Spain
Totana

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    • Day 25

      Mit dem Bike in die Sierra Espuña

      November 20, 2023 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

      Bei uns an der Küste ist es heute neblig und deshalb unangenehm kühl. 'Taro' wird dieser plötzlich auftretende Küstennebel genannt.

      Wir sind guter Dinge, dass er ein paar Kilometer rein im Inland keine Chance hat und fahren hinauf bis auf luftige 1200 m in die Sierra Espuña.🏍

      Holy moly, die Serpentinenstrecke hoch und wieder runter lässt unser Bikerherz höher schlagen... und ein Mirador ist schöner als der vorherige.

      Und erst die tolle Fernsicht! ❤️

      Ganz oben treffen wir auf einen spanischen Mountainbiker, der uns sein Fernglas leiht, um uns den Schnee auf den Gipfeln der noch fast 400km weit entfernten Sierra Nevada zu zeigen. 🥰

      Nach einer 5-stündigen, gemütlichen Tour nähern wir uns wieder Mazarrón und Isla Plana, um aus der Ferne schon wieder den Nebel wie in Zeitlupe über die Küstenberge kriechen zu sehen.

      Egal, uns nach einer heißen Dusche im Womo einzukuscheln ist auch mal ganz schön.
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    • Day 21

      Embalse de Algeciras (Stausee)

      March 6 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 17 °C

      Heute haben wir einen schönen Ausflug zum Stausee von Algeciras gemacht. Die richtigen Wanderwege haben wir gar nicht beachtet und sind einfach querfeldein marschiert. Was zuerst ganz easy aussah, musste dann auf dem Popo vollendet werden 🙈. Bis nach unten sind wir gar nicht gekommen, da unser Weg an einer Steilwand endete 😱. Zurück sind wir einfach den Hunden gefolgt, die haben uns super zum Auto zurückgeführt.
      Danach ging es zum Spanier - Essen! Superlecker - und in der prallen Sonne 🌞 erstmal einen kleinen Sonnenbrand abgeholt. Der Strandbesuch für unsere Hunde war ein MUSS. Nach einigen Bällewürfen brauchten sie auch eine Abkühlung! 😍
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    • Day 73

      Villa de Plástico

      February 19 in Spain ⋅ ☁️ 20 °C

      Es wurde langsam Zeit aufzubrechen. Unsere Reise muss wieder ein kleines Stückchen weitergehen.

      Von der hochgelegenen Küstenstraße sehen wir wehmütig auf unsere schöne Bucht, die ein paar Tage unser Zuhause war.
      Es soll weiter die Küste entlang gehen.
      Das Mittlelmeer packt noch einmal seinen gesamten Charm aus und verwöhnt uns mit bestem Wetter.

      Unser nächstes Ziel liegt bei Mazarron, dachten wir zumindest.

      Der Blick vom Pass nach unten ins Tal überzeugt uns nicht.
      Soweit wir blicken, ein Meer aus Plastik.
      Hier wächst gefühlt alles an Obst und Gemüse das wir in Deutschland im Supermarkt finden.

      Dieses Villenviertel aus Plastik ist furchtbar anzusehen. Wir lassen es hinter uns und fahren in die Berge dahinter.

      Oberhalb dieses riesigen Anbaugebietes finden wir einen Platz der uns besser gefällt. Wir blicken auf einen schön anzusehende Stausee der sicherlich dieses Anbaugebiet mit Wasser versorgt.

      Unser Salat zum Abendessen schmeckt heute nicht wirklich gut.
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    • Day 38

      A warm and windy walk

      January 17 in Spain ⋅ 🌬 15 °C

      Lots of sunshine, lots of wind and lots of pics today. Just a short 3 mile walk up to a statue of Jesus preaching, with many statues on route of him carrying the cross. It was mapped as a circular walk but the return leg was a very steep path parting from the road over a metal barrier. I did this section mostly on my bum. Thankfully, the video which John took of the occasion didn't work. We extended it a little and found a great picnic area spot with loads of stones for tables and seats and general fun. No-one else there apart from a camper. But the ladies toilet was open and unvandalised, even had toilet paper. They're very good for that in Spain. There were many long ups and downs so we were ready for a tea and coffee in the grounds of the hotel for the sanctuary. Only €2.50 in total. There were a couple there who spoke to us with English accents to tell us the cafe was open, it had seemed locked. John said something friendly to them about it being rare to come across British people on our travels but they barely answered. So it was pretty clear they didn't want conversation. They were probably trying very hard to avoid Brits.
      There's a range of vehicles staying here from French, Swiss, Dutch, German and Spanish. We've only seen 2 campers from the UK in our whole journey. The lady in the campsite said she used to fill up over winter with Brits, until the 90 rule came in and apparently they now go to Morocco.
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    • Day 37

      It's an up and over!

