Bubión: PR—A 70
5 Mei, Spanyol ⋅ ⛅ 63 °F
My goal today was to be out in the high mountains. So this morning’s cloudless blue sky was an extra bonus. The local trail that crosses the river twice between Pampaneira (the village just below us) and Capileira (village just above us) seemed like a good bet. Better yet, it passes directly in front of our house, so it was literally two steps to the trail.
When we got to the information board at the edge of the village, there was a big sign posted, saying that the trail was in bad condition as a result of the winter storms. We debated for a while and decided to get as far as we could, because, optimistically, perhaps the trail had already been repaired. It was a beautiful walk with views of all three villages in the Barranco de Poqueira, and with especially nice views of Pico del Veleta rising snow-capped to dominate the skyline above Capileira. The trail started out nice and wide, narrowed down as things got steeper, and eventually was interrupted by rock slides that had not been cleared. However, it was a great walk to that point. Ned went farther to see if things would improve and had a view of the river before he came back to join us.
After lunch, we walked around the village, finding numerous elements that are detailed in the ADR fichas. The most exciting were the tinaos that look like they have not been “prettified”. In fact, some corners of Bubion seem almost medieval, similar to the remote villages we visited in Nepal. We found two kinds of tinaos that we have not seen before: tinaos-descargadero (to have a dry area for unloading animals in front of stables) and triangular tinaos (to make use of corner spaces).
In the late afternoon, Ned had the pleasure of sitting in the sunshine on the balcony of our 500 year-old house listening to station WCRB out of Boston play Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 9. When I asked him if it was dramatic enough to match the scenery, he said that actually, it’s one of Shostakovich’s least dramatic symphonies. The interesting thing behind it is that Stalin wanted it to be dramatic, like Beethoven’s ninth or Schubert’s ninth, but Shostakovich had other ideas. As you might expect, it got him into some serious trouble with the authorities.Baca selengkapnya
Bubión: Casa Las Alegas
4 Mei, Spanyol ⋅ ☀️ 59 °F
Even if today were the biggest fiesta day of the year in Bubión, there is absolutely no chance that the festivities would be taking place in front of our house. Casa las Alegas sits on the edge of a precipice that drops 230 m (754 ft) to the river. This sheer wall is named Tajo del Diablo, and is so steep that there is no trail down it. To cross the river from here, we will have to angle towards one of the other two villages in the Barranco de Poqueira. Needless to say, we are delighted with the peace and quiet of our new location.
(In Órgiva’s defense, I must add that the Mother’s Day music ended at 6 pm, so we did get plenty of sleep last night.)
Here in Bubión, we spent the entire afternoon getting organized. In spite of the fact that Bubión is a small village of only 350 people, it took us an hour and a half simply to find the house. It’s not on a street, just on a pedestrian trail, so there is no identifying street name or number. We had photo directions to the house, but they were hard to follow through the maze of very steep streets. I think we will be better at this by the end of the week.
Once found, the house was full of interesting details. We were especially surprised by the stone-filled ceilings. We’ve never seen anything like them before even during our other stays in the Alpujarra. Because Bubion is so high (1330 m/4363 ft) and is not close to any river, there are no local reeds to use in making a traditional ceiling. Here the material above the lathes are slate rocks. Very beautiful. I can’t imagine how much work it must’ve been to gather all the flat slate rocks that are in the walls, ceilings, and roof of this house. We hope to learn more about the history of the building soon.
As I talked about our walk for tomorrow with Javi, the owner of the house, he told us we will see lots of fallen trees and walls due to an exceptional period of rain and wind that lasted for weeks this last winter. There were landslides in this area and some extremely heavy snowfall up in the mountains - where there is still lots of snow. The ski resort just on the other side of the mountains nearest us still had snow four meters (13 ft) deep yesterday! I wonder if we will reach any of it?Baca selengkapnya

PelancongHere’s to quiet and more sleep — and to all who figure out beauty and function from local materials!

Pelancong
I've been wondering, how do you (two) pick the towns to stay in? You must know so many after all the time you have spent in the Alpujarras!

PelancongActually, the only village we’ve stayed in before that is repeated on this trip is Lanjarón, where we stayed one night in 2010.

