Leaving the park to return again.
Three days and two walks were the highlight of our time back in the park, however, before this we needed to do shopping and move on from Lima Escape. Visiting a little town with an historic medieval bridge made for a quick food restocking and getting much needed cash. Ponte de Barco was very quiet but beautiful. A quick lunch of traditional pasties, then we were on our way. The egg filling of the sweet one was not something I would repeat but at least we tried them.
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Ponte de Barco |
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Ponte de Barco |
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Egg and almond pastel
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The drive over the mountain top to the next part of the park was absolutely breathtaking and was the beginning of our hairy drives…they got much worse after this, little was I to know at the time. The landscape was full of boulders and so stunning, and then just around a corner when you least expect it, were big long horned cattle, standing right there and not moving out of the way. The journey was exciting enough without these surprises, but it made it more entertaining.
Walking again
With feet bandaged up we did two walks over three days and they were both lovely, one to the village and surrounds with a visit to the
ethnological museum in Campo do Gères and one on one part of the Roman road that passes through Campo do Gères, this walk was fantastic. The short village walk took us through the valley and into the village to see the site of some espigueiros. These were my new found obsession. They are granaries made of wood or granite and placed on stilts to keep corn dry inside.
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Espigueiros for corn storage |
The traditional villages in this part of Portugal have these stores and we would see many more of them. The museum was small and informative about both the way of life and the flora and fauna of the National Park. It also gave us an insight into the Roman influence in this area, particularly the Geira, the Roman walk across the top of Spain and into Portugal. The village itself was believed to be a Roman camp, hence its name.
The area is important as it had preserved milestones, which allegedly had the names of the emperors engraved into them. We saw the milestones but could not make out any writing. I decided to make my own inukshuk, to welcome other weary travellers and hope that it lasts a week at least…I cannot imagine it will outlive the Roman milestones!
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Inukshuk |
Loving the blog so far.
ReplyDeleteThank you! Will try to keep them coming.
ReplyDeleteI love following along on your journey. Thanks for sharing. Can’t wait to travel again with you. ❤️
ReplyDeleteLooks amazing again. Great scenery. This blog is so easy to reAd it’s like we’re in the journey with you. Xx.
ReplyDelete