Entries in Setcases (2)

Friday
Mar092012

Pyrenees vacation - Hike 1, Setcases to Molló

In the prior blog entry, we introduced our "individualized" trip:  an organized 5-day hike from the edge of the Pyrenees to the Mediterranean coast.  It was structured by a travel company (a different hotel booked each night), but we would actually execute it on our own - no guides or groups.

The first hike was from Setcases to Mollo, both in Spain.  (Although you can already see the French border on the Google Map below.)  It's not the high Pyrenees, but still a hike of 650m ascent over 13km in that day's plan.

Below was the sign that greeted us at the start of the day.  This trail section is part of the major GR11 route across the Pyrenees, so we hoped that it would be well marked with the red/white stripes the whole way.

Our first steps were across a mountain stream, with the same flowers we saw in town (Setcases) on the bridge.

After 30-45 minutes of immediate incline, we reached a relatively wide, flat, grassy track through the woods.
We stopped frequently to take photos of the peaks across the way.  It was a beautiful, blue day in Spain.

The woods here were dominated by pine trees and rough shrubs along the trailside.

One thing we did NOT expect was to see cows in the mountains.  We learned, in fact, that the locals let them graze freely and just round them up a few times each year.  They were quite skittish and afraid of people.

The next surprise was to see horses in the mountains, also roaming freely.  As with the cows, people here let them take care of themselves and find them a few times each year.  What was a little disturbing to Frau A is that the horses are used for food!  (We'd seen Spanish dried horse meat on menus in Munich, and here they were.)

They were very nervous as well, but we snuck through the trees for a few closer photos.  This one was young and liked to stay close to mom... but still curious of us nonetheless.

To help people track them down, many horses wear bells like the one in the photo below.

In the next photo, you get a much better view of the wide, grassy train we were following.  No problems so far.  Until this point, we were following the GR11 and would see the red & white stripes marker periodically.

We caught this guy sharing our path, but he beat it as soon as we came around the corner toward him.

At this point, we could look back and see how the trail wound its way around the side of the mountain.

We then came to a point with a great view across the Pyrenees - peaks are far as the eye could see.  This is where the instructions told us to leave the GR11 (to take a path down to the next town).

Frau A took this chance to pose with the horses that were sharing our lookout point.

Unfortunately, things started to go poorly from here.  Our printed map and turn-by-turn guide sent us onto this narrow dirt track.  That was fine, except the instruction (remember, printed in German) told us to look for a fence on the left, go through the gate, and continue on the trail to Mollo.

We never found the fence, and therefore not the gate, and therefore not the path to Mollo.  We backtracked twice and checked each direction carefully, but just could not figure it out.  These cows couldn't help, unfortunately.  At least the weather was perfect - not too cold or hot for extended hiking.

It's funny.  Even though she's tired, somewhat lost, and it's getting on towards dusk, Frau A still wants to take photos of animals!  She would have taken one home with her, if it were possible.

At this point, it was starting to get dark.  We spent a LOT of time taking photos, and after backtracking twice to try and find the turnoff that the instruction said we should follow, we put away the cameras and headed to one place we knew existed and hopefully find some help.

Because this was already early October, peak season for hiking was over.  There were almost no people on the trails with us.  Fortunately we remembered passing a small turnoff into a national park, where earlier we had seen a few cars.  We hiked there as fast as possible... and luckily found one family left.  They were having a picnic.  Frau A asked them for help in Spanish.

Unbelievably, they offered to drive us to Mollo - where they are from.  They did not know the fence and gate the instructions mentioned, but since we had already hiked 15km (and probably 1100m total ascent) we didn't feel guilty about accepting their offer.  We had hiked more than in the plan anyway!

Ironically, it was a great way to end the day.  Their kindness was a reaffirmation of how nice people can be.  On the other side, we learned that we cannot trust the given directions from Wikireisen blindly.

The next hikes proved to be just as "interesting"... coming soon.

Wednesday
Mar072012

Pyrenees vacation - a self-guided experiment

(Sorry for the lapses in posting here - I'm back in action.  Thanks for understanding - Herr J)

Do you remember that I asked Frau A to marry me at Oktoberfest?  She said Yes, and the very next day we left for a week-long hiking trip.  This trip was destined to be interesting because it was a hybrid between a guided tour and a do-it-yourself vacation.  Here's how it worked:

A German travel company called Wikireisen offers multi-day hiking packages that go from hotel to hotel (or hut to hut) through the Alps or Pyrenees.  They offer other trips as well (biking, walking, etc.) in many different countries around Europe.  The idea is that they provide the structure of the trip, but you're not constrained to being herded with a group each day.  They call it "individualized travel".  They book the hotels (your start and end points each day), provide maps and outline the hiking routes, but you hike the route on your terms.

What made it appealing to us is that the plan details are (supposedly) fully and professionally prepared, but you execute it as you want.  Are you a late sleeper?  Most hikes each day are 5-6 hours, so just start at 10:30 and you'll be in the next town by dinner.  Frau A and I planned to start earlier, because we take so many photos that it slows us down.  In the heavy tourist season, many people will be booked in the same hotels, but would depart and arrive according to their hiking speed and preferences.  A pretty interesting concept, right?

So the next morning after the Oktoberfest proposal, we flew from Munich to Barcelona.

We selected a hiking plan through the Pyrenees, so upon arriving in Barcelona we took the train from the airport to the main station.  We bought tickets, and hopped the next train to Setcases, Spain:

The adventure we bought from Wikireisen included 5 hikes:

Day 1:  Setcases (Spain) to Mollo (Spain)

Day 2:  Mollo (Spain) to Prats de Mollo (France)

Day 3:  Taxi from Mollo to Coll de Noell (France), from there to Amelie le Bains (France)

Day 4:  Amelie le Bains (France) to Ceret (France)

Day 5:  Ceret (France) to Banyuls sur Mer (France)

In short, this would take us over 5 days from the Pyrenees to the French Mediterranean coast.  Very cool. 

We were quite excited when we finally arrived in Setcases, so before dinner we walked around the small town a bit.

In addition to the stone buildings, there were some water passages that (we think) help direct mountain run off.

A few stores were open, but we weren't there for shopping.  (Although the olive oil looked quite tempting.)

We weren't sure if this was the home of someone who loves plants and flowers, or a closed flower shop.

Setcases is quaint, but we took a quick dinner so we would be ready to start early the next morning.  The hiking directions were in German, so that made things a bit more complicated.  Frau A speaks Spanish, but neither of us speak French, so local help could be an issue at some point...

In the next posts, we'll share a hike-by-hike account of the adventure.  Lots of photos.  Stay tuned,.