hiking Picos de Europa, Spain – day 4

Day 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | Kraig Adams video

Trip ReportPicos de Europa Circuit – by site editor Rick McCharles

Rick-tent

Here I am, elated to have tented rather than staying under roof at the Collado Jermoso refugio.

Refugio

It’s a long, slow, pretty 1200m (3937ft) descent. Check out the wall looking back up from the valley.

Picos-cliff

My 4km return detour along the river to the town of Posada de Valdeon was well worth the time.

river-Picos

I resupplied at the bakery and two grocery stores.

I took time, too, to visit the Mirador del Tombo.

Mirador del Tombo
more interesting photos of this monument

Ascending back into the trees, I was shocked to see the leaves changing. This was the first time it had dawned on me that my summer of hiking Europe was ending. This was to be my last.

Sept. 12th
Sept. 12th

There were many more Chamois on this section of trail, the largest herds I’d yet seen.

Chamois

Though I had still not found a water supply, I finally set up the tent in a pretty spot well above the Picos mist.

cloud-Picos

Eventually the mist rose up to engulf me.

tent-mist

See the rest of my photos from day 4.

Day 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | Kraig Adams video

hiking Picos de Europa, Spain – day 3

Day 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | Kraig Adams video

Trip ReportPicos de Europa Circuit – by site editor Rick McCharles

This was the most photogenic day. Amazing.

I started by climbing up from Bulnes La Villa through high pasture land towards the central summits.

trail-to-mountains

green-pasture

I was looking forward to the iconic peak of the Picos, Naranjo de Bulnes.

Bulnes

It’s a world class climbing destination, obviously. But I was more surprised by the normally shy Chamois that hang about the Vega d’Urriellu refugio (1953m) as if they are domesticated.

Chamois

A cable assisted scramble takes you up and over Torre de los Horcados Rojos.

cable-climber

At the top, this weird silver igloo draws your eye. What the heck is it?

refugio

That’s Cabaña Veronica (2325m), once an American aircraft carrier cannon mount. Three hikers can sleep in it.

The most difficult part of the entire Circuit for me was the section from Veronica to Refugio Collado Jermoso. Here’s the high, bleak terrain. There are cairns at the start. But soon you’ll be guessing wildly, route finding and scrambling for a couple of hours. Convinced that you are hopelessly off route.

A GPS is essential. …

Picos

Somehow I made it. As did a dozen other hikers that day. Many, I noted, arrived late to the refugio.

This was my favourite sunset of the entire summer.

hikers-silouette

I set up the tent in a marvelous spot, very high with grand vistas in every direction.

tent-picos

Curious Chamois came by to check out my tent.

Chamois-tent

Hiking doesn’t get any better than this. .

tent-sunset

See the rest of my photos from day 3.

Day 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | Kraig Adams video

hiking Picos de Europa, Spain – day 2

Day 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | Kraig Adams video

Trip ReportPicos de Europa Circuit – by site editor Rick McCharles

The morning dawned clear. Quickly I climbed up above the valley cloud.

Picos-clouds

I met one of the alpine hut guards … with his free running dogs.

hiking-dogs

Here’s the large sign posted at his refugio, Marques de Villaviciosa:

sign

National Park regulations are somewhat flexible in Spain. And they vary wildly from place to place.

The main “story” of this Circuit are the climbs into and out of the huge Canal de Trea, one of the most spectacular canyons in the world.

descending 1200m of this cliff
descending 1200m of this cliff

There are many slippery and unstable sections before you reach, with relief, the Garganta del Cares gorge at the bottom.

…A remarkable engineering feat, the 3m-wide path running the length of the gorge was gouged out of its sheer walls in 1946 …

bridge

This relatively flat day hike is the best and most popular in the Park.

click for larger view
click for larger view

backpack

I “cheated” and took the Bulnes Funicular (an underground train) part way up the other side of the gorge, avoiding 4.5km distance and about 400m ascending.

My goal for the next day came into view.

Naranjo de Bulnes (Picu Urriellu)
Naranjo de Bulnes (Picu Urriellu)

A long but fantastic hiking day in perfect weather.

See the rest of my photos from day 2.

Day 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | Kraig Adams video

hiking Picos de Europa, Spain – day 1

Day 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | Kraig Adams video

Trip ReportPicos de Europa Circuit – by site editor Rick McCharles
map picos europa (Custom)

An unforgettable (91.5km) route covering the … most extaordinary limestone landscapes – river gorges, alpine lakes, depressions, dense beech woods, narrow canals, cliff hanging trails and peaks with breathtaking views

MAGIC …

Urriellu - photo by Edu-im
Urriellu – photo by Edu-im

The rain in Spain
falls mainly
… in the NORTH.

