The
Basques have often been described as a mysterious people: Where
did they come from? What's the source of their language? How
did they survive as a people despite waves of invasion of Celts,
Romans and Christian settlers? Arguments of geographical isolation
seem to hold little water leading researchers to conclude that
there must be something special about Basque character which
has allowed them to endure and thrive in their enchanting corner
of south-west France and mid-northern Spain where the sea meets
the great Pyrenees mountain range.
The Basque Country (Euskal Herria in the Basque Language, País
Vasco in Spanish and Pays Basque in French) is made up of seven
historical provinces (Vizkaia, Alava, Guipuzcoa, Navarra, Labourd,
Basse Navarre and Soule) stretching on both sides of the border.
These hilly and coastal lands have been farmed, havens for shepherds
and exploited for their mineral wealth for centuries and centuries
by the Basque peoples who share a common language - Euskara.
Euskara is a pre-Indoeuropean language and believed to date
to the time when Cro-Magnons walked the earth some 40,000 years
ago. A distinct folklore, games (jai alai), cuisine, dance,
relationship to the land and homestead have been cultivated
in this fertile region and we'll learn about this evolution
as we walk their paths and ways.
On our tour we will explore the roots of Basque history and
get a sense of what the Basques possess that has allowed them
to be known as Europe's oldest civilization. We'll sample their
world famous cuisine, visit their coastal fishing villages from
which innumerable voyagers launched off into the unknown in
search of discovery or to land an enormous whale, walk along
their old smuggler's trails as we cross the border connecting
France and Spain on two ancient Basque passes all the while
being exhilirated by their most beautiful natural resources
- the Urdaibai Biosphere Reserve on the coast, the densely forested
Urkiola Nature Park, and the jagged Aizkorri range. We'll not
only stay in some of the Basque country's most beautiful coastal
and mountain villages, we'll also enjoy the vibrant cities of
Bilbao (visiting the Guggenheim Museum), San Sebastian (a city
perfectly interfaced with its coastal and hilly setting), and
Pamplona (we'll learn why is was Hemingway's favorite getaway).
7 days & 7 nights
Level: Medium
Walking Days: 7 Total
Distance: 55.2 miles / 89 km With optionals 62.2 miles
/ 100.4 km
Departure Dates:
July 3-9, 2007
July 23 - 29, 2008
Please contact us if you have a group thatwould
like to book.
Price: US$2200/€1745
Groups: If you have a group of four (4) or
more and the dates are not available when you would like to
travel, contact us and we can try and schedule a tour adapted
to your dates.
Weather: The Basque Country's driest months are from July
to September but be prepared for the unexpected rain shower.
Summer temperatures oscillate between 15-30ºC / 60-85ºF
What is and isn’t included: Trip price includes accommodations (double occupancy),
all meals (breakfast, lunch and dinner) each day (except dinner
in San Sebastian), all entry fees, pre-departure information,
experienced guides, support vehicle, all transportation during
the trip. Airfare to Spain is not included nor is insurance
or transportation to the starting point (Bilbao) and from
the ending point (Pamplona). The single supplement
fee is US$250/€200 for this tour.
Daily Itinerary
Day 1 Bilbao
The tour begins in our charming hotel located near the Río Nervión
in the heart of Bilbao's historical district. After a brief
introduction and presentation of the week's program we'll take
a walking tour of Bilbao, a city founded 700 years ago. We'll
walk the winding streets passing the gothic Cathedral of Santiago,
the lively La Ribera town market where the vendors sell fresh
fish and produce as well as the city's first bridge, the Puente
de San Antón. We'll then walk along the Nervion River to the
Guggenheim Museum. En route we cross over the modern Zubi Zuri
bridge designed by the world-famous Spanish architect Santiago
Calatrava. At the Guggenheim we give you free time to explore
architect Frank Gehry's fascinating building and its collections
which have given a completely new face to Bilbao's waterfront.
For those who prefer not to spend the afternoon at the museum,
we'll offer an optional visit to ascend the city's emblematic
Monte Artxanda aboard the funicular railway built in 1915. From
here we'll have spectacular panoramic views of the city. Before
we dine in a characteristic 'mesón vasco' (Basque restaurant)
in the Siete Calles district (named logically for the seven
streets that neatly divide the area), we'll make a stop in the
arcaded Plaza Nueva, a typical open Spanish square ringed with
balconied houses, and join the locals for some delicious 'pintxos'
(finger-foods) washed down with 'txakolin' (small glasses of
local white wine). Walking distance: 4 miles / 6.5 km
Day 2 Lekeitio
En route to the coast we'll pass through Gernika, bombed in
1937 in a brutal German experiment to test armaments on a civil
population. The town was immortalized by Pablo Picasso in his
provocative black and white painting of the same name. We then
continue to the small fishing village of Elantxobe (which gave
us our word for the anchovy - one of its traditional catches)
that maintains an active fleet of colorful boats. Taking off
from the port, we'll ascend the nearby Cabo Ogoño, a limestone
mass which impresses with its 280m vertical drops to the sea.
Through thick forest and bucolic conuntryside, we'll continue
to the Ermita (chapel) de San Pedro de Atxarre (310m) and enjoy
a sudden and magnificent view of the 12km of sandy shore that
line the Gernika estuary where the Oka River meets the sea.
This horeshoe-shaped area, including the beach and surrounding
pastures and mountains, form part of the Urdaibai Biosphere
Reserve named as such in 1984 by UNESCO for its wealth of flora
and fauna. Descending on foot to Kanala, if conditions permit
we'll cross the estuary by boat to the fishing village of Mundaka
for a stroll and freetime to enjoy an afternoon drink at the
small colorful port. We'll shuttle to our seaside hotel, which
doubles as a spa, in the enchanting urb of Lekeitio. The day
ends with dinner sampling local specialties from the Bay of
Biscay such as cod (bacalao), hake (merluza), sea bass (lubina)
and squid (chipirones) (8mi/13km).