PelancongI plan out our trips by checking if plenty of trails are available on Wikiloc and then uploading them to GaiaGPS, so I have an overview of the possibilities all on one map. For this trip we had a lot of curiosity about villages we had seen from afar on our two mountain bike trips to the Alpujarra. For those, we stayed up high and only spent one night in a place, often remote cortijos. You are so right that it is an enormous pleasure to begin to understand the geography and history of these places we had so many questions about. Thanks!
Orgiva: Río Seco
3 Mei, Spanyol ⋅ ⛅ 66 °F
We started out on the GR 142 this morning, hoping to climb Cerro Negro before the clouds descended so low that all views would be lost. But in a new twist on the locked gate story, a property owner on the public track had a gate that was not locked, but displayed bold signs warning off walkers. The signs, coupled with a comment that we had read on Wikiloc about threatening loose dogs, were as effective as a lock on the gate could have been. They certainly convinced us to try a different route.
Luckily, I had an alternative ready: a track that wound its way into the canyon carved by the Río Seco. Along the way we got to see more of the Acequia de las Ventanas, heard lots of frogs in balsas, and found a pomegranate bush far enough along in its development to clearly see the difference between the male and female flowers.
Best of all, the Río Seco wasn’t totally seco. There was enough water running in it to make a plant-filled canyon that inspired all sorts of birds to sing for us. Marie was delighted with the results she was getting from the Merlin app. So many birds to identify! (A big thank you to all of you who introduced us to Merlin on previous trips!) I was amazed by the rock walls of the canyon. So many colors in the rocks. And Ned had a wide variety of side trails to explore, so all of us were happy.
We had noticed when we left Órgiva this morning that the chairs and tables and loudspeakers had been cleared away, so after three nights of little sleep (last night’s festivities ended at 3 am), we were relieved that our final night here would be peaceful. You can guess what’s next in this story. Yup, the street was again transformed when we returned. This will make the fourth night in a row of music on a playlist that never stops, played at a volume that neither earplugs nor a fan can make a dent in. Luckily we are moving to the small village of Bubión tomorrow, and our house is at the edge of the village facing the silent and deep Barranco del Río Poqueira.Baca selengkapnya
Órgiva: oldest parts of town
2 Mei, Spanyol ⋅ ☁️ 70 °F
Isn’t that opening photo priceless? While we were wandering up and down Calles Libertad, Cristo de la Expiración, and Barrio Alto today, many kind people asked us if they could help us find something. When we explained that we were looking for old houses that had existed in the past in Órgiva, most of them shook their heads and said that many of the old houses were gone. But one woman told us there was a wonderful large poster on the side of one of the buildings down the street that showed what Calle Libertad looked like almost 100 years ago. Marie spotted it, and we stood in front of it in awe, looking at all those women seated by their baskets selling food grown in their huertas. The way the street is lined with them makes me think there was no such thing as a grocery store in those days in Órgiva.
We did find one of the old houses we were looking for; it used to be a courthouse. But the other five we sought seem to have been torn down. We have photos of what they looked like in 2001, but 25 years later in the same spots, there are only vacant lots. So we have to be satisfied with the six we found on our last visit.
One unusual find today was a humilladero. These crosses were often found at the entrances and exits of villages in the past.
We had better luck with our shopping, finding some staples like powdered milk and instant oatmeal that will come in very handy in villages that don’t have grocery stores. Anticipating warmer weather, Ned also found a pair of shorts in an Asian bazaar.
The second night of the fiesta outside our windows ran from 2 PM to 2 AM last night, and we were hoping that might be the end of it. But when we got back from our walk today, the loudspeakers were blasting out music again. We aren’t on either of the main plazas, so we are a bit mystified as to why our street is the center of the festivities.Baca selengkapnya

mary louise adamsThe fiestas in the streets are quite something! I hope you get some sleep!
Órgiva: Wild rivers!
1 Mei, Spanyol ⋅ ☁️ 68 °F
It’s hard to believe we can have so many spectacular days! The reason we came back to Órgiva a second time was to give Marie a chance to see the remote, wild setting of El Valero, the home of author Chris Stewart. She just recently re-read all three of his books describing his life here. Since this was Ned’s and my second walk out that way, we didn’t expect to see anything new today. But as it turned out, we saw all sorts of new things, and kept asking each other, “How did we miss that on our first walk?”
We followed the GR 142, the senda medieval, walking about twice as far as we went the first time. We came to a point just opposite El Valero where we had a good view of the house and the out-buildings as well as the garden and the road. Stewart describes the construction of all of these in the chapters of his books, so we had many details stored in our memory to add to what we could see with our eyes. The bridge that he constructed across the Río Trevélez to be able to take his daughter to school in Orgiva was not visible at all today. We are assuming it was washed away by the torrential rains in February. We were not the only ones looking for it today. A group of motorcyclists came by loaded with tents and camping gear, but they could find no way to cross. Nor could the walkers who came down on the other side of the river, hoping to cross to the Orgiva side.
Just as exciting, we had our first view of the spot called Junta de los Ríos where the Río Trevélez coming from the north meets the Guadalfeo coming from the east. The combined waters then flow south and eventually turn west to flow under the Puente de Los Siete Ojos and form the Embalse de Rules. Whew! What a lot of geography we have seen in our eight weeks here.
Numerous pomegranate bushes caught our attention with their bright red fruits. We were able to solve the confusion that their shape caused us when we first saw them a few days ago. Today it was very clear that the small red tubular buds open up into flowers. But it turns out there are two kinds of flowers on each plant: male (numerous) and female (rare). Only the pollinated female flowers turn into the fruit that we associate with the word pomegranate. Female flowers have a bell-shaped base, while male flowers are narrow and fall off shortly after blooming.
Now we are back and the fiesta is continuing directly below our windows. Last night‘s fiesta de la Cruz ended at 1 AM, so I am guessing today’s May Day celebration will also end at 1 AM.Baca selengkapnya
Órgiva: Las Barreras
30 April, Spanyol ⋅ ☁️ 68 °F
Las Barreras is a little hamlet to the NW of Orgiva that we didn’t have time to explore the last time we were here. It actually falls inside the Orgiva municipal limits, and has eleven elements from the ADR fichas to be found within it. This was Marie‘s first time to be out on a ficha detective walk, trying to match the number and photo of an element with the description. Back home while getting ready for this trip, once I finished translating a ficha, I emailed it to Marie, and she formatted each of the 500 or so pages we prepared. So she has invested a significant amount of time in this project.
It was absolutely delightful to see her face light up when we got to Las Barreras and opened up the first photo and map. She looked around and immediately spotted number 056, the Alfarería Cacherche, a pottery workshop with a long history and a kiln in working order. The morning proceded in similar vein. In all, we were able to find eight of the eleven elements, and Marie was so delighted at each find that Ned and I experienced our own first-day enthusiasm all over again.
This put the day’s frustrations in perspective: accidentally leaving behind on the bus my beloved Patagonia Houdini jacket whose bright orange three ounces have valiantly protected me from wind, rain, cold, and speeding cars; meeting a locked gate on an essential part of the trail home; Ned getting stung by an angry bee as we walked by its bee box; and finding out that our casa rural has a front row seat for the May Day celebrations that started at full volume at 3 pm and are sure to continue past midnight.Baca selengkapnya

PelancongSo sorry about the day’s frustrations! I hope you can sleep, stay warm, and continue to be delighted by the magic you keep uncovering — and making.

