Category Archives: My GR-7

It’s a long way from Cádiz to Andorra

After an overnight stay in Málaga I caught a bus westward to Tarifa passing Algeciras and Gibraltar in the Costa del Sol. The first thing that I noticed when I stepped off the bus was the strong warm desert wind that would prove to be a very common phenomenon in that place. It is not without reason that Tarifa has a reputation as a surfer’s paradise.

Tarifa coastline viewed from GR-7
Tarifa coastline viewed from GR-7

The second thing I noticed was the silhouettes of the Atlas Mountains on the other side of the straits of Gibraltar. I found a guest house in the middle of the city and booked a room for two nights. I spent the next day looking at the sights and investigating how to get started on the GR-7 trail. In my guide-book Walking the GR7 in Andalucia the authors suggestion were that you start out on the beach walking several kilometers westward and “paddle” over the river Vega that splits the stretch on the beach in half. According to my findings it was a much better choice to walk a couple of hundred meters further inland in a bird sanctuary where there was a good trail. I also found out that there was an alternative to getting wet in Río de la Vega (whose flow in the beginning of May that year was quite impressive to me), namely: the river could be crossed on a bridge, if you didn’t mind walking on a paved road for a couple of kilometers. I thought it a was small price to pay for not having to struggle through beach sand for several kilometers and then in the middle of it strip naked to cross a river that looked a bit nasty to me.

Many days left to Andorra :)
Many days left to Andorra 🙂

The next morning I tried my backpack on and it must have weighed well over 20 kilograms. No way that I was going to carry that. I had to get rid of some stuff to bring the weigth down to maybe 18 kilograms. Although I was a seasoned wanderer even that weight was actually too heavy for me as I wasn’t trained to carry more than maybe 5 to 6 kilograms in the hikes I had made lately.

GR-7 Cádiz
GR-7 Cádiz

When I got on my way the sun was already burning and the temperature was well over 20 degrees centigrade. I took the route through the bird sanctuary but I couldn’t resist taking another look at Río de la Vega before deciding to take the alternate route passing the river on a bridge instead of swimming. The temperature rose to around thirty at noon and the wind blew quite hard and steady. The Cádiz province is wind power country and scattered all over the hilltops were hundreds and hundreds of wind mills rotating furiously. I made some navigational mistakes according to not having my GPS device adjusted properly and the sun, the constant blowing of the wind, and the heat was beginning to get at me. I found a spot of grass by a stream where I put up my tent for the night. I ate some supper and then fell fast asleep.

Bedtime
Bedtime

Later that night a strange sound caught my attention. It sounded like somebody was hitting a tin can with a stick. I looked out of my tent and saw a cow with a big cowbell around its neck four meters away. My tent occupied the only spot in the proximity where a cow could make its way down to the stream, so I kept an eye on the cow for a while until she noticed me and decided to move off. After that I went back to a dreamless sleep.

Moving on

Early in the morning I had breakfast and then broke camp and continued on my way towards Los Barrios that is located 45 kilometers northeast of Tarifa.

Between Tarifa and Los Barrios
Between Tarifa and Los Barrios

I was running out of water but got lucky finding a small stream. But the water wasn’t easy to get to depending on a tightly put up barbed wire fence and a steep slope, but I found a small opening in the fence and could slide down to the desirable running water.

Just a few hours later I came across a roadside restaurant and could feast on soft drinks, mineral water, and a sandwich with cured ham and cheese.

Los Barrios
Los Barrios

The last part of the stage that day went really easy after that. I found Hotel Real in the center of Los Barrios, a typical countryside hotel with a restaurant as the main attraction but also with some rooms for rent at the second floor. I took a shower and then made preparations for the walk next day. I went shopping for water, apples, soft drinks, and biscuits, filled my water bag, and took care of my feet and my gear before allowing myself to relax.

Myself
Myself

This was to become my daily routine for a long time to come, together with washing my laundry in the sink. Later on I visited the town square where I had supper. Actually, I was lucky to get fed that early, it was only seven o’clock  in the evening and often it is impossible to get a decent cooked meal in Spain before eight or eight thirty.

