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Las Montañas del Fuego
Album
Las Montañas del Fuego 

Page Type: Album

Image Type(s): Hiking, Scenery, Panorama

 

Page By: Gangolf Haub

Created/Edited: Nov 1, 2009 / Nov 1, 2009

Object ID: 569311

Hits: 254 

Page Score: 87.94% - 9 Votes 

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Introduction

Las Montañas del Fuego on the island of Lanzarote among the Islas Canarias are one of the most impressive mountain ranges on earth. The name mountain range might seem a little far fetched, given the fact, that the range's highest summit does not even reach 600m / 2000feet, but this mountain range can shed quite some light on the creation of mountains by volcanism.

Most of the range is part of the Parque Nacional de Timanfaya in which activities are strictly limited and overlooked. Thus the original idea to put up a range page had to make way for a page in the album format. Still, there should be as much information as possible to go with the colourful pictures of the hundreds of craters in the range.

Many of the pictures have been taken on a guided tour, a 5km hike through the western part of Timanfaya National Park. Daily only 16 people are allowed to take part in this tour, which is a once in a lifetime chance to see the area up close.

Don Andres Lorenzo Curbelo

Las Montañas del Fuego


”Today, on the first of September 1730, between 9 and 10 pm., the earth tore open near Timanfaya, two leagues from here.”

Thus begins the diary entry of Don Andres Lorenzo Curbelo, the parish priest of Yaiza, a village in the south-east of Lanzarote, which deals with the longest historical eruption on the island.

“A huge mountain formed in the first night already and flames shot out from its summit, burning for 19 further days. A few days later a new crater emerged and the lava flowed across Timanfaya, Rodeo and parts of Mancha Blanca. The Lava flowed towards the north, at first like gushing water, later viscous like honey. But on Sept 7th a huge rock rose out of the earth with an ominous rumble, forcing the lava to flow west and north-westward. There it destroyed Maretas and Santa Catalina.

On September 11th the activity of the lava renewed. It covered and burned Mazo whereafter for eight days a fiery cataract plunged into the sea with a fearful roar. Huge amounts of dead fish floated on the surface and were thrown upon the coast. Afterwards everything calmed down and the eruptions ceased.

But on October 18th three new craters opened up directly above the burned Santa Catilina, spilling huge clouds of fumes, which covering the whole island with sands and ashes. The gloom they produced repeatedly forced the people of Yaiza to leave their village."


Timanfaya used to be a village in the fertile south-west of Lanzarote, which during the first onslaught got buried by cinder and lava. 12 more villages were to follow, taking with them 420 dwellings into oblivion. Some of today's volcanoes are named after the villages but apart from this no trace remains. The eruptions lasted for 5 ½ years until April 1736 making this eruption one of the longest eruptions in recorded history. The lavas covered an area of almost 200 square kilometres or roughly one fourth of the island's area. The island's boundaries were extended in the north where lava streams formed a wild new coastline, impressive even still today. No humans died, most likely because these eruptions had been preceded by years of quakes and rumbles.

Parque Nacional de Timanfaya / Red Tape

Of these 200 square kilometres one fourth, 50 square kilometres around the epicentre of the 1730 eruptions have been set aside as a national park, the Parque Nacional de Timanfaya. Except for a few (four) places the park is strictly off limits for any non scientist. The dry weather of Lanzarote ensures that colonisation of the lavas by plants and animals occurs in super slow motion. In the last (almost) 300 years only different varieties of lichen have gained a foothold, making them the first pioneers in a hostile environment. Actually the lichens have been very successful: 200 different types have been counted from which no more than 80 have been scientifically classified. However the time it takes for this kind of colonisation is immense; a ranger showed us a place where a car had driven off-road more than a decade ago. You were still able to see the tracks, where the lichen population had been destroyed.

Enlarge
Guide-Made Geyser

The four activities you can perform in Timanfaya National Park are:
  • Ruta del Litoral, a path through the malpais along the northern coast. It is a 9km trail, which you can explore on your own – the only such activity. 9km through the malpais (“badland”, the towering lava fields) can take a whole day to hike.
  • Timanfaya Guided Tour. It is a once in a lifetime chance to see the park up close. You have to apply at least three weeks before the desired date and only people older than 18 and younger than 70 qualify. Each day 16 persons can take part in one of the tours, which is why your personalia are taken before the start. The tour is a 5km, 2h hike through the westernmost part of the park. You are guided by qualified and very engaged park rangers.
  • Ruta de los Volcanes, Islote del Hilario. This is the most popular of the tours. For a fee of 8€ per person you can drive inside the park to a place, called Islote del Hilario. The place – an “island” which never was covered by the lavas of the eruptions – is nevertheless the hottest spot in Lanzarote. Guides perform a couple of stunts like kindling fire from the heat of the earth or producing geysers by pouring buckets of water down tubes which lead into the hot ground. In the place an restaurant has been erected, where food is barbecued on a “volcano grill”. From Islote del Hilario you can take a bus ride along the Ruta de los Volcanes, a paved road, which leads through the epicentre of the eruptions. While not an outdoor activity, it is still recommendable – if you are prepared to pay the fee.
  • Dromedary Riding. This is the ultimate tourist attraction. There are currently 210 dromedaries which take the tourists up a 500m – 1km loop into the Montañas del Fuego. Not overly interesting, imho.

