Last Seasons Blog

Last Seasons Blog is still available to view via this link.
I do ask for a €2 donation from each walker, but only once per week. Half goes to S.O.S Animals, Spain and the other half going to ARCH Horse charity, AID Animal Charity and CUDECA.

Sunday, 8 January 2017

Rio Grande - Saturday 7th January 2017

This walk started by walking between the administration area of the Forest Firefighters Base and Airfield and the heap of gravel that have been extracted from the bed of the Rio Grande and then onto the banks of the river. In the past I have walked along the track that is used extensively bu vehicles visiting the stables which is located a few hundred metres ahead or the many families that use this area for a picnic at the weekends. This is no longer possible as the recent monsoon like rains caused the river to swell to such proportions that the track has been washed away. Our route was along the top of the now somewhat reduced banks close to the adjoining fields. Amazingly the amount of water that is now flowing in the river is little more than one would normally see in early summer.

We reach the Bridge that carries the drovers track over the river, which thankfully appears to have been unaffected, and head off into the countryside. In the past I have walked this route in an anticlockwise direction but today, for a change, to do it clockwise. We leave the Drovers track after only a few metres and head along a track that runs parallel with the river and is access to the fincas and fields that are scattered along this route. It is obvious that the recent rains had done a huge amount of damage to the track as it had recently been repaired and regarded which is something that had not happened for the previous 5 years that i have been using the track.

We reach a T junction and normally I would take the track to the left and head down to the riverside, but this track was still very wet and muddy and it was obvious that the track alongside the river was impassable. Fortunately the alternative route to the right is virtually only an S bend on the current track. Again the evidence of the water damage is obvious with hastily built new walls and the banks of dried mud on the edges of the track.

At the end of this track we come to another T junction and turn right and head further out into the countryside and leave the fincas and weekend properties behind as we head through the arable fields on an agricultural track. From this track we are offered views of the Sierra de las Nieves but unfortunately the atmosphere was very misty and the views very restricted.  We reach the top of this section and drop down and join the Drovers track some one and a half kilometres from the bridge that we crossed earlier. I know the distance very well as this was a route that I rode often on my bicycle and timed myself up the measured incline. The views are now in the nearer distance and across the valley to Pizzarra and Alora and further to Alhaurin de la Torre and the Sierra de Mijas.

I have ridden and walked this particular stretch many time over the past few years and know the environment quite well, but I was amazed at what the deluge of a few weeks previous had dome. Apart from the damage to the track itself, which is a well used route for access to the many agricultural enterprises, there was evidence of totally new water courses that had formed. It was then a n easy walk down this track and back to the bridge and then retracing our route along the river banks and back to the start.


Although the weather was dull it kept dry, if a little chilly. We had a very good turnout of 31 walkers, and several dogs, including the organiser of the U3A Country Walks Mr Vernon Bailey whom I hope enjoyed the route as the U3A are doing this same route on the following Monday. This was bad planning on my part when I changed the schedule recently.



Thursday, 5 January 2017

The Guard Tower and German Valley

Today was the first walk of the New Year, and normally the Thursday walks are to discover and test new routes, which in fact this was, but the walk was attended by 22 people. It really was a good job that the route planned out OK otherwise it could have been very embarrassing.



We parked on the side of the main track that leads to Barranco Blanco or White Revine and headed off through the Pine woods and onto the now derelict infrastructure of yet another failed urbanisation project. We the left this and took to the original way into the valley and past the Bavarian style building that was the Guard Tower for the valley when it was used by the Nazi’s during WW2.




The walk then takes us down into the valley and offers us some spectacular views across the countryside and to the sea, but the damage done by the recent monsoon type rainfalls was clearly visible. Eventually we reach the bottom and take a break alongside the skeletal remains of yet another failed development. We then start to pass the large villas that surround the lake and start out trek out of the valley and up the tarmaced entrance road.


The weather was ideal for walking being sunny with clear blue skies but not too warm. 




Sunday, 20 November 2016

Cerralba to Rio Grande - Saturday 19th November 2016

Another good walk was reported, as I am still unable to undertake the sort of distances the group likes to do. The weather has been very kind to us so far this year.


