![]() ![]() IMPORTANT: From 15 January to 15 June, access to the section from Cala Calella is prohibited so you will have to return on your outbound route. ![]() Some 200 metres further on, the route starts descending steeply, following a gulley which leads to the cove. Cala Calella is especially noteworthy for its rocks and the narrow inlet of clear, calm water which make this place so special.įrom this point you can return to the starting point, but if you want more, it is well worth following the coastline along the clifftops to the Port de Falaguer, where you can discover more about the fauna and flora that lives there.įrom this point, the trail leaves the coast to head steeply upwards towards the north-west until it meets a trail which leads easily back to the starting point. The trail mainly follows areas where garrigue dominates, with grey-leaved cistus and rosemary and scattered examples of wild olive and Aleppo pine. ![]() ![]() Where the road ends, you climb some stairs to the top of the mountain, coming to the Cap de la Barra viewpoint after a few metres, where you can enjoy outstanding views of l’Estartit, its beach, the Medes Islands and Roca Maura. Follow this route and after a few metres you can stop to look at the geological curiosity of the Pou de la Calella sinkhole. It then leaves the promenade and heads uphill along Carrer del Cap de la Barra, where the houses on the seafront briefly block the view over the port and the bay. The route to Cala Calella starts just in front of the tourism office in l’Estartit and follows the promenade towards the port. ![]()
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