Parador del Teide → Guía de Isora
The caldera, the lava, the long way down
Your journey begins high up, around 2,150 metres, right beside the Teide volcano.
The first kilometres run almost flat across an open plateau of black rock and pale pumice. The silence is total. You hear only your own footsteps and the wind moving over the lava. It feels less like a Spanish island and more like walking on the moon, or somewhere on Mars.
Then the trail begins to drop. You leave the National Park behind and the first pines appear, twisted and resin-scented. The world slowly turns green again. By mid-afternoon you reach the old village of Chirche, where the bakery still smells of warm bread and, on a clear day, you can see La Gomera and La Palma floating on the sea. From there it is a gentle descent into Guía de Isora for your first night.