Debi BrockSpanish holidays remain a mystery to me. The one thing I know is that they are frequent! Also, I hope that your jacket is still being made!
Órgiva: Cortijo del Tocino
29 April, Spanyol ⋅ ⛅ 61 °F
We might have seen the historic Cortijo del Tocino today… or we might not. But for sure, we saw a new part of the Rìo Guadalfeo.
The very detailed 1:10,000 map produced by Cartografía de Andalucia shows the historic cortijo exactly where we were. But the IGN map and OpenStreetMap show it in a different location about three km away and not reachable from the Orgiva side of the river. It’s hard to know which map is correct. Even the photo from the ADR office here in Orgiva was not helpful in identifying the cortijo because it’s taken from a distance and shows a number of different buildings.
In any case, we had a very informative walk because we were able to see a stretch of the Río Guadalfeo that is close to where it joins up with the Río Izbor coming down from Béznar (where we were last week). It was much more meaningful to see this after having crossed the presa at Béznar. There we looked down into the same wild area (El Salto de Lobo) that we walked to from the other end today.
We may be getting a better grip on the geography of this area, but we sure guessed wrong about how much the water level might have decreased in the Rio Chico since we were last in Órgiva two months ago. If anything, the level is even higher now than it was then! Absolutely no possibility of crossing it at the ford.Baca selengkapnya
Back in the Alpujarra
28 April, Spanyol ⋅ ☁️ 64 °F
Today was a day of everything going right. Marie’s plane arrived early, we were able to catch an earlier bus to Granada, the rain didn’t obscure the views through the Sierra Magina, and the sun came out as we reached Órgiva. Back to walking tomorrow!Baca selengkapnya

PelancongSo nice to share your experience with your daughter. Buen camino a todos ♥️👣♥️👣♥️👣
A quick trip to Madrid and back
27 April, Spanyol ⋅ ☀️ 66 °F
It seems quite wonderful that you can hop on a bus in the morning in a tiny place like Béznar - a village so small it can’t support a single tienda - and be at the Madrid airport by 1:30. We are here to meet our daughter who is arriving early tomorrow morning to hike in some of the more remote parts of the Alpujarra with us. We’ll be back in Órgiva by 6 tomorrow evening. I wish we had that kind of service at home!Baca selengkapnya

Laurie ReynoldsI am also so tempted to start ranting about public transportation in the US, but I will bite my tongue! Where are you staying tonight? Hope you get a chance to do a little something in Madrid. Hooray for Marie’s arrival!

PelancongWe are at the Clement Barajas because we have to be at the airport at 6 tomorrow morning. We’ve stayed here before. They have good soundproofing!

PelancongI really hope spain stays ‘as is’ for some time to come. Are you catching return bus from airport ? Or flying somewhere ? Enjoy your time in Madrid and buen camino to Marie.

PelancongA return bus from the airport, Annie. Back in the Alpujarra soon!

PelancongWow. Great connections. Our public transport is fair (trains mainly) but bus transport is mainly local. Oz doesn’t have the connecting buses to regions that they have in spain. 🇪🇸. I recall seeing the bus terminal there for the first time. Amazing !!
Béznar: a locked gate
26 April, Spanyol ⋅ ⛅ 64 °F
We had an ambitious plan this morning: to walk west through the numerous villages in the Lecrín Valley that we had cycled through on the TransAndalus heading east in 2010. We had gotten lost in the orange groves on that trip, and we were hoping today that we could find the turn we had missed and see some of the things we remembered. To get as far as possible down into the valley itself, we decided to take the bus to Talará to give us a headstart.
We began with a lovely walk through the seemingly endless orange and lemon groves that fill the Lecrín Valley. The villages in the upper reaches were still in the clouds, but by the time we reached the Rio Torrente, we were in the sunshine. We were struck by how many of the olive trees had been allowed to grow to their full height. We also noticed that some of the orange groves were being replaced by avocado plantations. It was fun to see places we remembered like the orange cooperative that prepares the fruit for transport all over Spain.
The Ruta Transandalus often uses the path of the GR 7 which today we found easy to follow. We weren’t sure how we missed it on our bikes. One reason might be that 2010 was the first trip we used GPS, and there certainly was no Wikiloc app in those days. We had a very primitive black-and-white Garmin that we had trouble following, whereas now it’s possible to see exactly where we are in relation to the trail on a full color screen with a choice of background maps. So easy!
Easy, that is, until we ran into a locked gate. It’s one thing to find a such a gate near your turn-around point on an out-and-back route; you just stop a bit short of your goal and say oh, well. But it’s another thing entirely to reach a locked gate when you are 3/4 of the way through a loop trip or on a one-way route. Even worse if you have a bus to catch!
We ended up having to walk as fast as possible in the wrong direction so that we could then connect with a road that would take us in the right direction. Luckily, we made it back to the bus stop with exactly two minutes to spare!Baca selengkapnya

PelancongWow … to the last minute rush. Just enough time to get your breath. 👍
Béznar: Iron Age fort
25 April, Spanyol ⋅ 🌧 59 °F
Béznar should win a prize for having plenty of good walks leading to places of interest from all different eras.
Today we set out for an Iron Age fort we saw marked on the IGN map. There were no Wikiloc tracks to it, but there was an extensive page on its history on the Dúrcal website. Using Wikiloc’s “Plan Trail” tool, we laid out a route that had a few iffy-looking sections, but in general, seemed quite doable. And in fact, it was.
Fog and clouds swirled around us as we set out, but it didn’t rain. Our route took us along the edge of the embalse, snaking back-and-forth around each inlet. Five or six different kinds of yellow flowers brightened up the trail below a long line of bee boxes. It is Saturday, so for the first time, we saw fishermen out on the reservoir.
When we got close to our goal, we needed to cross the barranco carved out by the Rio Chite. Scouting out the various choices, we picked a wide but shallow crossing. At that point, two hikers from Motril (down on the coast) came along, and all four of us got to the other side with dry feet. We worked our way up a couple of steep climbs and were within a few hundred meters of the fort when we ran into a locked gate. Oh well, it was a beautiful route there and back, and not such a great disappointment because there isn’t much left of the fort except the base of the walls. We could imagine it from having been able to look at the setting on our way there.
Back to Béznar via a different river crossing, this time shorter deeper, and in spite of Ned adding extra rocks to help me out, we both ended up with wet feet - me from not being agile enough, and Ned from trying to help me. It wasn’t cold though, so it really didn’t make any difference.
At any rate, now we know why there aren’t any Wikiloc tracks to the fort.Baca selengkapnya

