A personal take on walks in the hills and mountains of (mostly) northern Spain. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mi perspectiva sobre excursiones en torno a Cantabria
miércoles, 21 de diciembre de 2011
¡Felices Fiestas! Season's Greetings!
¡Felices Fiestas! ¡Que cojamos fuerzas para aguantar lo que nos viene encima...! Por lo menos hay pequeños placeres en la vida que la banca y sus acólitos no nos pueden quitar - como andar por el campo y disfrutar de las cosas que regala a nuestros sentidos.
Enjoy the holidays and brace yourselves for a none-too-rosy-looking future! At least the bankers and their acolytes can't take away from us those little pleasures in life, like rambling in the country and enjoying the sights and sounds in store for us there.
lunes, 12 de diciembre de 2011
The Missing Link
When Carmen and I moved to Cantabria in '95 we did the "Saja Reserve Walk" covering 90 km in four beautiful September days, crossing from the centre to the west of the province. Well not four actually, but three beautiful days, because the other one it rained and the mist prevented us from walking up the hills from La Lastra to Polaciones. Luckily, that was also the only day there was a road providing an alternative way for us to get to our destination.
I'd always meant to explore that "missing link" in the Walk - called the "Camino del Potro", or Colt's Way - and last weekend I used it on my way up to the Pico de las Astillas.
The Cohilla reservoir lies below the path, with Cueto la Jaya on the other side
Low-lying cloud meant it wasn't a day for good views - here the summit of Cueto Jelgueras opposite became visible for a moment
Just after the Mirador del Potro I decided to head up the steep hillside through gorse and broom
to the top of Las Astillas
Once at the top, there were no views of Cueto Cucón, immediately to the west, as it was enveloped in cloud; happily, there was something to see to the N-W
The coastline away to the north:
The villages of Tudanca and La Lastra down below:
The reservoir below Cueto la Jaya
Pico las Astillas from the nearby hilltop of Hazas
From the col at the base of las Astillas I discovered there was a track that led down to the Camino del Potro, which would have saved me a steep climb earlier on had I bothered to look at a map. Still, it's always good to go back via a different route - here looking back up towards Las Astillas (and Hazas on the right)
From the col at the base of las Astillas I discovered there was a track that led down to the Camino del Potro, which would have saved me a steep climb earlier on had I bothered to look at a map. Still, it's always good to go back via a different route - here looking back up towards Las Astillas (and Hazas on the right)
domingo, 4 de diciembre de 2011
Camera swansong
Four weekends in a row getting out to the country - can't remember when that happened before!
I left the car at Puerto de Braguía, between Selaya and Vega de Pas and headed east along a flat ridge overlooking valleys on either side.
Castro Valnera is the highest mountain in these parts, and looked particularly impressive after a heavy snowfall the day before.
A look back at the first part of the walk, with the snow-capped peaks of Alto Campoo appearing in the distance
To our left lay the Carriedo Valley
The Picos de Sopeña at the end of the ridge, called Llana de Perocapillo, were the day's objective
Castro Valnera soon started to cloud over
To the right, the Pandillo valley
One of many stone huts
The Picones ever nearer
The last part of the walk is pretty steep, as you make your way up to a gap between the two highest-looking peaks in the centre-left of the picture
And I was a hundred metres or so from the top when my camera decided it had taken its last photo, looking across to the north and Coteru el Teju. No amount of coaxing would change its mind - nor even the most colourful language I could come up with...
I left the car at Puerto de Braguía, between Selaya and Vega de Pas and headed east along a flat ridge overlooking valleys on either side.
Castro Valnera is the highest mountain in these parts, and looked particularly impressive after a heavy snowfall the day before.
A look back at the first part of the walk, with the snow-capped peaks of Alto Campoo appearing in the distance
To our left lay the Carriedo Valley
The Picos de Sopeña at the end of the ridge, called Llana de Perocapillo, were the day's objective
Castro Valnera soon started to cloud over
To the right, the Pandillo valley
One of many stone huts
The Picones ever nearer
The last part of the walk is pretty steep, as you make your way up to a gap between the two highest-looking peaks in the centre-left of the picture
And I was a hundred metres or so from the top when my camera decided it had taken its last photo, looking across to the north and Coteru el Teju. No amount of coaxing would change its mind - nor even the most colourful language I could come up with...
At almost 1300 metres there was quite a lot of snow around and on the other side of the Picones a good view of Porracolina and the final part of the road up to the Lunada pass totally white. Unfortunately, I was unable to photograph the view of the walk I'd made from above or the absolutely gorgeous sight of Alto Campoo, Peña Sagra and the Picos beautifully silhouetted away to the west - not that my camera would have done it justice anyway, even if it had been working...
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