Green-Spain

Green Spain, it’s called, home to a wealth of flora and fauna. Including, perhaps, 90 bears.

The weather in Picos de Europa is very atypical for Spain. Happily, September is normally the best month.

Cangas de Onís is the busiest and most easily accessed of the gateway towns. … and can supply all last-minute needs.

Roman Bridge - Cangas de Onís
Roman Bridge – Cangas de Onís

Frequent buses deliver you from Cangas to Covadonga, an impressive tourist attraction.

… In 722 AD, Iberian Christians won the battle over the Moors in Covadonga. This was the first significant Christian victory over the occupying Moors; as such, it is often considered to be the start of the Reconquista, the 770-year effort to expel the Moors from Iberia. …

Dom Pelayo
Dom Pelayo
Covadonga Cathedral
Covadonga Cathedral

During the summer you can bus all the way from Cangas to the trailhead at Ercina Lake. Unfortunately I arrived the day after those buses stopped running for the season. I hitched the last 12km or so from Covadonga. The Spanish couple who picked me up were also hiking a variation of the circuit staying in refugios, alpine huts providing beds and meals.

Lago Ercina - Browserd
Lago Ercina in good weather – Browserd

Here’s how the lakeside looked to me.

cows-in-fog

I’d arrived into the frequent, infamous Picos mist. A thick fog bank that often clouds the valleys and lower elvations of this micro climate.

After wandering around blind for 3hrs … I finally set up my tent right at the trailhead. A rotten start to the adventure.

Later I learned the couple that had driven me to the trailhead walked directly to the refugio using GPS.

Note to self: Get me a GPS.

See the rest of my photos from day 1.

Day 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | Kraig Adams video

lost in the Canadian Rockies

Foolishly Garth and I followed Rocco into the front ranges of the Canadian Rockies for a Fall day hike.

fearless-leader

After driving aimlessly on gravel roads for some time, we finally gave up on our original goal, Cox Hill.

Instead, Rocco proposed we park at an unmarked turn-out. And scramble up to what he recalled to be from memory, Jumpingpound Ridge.

It was a gorgeous day.

ridge

While having lunch at the ridge, 3 older (wiser) hikers walked by informing us that we were on a completely different ridge than I was studying in the guidebook. They instructed us carefully on the best, most scenic way to descend.

… As you have already guessed, we never found it. But the bushwhack downslope was even nicer than our scrambling ascent.

If you ever see these guys scanning the distance with binoculars, stop and help them out. They are lost.

lost-hikers

more photos from this hike

missteps hiking the Pyrenees

Trip Report by site editor Rick McCharles

Driven from Scotland by midges, I flew to sunny Spain.

But where to hike in the Pyrenees?

My first thought was … Pyranean Haute Route, using the guidebook by Kev Reynolds.

Unfortunately Kev calls that adventure one of the 3 toughest treks in Europe. It would be too dangerous for me to do solo.

Instead I decided on The Pyrean Traverse, an easier, lower, parallel trail on the Spanish side of the border. I used Lonely Planet Walking in Spain as guidebook, starting at the beginning of the 23day, 305km track.

The official start is at Canillo in Andorra. Forget that. Much better is to bus to the day 2 trailhead, the ski resort at Arinsal. That’s where the trail climbs up and away from the road.

I sat down by the creek for lunch. And a start-me-up pot of coffee.

coffee-pot

Doh.

The gas cartridge stove fuel canister I had purchased that morning in Andorra la Vella was the European “puncture” system, not the screw on type we use in North America. (Both systems are widely available in Europe.)

I had to pack up. Catch the bus back to town. And try (unsuccessfully) to swap canisters. Instead I had to purchase a new threaded one.

The Pyrenees look much friendlier than the Alps. I saw no glaciers. Looked to me my days would be much more leisurely than I had had in Switzerland.

The trail was very busy as far as Refugi Josep Montfort.

Refugi-Josep-Montfort

I decided to push on and cross the first high pass. (It’s great to be able to start with a descent in the morning.)

Trails in the Pyrenees are not particularly well signed nor blazed. It was a wild route finding scramble to get over the Port de Baiau, at 2756m just as high as the passes in the Alps. The treacherous scramble down was the toughest I had all summer.

Turns out that hiking in the Pyrenees is no easier than in the Alps. It merely looks easier in the photos.

I had to set up the tent in the dark.

mountains-at-night

Next morning dawned pretty.

