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This guidebook has 30 routes for mountain walkers of all abilities in Southern Catalunya. The routes are in 3 national parks between Barcelona and Valencia; around the River Ebre: the els Ports massif, Serra de Cardo and the Serra de Montsia, including the immense limestone crags of the Parc Natural dels Ports overlooking the Mediterranean.
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A guidebook to 30 graded walks in Spain’s Southern Catalunya. Exploring the beautiful scenery of els Ports and the Tarragona mountains, the walks are suitable for beginner and experienced walkers alike.
Day walks range from 4 to 21km (2–13 miles) and can be enjoyed in 2–6 hours. A 2-day, circular trek encompassing Sant Roc and Arnes is also described in 2 stages covering 47km (29 miles).
Map Key
Overview Map
Introduction
The Walking Area
The Natural Parks
Climate and When to Go
Geology and Geography
Wildlife
History, Architecture and Culture
Getting There
Getting Around
Where to Stay
Emergencies
Language
Money
Food and Drink
What to Take
Waymarking and Access
Hunting and how to avoid it
Maps
Using the guide
The Walks
Walk 1 Punta de l’Aigua
Walk 2 Montaspre ridge
Walk 3 Moleta de les Canals circuit and summit ridge
Walk 4 Barranc del Camp
Walk 5 Solana route
Walk 6 Cova dels Adells
Walk 7 Coll d’en Caubet and Vallfiguera
Walk 8 Cervera and Figuera valleys
Walk 9 La Moleta
Walk 10 Vall d’Infern
Walk 11 Pi del Perillo
Walk 12 Mont Caro summit
Walk 13 Mola del Moro
Walk 14 La Barcina
Walk 15 Cresta del Marturi
Walk 16 Sources of the Matarranya
Walk 17 Roca del Migdia
Walk 18 Caramella gorge
Walk 19 Mola Castellona
Walk 20 Lloret high level route
Walk 21 Barranc de Lloret
Walk 22 Roca Xapada
Walk 23 Font del Paradis
Walk 24 Coll de Lloret
Walk 25 Sant Roc to Arnes and back
Walk 26 La Creu de Santos
Walk 27 Seven ermitas and a ridge
Walk 28 Mas de Mata-redona
Walk 29 La Foradada
Walk 30 Coastal path
Appendix A Route summary table
Appendix B Finding the walks
Appendix C Catalan–English glossary of mountain terms
Appendix D Useful contacts
This guide is intended to be used in conjunction with walking maps produced by Editorial Piolet. These provide, within the limitations of the 1:25,000 and 1:30,000 scales, a good depiction of the walking terrain. Discrepancies between the maps and routes ‘on the ground’ are dealt with both on the sketch maps and in the text. The following are useful maps:
The Estels del Sud map is designed to accompany a multi-day circuit of els Ports and gives guidance in four languages including English. All the maps are available as both hardcopy and CDs and can be purchased online from the publisher at www.editorialpiolet.com (Catalan only) and from the main Tortosa bookshop at
www.la2deviladrich.cat/public/en, which has an English language option.
The Institut Cartografic de Catalunya produces maps of the area at 1:50,000, which can be bought in the UK. The scale is inappropriate for walking but the Baix Ebre (9) and Montsia (22) sheets are useful as detailed road maps. There is also online access to 1:10,000 maps at www.icc.es, but these lack essential footpath information.
March 2025
Page 61
From here the path descends on scree etc. This route is blocked by vegetation and a higher line is required to avoid. After that the path difficult to find for a while.
Thank you to Bob Johnson
December 2022
The authors have provided the following GPX tracks for walks 3, 13, 17 and 22. They work best on the recommended Piolet Estels del Sud map but can be used on the generic Spanish Topo.
July 2014
Page 182 Monte Caro Mountain Hut
There have been some changes to this hut;
New phone number, 003 49775 80063 / 003 46097 90321
The shelter does have water
website www.refugiueccaro.cat
info@... 2011
Walk 20
pg 125: Following the sentence 'The climb continues for half an hour to reach an unsuspected patch of scree with a fig tree growing in the middle of it.'
After ascending the scree the path turns left to climb for some 10m towards the base of some undercut cliffs before turning definitively right onto a clear path. The way now becomes increasingly hemmed in by cliffs and pinnacles until it narrows to a cleft, with two wooden ladders leading up over the top to provide the only exit.
This is the Escarrisó de Borosa and it is reached some one hour 20mins from the start of the walk. A further 10mins of climbing on a clear path leads on to a grassy plateau and up to the shapely rock pillars of the Coll dels Morralets. Turn left here for Cova Ebre and Pallers following a red painted arrow on the back of the first pillar. About 10m further on there is a rock on the right hand side of the path with a metal signpost plate. The route carries straight on here, through woodland, towards the Cova Ebre and Caro
Many thanks go to reader Mike Cahill for providing us with this update information
The guided walking, birdwatching and other services previously provided by Ebrotours have now been transferred to Walking Birder, which can be accessed at www.walkingbirder.com.
A new start is needed for these walks now that the original track to Mas Torrat has been fenced off and it is clear that walkers are no longer welcome to follow the barranc route directly but must make a detour to join the route higher up. The same alternative should also be used for Walk 25.
A new parking area has been built about 500m before Casa de Carvallo, just before the road has a big kink south. The workmen are not finished yet, but there are already “no motor traffic” signs and the foundations for a barrier to stop vehicles going on to the Casa, so all the walks will be a km or so longer.
Many thanks to Peter Gorvett for this information.
The route has been diverted to avoid the property of a landowner who is clearly not walker friendly. The diversion is towards the end of the walk (page 57). The text reads:
‘At this point a cairn marks a junction. Bear right onto a rougher track and continue rising by a terrace wall for 4 minutes until another rough track joins from the left’
Instead of carrying straight on past the ‘No-entry’ sign as described, turn into the rough track which joins from the left. After approximately 200m there is a clear footpath on the right, marked by a post with a direction arrow and a cairn. Take this path and follow it until it joins a broad track. (This is the GR7). Turn right and complete the circuit as described in the guidebook.
After leaving their academic careers in 2002, Philip and Vivien Freakley moved to the Haute Ariege region of the French Pyrenees to indulge a lifelong passion for mountains and the natural world. They are, by inclination, fair weather walkers and discovered the mountains of Southern Catalunya during an escape from a particularly cold and snowy Pyrenean winter. In 2004 they bought a house there and have spent the subsequent five winters exploring, talking to local walkers, translating Catalan route descriptions, knitting together apparently unrelated scraps of footpath and encouraging everyone to build cairns.
After leaving their academic careers in 2002, Philip and Vivien Freakley moved to the Haute Ariege region of the French Pyrenees to indulge a lifelong passion for mountains and the natural world. They are, by inclination, fair weather walkers and discovered the mountains of Southern Catalunya during an escape from a particularly cold and snowy Pyrenean winter. In 2004 they bought a house there and have spent the subsequent five winters exploring, talking to local walkers, translating Catalan route descriptions, knitting together apparently unrelated scraps of footpath and encouraging everyone to build cairns.
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