It's damnably hot and humid in Catonsville, so my thoughts take me to the mountains, to someplace high, dry, and cool. To the Pyrenees, the rugged mountains that define the border between France and Spain. To the French department of Haute Pyrenees, and to the wonderful national park that occupies the highest reaches of the mountains.
There are a few medieval churches and many houses and mills dating to the 1600s, all built in the local stone.
We enter the high country, one of the wildest parts of Europe, home to brown bears, golden eagles, and the mountain goats called here Isards.
Most spectacularly in the Cirque de Gavarnie, one of Europe's most famous hikes, where the Grand Falls plunge more than 420 meters.
I went bike riding this morning. By 8 AM the sun already had staked its claim on all mortals foolish enough to step out into the fresh air.
ReplyDeleteI think the spanish side is nicer.
ReplyDeleteBoth sides are sublime. To me, the Pyrenees during the Romanesque is one of the great ages of all humanity.
ReplyDeleteThere is some sun, but it's not so dry, more cool and damp. Think Scottish weather. That said, in Aragon you will find these sudden, weird pockets of utter desert, like the Bardenas and Los Monegros. I don't know what's up with these places ecologically, but they remind me of Big Bend in Texas.