Val d'Aran
Wildlife of Spain's green Pyrenees

Sunday 29 June - Sunday 6 July 2008 (8 days)

Join Mike Lockwood on his second tour to the Val d'Aran, a superb lush, green valley, much like the French Pyrenees but in fact in the Spanish State! Heres Mikes tour description:

© Paul Browning/Nature Portfolio
photo of  Tufted Marbled Skipper
Tufted Marbled Skipper

download a report of one of our previous trips to this area Fortunately even today, in an era of rampant redrawing of national boundaries, a few anachronisms such as Val d'Aran still exist. This high valley lying to the north of the main Pyrenean axis and whose main river, the Garona, heads north to the Atlantic at Bordeaux, is not part of France, as geography would seem to dictate, but belongs instead politically to Catalonia and the Spanish State. With its own language (Aranese, a dialect of Occitan) and despite having relinquished some of its 'lost valley' feel to the needs of the skiing fraternity (the first road into Spain was only opened in 1924), Val d'Aran is still a paradise for all types of flora and fauna, including some of the best subalpine forests and pastures in the Pyrenees, 120 species of butterflies, Lammergeiers and even Brown Bears!

We will investigate this 'valley of the valleys' (translating literally from Aranese), abounding in glacial features, from our base in Salardú. Our hosts are both keen naturalists active in local bird conservation and run a hotel adjusted to the needs of 'wildlifers' and their off-beat timetables! On our daily excursions we will make good use of the roads that wind up to the high pastures and passes with their glacial lakes and mountain pine forests, as well as investigating the valley bottoms and their superb hay meadows and deciduous woodland. In 2007 we recorded Downy Emerald for the first time for the Spanish State and refound Large Chequered Skipper, 25 years after its only previous Catalan record!!

Price: £ 1,145
Single supps.: £ 185

Deposit: £ 300 per person

The price per person includes return scheduled flight from London - Toulouse, airport taxes, 8 nights' accommodation, all meals, transport and the services of the leaders.

The price excludes holiday insurance, drinks, and other personal expenses.

Principal Leader: Mike Lockwood

Val d'Aran map

Itinerary
Day 1
We take a scheduled flight London - Toulouse, and drive across the border, then up to our hotel in Salardú. If time permits we will have a chance for a first inspection of some of the local meadows and streams.
Overnight Salardú

Days 2 - 7
Although mainly under 1,000 m, the Toran valley in the north of Aran is one of the most butterfly-rich sites and here we will be looking out - in patches of meadows coloured pink by musk mallow - for Purple and Lesser Purple Emperors, Great Sooty Satyr, Tufted Marbled Skipper and a variety of fritillaries including False Heath, Spotted and Lesser Marbled. The head of the valley is graced by mixed beech and European silver fir forests with support from sturdy Norway maples, alpine elderberry, a wonderful variety of ferns and in the understorey the parasitic yellow bird's-nest, spreading bellflower and herb Paris. Two very special creatures here are Catalonia's only Middle-spotted Woodpeckers and Cordulegaster bidentata (a near relative of the more familiar Golden-ringed Dragonfly) found in the Val d'Aran in meadows and along forest edges.

At mid-altitude we will be exploring the woodlands and pastures at the heads of the valleys of Artiga de Lin, Varradòs and Tredòs. The former boasts one of the few limestone outcrops in the area and as such has the most diverse flora -western St. John's wort, fairy's thimble, tufted catchfly and livelong saxifrage on rock outcrops and knee-high ungrazed meadows dotted with Welsh poppy, Pyrenean sow thistle, alpine aster, roseroot and Pyrenean cinquefoil. If we can get up to one of the few remaining snow patches in this north-facing valley, we may find plants such as alpine snowbell and oxlip just coming into flower. Butterflies include Mountain Clouded Yellow, Apollo and lycenids such as Amandas and Mazarine Blues. A further notable feature of Artiga de Lin is the cascade of Uelhs de Joèu, the upwelling of an underground river fed by melt-water from the glacier on Aneto (the highest peak in the Pyrenees).

The Varradòs valley is more open and a good site for Lammergeier (2 pairs in the area), Griffon Vulture, Red Kite and other raptors, while meadows here and elsewhere hold Red-backed Shrike, Whinchat and Yellowhammer. The grazed meadows are painted yellow with great yellow gentian and a ragwort Senecio adonidifolius (the plants the cattle reject), with a supporting cast of Martagon lily, English iris, adenostyles, arnica and the huge umbellifer molopospermum on riverbanks and cobweb houseleeks on the granite rocks. This too is the territory of Large, Escher's and Idas Blues, Purple-shot, Purple-edged and Scarce Coppers and Geranium Argus, as well as Alpine Marmot and Chamois.

Aside from its superb meadows (Yellow-spotted and Water Ringlets and Marbled and Niobe Fritillaries) and forests (Citril Finch, Crossbill, Crested Tit, Goldcrest and Black Woodpecker), Tredòs is famous for its sphagnum bogs that boast water horsetail, long-leaved sundew, alpine bartsia, marsh felwort and populations of White-faced Darter and Brilliant and Downy Emeralds, the latter two species in their only known Catalan location. Also at mid-altitude we will head for the dank European silver fir and mountain pine forests with understoreys of goatsbeard spiraea and wood saxifrage in clearings and wintergreens and the rare creeping ladys tresses in the shade.

A trip to this sector of the Pyrenees would be incomplete without a visit to a glacial lake. After looking for Alpine Chough, Rock Thrush, Citril Finch and Water Pipit, as well as Dewy and Lefebvre's Ringlets, Shepherd's Fritillary, Glandon Blue and Peak White in the pastures around the high pass of Bonaigua, we will walk up through the light pine forest decorated with Campanula scheuchzeri, Pyrenean toadflax, alpine clover, alpine rose and sesamoides to the delightful Estanyola de Gerber. Around the lake we will search the rock chaos for small white and fragrant orchids, the zig-zagged-stemmed streptopus, Gentiana burseri and Pyrenean lily and look on rock faces for white musky saxifrage and in the streams for starry saxifrage.
Six nights Salardú

Day 8
We return to Toulouse and will stop en route if there is time.

Accommodation: We stay in a hotel on the outskirts of Salardú designed by and for birdwatchers, complete with terrace views across Val d'Aran to the permanent snows of the Aneto glacier. We dine in local restaurants.

Numbers: Max. 12 clients