Basque Country: All Roads Lead to La Rhune

Summary


  • A historic hike

  • With these ponies, it’s wise to keep a safe distance

  • These smuggling routes were also used by the resistance

  • Our steps cross the legendary GR 10, which traverses the Pyrenees

“It’s better here than packed like sardines on the Saint-Jean-de-Luz beach!” Jean-Pierre, a cheerful fellow with a black beret, speaks with a jovial authority. In mid-March, the retiree, “ex-charpentier”, teases his three companions visiting the region. To show them more than the usual tourist spots along the coast, he leads them to the Venta Yasola, “the place of reeds” in Basque, perched near the Spanish border. At 400 meters above sea level near the Subizia pass, this small, plank-clad inn is reachable only on foot, after about an hour’s walk from Olhette, a neighborhood of Urrugne.

It’s one of many ways to wander the Rhune massif and, if one feels up to it, to approach its nearby summit. With a shark-fin silhouette that stares out at the shifting blues of the Bay of Biscay, the mountain holds significance for the Basques far beyond a mere landmark; it’s a familiar sentinel and protector. Each year it draws a flood of visitors, most of whom take the gentler route aboard a cog railway, while others attempt the ascent on foot via the Ascain path, a highly walked route in summer. Rather than tackling the monument head-on, we chose to explore the surrounding area. The Rhune massif, besides its main route to the summit, hosts around twenty trails of varying lengths, weaving through mid-mountain landscapes typical of the Basque hinterland. It’s enough to measure the icon’s presence before perhaps attempting to go all the way to the top.

A historic hike

Amara Nambinga

Amara Nambinga

I write about tourism, culture, and emerging destinations with a Namibian perspective. Through my articles, I try to highlight the places, people, and travel stories that show how Africa and the wider world are changing.