Pelancong
When using those float tubes at home, they come with flippers to help you propel yourself along when flyfishing.
Béznar: Earthquake
24 April, Spanyol ⋅ ☁️ 55 °F
Waking up to the house and bed shaking was disconcerting, but it turned out to be only one of the hundreds of small quakes that regularly occur in Andalucia. Its epicenter was nearby though, in Jayena, only about 10 miles from here (16 km). Coincidentally, just yesterday I was admiring the prominent geological scar visible above Dúrcal. This tectonic fracture, created by the uplift of the Sierra Nevada, has shifted rocks by over 1000 meters, leaving visible striations. We walked up to it in 2018, but I hadn’t expected to see it on this trip, especially not on the day before a fault- related event!
Clouds kept the temperature down today, so we had a nice cool walk past the village lavadero, through old orchards, and up to Cerro Redondo. Along the way, we spotted a smaller version of the magnificent pine tree that we saw shading Cortijo Albercón two weeks ago. I think of that majestic tree every time we are out walking, and have rued the fact that we weren’t able to identify it. At the time, neither PlantSnap nor the “i” in Photos was able to definitively name its species. But today when we reached the similar tree only to find that it also was shading a cortijo from the southern sun, a bell went off in my head. I asked Google if there was a particular sort of pine tree that was commonly planted in front of cortijos in Andalucia, and in seconds it told me that stone pines were frequently used. Sure enough, looking up the scientific name, pinus pinea, turned up multiple photos that resembled the two trees we’ve seen. Mystery solved.
New things to investigate cropped up during our walk, however. In particular, we wondered why the trees in one fairly large avocado grove were pruned back to no leaves and completely covered with whitewash. We’ve read that the whitewash is used to disinfect trees, but we usually see it used on only a portion of the trunk.
One more unusual sight was an entire grove of olive trees, where every single one of the old trees was cut off right at ground level and a new trunk was sprouting from the old. We’ve frequently seen large old trees cut back to make the height easier for picking and because it helps the tree produce more olives, but this was a radical cutting compared to others that we’ve seen.
So…two new mysteries to ponder. (Added to the long-standing question of why some grape vineyards are trellised and others are free-standing, like bushes. I bet AI has answers.)
Yup. I should have looked all this up before I wrote today’s entry. In short:
1. A solution of 50% white latex paint, 50 % water protects the thin bark of young avocados from sunburn and disease.
2. Complete cutting back to the stump allows regeneration of worn-out olive trees with a poor ratio of leaves to wood.
3. Stump planting of grapes produces more flavor; trellised vines are easier for mechanization and for exposing the fruit to sunlight.Baca selengkapnya

Laurie Reynolds
So does this mean that soapy water went into the acequia to irrigate the crops? I had never thought about where the lavadero water would end up.

Laurie Reynolds
That looks radical, but I guess they know what they’re doing. So the trees should grow and produce again in the near future?

PelancongI guess so. I wish there had been someone working there so we could have asked. At first, I thought it was a whitewash made with lime, but AI says latex paint.
Béznar: Castillo de Zoraya
23 April, Spanyol ⋅ ☁️ 73 °F
Combining our need to top up our groceries (the nearest store is in the village of Talará) with our desire to hike up to the Castillo de Zoraya (accessed from the village of Mondújar, next to Talará), we decided to take the first bus of the morning to Talará. This gave us a chance to make the climb up to the castle while it was still cool, which turned out to be a very good decision.
The trail up had sections through an almond orchard, and then an olive orchard. This had a new irrigation system, using pipes running directly beside the traditional acequia. Soon the trail got steeper, but still quite doable in the cool of the morning. A series of caves that looked like they had once been used as shelters became visible. Then we were up above the trees, and the castle popped into view. Now the trail got steeper and steeper, but there was no drop off beside it, so it was not scary. Just 14 m of elevation shy of the top, it became so steep and littered with loose stones that I knew it would be quite difficult for me to get back down without slipping and falling. I stopped at that point, and Ned went on to the castle where he was able to explore the structure and see the double curve of the entrance that made it easier to defend.
The fortress was built on the orders of the penultimate Nasrid sultan, Muley Hacén. (It was his son, Boabdil, who handed over the keys of the city of Granada to Ferdinand and Isabella in 1492.) The castle also included gardens and orchards and was a favorite retreat for the royal family. Its name comes from Hacén’s second wife, Zoraya.
Muley Hacén died there in 1485 and was buried in Mondújar, but after the Christian Reconquest, his remains were moved to the highest mountain in mainland Spain, Mulhacén. I was delighted to learn how the mountain got its name, since I had never made that connection before!
The way down turned out to be easy because we imitated a tractor-trailer. Ned was the semi in front and I was the trailer in back, hanging on to his runner’s vest. No slips!Baca selengkapnya

Pelancong
Already that big?! We have seen the blossoms in February, and now they are already this size? Surprise

Laurie Reynolds
Oh I love climbing around in castles. All pretty and restored is nice, but there’s something much more evocative about being alone in castle ruins. This is really something.
Béznar: Hang on to your hat!
22 April, Spanyol ⋅ ☀️ 75 °F
The theme of the day was wind and water power. Both were uppermost in our minds as we were walking over the top of the Presa (dam) de Béznar. The sound of the water escaping from the dam is deafening, and the wind blowing down the valley of the Río Izbor is strong enough that I had to hang onto my hat or I’d be watching it sail off toward the Mediterranean.
Pleasant gravel tracks led us from the village to the dam, and dirt tracks that followed the irregular shoreline brought us back. But the exciting part was the dam itself. It has a road over the top with sidewalks on either side. Sturdy hand rails keep you from being blown off. There are even little viewing miradors right in the middle.
The dam was built in 1986 to provide a constant water supply (along with the Rules Reservoir just downstream) for the Endesa hydroelectric power plant in Ízbor. It also helps with flood control and irrigation. The top of the dam is 110 m (360 ft) above the river , so we had a dizzying view of the area called salto del lobo - metaphorically so narrow a wolf could jump over it.
The reservoir is at 85 % capacity this week - a heartening sight, since on many of our recent trips the water in various reservoirs has been dismayingly low. It’s hardly rained at all since we’ve been here in Andalucia, so I guess the reservoir must be full from rain that fell in the tremendous storms of January and February.
On the walk back, Ned immediately recognized a nightingale singing because he has heard it so often when listening to Respighi’s Pines of Rome. (That was the first orchestral piece to incorporate electronic sound, using a 1910 recording of a live nightingale.)
Unfortunately, we can’t upload an audio recording to FindPenguins. We should have videotaped it.Baca selengkapnya