To get an overview over the Montañas del Fuego, I can recommend Montaña de la Cinta to the south-west of Yaiza, the mountain from which Don Andres Lorenzo Curbelo observed and recorded the eruptions.

Geographical Overview

Las Montañas del Fuego seen from Islote de Hilario

A look at the interactive map below reveals the origin of the Montañas del Fuego. A fault line opened beneath the surface preceding the 1730 eruption along which magma rose to the surface. After years of quakes finally at the site of the vanished village of Timanfaya – visible on the satellite map left of LZ67 – the first and most violent eruption took place, eventually piling up Montaña Timanfaya, the highest summit of the area.

Google Satellite Map of the Montañas del Fuego

The Montañas del Fuego take all the area between El Golfo in the west (half of it's crater has already eroded by sea tides) and Masdache in the east. The last of the volcanoes to erupt was Caldera Colorada, the crater of which shines brightly red when seen from the east. The Montañas del Fuego covered about 200 square kilometres of the island with their lavas. Out of these “seas of lava” occasionally older volcanoes rise like islands, Caldera Blanca or Montaña de Vieja Gabriela being the most important ones.

Montaña del Golfo with its green lagoon

In addition to the Parque Nacional de Timanfaya the Montañas del Fuego have been protected also by the the Parque Natural de los Volcanes, which surrounds the National park like a half-circle.

Images


Montaña Rajada

Caldera Colorada

Montaña Timanfaya

Montaña del Golfo

Caldera Colorada

Caldera Rajada (176m), Montana Rajada (373m)

Montaña del Golfo

Hot Ground

Summit view Atalaya de Femes

Las Montañas del Fuego

Montaña del Golfo

Montaña Rajada

Montana Ortiz (450m) and Montana del Cortijo (434m)

Montaña Rajada

Caldera Colorada


[ View Gallery - 68 More Images ]


Comments

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Viewing: 1-7 of 7

tocGood one.

Voted 10/10

Was this ment to be an album...?
Posted Nov 1, 2009 10:22 am

Gangolf HaubRe: Good one.

Hasn't voted

Yes it was - The range is too low to be really featured on SP. Plus: you can't freely hike it. There's just those 4 things you may do: guided tour, bus ride, coastal trail and dromedar ride. Not your average mountain range, is it?
Posted Nov 1, 2009 4:07 pm

ezaYes, it's not...

Voted 10/10

my average mountain range, but I'm feeling rather envious of your opportunity to do that guided 5 km hike. That was good luck for you! When I was on the bus ride I could only think something like "I can understand the prohibition, but I would give anything to put my boots on and take a walk out there!"
Posted Nov 5, 2009 9:30 am

Gangolf HaubRe: Yes, it's not...

Hasn't voted

Don't blame me - my girlfriend found the site of the Timanfaya park on the web and found the form, where she could apply for this guided tour. She applied for Dec 23rd two months in advance.

And yes - during the bus ride I wondered whether it would not be possible to hike the paved road in the early morning, before they start going with the buses. As far as I remember, the first bus went at 10 a.m. so there should be plenty of time for early birds. But they won't allow it, I'm sure...

Third remark: the guide told us that they keep people out of the area mainly for their (the people's) own sake. If anything happened in the lave they would be forced to perform the rescue operation on foot - putting the rescuers in the same danger as the person to be rescued. And believe me - there is some real danger! We got lost near Caldera Santa Catalina (outside the park) and tried to get back to a dirt road by crossing a lava field. The lava broke under our feet like styrofoam - but one with very sharp edges. We both broke in first knee- later hip-deep and were extremely happy to get out of there without too many bruises. The area might be flat but there's danger lurking underneath...
Posted Nov 5, 2009 10:40 am

Gangolf HaubRe: Yes, it's not...

Hasn't voted

oh, and by the way - you can see the road, leading to the start of the guided tour (and both endpoints) on the satellite picture. A straight road leads from Yaiza in the bottom left of the pic in direction NNW to the open crater of Montaña Tremesana. The tour heads between around the mountain in the north and between the craters towards the west, where you can see the other endpoint.

A very short hike for sure ...
Posted Nov 5, 2009 10:45 am

ezaRe: Yes, it's not...

Voted 10/10

Yes, a really short one...
Posted Nov 5, 2009 11:36 am

ezaRe: Yes, it's not...

Voted 10/10

Well, it's good to know all that... I couldn't have imagined that those lava badlands were that fragile! But that fragility makes by itself an excellent reason to protect the incredible landscape of Timanfaya. If you add the visitors' safety and the Park personnel peace of mind, the equation is complete: no hiking allowed is the most sensible idea. Thanks for sharing your personal experience, Gangolf
Posted Nov 5, 2009 11:41 am

Viewing: 1-7 of 7


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