Arija

Camino Olvidado

To end of camino
367.7
Altitude
857

San Vicente de Villamezán

2.20

Arija

2.60

Bimón

Services
ATM
Yes
Bar
Yes
Bus
Yes
Pharmacy
Yes
Train
Yes

Arija sits on the Embalse del Ebro, a reservoir created by flooding the original town — 400 houses, 8 churches, 2 chapels, and a traditional glass factory were submerged. What remains is an "upper town" built after the dam and a "lower town" by the water. The atmosphere can feel a bit forlorn.

Hotel Rural la Piedra offers rooms. There's a small grocery store down by the water. The albergue appears to be permanently closed.

Arija has limited services — a pharmacy, the hotel, and the grocery store.

The Road

Once you leave Arija, you enter Cantabria. The approximately 18 km to Villafria are along the reservoir on the side of a road. The road is very quiet but cars go fast between villages, so stick to the dirt shoulder. About 7 km along, at Villanueva de las Rozas, you'll see the tower of a church that was submerged to create the reservoir — there's a walkway out to it.

After Villafria, the route is mostly off-road. Two highlights: the Roman ruins of Juliobriga (with a museum and church bell tower worth climbing) and, after a 200 m ascent through beech forest to the Pena Cutral, the descent to the Romanesque church of San Pedro de Cervatos with its famous erotic capitals and corbels.

City Map

Comments

All Caminos App User (not verified)

À partir de Arija pour éviter la route et ses énormes poids lourds suivez la voie ferrée elle est désaffectée ça raccourcit le chemin et c’est parfois insolite