Skip to main content

The road to Espinama



Sotres isn’t quite at the end of the tarmac as there’s a little more, to Tresviso, that we didn’t drive. We got an elevated spot on the camper van grassy area and the view of the mountains was super. The village caters for walkers and climbers and possibly suffers the camper vans without much choice. Any facilities that used to be provided are not now, however we had an empty loo (always a good ploy) and plenty of drinking water (20 litres plus various bottles).






We had a wander around. It’s always good to see a Land Rover - this is a Santana (leaf sprung), built under licence. We checked that there’s bread tomorrow (from 9am) and a found couple of bars from which we would choose one for a drink.

We laughed when we saw a wind sock in what looked like the garden behind the little hotel & bar. We chose this one as, peering into the other, all we could see was a local mountain-wizened man looking out at us. I felt that striking up any kind of conversation would be difficult at the best of times and certainly too demanding of my Spanish.

So into the climbing-memento-strewn bar we went and ordered our beer. The barman hadn’t completed the pouring when a helicopter dropped down and landed behind in the wind-sock garden. Only the landlord seemed unsurprised. Everyone else ran into the street to look, including the staff.

Then we started talking to an English guy who’s on a week’s guided walking, through Explore Travel. The group of sixteen covered all the ages and they had just completed day two and he thought “it was going to be alright’. He’d been worried about group dynamics but I said I thought that sixteen meant you could ignore a problem character without it being obvious. In fact he’d done the research and suggested that two hour shift rotation would be needed, to keep misfits occupied but away from the rest. Such homework! We then tried to observe the rest coming into the bar for dinner to see where our friend ‘sat’ in the group. When a couple of others came over to talk, we were happy to see that he had fitted in.

The two chaps from the helicopter walked into the bar with their overnight bags and I could clearly detect a slight swagger in one as he greeted the landlord.  If I was he, I’m sure I’d have been the same, flying in like that. It turns out that they are really just a glorified labourer and electrician, working to lift electric pylons into awkward mountainside locations and secure with concrete. That would explain the electrical generators on the lower car park. They aren’t there to deter camper-vanners, it’s a temporary supply for the village. We realised that they’d be on all night. One of us appreciated the constant noise but the other didn’t, I’m sorry to say.


We appreciated the morning view and grabbed a
Barra bread for lunch. Then to the main activity, a ‘4x4 traverse’ of a high pass, to drive south to Espinama, on a route that’s famous for its scenery.

Again we felt that the locals were trying to deter us but just like the walker in the bar, I’d done my homework and we ignored the dubious deterrent sign at the hairpin where our track started.






The off-road drive was easier than expected as most of the accounts are provided by bikers and because it’s so loose and rocky, it is a challenge for them. For us it was a beautiful drive in perfect weather - 16km in 90 minutes with a few stops to take it all in. We also talked to Steve, a biker from that posh Formby, who we met near the top. Poor Steve didn’t feel well since leaving the ferry a couple of days ago.  He’s really off to Portugal but his legs ache. We give him some sympathy and hope that he can continue.








As for us, we dropped down into Espinama, find that nowhere is open and so nip up the road for 5 mins to the Fuente De cable car and buy our
café con leche there.

Then we turn around and drive all the way back, this time away from the sun and stop about half way down. There we have lunch at the side of a stream.







We see one other 4x4 tourist, a few bikers, half a dozen walkers and a couple of locals in pickups.
Superb.



Comments

Rach said…
Got ‘The girl from Ipanema’ in my head…de de de de de de de, The Road to Espinama….’
Tim said…
Ha ha. I’m not surprised. In fact we’ve just listened to it 🤣

Popular posts from this blog

On y va

Hooray. We are off. The ferry was booked a few weeks ago and the pressure was then on to get all sorts of jobs finished on the house and Landy. Major cosmetic work was to cover the grey front doors with paint that matches the rest of the vehicle. On the engine a coolant leak had developed behind the water pump and so the P gasket and adjacent core plug were renewed. Also a cheapy head unit from those Chinese people replaced the old Sony fm radio. Now we have opened up the wonders of Car Play and all that comes with it. Finally the 9th gen iPad with WiFi became a 9th gen iPad with WiFi and ‘cellular’. This means we can use OsmAnd Maps which need no data and get their gps position off the ‘cellular’ chip in the iPad. More on this useful map in subsequent posts. We headed towards Portsmouth for a mid morning ferry via our old neighbours in S-I-V. There we had a great few hours updating each about our families and then proceeded to save the NHS, the country and the world too. I mean why no...

Onwards

You can’t visit a classic car enthusiast without admiring their car and we got our timing right, as it was the monthly club meet on Sunday. This was held at the Hippodrome in Maisons Laffitte, so it was just up the road. The definition of ‘classic’ here is 30 years and so many of the vehicles there looked very familiar to us 😳. TR5 and TR6, MGB, RR, BMW, Maserati, of course the Jensen Interceptor that our host drives, 2CV, Caterham 7, a beautiful Austin Healy 3 litre and then this… This is identical to mine, a Fiat 850 Sport Coupé, that I owned from 1978-81. Seeing it, brought back memories of welding, brazing, stripped driveshaft splines, clutch on the M1 and many miles of amazing touring. We drove around France on a camping road trip for all of September 1978 and the following year did the Ardennes for a month too. Here’s Nige’s Jensen… Maisons Laffitte is a very nice area to the west of Paris centre. The mansion is now owned by a trust I think and is a beautiful building. All we ne...

Burgundy

We thought that after the descent from Col du Galibier, we would be done with cols. They are brilliant to drive but hard work. The narrower the road the harder it is, especially at hairpins. These are almost always steep and so the vehicle speed and engine revs need to be correct before the turn. If it’s a right hand bend then the driving line is obviously on the right part of the corner which is always the steepest. It’s all about teamwork, especially as those bikers love the roads and like to be close to the middle. A Land Rover 110 needs a wide turning circle and so we have to look out sideways and either up above or down below to see what’s coming. After Galibier the road finally descends to the ski area of Valloire and on to Col du Telègraphe, which from the south isn’t much but those ascending from the north will feel the height gain. Then down to the Maurienne valley and we think we are done with hills. However there’s one last surprise as we turn right off the motorway route to...