Pelanconga building, 30 stories high, 100 meter wide, 100 meter long . If you fill that up you will have 1 cubique hectometer, roughly 400 olympic swimming pools. But he … keep on walking !
Béznar: a tale of three bridges
21 April, Spanyol ⋅ ☁️ 68 °F
The main reason for choosing to stay in Béznar this week was to be able to walk to the abandoned village of Tablate. During Muslim times, Tablate was an alquería (a small group of farmhouses) located at the one point where the villages of the Alpujarra could be accessed from the west: over the Tablate Bridge.
Amazingly, although two newer bridges have since been built to cross the barranco at exactly the same point, we were able to cross it today on the medieval bridge, the lowest one. What an experience! Robust and solid after all these centuries, its single arch allows passage over the river in a deep gorge between sheer vertical walls. Looking down, we could barely see the bottom. Directly above us were the 19th century bridge and the cable-stayed current bridge built in 2001. From the looks of the new road construction we saw yesterday, all three will soon be replaced by a tunnel farther up the barranco.
Everything that we had read ahead of time stated that the village of Tablate gradually depopulated during the 1960s when there were so many emigrants from Spain to other countries in Europe. The last permanent resident was supposedly a shepherd who died in the 1990s. So you can imagine how surprised we were when we got to the village today and the very first house we saw was clearly new and lived in, with laundry hanging on lines in both the front and the back.
The rest of the village, though, was very much in ruins. This made it easy to see the details of construction in the various buildings. The most interesting for us to see was the tower for the counterbalancing beam of an old olive oil mill. This is very similar to the beam tower we saw at the Benizalte Mill in Órgiva seven weeks ago.
All the Wikiloc tracks to Tablate show photos of a dome-shaped brick bread oven. We were really looking forward to seeing this, but it must have recently collapsed, because only the bottom part was still visible. All in all, though, it was easy to imagine life here and understand why the conquered Muslims tried to recover it in their unsuccessful War of the Alpujarras in 1569.Baca selengkapnya

PelancongYou two should be leading guided walks! Every day has been fascinating as you show us what you see and have found. And now I am off to learn more about the War of the Alpujarras. ❤️

PelancongI really loved the various bridges and how they have each lasted. I somehow connected to the village, The church just touched me somehow. You said 7 weeks? How can that be?? mI seems like maybe 3. Be safe and Carrt]y ON!!
Béznar: fruit trees galore
20 April, Spanyol ⋅ ☀️ 72 °F
Today was a relocation day. As we packed up, we ruthlessly eliminated anything we thought we wouldn’t be using for the next month. With high hopes that we would be able to mail this small pile home, we headed off to the closest correos. Unfortunately, they didn’t have any boxes of the right size, so all the items just went right back into our packs.
Next stop was the Día grocery store so that we could buy a week’s worth of food. There is no grocery store or even small tienda in the village where we are now staying.
The taxi driver who took us, our packs, and our four bags of groceries from Lanjaron to Béznar was full of information about the roadworks that are taking place between Lanjarón and the motorway that goes north to Granada and south to Motril. He says the use of bridges and tunnels will cut 3 km out of a 9 km route. Right now the construction machines look overpowering. There are huge cuts and scrapes all along the route. At one point there is only one lane of traffic. I am wondering if it will be hard to get through all of this on our return trip from Madrid to Orgiva.
We are now in a small, newly renovated house in the village of Beznar - about which we know absolutely nothing. Beznar is not in the Alpujarra so it was not inventoried by the ADR project that produced the fichas, nor does it appear in Donald Gray’s books. It’s in the Valle de Lecrin. We picked it as a place to stay this week because it is close to Lanjarón, it looked like there would be interesting walks leading out from the village, and we needed a place beyond the road construction so we’d be able to make our bus connections to Madrid next week to meet our daughter arriving from Boston. The two short walks we took this afternoon introduced us to the area. Plus, our house has a variation on the traditional aleros we discovered in Lanjarón yesterday! Under other circumstances, we would never have glanced up and noticed the eaves or known anything about their significance, so it was quite a nice coincidence to be able to use our new knowledge so quickly.Baca selengkapnya

Pelancong
Still early I see but I love smelling the fig trees when close to eating stage. Mmmmmm

Debi BrockI hope that you two have a plan for making your huge amount of research available to a broader public!
Lanjarón: Aleros
19 April, Spanyol ⋅ ☁️ 68 °F
After spending an inordinate amount of time this morning struggling with the Alsa bus app, we finally broke free and used our last afternoon in Lanjaron to compare the drawings made by the architect Donald Gray with the current look of the town. To our surprise, we realized that we had completely overlooked the craftsmanship of the aleros (eaves) on one of the traditional houses we photographed earlier this week. They are gorgeous, and the only ones like them that we saw still remaining.
One of Gray’s goals was to preserve the vernacular craftsmanship that he so admired. In 1986 he started the Lebrija Crafts School where master craftsman could pass down the dying arts of the area. He also added careful measurements to the sketches he made so that future builders would know the exact dimensions previously used. These sketches were published in a series of four illustrated books on the architectural traditions of the various areas of La Alpujarra, “seeking to bring such traditions closer to the people who inhabit and build there, so that they may know and respect them also.”
Our other big find of the day was the Convento de las Hijas de la Caridad which has been dedicated to education for over a century. As teachers ourselves, we would have loved to see the boarding school for girls they established in 1900, but the gates were firmly closed. In fact, we were only positive about the location due to the very tall pine tree we knew was on the grounds. We could see it over the wall!
We have thoroughly enjoyed our nine days here and have learned a lot, thanks to Marta, the ADR fichas, and Donald Grey. Tomorrow we are off to the village of Béznar.Baca selengkapnya

PelancongHow wonderful to have such beautiful and clear sketches with to to compare your photos of today (well done on angle accuracy!). It's lovely to see that in some cases, only the trees have changed.

