Mblinko
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- Joined
- May 13, 2014
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So, we drove to Santander to meet a couple of friends with Land Rovers off the boat from Portsmouth. This the route we planned to drive.

If if any members want the GPX file, I'm happy to share. Just PM me.
Having done it, I'd say about 70% is off road, though we did skip a bit in the middle to allow a couple of days off.
Waypoint navigation was handled by my Garmin GPSMAP620 and I got free Topo maps from here http://Garmin.openstreetmap.nl. They are very good and are available for almost anywhere.
We planned for 10-12 days driving south with 2-3 days for the return journey. As it was, this was about right to get us all the way to the Algarve.
Our tracks started pretty much on the Portuguese border and soon after starting there was an ideal photo opportunity.

Funny how the perspective on the photo seems to show the LC as being smaller than the Landys !
We hadn't pre-booked any campsites and just took it as it came. Overall, they were priced between 10 and 16 Euros a night which was very reasonable. Some were bigger than others and some were smaller / fuller than expected for the time of year, but I just managed to squeeze into this one

For the first few days, the tracks near the border lead us through a mixture of open plains and forest far away from main populations.

When we went through the tiny villages, the one impression I will take away is how friendly the people are. You wave as you pass and they smile and wave back - without exception, everyone did this
The tracks were a mixture of wide forest tracks with firebreaks either side and rocky climbs and descents

The really interesting challenging tracks were the small ones that we found when finding routes between waypoints as opposed to following the pre-defined route. This next photo followed about a mile or so of narrow hilly rocky walled rough track which was so narrow, in many places there was barely an inch spare on either side. Slimline Landys were fine, but for me, it was a bit more challenging to come out without scars which I did. It was all worth it when we arrived here.

It was river bed which in the winter would be raging but for now was all but dry

Unfortunately, the track disappeared a bit further up and we had to do it all in reverse - shame
Here's a gratuitous LC shot to finish this part

./ end of part 1

If if any members want the GPX file, I'm happy to share. Just PM me.
Having done it, I'd say about 70% is off road, though we did skip a bit in the middle to allow a couple of days off.
Waypoint navigation was handled by my Garmin GPSMAP620 and I got free Topo maps from here http://Garmin.openstreetmap.nl. They are very good and are available for almost anywhere.
We planned for 10-12 days driving south with 2-3 days for the return journey. As it was, this was about right to get us all the way to the Algarve.
Our tracks started pretty much on the Portuguese border and soon after starting there was an ideal photo opportunity.

Funny how the perspective on the photo seems to show the LC as being smaller than the Landys !
We hadn't pre-booked any campsites and just took it as it came. Overall, they were priced between 10 and 16 Euros a night which was very reasonable. Some were bigger than others and some were smaller / fuller than expected for the time of year, but I just managed to squeeze into this one

For the first few days, the tracks near the border lead us through a mixture of open plains and forest far away from main populations.

When we went through the tiny villages, the one impression I will take away is how friendly the people are. You wave as you pass and they smile and wave back - without exception, everyone did this

The tracks were a mixture of wide forest tracks with firebreaks either side and rocky climbs and descents

The really interesting challenging tracks were the small ones that we found when finding routes between waypoints as opposed to following the pre-defined route. This next photo followed about a mile or so of narrow hilly rocky walled rough track which was so narrow, in many places there was barely an inch spare on either side. Slimline Landys were fine, but for me, it was a bit more challenging to come out without scars which I did. It was all worth it when we arrived here.

It was river bed which in the winter would be raging but for now was all but dry

Unfortunately, the track disappeared a bit further up and we had to do it all in reverse - shame

Here's a gratuitous LC shot to finish this part

./ end of part 1