Activity

Sunny Walkers 301022: Casares y Sierra Crestellina y Pico Las Chapas 3

Download

Trail photos

Photo ofSunny Walkers 301022: Casares y Sierra Crestellina y Pico Las Chapas 3 Photo ofSunny Walkers 301022: Casares y Sierra Crestellina y Pico Las Chapas 3 Photo ofSunny Walkers 301022: Casares y Sierra Crestellina y Pico Las Chapas 3

Author

Trail stats

Distance
6.7 mi
Elevation gain
1,978 ft
Technical difficulty
Moderate
Elevation loss
1,978 ft
Max elevation
3,082 ft
TrailRank 
65 5
Min elevation
1,213 ft
Trail type
Loop
Moving time
2 hours 43 minutes
Time
4 hours 15 minutes
Coordinates
1875
Uploaded
October 30, 2022
Recorded
October 2022
  • Rating

  •   5 2 Reviews

near Casares, Andalucía (España)

Viewed 770 times, downloaded 44 times

Trail photos

Photo ofSunny Walkers 301022: Casares y Sierra Crestellina y Pico Las Chapas 3 Photo ofSunny Walkers 301022: Casares y Sierra Crestellina y Pico Las Chapas 3 Photo ofSunny Walkers 301022: Casares y Sierra Crestellina y Pico Las Chapas 3

Itinerary description

I’ve done this hike a few times now but the weather for this was perfect as we had clear blue skies little wind to speak of and not too hot. I’ve also done this in the wet which can be a little tricky on the steep descent from the refuge Sierra Crestellina.

The Sierra Crestellina Natural Park belongs to the Malaga municipality of Casares. Declared a Protected Natural Area in 1989, it owes its name to the ridges and peaks that form it. Located in the Cordillera Penibética, with a surface area of ​​478 hectares, it constitutes a steep rock of Jurassic limestone that rises above the Triassic sandstones of the Genal Valley. Together with the Sierra de la Utrera massif, it constitutes the only limestone enclaves in the entire area.

Sierra Crestellina has two peaks, one called Cerro de las Chapas (Hill of the Plates), with the peak at 943 m., And the other called Sierra de Casares at 906 m., Each located at one end of the mountain range.

Our route runs through the entire crestería joining the two peaks starting from its northern slope where the maximum elevation is located in Cerro de las Chapas.
The route offers stunning summit views down the Guadiaro valley across to Gibraltar, and up the Genal valley

A Moderate hike via dirt and gravel tracks on the approach and descent but a scrabbly slope to the summit and some light scrambling at the summit.
My advice is to return via the same route to the summit as the variation we took on this occasion was a little tricky.

Views down over Casares – a classic pueblo blanco divided by a deep ravine and with the remains of a dramatic cliff-top castillo.

The accompaniment of vultures on the way up to the peak is assured.

Stunning summit views down the Rio Guadiaro valley and across to Gibraltar (and, on a clear day, to Africa); and northwards up the Rio Genal valley to the mountains south of Ronda.

History of Casares
—————————-
In Roman times the spa of la Hedionda, located on the road to Manilva, was already well known, and this is where Julius Caesar supposedly was cured of a liver complaint, thanks to the sulfuric waters that still pour out of the local spring. For this reason, during the Roman Empire, Casares was allowed by emperors to mint its own coins.

The 12th-century castle, around which grew the present town center, was founded by the occupying Moors. In 1361, Peter I of Castile and the dethroned Muhammed V signed the Pact of Casares, by which the Moorish King recuperated his throne, leaving Casares as part of the Nasrid dynasty. The town surrendered to the Catholic forces after the fall of Ronda in 1485 and was handed over to Rodrigo Ponce de León, Duke of Cádiz. Later during the Rebellion of the Moriscos, Rodrigo's descendant, the Duke of Arcos, accepted the surrender of the rebel Moriscos, the Moors who had "converted" to Christianity. Casares had taken an active part in the Morisco rebellion, put down by Don John of Austria. The town separated from Manilva in 1795, being granted the title of Villa. At a later period, Casares was the only town, apart from Cádiz, that the Napoleonic troops had not been able to take.

More recent history indicates the old village as the birthplace of the father of Andalusian nationalism, Blas Infante Pérez de Vargas, labor lawyer, politician and writer, who is considered to be the largest historic figure in Andalusia. He was born in 1885 and died during the civil struggle in 1936.

Since 1978 the historical and artistic heritage of the village has been officially protected.

Waypoints

PictographPhoto Altitude 1,345 ft
Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 1,617 ft
Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 1,939 ft
Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 2,110 ft
Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 2,192 ft
Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 2,192 ft
Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 2,267 ft
Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 2,264 ft
Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 2,490 ft
Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 2,726 ft
Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 2,854 ft
Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 3,038 ft
Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 3,084 ft
Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 3,081 ft
Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 2,877 ft
Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 2,822 ft
Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 2,756 ft
Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 2,392 ft
Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 2,234 ft
Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 2,139 ft
Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 1,991 ft
Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 1,759 ft
Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 1,617 ft
Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 1,207 ft
Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto

Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 1,365 ft
Photo ofPhoto Photo ofPhoto

Photo

Comments  (2)

  • Photo of alpine89
    alpine89 Sep 15, 2023

    I have followed this trail  View more

    Supermooie route

  • Kirsty Jayne Jan 21, 2024

    Great!

You can or this trail