PelancongThanks! It was very engaging to stand in the street and make the comparisons. Ned worked hard on the photo angles.

PelancongI've also spent ages battling with Alsa today preparing my trip home on Thursday
Lanjarón: the other side of the tajo
18 April, Spanyol ⋅ ⛅ 73 °F
Every day we look out our window at the sheer red-and black rock face of the Tajo Colorao across the Río Lanjarón. Today we walked around to the other side of it. It was so different, so green and smooth and verdant, that at first we thought we were looking in the wrong place. After thinking about it for a while, we are guessing that the sheer north face was cut down by the powerful river over thousands of years, leaving the south face to the gentler erosion of wind and rain.
It was an easy walk today - much appreciated after yesterday! We got an early start to avoid the hottest part of the day. The area we walked through lies between the Río Lanjarón and the Río Guadalfeo. It held two interesting surprises for us, both described in the ADR fichas. First was the Casa de los Peones Camineros del Visillo. Built in the early 1900s, this was a house in which two families of road maintenance workers lived. They were in charge of this section of the road that connects the Alpujarra with Granada.
Beside the house, a small mine excavated in the hillside served as a refuge for the inhabitants of the house during the Civil War.
The house was very utilitarian and identical to others built throughout the Alpujarra. In fact, there was a whole network of accommodations for these road maintenance workers throughout the country. For those of you who are walking here, there is a website with photos and maps for all of Spain at https://www.casillasdepeonescamineros.es/
Our second find was the Cortijo de La Campana. It was the most important cortijo in Lanjarón during the 1900s, both in terms of size and the agricultural activity that took place there. We walked down its lane to get a closer look, but the gates were locked. Although the building is in ruins, the land around it is clearly being used. There were several cars parked inside the gates, and workers were visible in the fields near the building. As we walked on, we got a better view of the olive groves. There are 16 clearly defined layers of bancales, all meticulously maintained.
Quite a nice day!Baca selengkapnya

Pelancong
Great statement for the bench. Spent the last two days at the Eagles club in Daytona Beach as a temporary member of the band. So nice to be involved once again.
Lanjarón: Acequias Aceituno and Cercarta
17 April, Spanyol ⋅ ☁️ 70 °F
There are 20 acequias that draw water from the Rio Lanjarón! The town of Lanjarón does an excellent job of maintaining trails along two of these acequias: the Aceituno and the Cercarta.
We had perfect weather to climb up to these two today: clear skies, lots of sunshine, and hardly any wind. But by the time we had climbed for three hours straight up from town, we would have welcomed a rain storm and strong winds. It was very, very beautiful and very, very hot!
The Acequia Aceituno has a sheer drop of about 100 m to the river, so the ayuntamiento has installed metal railings along the most dangerous parts. We were very glad for these – without them we absolutely could not have walked this trail. It didn’t pay to look too closely at the erosion and rust, though! Nevertheless, they gave a much appreciated sense of security.
The Acequia Cercarta, on the other hand, was a beautiful high level walk without the frightening overtones. We had good views of the high mountain country around us. The face opposite was full of hundreds of abandoned bancales. Another area was burned, probably from the bad fire that occurred at Tello a few years ago. We’ve noticed a helicopter flying overhead frequently the last couple of days and are guessing it is looking for forest fires.
Up close, we noticed that the open acequia sections are lined with trees, but when the acequia disappears into an enclosed tube, water can’t leak out into the surrounding ground, so the trees in those areas have all died.
At the end of the acequia, there was a steep, cobbled path back to town where we are now cooled off and happy to have had such a special day in the mountains.Baca selengkapnya

