Читать книгу Walking in Menorca. 16 day and 2 multi-day routes онлайн
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Drystone walls enclose small fields all around the village of Sant Lluís
Follow the main road gently uphill and round a bend, reaching another crossroads and a cycleway mapboard. Turn right and follow the Camí Vell de Biniancolla, which runs gently downhill as a tarmac road flanked by walls, fields and a couple of farms. After passing a gate, it continues as a broad track flanked by walls and fields, heading gently downhill and uphill, now with wild olives alongside. There is a sewage works to the left, and on the crest of the track at sa Serreta, a concrete picnic table and benches are available. Views stretch from the headland of La Mola to the village of Torret and the highest point on Menorca, Monte Toro.
The track runs gently down past bushy scrub and rocky ground, passing a picnic site and a ‘vista panoràmica’ sign. There is a lighthouse on the island, Illa de l’Aire. The track becomes metalled again, dropping more steeply, with views of houses along the coast, both left and right. Pass another picnic table and continue down to a gateway and road junction, where there are signposts and a cycleway mapboard. Walk straight down the road, Carrer de sa Devallada, reaching another road junction and bus stops near Son Ganxo. The Bar Restaurante La Baia lies across the road, beside the inlet of Cala Biniancolla.