Participants
2 à 8 persones
Prix
2 People: 545€
Extra person: +155€
Child (10-17): +85€
Children under 10: free
For groups bigger than 6 people contact us
2 à 8 persones
2 People: 545€
Extra person: +155€
Child (10-17): +85€
Children under 10: free
For groups bigger than 6 people contact us
8h à 9h
Nature walk adapted to any level (2-3 hours)
INCLUDED
Profesional guide, transport, traditional menu, selection of drinks and water.
PLACES
Hondarribia Fishing port & Historic Part, Jaizkibel Mountain
Secret mountain
Throughout our three-hour excursion along the coast in Hondarribia we’ll see caves, cliffs, lighthouses, and rock formations that seem to have been carved by an artist. We’ll even see grasslands where aviator and millionaire Roland Garros landed in 1911, saving his life. We’ll tell you about everything, about how the Basques continue to fish bonito (white tuna) with traditional methods (with a fishing rod, one by one), so that the fish reach markets in perfect condition.
Private gastroclub
After the walk, we know you’ll be hungry. To remedy this, we will go to a 'private club' in the Basque style: a gastronomic sociedad or, in Basque, 'txoko'. What is a gastronomic sociedad? Very simple: a place with a professional kitchen and spacious dining rooms, where Basque cooking lovers (and who are not professional chefs) have gathered for decades to eat, drink, talk, sing and more. At any time, on any day. Although gastronomic sociedades are private clubs, we make it possible for you to take part in this local cultural phenomenon, so you can eat like a Basque (if you can), drink like a Basque (likewise), sing like a Basque (that's easy) or laugh (that, too) like a Basque.
We’ll be welcomed by Fernando, a Basque version of Obélix who, it is believed, fell into a pot of marmitako as a child and gained a superpower for cooking and food in all its forms. Fernando will prepare an authentic Basque dinner for us using typical seasonal products (and kilometer zero, of course!), vegetables from the orchards of Hondarribia and fish from the port market that we’ll have visited at dawn (the fish get up early, what are you going to do?).
The menu? Simple and delicious as the very essence of Basque cuisine: anchovies, garden tomato salad (you know, those tomatoes that still taste like tomatoes) with homemade canned tuna, baked monkfish and, for dessert, pantxineta (a tart typical of Gipuzkoa, with puff pastry, cream and toasted almonds).
Lucky Town
Hondarribia has the advantage of being one town but seeming like two: one is a medieval fortress located in the highest part (with walls, cobblestone streets, slopes, wooden balconies full of flowers, and a former palace of Emperor Carlos V that hides tapestries based on paintings by Rubens). The other is a typically Basque fishing village - white houses, colored windows, a large, tree-lined esplanade where fish were once sold, tiny bars with dreamy pintxos. Today it’s a a gastronomic destination. Because of the former (for being fortified) Hondarribia has witnessed dozens of battles; because of the latter (its fishing port), Hondarribia has witnessed something much better: how its bars and restaurants have become a world gastronomic reference praised even by the New York Times.
When it’s time to return to San Sebastián, we’ll take the longest (and most beautiful) road: the panoramic road along Mount Jaizkibel, the third highest coastal mountain in Spain and one of the Cantabrian areas with the greatest biodiversity.