      January 16 in Spain ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

      We left Pinoso and headed for a car park stopover at Los Banos, near a place called Mula. Had it in mind that we (well, I) might want to try the thermal baths up there. Had a lovely drive on a good road that ran parallel to the newer dual carriageway. Very peaceful and some weird and wonderful scenery appeared, rather like a huge sandpit!
      The thermal bath places on offer didn't inspire confidence, looked rather seedy, and I wasn't convinced they'd be particularly hygienic. But we had a good little walk, and a stream of water by the roadside was warm. Aqua callientes! That's one I learnt at the foothills of Machu Pichu. It was the town's name.
      John went down to the riverbed, that water was cold. His photo from there looks like Christo and Jeanne-Claude have been at work, wrapping the landscape.
      We didn't really take to the carpark for an overnighter, so went on to Mula itself up a very steep, narrow, windy road to a castle. Big sign said castle was forbidden entry. Paah! We gazed at the vast landscape and noted the sound of barking dogs across the whole vista. We didn't take to that spot either, so we moved on to this lovely spot an hour further on by a sanctuary at Totana. I chose a scenic route, marked green on the map, it looked fairly straight and low altitude. Whoops ... wrong again! It went up and over, twisted round about, and scared the living daylights out of me, especially when people overtake on blind corners! The surfaces were dreadful with deep potholes, and even rare smooth sections were bumpy. For some reason, workmen were at the most remote part resurfacing a fair stretch, and it was a hell of a squeeze to get past each of them. One side, a metal barrier, the other roadwork machine beasts. Boy, was I relieved when we reached lowland orange groves and flat smooth roads again.
      It's a little elevated again here but a smoother ride.
      Temperature got up to 24° today. 😃
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    • Day 40

      Eine Halbwüste der besonderen Art

      May 13, 2023 in Spain ⋅ ☁️ 20 °C

      Wir verlassen die pinkfarbenen Salinen von Torrevieja und tauchen ein in eine außergewöhnliche Mondlandschaft.
      Ein hübscher Weg durch Zitronenfelder führte uns auf eine steile, nicht ganz ungefährliche Schotterpiste. Bereits während der Hochfahrt hielt sich Moritz bei dem sehr schmalen Weg an guter Hanglage die Augen zu. Angekommen an einer kleinen Ausweichbucht ging ich die letzten Meter zu Fuß, um nachzuschauen, ob die Strecke für unseren Camper überhaupt noch für eine Weiterfahrt tauglich ist. Während der letzten Regenphase scheinen schon ein paar Autos gerutscht zu sein, die Erde war jedoch in diesem Moment trocken also entschieden wir uns auf einen tollen Platz hoch zu fahren. Ein hübscher Wanderweg eröffnete uns die Schönheit der Natur und wir bekamen eine spektakuläre Aussicht auf das riesige Halbwüste Gebiet, die Gebas-Schluchten und den glitzernden, türkisblauen Stausee Rambla de Algeciras geboten.

      Die Barrancos de Gebas, befinden sich westlich der Sierra. Ihre charakteristische Formation von Badlands erinnert aufgrund der  fehlenden Vegetation, der stark von Wasser und Wind erodiert wurde -, die aus Rinnen, Schluchten und Canyons bestehen und ein spektakuläres Bild abgeben, das an eine Mondlandschaft auf der Erde erinnert.

      In den Barrancos de Gebas, diesem riesigen Halbwüstengebiet, glitzert türkisfarben der Algeciras-Stausee. Der westliche Teil der Sierra Espuna wird beherrscht vom Ödland, ein Schauplatz von trockenem Land voller Schluchten, so dass es sich in ein Labyrinth ohne Ausweg zu verwandeln scheint.
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    • Day 30

