Features

Following the train tracks by bike

An easy cycling route suitable for the whole family that gently traces the former railway lines going from Olot to Girona and then from the capital to the sea at Sant Feliu de Guíxols

This cy­cling route may be a total of 97 kilo­me­tres but at the same time is easy enough and can even be done with chil­dren if taken in stages. What's more, there are a num­ber of ac­com­mo­da­tion op­tions, in­clud­ing for fam­i­lies, along the way. The first sec­tion of the route goes from Olot to Girona, pass­ing through the coun­ties of Gar­rotxa, Pla de l'Es­tany and Gironès, as well as a dozen towns as it fol­lows the courses of the rivers Fluvià, Bru­gent and Ter. The path it­self not only slopes gen­tly down­hill, but is in good con­di­tion and well-sign­posted. The Ruta del Car­rilet be­gins in Gar­rotxa's vol­canic area and ends in Salt and Girona. In the mean­time, the route passes by vol­ca­noes, Hos­toles cas­tle, as well as towns like Anglès and Sant Feliu de Pallerols. As the route ap­proaches Girona, it runs along­side the River Ter be­fore end­ing in the city it­self. The sec­ond part of the route fol­lows the old nar­row Girona-Sant Feliu train line, pass­ing through two coun­ties -Gironès and Baix Em­pordà- from the Ter river basin to the Ri­daura val­ley via the Selva de­pres­sion.

Old rail­way

What is so no­table about the stretch of for­mer rail­way line from Sant Feliu de Guíxols to Girona is how gen­tle and slight the route's ups and downs are as the path winds its way through the local area. The road sur­face is made of a sandy gravel that fits in with the sur­round­ings, al­though there are also sec­tions that pass through paved urban areas. On leav­ing Girona, the route first passes through the Selva de­pres­sion, which is char­ac­terised by a mo­saic land­scape of fields and woods with, on clear days, panoramic views that take in every­thing from the east­ern Pyre­nees to Montseny, and in­clude coastal fea­tures of the Ser­ral­ada Trans­ver­sal (Far, Sant Roc, Ro­cacorba). The final part of the route goes through the Ri­daura val­ley, which di­vides the Cadi­retes mas­sif in the south from the mas­sifs of Gavar­res to smoothly and gen­tly reach the sea at Sant Feliu de Guíxols.

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