PelancongIt was about half with a guardrail and half without. Those were the parts that were really scary!
Lanjarón: La Fábrica y El Castillo
16 April, Spanyol ⋅ ☀️ 57 °F
We thought today was going to be about walking through the Barranco del Salado looking for the remains of an ochre factory, and then continuing on to the castle that protected the approaches to the Alpujarra from Roman times on. We did indeed do those two things, but the day was really about the chance conversations we lucked into.
To begin with, as we were walking through town to the trailhead, Ned saw people wildly waving their arms in a café as we passed by. Then he realized they were waving at us. Who in Lanjarón could possibly know us well enough to be waving at us over a cup of coffee? It was Ramón and Michelle from Casa Walhalla! They were in town to do some paperwork and were as surprised to see us as we were to see them. A reunion with them was a great way to start the day!
Next came the barranco. We knew that an ochre factory had once flourished here and were determined to look for remains of it. We made our way across an old dique (dam) built for flood protection. It has completely silted up behind the dam in the hundred years since it was built, but the other side was a sheer drop. Luckily, it was easy to cross with a railing at the top. As we descended through a eucalyptus forest (also introduced for flood control), we kept peering through the undergrowth, looking for signs of the Fabrica del Ocre. We were able to spot stone foundations, stairways, an old brick wall, another graffiti covered wall, and supports for carrying water from one part of the operation to another. Everything was covered with thick growth, but we could imagine how busy this now peaceful spot must have been when Explotaciones Mineras de Granada S.A. was extracting ochre. I had no idea before today what an ocher factory was or did, but found out it’s where hydrated iron oxide (ochre), was used to prepare colors in paints. Due to the high quality and quantity of the ocher here, the factory remained open until the 1980s. The ficha notes that its closure is ”an example of the disappearance of small local industries over time, abandoned due to their low profitability and the replacement of this natural dye with others.”
Today the only sounds were the waterfalls and the birds: Cetti’s warblers, Eurasian wrens, and Eurasian blackcaps.
From low down in the barranco, it is a steep climb up to the castle. If I had been in an attacker, I would have given up long before reaching the top! Even with the rock steps available to current visitors, it was scary enough that I surrendered 9/10 of the way up. Ned made it to the top and was able to see the cistern that supplied the garrison.
While he was doing that, a young Spanish couple stopped to talk to me, and my Spanish extended just far enough to explains the basics of the extraction, washing, grinding , and sifting that had taken place in the Fábrica del Ocer. They hadn’t known anything about it and set off to see what they could find on their walk back.
Just as Ned came down and reached the spot where I was waiting, a Bulgarian couple and their friend reached us. We had a wonderfully long conversation in English and Spanish with a few words of French thrown in for good measure. They were involved with a course in lace making, and were using their free time to explore the Alpujarra. Ned has often talked to Bulgarians on his ham radio, but this was our first in-person conversation with anyone from there. We were grateful for the time they spent sharing ideas with us!
On our way back into town, we met a class of middle schoolers on a field trip to the castle. A third of the group wished us “buen día” as they passed, another third studiously ignored us, and the last third, egged on by their giggling friends, loudly shouted “hello”.
Back at our house, we met up with Marta to talk about everything from her renovation of this house to her grandmother‘s experiences during the Spanish Civil War.
We didn’t find the limestone kiln or the Bronze Age village remains near the castle, but it was a great and varied day!
.Baca selengkapnya
Lanjarón: Old manor houses
15 April, Spanyol ⋅ ⛅ 66 °F
Grocery shopping, making reservations for the next 6 weeks, and another haircut (me this time) used up our morning, but left our afternoon free for some ficha detective work.
Of the 81 entries on the ADR inventory for Lanjarón, seven are for historic houses within the town limits, and all seven have street addresses given - a real rarity! So we had pretty good luck finding what we were looking for. We identified four of the seven for sure, and another one as a maybe. The other two have completely disappeared - not surprisingly, since the inventory was done 25 years ago.
It was quite fun to search these out. Ned had the 2001 photos on his phone, I had the ficha descriptions on my phone, and I also had a piece of paper where I had jotted down both the ficha number and the street address. When we thought we were at the right spot, Ned would compare the photo to the current building, and if it seemed like a match, I would share the ficha notes. We got quite excited over finding things like coats of arms and corbels. For each house that we were sure about, we put a waypoint on the Wikiloc track we were making and added photos to the track of any noted points from the ficha that were still visible.
We’ve walked by several of these buildings three or four times now, and never particularly noticed them before because they can be a bit (or a lot) rundown. But they took on a new life in our eyes when we had specific things to look for.
When we get home, I’ll have to level up my track editing skills and learn how to combine the fountains, tinaos, and manor houses currently on separate tracks into a single gpx track.
For anyone interested, the Spanish ficha 032 for the house at Calle Real, 44 in today’s photos is available online at https://79f1dde2-d033-4cc2-aad9-08edc948e824.fi…
I’ve translated the fichas for the villages we are visiting on this trip and have copies on my phone. I’ve attached the English version of ficha 032 as a document at the end of today’s photos.Baca selengkapnya

PelancongI really want to see Agustín Sánchez Hita’s inventory have a wider audience, so it’s fun to be a middleman.

Laurie ReynoldsThis is what I call a woman on a mission! It gives such purpose to your fun-filled days!
Lanjarón: Cortijo Albercón Bajo
14 April, Spanyol ⋅ ☀️ 61 °F
Imagine coming around a bend in a forest road, looking for an old cortijo, expecting some crumbling ruins, and seeing the above view in front of you. What a special, special day!
When I discovered the ADR fichas online in 2024, the first area for which I tried to determine locations was Lanjarón. There are 81 fichas for Lanjarón, and only about a third of them have exact locations given, so I started using every tool I could think of to precisely locate the other two-thirds. Cortijo Albercón Bajo was the first element I was able to pinpoint. I was so happy to find it on the Spanish IGN (Instituto Geográfico Nacional) maps. There were no Wikiloc tracks to the cortijo, but using the trail planning tool in the app, I was able to lay out a track that would take us from the town of Lanjarón to not only Cortijo Albercón Bajo, but also to Cortijo Albercón Alto and the Escolta mines.
Today, two years later, we actually got to walk that track. We had welcome shade almost the entire climb up and a nice wide forest road to follow (actually the GR 7, which, for a change, was easily doable). A Eurasian blackcap’s song cheered us on.
It was electrifying to come around a corner and see the cortijo for the first time. Its setting is simply magnificent, especially today with the bluest sky you could possibly wish for. The enormous pine tree that rises above the roof of the farmhouse and covers the entrance like a porch is especially striking.
The building is typical of the large farmhouses from the early 1900s which were accompanied by sizable expanses of land. The structure is still in good shape, but it doesn’t appear to be in use (although it was occupied 25 years ago when the ficha was written). The olive orchards next to the cortijo are being maintained. We could hear a tractor at work, and the farmer’s small dog came over with his tail wagging a friendly hello. There is an era behind the house where the family would have threshed their own wheat, and below which we ate our snack of mandarin oranges, admiring the view down to the Embalse de Rules and the Mediterranean. What a setting!
We next worked our way up to Cortijo Albercón Alto. It was in bad repair and not at all special. But after passing a tractor that had clearly seen better days, we had a fine view of the Escolta Mine. It may date from Roman times and was used for the extraction of iron until the 1970s.
Our route down was a copy of our walk from Nigüelas to Lanjarón on April 15, 2009. In one more day that will be 17 years ago! It was raining that day and so foggy that I am sure we never saw Cortijo Albercón Bajo as we passed by. A dog followed us from high up in the mountains all the way down to Lanjarón. We went into the information center to ask for help, and the nice woman there called a local vet who, it turned out, actually knew the dog and reunited him with his owner.Baca selengkapnya
Lanjarón: the balneario
13 April, Spanyol ⋅ ☀️ 43 °F
By walking out beyond the west end of town this morning, we were able to get a view of the castle and see some of the trailheads we will be using in the next few days. We then worked our way back into town, making a Wikiloc track for the other 12 of the 23 fountains that we didn’t see yesterday, plus various related buildings.
Starting in 1774, the healing properties claimed for the various springs here made Lanjarón famous. Add in the thermal springs, and by the 1800’s, the balneario (spa) itself was established. Lanjarón was now a destination for tourists.
The building we saw today was started in the 1920s after the original was destroyed in the earthquake of 1884. Inside there are various pools fed by five different springs (temperatures between 16° and 27° C / 60° - 80° F with bicarbonated, sodium, calcium, ferruginous, and magnesium qualities), treatment rooms, a theater space for live performances, and hotel rooms. (I originally thought it might be fun to stay there, but then we would have missed Marta’s house!)
While Ned got his hair cut, I tried to learn more about the tinao-adarves we saw yesterday, and chanced upon something totally unexpected. According to research done by a Jesuit priest , Father Ferrer, “the oldest works in the Hondillo neighborhood of Lanjarón were made by Jewish residents centuries ago. The objective of these buildings was to maintain a certain family independence around a patio and covered walkway where access from the street could only be obtained through a gigantic door or an enormous gate made mainly of chestnut wood.” This explains the big wooden door we saw yesterday.
Father Ferrer maintained that “since the daughters of Jews could only marry the sons of their paternal uncle, the family environment was thus preserved within these doorways. It was a way to ensure that the family patrimony would not be divided but would remain united even as the children grew up.”
Father Ferrer also says that “the buildings in the Hondillo neighborhood are different from those found in other parts of La Alpujarra because they also hold a religious significance. According to the Torah, on the Sabbath people could not take anything out of their homes, such as food, but since the covered walkway often had a courtyard, people could exchange items on the Sabbath without breaking the law.”Baca selengkapnya