Pyrenees

The next section I saw almost no hikers … except for the masses headed up Pica d’Estats, Catalunya’s highest peak 3143m.

lake

It was a long descending walk into increasingly rural scenes.

horses

I camped at Planell de Boavi, the only tent in the huge riverside meadows. The highlight was a fox that came sniffing around my tent at dusk. He dragged off my cook pot at some point during the night.

Next morning I wandered down into the village of Tavascan 1116m, assured by my guidebook that I could resupply with food.

… Unfortunately the woman who runs the “shop” out of her house was gone for the day. The only food available in town was at a restaurant. Instantly I sat down for lunch, Menú del Día (Menu of the Day).

As always, it came with wine.

Once I had splashed down 3 large glasses, my hike was over. I was drunk. Checked into the hotel and passed out had a siesta.

The owner of the hotel put down my name for the Menú del Día dinner (more wine). By the end of that I asked him to book me a car out of the mountains, next morning at 5AM.

That driver overcharged me (30€ instead of the agreed 20€) and promptly hit a deer on the way out of town.

All in all, not my finest hike.

But I loved the Pyrenees. Certainly I will return one day, but for the High Route.

see the rest of my photos from 3 days in the Pyrenees

scrambling Mt Cory, Alberta

by site editor Rick McCharles

Because of the record breaking temperatures where I live, I dashed off to Banff Wednesday.

You always get good advice from the National Park Rangers at the hiking desk on Banff Avenue. They recommended Mt Cory, a mountain I did not know.

Elevation gain about 1370m.

Banff in distance left as seen from Mt Cory
Banff in distance left as seen from Mt Cory

Here I am about half way (2hrs) up looking on to the sawtooth ridge.

Sawtooth-ridge

Guidebook – Scrambles in the Canadian Rockies

Get the guidebook. I did not have it with me, ending up taking the wrong ridge up. And the wrong ridge down. And missed a highlight, the “Hole in the Wall”.

Taking the wrong ridge is quite common:

… It is imperative that you are at the right spot, as I went up the wrong rib on this mountain years ago and was forced to redo this route in 2005 to complete it. There are several large ribs coming down from Mount Cory. You want the eastern most rib which is identified as light-colored shaley cliffs with a deep ravine to its right.

SummitPost

You might want a GPS.

I was elated to get to the top after 4hrs. To celebrate, I rocked out to Coldplay for a half hour, enjoying the perfect weather close to 3000m. This is rare in the Canadian Rockies, any day of the year.

 summit cairn
summit cairn

Here’s the gorgeous view looking North.

Rockies

See the rest of my photos from Mt Cory

=====

It dawned on me that I have never before hiked on this North side of the Trans Canada Highway.

Why?

Because the best hikes in the Canadian Rockies are on the other side.

For example, Sunshine to Assiniboine, our #5 best hike in the world.

Chris Townsend in 1988 was the first to walk the continental divide of the Canadian Rockies, a 1600mi challenge. He declared the days from Assiniboine to Sunshine to Lake Ohara the finest section.

biking hiking Banded Peak, Alberta

by Besthike editor Rick McCharles

One of the best day hikes out of my home town, Calgary, is Banded Peak. But it’s a big day:

Something like 37 km return, a 1416m (4645ft) height gain.

Perhaps 27km on the bike and a 10km return hike/scree scramble to the 2,934m (9,626ft) summit.

Banded Peak from near the trailhead
Banded Peak from near the trailhead

Here’s the final deceptively easy looking approach.

summit
summit

Banded Peak, together with Mount Glasgow, Mount Cornwall, and Outlaw Peak, forms a small range which lies between the Little Elbow River to the north and the Elbow River to the south. …

PeakFinder

It’s become a tradition with the families of some of my hiking buddies to take their sons on this adventure as something of a rite of passage to manhood.

On Sept. 19th, 2009 we took three 13-yr-olds. They had to get to the top … or die trying.

Banded-Peak-trailhead

Rob Glaser, our leader, was far from certain that a group this big could finish. And finish in time before night fall.

Here we are on the summit. Everyone made it. Somehow.

triumph-on-Banded

It was extremely windy on top. I’d estimate 80km/hr (50MPH).

Other than that, the weather was great for this time of the year. We were lucky.

Our best fun was some of the scree runs on descent.

scree-run

Happily, we all made it back to the trailhead by 5:30PM.

Victory.

more photos from this adventure

Guidebooks:

  • Kananaskis Country Trail Guide – Vol. 2
  • Scrambles In the Canadian Rockies 3rd edition
  • related: Banded Peak Challenge for Easter Seals Camp Horizon