Where's Bertie? He's still at Berastegi
Weather: Sunny and warm, but a bit breezy
Just as I was about to put tea on the table last night, Mick nipped out to put a couple of things in the recycling bin, about twenty paces away. After a while I wondered if he'd failed to notice the big bank of bins almost next to us and had gone on walkabout, but it turned out that he was just chatting to our Dutch neighbour. His tea may have been cold by the time he got back, but it was a fortuitous chat, as he received a recommendation that the Menu del Día at the bar in the village was excellent. A plan was thus formed: I would get up early(ish), head out for a 4-hour run/walk at 8am, then we'd go for lunch about 1pm, after which we would either get on the road for the shortish hop up to France, or we'd stay here another night.
I'd downloaded three possible routes for my outing and ended up doing a mishmash of two of them, taking in six summits (the highest being 860m) and amassing 900m of ascent over the course of 19km.
The first summit didn't have much merit, and I felt like I'd trespassed to get there (I have no idea what the access laws are, but my observation in Spain in general is that if there's a track and it's not marked as private, then it's fair game. On this route, however, I'd left a track to walk up a field and into a felled forest, which felt a bit dubious. That said, just about everywhere that someone may want to cross a field boundary there seemed to be a gate or some sort of a cobbled together style, so maybe access is accepted even off-piste hereabouts). The second summit had a trig point and good (if slightly hazy views) over a magnificent looking ridge that still had some small patches of snow.
I opted to bypass the next couple of nobbles along the ridge (they felt even more like trespassing to me), but detoured to the next couple. Then came the highlights of the outing - a couple of summits topped by rocky tors. The first one was easy to navigate and technically the second would have been too, but it was a scramble with some big chasms in the rock, where a fall would have serious consequences, so I erred on the side of caution and made do with getting within metres of the cross on the summit.
My final high point (811m) was accidental. On a path through another grassy field (where I was confident I was allowed to be by the fact that another chap was following me, and four came the other way - I feel like I saw more walkers on this outing than I've seen in the last month combined) was indistinct on the ground and I wasn't sure which side of a fence I needed to be. Having crossed the fence I decided I was on the wrong side of it, by which time I thought I may as well re-route over one final top.
Setting off back down the hill, I thought I was going to be late for my lunch date, but it was a speedy descent and I actually arrived a few minutes early, and not alone, as Mick had walked out along the road to meet me. It had been a thoroughly enjoyable route that I'd happily do again, although I'd probably choose to do the PR111 next time, and to take Mick with me.
Back at Bertie, it was a quick shower and change, then out to Ategi Taberna, where I was pleased to see that the menu was written in Spanish, not Basque. The food was good, and the place was reasonably busy for a Wednesday. It seemed a little odd, just after being served our main courses, that our puddings were put down on the table next to us, but it wasn't just us. A couple that came in after us were still on their first courses when their mains were delivered, and their puddings arrived just after they started their mains. It's obviously just the way they do it, and as everyone else seemed to be local and regular customers (everyone seemed to know everyone else), it's obviously just accepted. It does make for a rather fast lunch, though.
Given how close this place is to the route that we've now many times driven through Spain, we'd happily pop by again, even if just for a lunch stop.
We could have driven on into France after lunch, but given what a nice spot this is, and that it's free and quiet, we decided to stay another night. That gives us three days to get from here to Calais, so we'll be in full-on driving mode from tomorrow. The only potential fly in the ointment is that on the TV news in the bar there were reports of queues at petrol stations in Spain due to the attack on Iran. If that escalates into large-scale panic buying and fuel shortage, that could be problematic to our journey. It's not something we can control though, so no point worrying about it.
I'm liking the variety of field boundaries hereabouts. No one seems to go in for manufactured fence posts - any piece of straight-enough local tree will do.
Dry stone walls are prevalent too
If you can look past me and the trig point, that's a fine ridge as the backdrop. The map tells me its high points are around 13-1400m.
Talking of not climbing things, this is the summit I didn't quite reach. Technically straightforward enough, but grykes were of man-eating size and a slip would have ruined more than just my day.















































