|
While you are just ten minutes to Ronda by car, you are only 15 minutes walk to Arriate, one of the
friendliest white-villages of the Serrania de Ronda. Well provided for with a good butcher, greengrocers and supermarkets,
it also counts three or four excellent tapas bars, including the atmospheric Almacen, whose owners like to experiment with
what is known in Spain as 'cocina creativa' or creative cooking.
Ronda is a totally different prospect and boasts, without a doubt, Andalucia's best collection of restaurants, including the
celebrated Michelin-starred Tragabuches (the first in the province) to the cheaper, but adventurous Casa Maria. The city is
also home to one of the best-preserved ancient Arabic cores in the world, with a warren of tiny passageways leading to former
Moorish palaces and private homes.
On top of that is the much fabled tajo, or gorge, which once made the city almost impenetrable by force and has been hewn out
of limestone rock. Being the third most visited town in Spain, Ronda has a good selection of shops and entertainment in the
form of theatre, flamenco and, even opera, all year round. There is a cinema and English papers arrive by midday. Also nearby
are the fascinating white-walled mountain towns of Setenil de las Bodegas and Grazalema, which was once the centre of
Spain's wool trade.
Further afield - each around an-hour-and-a-half by car - are the majestic Imperial cities of Seville, Granada, Cordoba,
Jerez and Malaga. The five crucibles of Spanish culture and history are easily reached by car and Granada and Malaga are
easily reached by train. Walks go straight from the door, with half a dozen itineries already mapped out for guests, while
some of Spain's best hikes through the Sierra de las Nieves and Grazalema national parks begin less than half an hour away
by car. Mountain bikes can be hired and other local entertainment includes ballooning, quad-biking and riding.
|