26th November 2025
On a chilly but beautiful sunny morning, eleven of us and two dogs gathered at the Cantinho de Bordeira in the picturesque village of Bordeira on the Western Algarve coast. They were Ros, Geoff, Linda, Jim, Sue, Margaret, Gill, Steve, Tim, James, Richard, Toby and Bica.


We walked out of the village for about 200m past the bus stop (or meeting spot for the locals) to the start/end point of the trail. We took the right fork then climbed steadily until we reached a swing. Ros and Richard re-lived their childhood, having a go on the swing.
After nearly 4 km we came to a fork in the road at the narrowest point of the figure of 8. Here was where people who wanted a shorter walk could turn off, but we all pressed on.
Jim was not feeling well so he and Gill carried on. The dilemma was should they go back the way they came or carry on. Margaret confidently told them that to continue the walk involved fewer turnings so would be easier to follow as the way was signposted. The only tricky bit would be to turn right when you reached a pile of timber trunks on the left.
We set off after lunch and headed into the wood and realised there were more turnings and piles of wood than Margaret had remembered. But all was well. Thanks to Jim and Gill’s excellent orienting skills and ability to ask for directions they found their way back down and Jim recovered.
Coming out of the wood the scenery took a darker and more sinister turn. Here the horrific fire in September that spread from Aljezur to Barão São João had left its mark.
All around were black charred trees, and the smell changed from the heady aroma of the forest to the stench of burning still in the air after all this time.
But even after people's carelessness and stupidity has wreaked such havoc and devastation, nature finds a way to restore itself. It will be interesting to come back in the future to see the new plants grow.
Having climbed in the morning the afternoon path was mainly downhill or flat and we returned to the area untouched by the fire. There was a stream to cross.This was confirmed as we turned the corner to see the village of Bordeira nestled on the hillside, where much-needed refreshment was enjoyed by all.
Many thanks to Gill, Tim, Steve and Geoff for their photos and Geoff for his stats
Key statistics
Distance covered: 16.5 Km
Time spent moving: 3hr 40 min
Height climbed 260m
Highest point 198m












Great walk...and much better weather than when originally planned as part of the awaydays ( but was cancelled due to torrential downpours). Look forward to a repeat when forest has recovered.
ReplyDeleteSteve and Margaret did an excellent job in managing expectations....no sign of stepping stones, bogs, quicksand at all...think they must have been collectivly hallucinating!
Great blog - all the important bits. But where were the quicksands and raging torrents?!
ReplyDeleteNice day out and thanks for the chicken alert. Thanks again.
ReplyDeleteThanks for a super walk and the great communication before hand
ReplyDeleteHope to see you all again very soon Lv James and Audrey
A pity to miss the walk, but as you know Julie and I were exercising different muscles on our annual cycling tour. We'll look forward to the next visit to this area when nature will have healed and greened the effects of this summer's fire. It looks to have been popular with those participating.
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