Just another day at the office

I left Los Barrios today (May 11 2014) at 7:30 AM. In my guide-book it read: Good hill tracks start the route, followed by a long road walk with the reward of a beautiful view of the hill-top castle of Castellar at end of the day. Heart and muscles already have begun to adopt to carrying a backpack walking many hours a day and I made good speed until 1 PM when the heat began to slow me down.

Los Barrios-Castillo de Castellar
Los Barrios-Castillo de Castellar

A strange sight suddenly appeared before my eyes as I was rambling along: storks’ nests, sitting on almost every single one of the many electricity pylons that ran through the landscape.

The last part of the route that day offered a couple of road-side bars that makes it easier to drink enough, even if I normally carry four liters of water, a water bag with a suction nozzle and four small bottles to be safe in the heat for many hours even if there is no possibility to re-fill.

Castillo de Castellar
Castillo de Castellar

After climbing the hill to Castillo de Castellar I checked in at hotel El Alcázar that was located inside the castle walls. My room was large and almost luxurious, it had massive wooden beams in the ceiling, and was furnished with heavy wooden furniture. It also offered magnificent views: looking north I saw a huge man-made water reservoir (presa) with emerald-green water surrounded by a beautiful forestal landscape, and if I turned to the south I saw the impressive rock of Gibraltar and the Atlas Mountains in Morocco in the distance behind it. The twilight and a full moon created a surreal feeling and the picture was so beautiful that it almost hurt, and I could hardly take my eyes off it. After having made the usual preparations for the next day I had a very nice vegetable stew with eggs and a salad with tuna in a “hole in the wall” that seemed to be a place well-known for people who like flamenco and bull fighting according to the amount of pictures and event posters covering the walls.

A tough day

Today’s hike (May 12 2014) was relatively easy to begin with but all that changed when I chose to follow my GPS when it suggested a different route from that of the guide-book. The GPS route took me for a walk through vast fields covered with bushy herbage growing chest high and it forced me to lift my feet high for every step I took in order for them not to get caught in the undergrowth with a headlong fall as an immediate result, cruelly pushed down to the ground with force by my backpack.

After having struggled through these horrible fields I went past a small group of houses where a white horse got trapped between me and a gate that I wanted to pass through, and it took quite some time before I could convince the horse to move towards me and then past me as it was quite jumpy. After climbing a couple of high fences and crossing a creek I finally re-connected with the track from the guide-book and from there I had a pleasant walk for the rest of the afternoon until I made my way up the last hill where Jimena de la Frontera resides.

Jimena de la Frontera
Jimena de la Frontera

I got a room at Casa Henrietta and had a superb omelet with fresh, gigantic, mushrooms, and a huge salad at a restaurant at the town square.

Jimena is another one of those many beautiful, relaxed, and friendly places in Spain that also offers magnificent views.

Walking the GR-7 in Andalucía:
Dominated by its castle, an Arab fortress built on Roman ruins, Jimena is a delightful ancient village built on a steep hillside and looking down over fertile green valleys with orange groves and cork forested hills. Many British residents enjoy its sunshine and relaxed pace of life. From the castle you can see as far as Algeciras and Gibraltar.

Nothing fancy, just hard work

The walk between Jimena and Ubrique turned out to be quite rough and took many hours. The temperature was a little lower though than it had been until then, but the path was very crude and dotted with loose stones of different sizes that made the foothold insecure, and it moved constantly up and down the steep hillsides.

Ubrique
Ubrique

In Ubrique I went to the tourist information and they gave me an address to a nearby guest house, Hostal Rosario. The door was locked but there was a phone number written on the wall and five minutes after calling I was let in and given a room by a very hospitable woman.

Fungus
Fungus

Heading into the Málaga province

I continued on my way towards Montejaque and went through wide valleys surrounded by mountains. For several hours I walked through vast pasture lands in the midst of hoards of cows and I must admit that every now and then I cast an eye at the area between the hind legs of the animals in order to convince myself that they all had udders and not something completely different that only bulls have 😮 Occasionally I went past very well enclosed fields where large bulls roamed behind fences and sturdy hedges. My guess is that their destiny was to end their days fighting for their lives in some bullfighting arena. The wind was hot and strong and blew in my face all day.

