11.EXPERIENCE THE REGIONS OF TABEIRÓS-TERRA DE MONTES AND PONTEVEDRA
A WORLD OF RICHNESS IN THE COUNTRYSIDE
A WORLD OF RICHNESS IN THE COUNTRYSIDE
We recommend you a custom-made tour to enjoy unforgettable days in As Rías Baixas.
The most important museums, the natural and cultural attractions of the main towns and the cuisine that should not be missed.
- Day 1:
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CERDEDO-COTOBADE AND FORCAREI
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This food festival promotes the culture and tradition of the petote, which is part of the cocido and consists of a boiled wheat and corn flour bread roll that is served cut into slices.
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It is a remarkable museum of traditional Galician music, in the village of Viascón, specialised in the bagpipe (gaita). It also exhibits other traditional musical instruments and old photographs. The Casa da Gaita introduces us to the life of Ricardo Portela, which was one of the most renowned bagpipers in Galicia.
By appointment only
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It is one of the most renowned groups of hórreos (typical granary houses) in Galicia, called Eira Grande, which consists of 12 hórreos arranged around a big square near the Eira do Pallal, where peasants used to thresh the rye and husk the corn. The hórreos, built in stone and wood, and provided with pitched roofs, have been restored.
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It is a wood with centuries-old oaks, chestnut trees and leafy ferns, vines and mosses. A shrine devoted to San Xusto, where a pilgrimage is held every August, has been preserved. From there, you can access the thermal baths of San Xusto, with sulphur-fluoride waters.
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It consists of 21 hórreos arranged around a cruceiro (stone cross) and the shrine of the Virgin of Os Remedios, in the middle of lands and countryside houses.
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This festival offering traditional local meat stew takes place on the first weekend in December. It can be tasted in the restaurants París, Victoria and in the bar Gran Sol.
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This ethnographic centre, located in an old traditional house, reveals how rural life was in the region between the end of the 19th century and the 1970s: livestock farming, agriculture and trades, housing, food, childhood, traditional women’s or men’s tasks, and the phenomenon of rural exodus and emigration.
By appointment only
Temporarily closed for works
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Ice-storage walls located 800 metres above sea level, which date from the 17th century, and were linked to the monastery of Aciveiro. They consist of two large-capacity waterholes to store ice that was used to preserve food. The house of the neveiro, the person responsible for the ice production, has been preserved. There is a trail from the neveiras to the village of Grovas.
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It is more than 1,000 metres high. It has large open-air areas and wide meadows, brushwood, and vast oak groves. There is a signposted trail, and at the top there is a viewpoint with panoramic views of the town of Silleda.
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Located near the source of the Lérez River, it was founded by a community of twelve monks in 1135, but soon they were more than 100. The church is a good example of the Galician Romanesque although the original façade was rebuilt in the 18th century. One of the activities carried out by the monks was the trade of ice produced in the neveiras (ice-storage walls) built in O Candán Hill. The association of the friends of the monastery has a Facebook profile including information about activities, guided tours, exhibitions…
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- Day 2:
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FORCAREI
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This 15-kilometre trail follows the course of the Lérez River, and boasts no less than 40 bridges and a group of 12 abandoned mills. The most remarkable bridges are A Ponte Vella de Andón, A Ponte do Crego, A Carballa, Maril and Gomail.
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The Fundación Ceo, Ciencia e Cultura (FC3) is a foundation in charge of managing the astronomical observatory, aimed at scientific, educational and dissemination purposes.
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It is located at the O Candán Hill, and near the canyon of the Grovas River. It consists of traditional houses that were part of a tin mining small village where oak charcoal was sold. It was abandoned in 1969.
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Its origin is in the parish of Aciveiro (Forcarei). This river is filled with stories of muleteers that followed the riverpaths. In the town of Moraña it is a fast-flowing river, but it flows slowly as it passes through Ribadumia, a town with plenty of Albariño vineyards. Finally, it flows into the coastal inlet Ría de Arousa, creating the protected space of the Bodeira Lagoon and the wetlands of O Vao and Punta Carreirón.
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This 132-kilometre-long river is the third longest in Galicia. It has a high landscape value: alder trees, willows, birch trees, oaks, laurels and some chestnut trees are planted along its banks. It flows slowly, –with some stretches of rapids– until it reaches the magnificent coastal inlet Ría de Arousa.
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The village of Sabucedo hosts one of the most peculiar traditions in Galicia, which shows the symbolic strength of the horse. This festival is celebrated in July and consists of bringing the herd of horses that live wild at the Montouto Hill, and grouping them in a big fence. There, the aloitadores and aloitadoras overpower the beasts in order to cut their manes.
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This museum, located in the former municipal slaughterhouse and dating from 1924, shows the traditional life of the local people from A Estrada. It exhibits objects used in the old farming activities, traditional trades and everyday life. The replica of a classroom of an early 20th-century school and a display of traditional toys show how childhood used to be in rural areas.
By appointment only
Temporarily closed for works, you can visit the Museum at www.museo.aestrada.com
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A festival that promotes the organic cider produced in A Estrada and in other neighbouring cider-making areas. This product can be tasted in the following cider houses:
Sidrería Ribela
Trabadela, 12, Santa Mariña de Ribela, A Estrada
+34 655 112 386
Sidrería Peroja
Lugar Outeiro, 11, Agar, 36685 A Estrada
+34 986 588 131 / +34 669 880 542
Sidrería Camino
Lugar de Moreira, s/n, 36688 A Estrada
+34 629 585 711
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A festival of Tourist Interest in Galicia held in May which pays tribute to the salmon. It is prepared both in the traditional way and as part of innovative recipes. Other entertainment and fun activities are also held.
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Although the origin of this typical manor house dates back to the 13th century, most of the buildings that have been preserved are in the Baroque style and date from the 18th century. It has a large garden, an orchard, a church devoted to Saint Anthony of Padua and several houses for the day labourers. The proprietors of the pazo also owned the wood Fraga da Cerrada, the oak grove of Ouriles and the meadows of Subatán and Badoucos. The pazo is popularly known as the Galician Versailles due to its beautiful gardens.
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This SCI zone is located near O Candán Hills, where many of the small rivers that flow into the rivers Ulla and Umia rise. There is a lagoon nearby, Sacra de Olives, a must visit in what is considered the best example of acid bogs in Galicia. This unique and peculiar ecosystem dates from the Neolithic period and has been part of the Natura 2000 network since 2001.
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