Photo's courtesy of Mr John Campbell and Mr John Milborrow.

Monday, 14 November 2016

Lakes & Trees - Saturday 12th November 2016

This is a route that the Thursday group had explored few months ago and, in my opinion, was one of our best walks,and was suggested originally by John Milborrow.




The walk starts in the Olive plantations and offers a totally different perspective on the views that tourists get of this popular area. The area is know to many as 'The Lakes' and is in fact a series of reservoirs that supply water to the hungry irrigation systems of the Guadalhorce valley.
The views extend to the town of Ardales and the mountains behind.

After a short but sharp climb the edge of the plantations are reached and the Pine forests start, and the views from the track is now of a totally different lake and completely different vistas beyond. The walk continues through the wooded area, still offering glimpses of the wonderfully blue coloured water, util it reaches the area of great interest. A slight detour from the main track leads to the Necropolis and a section of trench that was used by civil war combatants to defend the high ground.
After a while of exploring this very interesting area it was back onto the forest track to the start.


Photos courtesy of John Campbell, John Milborrow and Paula Shrimpton

 

Gibrigalio - Thursday 10th November 2016

Unfortunately I am still unable to join the walks and am still in a period of convalescence, although I am still administering the group and sending out the routes, which makes it all the more difficult when I get the reports from the walk telling me how good it was.
This was indeed the case with this particular route, It was an area that I had wanted to explore for a while and it seems that those who did the walk were not disappointed.
Apparently some of the inclines were quite steep but the views from the top were quite stunning and I am told that they were possibly some of the best so far experienced.
The route down caused a little consternation and John Milborrow had to do some improvising to find a way down but succeeded with his usual ingenuity.

Photos courtesy of Mr John Campbell and Mr John Milborrow

Sunday, 6 November 2016

The Show goes on without me.

There we things to organise and things to do, there was the Sponsored Fun Walk for S.O.S Animals to organise and lead, there was the trip to the Caminito del Rey to finalise, and here I was in a hospital bed being told to stay calm.

It was then that I realised what a fantastic group of walkers and friend I had. They were not going to let things stop just because I wasn't there and several of the group got together and carried on where I had unfortunately been forced to leave off.

The sponsored walk was a great success and raised almost €1200 for the charity, which included €105 raised by John Staton's cake raffle.

The trip to the Caminito was another success with Paula organising the meet up and convoy to the attraction and John Milborrow sorting out the lunch at El Kiosko.

There was no question that anything was going to stop, apart from a couple of walks that got missed before we could set up a working party to run things in my absence, and a change to the schedule, the walking group will continue. I am hoping to be back at the helm at the start of the New Year.

A huge thanks to all who stepped into the breach.
A huge thanks for all the good wishes and to those who have been so helpful and selfless.



The Day my World Changed Forever – Monday 10th October 2016

This entry into the blog is somewhat later than in the usual case, but there is a reason;

The day started like any other and I was really looking forward to exploring a route that had been suggested by one of our members, Meg. This was the third hill walk that I had done in 5 days and was feeling rather good about it, if a little tired. There was just the three of us talking this route, Meg, Paula and myself. We met in the carpark at Monda and then followed Meg to her beautiful South African Log Cabin, nestling in the hills.

From her we trekked on little used tracks that undulated through the hills with some quite steep climbs in places. We eventually arrived at about the halfway point which was the tarmac of the road to Istan. This proved to be a relentless c limb, but offering great views to Malaga in the far distance.
Our route then left the tarmac and took a well maintained track that led past one of the larger houses in the area. We then took the zig-zag path down the side of the hill into the valley and crossed a stream that would have looked beautiful had there been water flowing.


It was then up a long incline and onto the drive back to Meg’s casa as we approached there newly laid coloured concrete terrace that led to the house my life changed. I felt a little whoozy and consequently feinted, everyone thought that I had just overdone things a bit, and despite resting I wasn’t getting any better. I was taken home and from there to Hospital in Malaga where I was diagnosed with arrhythmia.

I spent the next 15 days in hospital and now have a implanted defibrillator. My life was saved but my hill walking days are over I’m sad to say. Hopefully I will be back to an almost normal life in a few weeks.