Montejaque
Montejaque
Montejaque
Montejaque

I reached Montejaque in the early afternoon and had a tortilla and a beer and refilled my water vessels. I carried on and soon, at a distance, I saw the characteristic silhouette of the majestic cliff upon which Ronda resides.

Approaching Ronda
Approaching Ronda
Ronda
Ronda

The cliff or rock is divided by a deep crack that runs through the city where it creates several magnificent sights and lots of photo opportunities. It still took me a couple of hours before I reached my hotel close to the new bridge in the center of old Ronda.

Ronda
Ronda
Ronda
Ronda

My room had double doors that led to a large balcony where I could take in the city and it was also an excellent place for hanging my wet laundry to dry.

Ronda
Ronda

Increasing the pace

I made an early start from Ronda and everybody else, both guests and staff, were still asleep. I was instructed the day before to drop my room key in a letterbox by the reception and that I did. Seconds later I realized that I had locked myself in behind a wrought-iron gate that sat between me and the door to the street. The key for the gate was now without reach for me in a locked letterbox. There was a bell though and I rang it a couple of times and could hear it make a muffled sound somewhere deep inside the hotel. After my third attempt a not too happy person, still half asleep, turned up and he opened the gate for me.

Ronda
Ronda

I started the day by walking the remaining eight kilometers of stage 6 of the GR-7 that ends in Arriate. There I took the decision to try to make it to Ardales that day a further 32 kilometers ahead, making it a more than 40 kilometer day stage. It was my seventh day on the road and I felt that it was possible to extend the day stages. The wind was still very strong and steady and as usual it insisted on pushing me back instead of helping me to move forward. I walked mostly on roads all day and unfortunately they were quite busy at times and it is not pleasant being shaken again and again by the turbulent air that is brought upon you by trucks and cars, and the sound from the vehicles gets to you and make you tired and irritated.

Arriate-Ardales
Arriate-Ardales

But, eleven hours after leaving Ronda I reached Ardales and Hotel Restaurante el Cruce that is situated by a bridge over Río Turón. The hotel had everything I needed and after having made the usual preparations I had a shower and a delicious evening meal before calling it a day and taking a well earned rest.

Serrato
Serrato

Up and down all day round

Early in the morning of May 15 I had a frugal breakfast consisting of café con leche (coffee and hot milk) with a tostado (half a mini-baguette, toasted) drenched in olive oil. It is actually quite a substantial meal with all that olive oil. Normally I don’t eat that much during a day walking but I always try to have some bread with oil and a coffee before I start as I know that this will keep me going for several hours.

Ardales
Ardales

Then I set off going east and soon went into a hilly area with steep slopes going up and down. The last slope heading down into the El Chorro gorge was actually very steep with loose rocks all over the path and even if I had a busy time going down I thought I was lucky not having to walk upwards instead. I had some rest and a spot of lunch in El Chorro by the railway station.

El Chorro
El Chorro

The landscape there is dominated by sharp limestone cliffs and there are an abundance of caves. It is a splendid place for climbing, horse riding, mountain biking, canoeing, windsurfing, and more.

El Chorro
El Chorro

El Chorro also is world famous for an old workers pathway hanging from the sheer cliffs high up over the Guadalhorce river. It has recently been reopened (Easter 2015) after being restored and now it is safe to walk after having been a death trap for many years with several deadly falls. The path is named the kings little pathway, El caminito del Rey. At the time I was there in May 2014 it was still under repair and I didn’t bother going there just to have a look as I knew that it was closed off.

El caminito del Rey
El caminito del Rey

Instead I continued my walk that had more steep climbs up and around Sierra del Huma with magnificent views over distant farmland. Then began a gentle decent into the Abdalajís valley. The signposting for the GR-7 was not very good but better for the GR-249 that followed the same stretch for a while. But I got a bit lost at the end and had to rely 100% on my GPS in order to get down to Abdajalís through the rugged landscape. I hardly could notice a path at all cruising, zigzagging my way down a slope full of boulders, bushes, and knotty trees but there was an occasional cairn that confirmed that I was on the right track.

A little later my feet was hitting tarmac and I soon went into the village of Valle de Abdalajís. I put down my backpack at Hostal Vista de la Sierra that also had a bar and a restaurant, went shopping at the local Repsol petrol station and then had time off until the next morning.