      Elchè to Lake Negratín

      November 5, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 20 °C

      We had quite a good nights sleep last night except for getting battered by the wind. It wasn’t constant and seemed to roll down the mountains in waves once or twice an hour giving us a battering for a couple of minutes at a time and then stop.
      The worst thing was the dust, it was like sleeping in a dust bowl and at bedtime Ellie had a coughing fit because it was so dry and I woke up twice to get a drink as I just couldn’t swallow. By the time 7:30am came around we both felt like we had been licking sand off a plate. It took hours to properly rehydrate again.
      We had quite a big journey ahead of us today so just before 9am we started moving. We were now cutting inland again away from the coast in a westerly direction towards Granada.
      I had planned a stop on route at a viewpoint by a reservoir and plotted the parking spot into TomTom. After 50 miles of driving at 10:30am we were almost there and the sat Nav took us off the mountain road and onto gravel tracks. This wasn’t unusual until we came to a big parking area and the single track split into four different tracks and the one we wanted said something about a danger zone and workers only and the others didn’t appear on TomTom atall.
      I went to check google maps but we had no internet so after 10 minutes we decided to leave Wanda and check out the track on foot. We still had 3 miles left to get to the viewpoint.
      We walked about a mile down the track and there weee a couple of big lay-bys where we could park or turn around so we then trekked back up the track to get Wanda.
      Back in Wanda we drove back down the track we had just walked, this time we passed by the lay-bys as I was confident I could reverse it back to them if needed and as we rounded a bend about a mile and a half down we came to some padlocked gates and our route was blocked. I tried checking google maps again but there was still no signal but TomTom said we had a mile left so I grabbed the drone and my camera gear, locked Wanda up and we started walking.
      It started off flat as we walked alongside a canal. The gates were to stop vehicles driving all the way up to the pumping station but we walked passed and then the road veered up and we started climbing. My watch told me we had already walked a mile so I topped the data up on my phone quickly and then connected to 4G as we were now out in the open with signal and google said we had another mile and a half and it would take 30 minutes. It was a nightmare walk in the burning hot sun. The saving grace was it was quite pretty and quiet and we did bring drinks. Finally at 12:15pm we arrived at the Mirador del embalse de Algeciras. This was where we wanted to be and there was our parking spot we couldn’t reach. Obviously TomTom had brought us in the wrong way.
      The views were magnificent with white limestone cliffs and turquoise blue waters. Various coloured ring marks had formed around the base of the cliffs showing the water levels over the years. It was beautiful and worth the hike.
      We left there at 1:10pm and on the way back to Wanda I decided we would just move further down. Ellie made sandwiches for lunch and at 2pm we started moving again coming off the A7 Mediterranean highway and turning west onto the A91 into cave house country.
      At 4:15pm we arrived at a restaurant but it was the wrong one. This restaurant had hot springs which was nice but we needed a parking spot for the night so I checked park4night again, found where we should have been and at 4:45pm after another 160 miles of driving we arrived at Lake Negratín. We had seen this place on A Place In The Sun years ago and Ellie has been scouting out cave houses in the area for a couple of years so we thought we would just come and check out the area. The drive around the lake didn’t fill me with confidence as it looked quite industrial with pump houses scattered here and there and the first town we drove through looked tired and dirty but as we got closer to Freilla it did get prettier.
      We found our parking spot by a closed restaurant right at the lake beach with an amazing panoramic view of the whole lake and mountains. This was one of our most scenic park ups so far. We got out to check the restaurant out and sunbathing behind the restaurant were a British couple. We got talking to them and this turned out to be there second time here in there campervan and last time they spoke to a British man who had brought a house in the area and was now selling it because the winters here are proper winters with snow and freezing temperatures. Now we definitely wouldn’t be buying a house here.
      As Ellie cooked a late dinner a fox walked past us and into the woods, we sat watching him out of the window for a few minutes until he disappeared, it was the first one we had seen on the trip. After dinner at 8pm we decided we had made enough power to watch TV and watched Netflix for a couple of hours before bed, it felt like it could be a cold night with no clouds and the temperatures dropping from 25°c to just 15°c in the last 2 hours.
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    • Day 44

      Camping Sierra Espuna

      January 20, 2020 in Spain ⋅ 🌧 4 °C

      Toller CP ,Terrassenförmig auf 650m Höhe in der Sierra Espuna. Geräumige Plätze mit kleiner Bar,beheizte Duschen. 22 € all incl. Bis zum Dorfzentrum mit 100 Einwohnern , 250m. Viele Orangen und Zitronen Bäume auf der Serpentinenreichen Anfahrt.Read more

    • Day 90

      RM 515 von Murcia nach Mazarrón

      November 29, 2023 in Spain ⋅ ⛅ 19 °C

      Der Weg von Murcia nach Mazarrón, geniale Aussichten auf schmalen Bergstraßen mit fast keinem Verkehr. Wieder verändert sich die Landschaft 👀🏜️ , Mandelbäume🌳🌳soweit das Auge reicht. Einfach toll zu sehen 😁Read more

    • Day 132

      Alhama de Mursia

      March 26, 2020 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 17 °C

      Nun sind wir wieder auf Tour. Der Schrotthandler hat uns ein gebrauchtes Rad verkauft. Wird hoffentlich halten. Nun werden unsere Etappen wohl etwas länger werden da ein Stellplatz zum Übernachten schon sehr schwer zu finden ist. Alles gesperrt und zu. Einziger Vorteil, wenig Verkehr.Read more

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