Rustic Blue Holiday Guide to Aracena

Pretty and picturesque, relaxed and cheerful, Aracena is the main town in the beautiful Natural Park which surrounds it … Read more below

Priego de Córdoba
Map of Andalucía with Aracena highlighted

Description

Aracena is the main town in the Sierra de Aracena Natural Park with a population of approximately 7,500. Unpretentious but relaxed and pretty, it meanders up a hillside topped by the remains of its Moorish castle and a church built by the Knights Templar, the Church of Our Lady of Sorrows, which preserves the minaret of the mosque that preceded it.

Aracena

A favourite holiday retreat of the Spanish royal family, Aracena is a busy, bustling little market town, relaxed and cheerful like so many in La Sierra de Aracena, an hour to the north-west of Sevilla and well on the way to Portugal. Welcomes are warm and friendly and you will feel immediately at home here.

Supping a cold beer outside one of the many little bars and taverns around the Plaza Alta in the centre of town, watching the world go by, is a very satisfying way to spend some time. Here, old-fashioned, unpretentious rural Spain meets more trendy modernity in perfect harmony. Children on roller skates and scooters, giggly teenagers flirting and listening to music, old men earnestly debating the best way to grow a pumpkin, grandmothers fussing, women gossiping: all the generations in one space, a constant hubbub of activity.

Aracena

It's a perfect size, a little country town, so not remotely intimidating, yet big enough to offer some excellent restaurants and tapas bars - there were 64 bars and three night clubs at the last count - and some good shops. The town also has a popular covered market, boasting three fish stalls and two meat stalls as well as plenty of fruit and vegetables.

Its Moorish castle and fine, thirteenth century church notwithstanding, the town's most famous landmark is the Gruta de las Maravillas, the "Cave of Wonders", the most visited site in the province of Huelva.

the Church of Our Lady of Sorrows

For centuries the townsfolk of Aracena were unaware of this marvel that lay, unsuspected, beneath the very ground they trod. Discovered by accident (by a stray pig apparently … ) the Gruta de la Maravillas is the largest cave in Spain, a mile and a half long, and is truly a marvel of subterranean lakes, striking colours, cathedral-like chambers and all manner of exquisitely adorned stalagmites and stalactites.

Gruta de la Maravillas

As the brochure says "Water has written a poem through the silence and slowness of the centuries". The names of the individual chambers sound like they were dreamt up by a Hollywood scriptwriter but are, in fact, an accurate reflection of the rock formations found inside - the Cathedral, the Sultana's Bath Chamber, the Emerald Room, Godʼs Crystal Room, the Submerged City, the Enchanted Tannery, the Chickpea Room and the Gallery of Nudes.

The cave served as the backdrop for the film "Journey to the Centre of the Earth".

Aracena

At the entrance to the caves there is a helpful tourist office and a small geological museum with minerals from all over the world.

Aracena is, of course, at the heart of a prestigious jamon producing area and is well served by restaurants and tapas bars. It featured in the Sunday Observer's "50 best things to eat in the world, and where to eat them". As they said, "black foot ham from here is some of the finest in the country, and there is nothing better than sitting down in any of the bars and restaurants in Aracena to a plate of this rich delicacy, sliced and served with unpretentious understanding. Last time we were there we had a memorable revueltos (scrambled eggs) with setas (local wild mushrooms) and jamón".

a street scene

There is a Ham Museum (Museo del Jamón), dedicated to the tradition of farming Aracena’s most valued denizen, the black-footed pig. They are left to roam the surrounding oak forests and feed on acorns to produce the prized pata negra ham, a delicacy exported all over the world. Other specialties of the region are its mushrooms, chestnuts and asparagus.

All around you have the marvelous, soft beauty of the Sierra de Aracena Natural Park, a land of glorious woodlands and far-reaching views, of rolling hillsides and crystal-clear streams. And some of Spain's most beautiful villages.

Aracena

Aracena is an easy one hour drive from Sevilla, a city which must not be missed. In the opposite direction, there's Portugal, a different world away, enchanting, beguiling and so, so different from Spain. The Costa de la Luz is a 90 minute trip, passing through dramatic scenery which includes the Rio Tinto mines.

Right here, the pace of life is slow, the air is pure, the future bright. Aracena, capital of this captivating region, is a picturesque little town with a relaxed air of quiet satisfaction.

Aracena
ARACENA FACT FILE
Population 7,500
Altitude 685 metres
Distance from Sevilla 90 kilometres
Distance from the Coast 125 kilometres
Patron Saints Virgin de Mayor Dolor
Fiesta Dates Carnival
Easter Week
Romería de la Divina Pastora (1st Sunday in June)
Feria Grande (3rd week in August)
Romería de la Reina de los Angeles a la Pena (8th September)
Climate The altitude and proximity to the Atlantic Ocean mean that summers are cooler in the Sierra de Aracena than elsewhere in Andalucía. Warm and sunny by day, nights are cool and comfortable. Winter rains are frequent.
the lake below the village

Holiday Villas

Select your holiday villa in La Sierra de Aracena

Holiday homes and villas in La Sierra de Aracena

Walking Holidays

Independent walking holidays in La Sierra de Aracena

Our self-guided walking in La Sierra de Aracena, Andalucia, Spain

How to Get Here

We recommend that you use Sevilla airport which is 1½ hours away. Ryanair's daily, direct flights from Stanstead to Sevilla even make a long weekend a perfectly viable option. They also fly to Sevilla from Bristol and Liverpool. British Airways have daily flights from Gatwick as do Iberia from Heathrow. Vueling also fly from Heathrow. Aer Lingus fly to Sevilla twice a week from Dublin.

Jerez de la Frontera (Ryan Air from Stansted) and Faro on the Algarve Coast in Portugal (Easyjet from Stanstead, Luton, Gatwick, Bristol, Glasgow and Newcastle; Ryan Air from Edinburgh, Glasgow and Liverpool and Jet 2 from Edinburgh) are a couple of hours away; Málaga, 3½ hours away is the other alternative.

Detailed Map

View a detailed map of La Sierra de Aracena

Aracena Aracena Aracena Gruta de la Maravillas Aracena
 

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