Valle de Abdajalìs
Valle de Abdajalìs

Surprise, surprise

I had an early start as usual, checking my equipment several times, leaving the keys in the door to my room, moving down the stairs from the second floor, and shutting the front door locked behind me. If something was left behind it would imply waiting for a couple of hours until the guest house owners woke up. The weather was perfect for walking, overcast and around twenty degrees centigrade. Moving through a hilly agricultural area with billowing fields of corn and scattered farm houses.

Antequera
Antequera

Reaching Antequera early in the afternoon and after spending an hour in the historic town with a skyline dominated by the towers of a Moorish fortress and a multitude of church spires I decided to continue walking for couple of hours. My guide-book has one weakness in that it is not very good at describing the way out of populated areas, so I followed my GPS instead. Sometimes a track can take you in the opposite direction from where you’re going for hours but after a while I got suspicious and examined the GPS more thoroughly. The GR-7 on its way through Andalucía splits up in a northern path and in a southern path and that occurs 15 kilometers east of Antequera. I intended to follow the southern leg but I had the GPS tracks for both routes in my device. When leaving Antequera I just chose to follow the track that was next in sequence and assumed that it was the track leading to the fork where the GR-7 split up.

Slowed down
Slowed down

But there and then I realized that the last common track that led to the fork was missing in the GPS. I had downloaded all files but the person who published the tracks had forgotten to include exactly that vital track. The track I was following was actually an extra track, which was a shortcut to the northern path heading directly out of Antequera, that someone had thought would be of great interest to all hikers 🙂 Well, well, well, I accepted my mistake and turned around 180 degrees and moved back to Antequera in the afternoon sunshine in order to find a place to spend the night and to get something substantial to eat after a long day.

Encounter with a huge white Labrador

It was a nice cool morning but the walk was quite boring with a lot of tarmac to begin with but after a while the track continued on a narrow dirt road that suddenly after a bend passed straight through a farm between buildings to the left and to the right. Suddenly a huge white Labrador came running straight at me without making a sound. I also saw a woman and a child standing to the right outside the main farmhouse looking in my direction. The dog snapped repeatedly at me from behind, taking hold of my trousers with its teeth shaking its head vigorously. I didn’t know what to do so I just continued walking dragging the dog behind me while urging the woman to call off the dog. She made a couple of lame tries to do so but Pietro, as she called dog, continued to defend the household against the intruder. I am convinced that Pietro applied the same methods on me snapping at my heels as he knew would work getting the cows to where he wanted them 🙂 After a couple of very long minutes Pietro decided that he had won and let me off the hook in order to return to his normal business.

Villanueva de Cauche
Villanueva de Cauche

The terrain became rather difficult from there on with a lot of obstacles to pass like barbed wire fences and ravines and I began to suspect that I had chosen the wrong path when passing a fork a while before being abused by the dog but I had no intention to go back and take a chance with Pietro once more so I strode on using my GPS and my compass to navigate safely forward through rocks, boulders, and fissures and soon I found myself facing a motorway from way up a hill and down there in the valley was Villanueva de Cauche, my halfway target for the day.

GR-7 fork
GR-7 fork

As in all villages in Spain no matter how small they are there always is at least one restaurant and this was no exception. I had a ham and cheese sandwich and a beer and had a rest for a while listening to the locals talking. In Villanueva de Cauche the GR-7 through Andalucía splits in two, of which one goes north of and the other one south of the Sierra Nevada. I continued following the track to the south mostly on tarmac but with magnificent views over the nearby mountains. My guide-book told me that there was no accommodation to be found in Riogordo but i went by a Casa rural a bit up the mountain and asked the people in there watching television all family together if they would have me but the answer were that they were closed for business and when I asked if there was any place to stay in Riogordo I got a no as an answer from one of the older women. But when leaving one if the younger women stopped me and told me that there certainly w-a-s a bar beside the public swimming pool in Riogordo that had rooms to let. I thanked her and went on my way downhill for several kilometers.

Riogordo
Riogordo

The place she had told me about had rooms to let but the problem was that this was on the one day of the week that the bar staff had their day off so the bar was closed. But there was a note beside the door with a phone number and ten minutes after having called I was installed in a brand new hotel room with all conveniences.