Day
3 Arantzazu We shuttle to the center of Euskadi to the Urkiola Nature
Park located in the mountains around Durango. Nicknamed the
little Switzerland, the park boasts a stunning limestone range
of majestic, craggy peaks whose crowning glory is Anboto (1330m/4362ft),
themythic dwelling place of the Basque country's most important
pre-Christian deity, Mari, aka the Dama de Anboto. Today we'll
cross this enchanting range inspired by the legends and its
magnetic beauty. Shuttle to and visit of Onati a town known
for its surprising collection of Renaissance works of art including
its university and church. From there we continue to our hotel
in Arantzazu (2398ft/731m) most well-known for its avant-garde
sanctuary incorporating such reknowned artists as Eduardo Chillida.
This highly picturesque village and favorite Basque getaway
is set within a deep and narrow, wooded valley atthe foot of
one of the Basque Country's highest peaks, Aizkorri (5012ft/1528m).
Tonight's fare will emphasize the inland farmers' hearty vegetable,
poultry and meat dishes as well as delicious smoked sheep's
milk cheeses. (8.4mi/13.6km)
Day 4 San Sebastián Heading off on foot from the hotel we ascend to the base
of emblematic Aizkorri enjoying first a dense and inviting beech
forest and then magnificent views of the steep range. We'll
discuss the importance of shepherding to the mountain communities
and the presence of the semi-wild horses that graze on the grasslands.
We loop back to Arantzazu and then continue to the coast ; our
destination the beautiful city of San Sebastian arguably Spain's
most attractive and romantic cities. Among its charms are its
setting : three spectacular beaches, its expansive bay leading
out to the ocean, the hilly contours framing the city, the wooded
Monte Urgull crowned with the ruins of a castle and its very
appealing early 20th century architecture funded by turn-of-the-century
nobles who came here in droves to enjoy the temperate climate.
We'll wander the streets, climb up Monte Urgull for spectacular
views of the area, enjoy its maritime walkway, look for the
more than 100 types of lamp posts decorating the city and then
wind up in the historical quarter. Here we'll find the Basque
cuisine at its best ! Enjoy dinner on your own tonight in this
culinary mecca ! (9mi/14.5km)
Day 5 Ainhoa (France) From San Sebastian we'll take a magnificent coastal trail
which quickly leaves the city beind and transports you back
in time to the days when the hillside, Uliamendi, was used by
local whalers to spot the great sea beasts approaching the coast.
The undulating trail enters forests, soars along the cliffs
and then leaves us at the foot of a picturesque lighthouse which
protects the entrance to one of the Basque Country's most beautiful
natural ports, Pasai Donibane. Oozing historical charm, with
its galleried waterfront homes, you'll enjoy exploring this
attractive village where Victor Hugeo lived and wrote 'Alps
and the Pyrenees' in 1843. After lunch we'll ride along the
Jaizkibel ridge to the picturesque frontier town of Hondarribia.
The brightly colored houses, spilling with geraniums, will delight
you as we walk through the town enjoying views of nearby coastal
France. We then head to Ainhoa, one of the French Basque Country's
most beautiful villages. The highly scenic roads takes us over
the border where we'll savor French Basque cuisine this evening.
(8.2 miles / 13.2km)
Day 6 - Burguete Today we make an exciting journey into the past passing
three sets of caves (we enter two fo the three). Over the course
of thousands of years, the caves have been whiddled out of the
limestone massif that forms this stretch of the Western Pyrenees.
We'll walk through rolling farmland along ancient smugglers'
paths that were used most recently to help Jews flee from Nazi
occupied France. Our first stop is at the Sare caves which were
occupied some 45,000 years ago by human ancestors. Sheep and
semi-wild horses, pottoks, graze in these hills as the wooded
trail heads over the border to the Spanish caves at Zugarramurdi
where a witch hunt in the 1620s left the local populations of
Urdazubi and Zugarramurdi with only one-fifth of its residents.
The supposed witches were said to meet in the caves for their
covens (akelarres). The last caves in Urdazubi overflow with
natural sculpture - stalactites and stalagmites formed by the
process of karstification - water acting upon limestone. After
our walk we'll shuttle to St Jean Pied de Port. En route, we'll
drive through the lovely French Basque village of Espelette
where red peppers dry in the sun and drape the facades of the
houses. Bustling St Jean has been greeting pilgrims making their
way to Spain along the Camino de Santiago (Road of St James)
for a thousand years. We'll stop and visit its charming cobbled
streets, gated doorways and get excellent views from its medieval
fortress, the citadel. Shuttling uphill and over the border
we reach Burguete, most well-known for being Hemingway's favorite
trout-fishing getaway as described in his classic, The Sun
Also Rises.
Day
7 Pamplona Following the footsteps of thousands before us we'll set
off from Roncesvalles along the famous medeival pilgrimage pathway,
the Camino de Santiago. Over the centuries hundreds and thousands
of pilgrims have undertaken the long overland journey to Santiago
de Compostela passing through this entrancing local which also
claims fame for being the site of the great French epic, The
Song of Roland. The tragic events that led to the death
of Charlemagne's greatest knight, Roland, took place here. After
a brief stop in Roncesvalles, we'll continue through forest
and farmland to the rustic villages of Burguete and then Espinal
both known for their neat red and green trimmed white-washed
caserios. Before our farewell dinner we'll visit the city on
foot taking in the famous streets along which the bulls make
their daily run to the bullring during the San Fermin festival
in July and visit the Cathedral (noted for its eclectic mixture
of styles) (9.5mi/15.2km).