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To get there, rejoin the road used to travel to La Alberca and head up to the Portillo de las Batuecas. On the other side of this low pass, one cannot but be impressed by the change in landscape and the subtle shifts in colour and tone that take place in response to the light at different times of day. Almost at the end of the sheer descent, a narrow road branches off to the right, only to peter out at the entrance to the valley on reaching St. Joseph's Shrine (Santuario de San JosŽ, also known as the Satuario de Santo Desierto), the Monastery of the Discalced Carmelites, a cloistered order not admitting visitors. What the traveller can do instead is to stretch his/her legs by going for a quiet ramble along the banks of the river from which the valley takes its name. Walkers are obviously free to roam as far as they wish, but should nonetheless take care not to get lost along paths that area not always too well defined. Evidence of prehistoric inhabitants plainly capable of appreciating their surroundings is provided by the many rock paintings in the area, yet access is often difficult. |
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