PelancongLooks lovely. When I lived in Germany many years ago you could buy an entrance and take all the baths and fountains. Extra were massages.
Lanjarón: Adarves, fuentes, and tinaos
12 April, Spanyol ⋅ ☁️ 61 °F
Lanjarón is known for its healing waters. It has 23 fuentes that can supposedly cure almost anything - blindness, anemia, arthritis, liver problems, kidney problems… We set out to make a Wikiloc track with the historical information from the ADR fichas about the fuentes on the east side of town today and found eleven of them.
As a totally unexpected bonus, we ended up walking along Calle Hondillo, a lane that leads through the oldest part of town, and found ourselves ducking under one tinao after another. We’ve seen a lot of tinaos in various villages over the years, but this is by far the densest concentration of them we’ve ever experienced. For about eight long, deep blocks, the only way to access the housing units that face the interior of the blocks is through tinaos that serve as adarves. That is, they are essentially dead-end tunnels that lead to the inward-facing houses. You can picture it like a wormhole that travels from the outside crust of a donut into the center hole. (In the Alpujarra, an adarve is not the parapet walk around the top of the defensive walls of a castle. That’s a different meaning of the word.)
We were delighted…astounded…dumbfounded…as we kept finding one tinao-adarve after another. What beautiful gems. One preserved the original door, constructed with row after row of studs and at least five feet wide. Another led to an interior garden where a thoughtful resident had set up a bench facing a post with a notch carved in it to hold a phone so you could take a selfie (see ours!) Every tinao led to a fascinating warren of doorways and greenery.
We think Lanjarón should be at least as famous for its tinaos and adarves as it is for its mineral water!Baca selengkapnya

PelancongI love the fountains and the tineos but mostly I love the pictures of the 2 of you. You look terrific. This looks like a great place to spend time. Is there a restaurant? Just asking for a frend!!

PelancongPlenty of restaurants and grocery shops. Lots of fresh fruits and vegetables! I just finished a banana.
Lanjarón: Marta’s house
11 April, Spanyol ⋅ ☁️ 66 °F
We had originally planned to come to Lanjarón at the beginning of our trip because it is the gateway to the Alpujarra. As things unfolded, however, we realized we had to go to Orgiva first to be able to photograph the maps at the ADR office. So Lanjarón was relegated to “we’ll see when we can fit it in” status. By the time we made up our minds on the exact dates last week, there was only one house left for the days we wanted. It didn’t look so great in the photos, but all we really needed was a kitchen and a place to sleep.
What a surprise to get here today and find out that we get to spend the next nine days in the midst of someone’s loving project to keep alive a little corner of history. We have been very lucky on this trip to have this happen three times: in Orgiva, at Walhalla, and now here. Each time it sends a shiver of gratitude through us to be able to see and feel the devotion of these joyous people.
Marta says the house dates back to 1910. On this street, almost everyone who lives here is related, and this was the first house they built; the others were built 20 years later. They had donkeys and other animals, and when they came back with them from the countryside, the animals lived in the stables downstairs.
Marta herself is from Madrid. She bought the house five years ago. It was in a very neglected, deteriorated condition. The terrace was sunken, and so was the dining area. She fell in love with the house just by seeing a photo of the foyer, and called a friend who is an architect to help her create something beautiful. She has preserved and restored everything original: the chestnut beams, the terrazzo floors... She had the viewing point in the living room made using chestnut wood, which is typical of Lanjarón. She restored the walls and ceilings herself. A lot of the furniture and art belonged to her mother.
At first, she was going to live here, and did everything with that intention and with affection. But later she fixed up the stable area downstairs and made it into a nice apartment where she lives, and she shares the house with people like us and with her family when they come to visit.Baca selengkapnya










































































































































































































































































































PelancongWhat gorgeous scenery. I see a cat! Zara says Hi, Me,too.
mary louise adamsSpectacular
Pelancong
They say that about me, too...