothole. these areas are under study and they have found skeletal remains. the skeletal remains are 5.000 yrs old for human and there are also animal bones. The walkway in was built in 1941 by the son of the discovered Tomas did with just a hammer and chisel. there are no photos in the caves, just the torchlight of the guide to illuminate the images.
    Read more

  • Day 15

    dinner at el campillo

    May 26, 2022 in Spain ⋅ 🌙 15 °C

    we walk up the same path we did the night before, but this time in dusk. we get to the top and el campillo is the restaurant right there so we sit down and eat. we had passed 3 English ladies asking where the gates were on our way up. As we are finishing our meals they will come back up and will have a drink at this same restaurant. they are keen travelers so good conversation with them. I had the biggest leg of baby goat, it was good but enormous and colin had the Iberia sirloin pork also very good. my water in the beautiful blue bottle cost the same as Colin's beer! this restaurant is on the plaza maria auxiladaria and has a lovely sunset view. after dinner on our way back to the car we will pass an old mineratre- minarete de san sebastian which was converted to the belfry of san sebastian church. tbe church is no longer there but the mineratte still stands. we found our way to the puerta de filipe v gate and over the upper bridge-puenta virgo through the padre jesus neighborhood which is now very quiet and back to the car.Read more