When Juan Holgado suggested we go for a walk along the GR 48 I jumped at the opportunity. Although it's been a mild winter in the UK it felt like a long time since I had done any serious walking. I was ready for sun and some long days on the trail with Juan felt like ideal preparation for my six week trip to Nepal which starts in March. Better still Juan was doing all the hard work, putting together the itinerary and booking the accommodation, all I had to do was turn up and keep up.
The only downside of letting Juan do the planning was that he determined how long the days were. Juan is a serious dawn to dusk walker and the schedule he put together involved walking 160 kilometres in four days. Despite all my best intentions I had not kept up anything like the level of fitness I had acquired on the E4 last year and keeping up with Juan, who runs/walks 20 kilometres every day he is not on the trail, was always going to be a challenge.
Still the GR 48 was a great choice. It's easy walking, generally between 300 and 800 metres, along excellent trails through really interesting countryside. It's a relatively new trail, going, west to east through a series of natural parks, from just inside the Portugese border for 550 kilometres through the Sierra Morena in the north of Andalucia. Clearly part of an initiative to promote walking it is supported by one of the best web-sites I have seen with guides and GPS trails available for download. The guides on the web-site are in Spanish but English language versions were forwarded to me by a very friendly help desk, via their Facebook page.
The only downside of letting Juan do the planning was that he determined how long the days were. Juan is a serious dawn to dusk walker and the schedule he put together involved walking 160 kilometres in four days. Despite all my best intentions I had not kept up anything like the level of fitness I had acquired on the E4 last year and keeping up with Juan, who runs/walks 20 kilometres every day he is not on the trail, was always going to be a challenge.
Still the GR 48 was a great choice. It's easy walking, generally between 300 and 800 metres, along excellent trails through really interesting countryside. It's a relatively new trail, going, west to east through a series of natural parks, from just inside the Portugese border for 550 kilometres through the Sierra Morena in the north of Andalucia. Clearly part of an initiative to promote walking it is supported by one of the best web-sites I have seen with guides and GPS trails available for download. The guides on the web-site are in Spanish but English language versions were forwarded to me by a very friendly help desk, via their Facebook page.