Guama, Cedro (Tenerife), Dec 17 2023

Back in business on Tenerife

On our way to Montaña del Cedro
On our way to Montaña del Cedro

Index

Date Peak Height PF Location MAP
17.12.23 Montaña de Guama 877m 115m Tenerife, Spain MAP
17.12.23 Montaña del Cedro 2265m 216m Tenerife, Spain MAP

Montaña de Guama (877m), Dec 17 2023

Our route across Montaña de Guama
Our route across Montaña de Guama

Sunday: After breakfast at hotel Barceló Santiago, Los Gigantes, Tenerife, we discussed where our first hike should go. My main goal is of course to get mountain tops with a prominence of 100m or more, and we settled for Montaña de Guama – just up the valley.

Montaña de Guama seen from Montaña Bilma a few days later
Montaña de Guama seen from Montaña Bilma a few days later

Anne had purchased the AllTrails app, which had good coverage of hikes all around and also on Tenerife. The app showed a round trip hike from the village Taimamo. It seemed like a good plan for our first hike.

We drove up to Taimamo and just parked in the middle of the village. Or perhaps town is a more correct term. This was a town that I later claimed to be my favourite town on Tenerife. The roads were straight, and parking was plentiful. This was not the kind of village with super-narrow roads where you hold your breath when you drive through. They had space…

We started hiking and tried to navigate to the trailhead that Anne’s app was suggesting, and found they town also had narrow roads

Looking for the trail
Looking for the trail

Eventually, we found the trailhead and we soon crossed a path that we later understood ran all the way from Los Gigantes and up to Santiago del Teide.

We're on our way with Guama up to the left and the cross to the right
We’re on our way with Guama up to the left and the cross to the right

The path would first lead us up to a cross and the path was easy to follow.

Cool rock. We felt "La Gomera" vibes here
Cool rock. We felt “La Gomera” vibes here

Eventually, we reached the ridge, and I was blown away by the beauty. I immediately recognized Montaña Ijada, which I hiked solo when we were here in 2015.

View towards Montaña Ijada - on the main ridge
View towards Montaña Ijada – on the main ridge

We had a good view towards Taimamo from up here…

Taimamo
Taimamo

And then we reached the cross

Anne at the cross
Anne at the cross

After visiting the cross, we continued up the ridge to the main top.

On the ridge up to Guama
On the ridge up to Guama

And then we stood on our first Tenerife top on this vacation…

On Montaña de Guama
On Montaña de Guama

View from Montaña de Guama
View from Montaña de Guama

After a short stay, we moved on. After all, this was supposed to be a round trip hike.

We met several hikers on our hike and understood that this was a popular hike.

Descending from Guama
Descending from Guama

We enjoyed ourselves – big time!

Anne - the path is to the right!
Anne – the path is to the right!

We noticed a cool hole in the ridge, but we weren’t really motivated to go back up again just for this hole.

Until next time...
Until next time…

We also had a good view towards Los Gigantes and our hotel.

Los Gigantes- the town. Or is it Puerto de Santiago? The names confused us
Los Gigantes- the town. Or is it Puerto de Santiago? The names confused us

There was also a cool pinnacle that I really wanted to scramble. But I’m not in my prime years anymore and I left it untouched. It’s best that way. For the both of us…

A cool pinnacle
A cool pinnacle

I noticed a goat with her kid just below the pinnacle. We backed away immediately to avoid scaring them into even scarier terrain.

Goats are amazing creatures and world-class climbers...
Goats are amazing creatures and world-class climbers…

It was tempting to also visit the next top on the ridge (point 623m), but this top clearly didn’t have a prominence of 100m or more and Anne wasn’t really interested. So, we skipped it and sat course for Taimamo.

Point 623m
Point 623m

As we started to see the end of this hike, we realized that we were hungry.

Coming down from our round-trip hike
Coming down from our round-trip hike

But first, we had to return to town – still 2km away…

On the Los Gigantes - Santiago del Teide trail
On the Los Gigantes – Santiago del Teide trail

It was a great hike and little did we know that we would pass *through* this mountain a few days later…

We drove up to Santiago del Teide for lunch, and stopped by what seems to be a biker’s place…

Time for lunch
Time for lunch

The burger was great…

Yum...
Yum…

Happy with the hike, we decided to go for one more hike and drove up to the plateau below Teide to bag yet another 2000m top…

Trip statistics: 6km, 505 vertical meters, 1h:55m
Pictures (Canon EOS RP/Iphone 13 Pro Max/Samsung Galaxy) from the hike:

Montaña del Cedro (2265m), Dec 17 2023

Our route across Montaña del Cedro
Our route across Montaña del Cedro

Sunday: We drove up to Parque National del Teide, below Pico del Teide – which we hiked in 2015. We had been to a number of the peaks up there – El Sombrero, Roque de Los Almendros, Montaña de Guajara, Montaña Pasajirón, Roque de la Grieta – all above 2000m. Today, we focused on Montaña del Cedro.

One thing was for sure; off-trail hiking was out of the question. We parked by the Mirador de las Narices del Teide along TF-38, as this seemed to be a hiking area. But the main trails here don’t cross any tops, so how should we go about this?

Heading out along the official trail
Heading out along the official trail

On my GPS map, we could see a path cross Roques del Cedro (2191m) and after following the main trail for a few minutes, we located this path.

Heading up the path to Roques del Cedro
Heading up the path to Roques del Cedro

It was easy to follow, marked with cairns.

Awesome terrain!
Awesome terrain!

The path continued across Roques del Cedro and soon we had Montaña del Cedro ahead of us.

Montaña del Cedro
Montaña del Cedro

The GPS map indicated that the path would curve around the mountain on the west side. We just would have to wait to see how this would progress. In the meantime, we had enough amazing stuff to look at…

Eruption zone on Teide
Eruption zone on Teide

At the foothills of the mountain, the path did indeed turn to the west.

The path turned west here, below the cliffs
The path turned west here, below the cliffs

As the path was about to lead us away from the mountain, we noticed a distinct path (marked by cairns) that was clearly a route to the top.

On the path towards the top
On the path towards the top

Roques del Cedro
Roques del Cedro

This was good news as we had no intention to be hiking on the lava rock!

On top of Montaña del Cedro
On top of Montaña del Cedro

Eventually we reached the top and could enjoy the fine views.

Beautiful view towards Pico del Teide
Beautiful view towards Pico del Teide

It was amazing to see the clouds hitting on the island. We hoped that they would stay put down there…

Woah...
Woah…

As we left the summit, we noticed a vague path leading to the south ridge. This path was also marked with small cairns. We decided to follow it. After a rock section, we entered the pine forest. Although vague, we were able to follow the path all the way down to the main trail at the foot of the mountain.

Heading down the south ridge
Heading down the south ridge

Coming down to the warning signs along the main trail made us ask ourselves if our hike was legit or not. We weren’t quite sure. We had followed paths all the way, but were those paths legit? It was obvious that the black lava rock alongside the main road was off-limits, and we hadn’t gone there. I decided to look this up later. This would anyway be our last hike in this national park.

Hmm...
Hmm…

We now had 2,3km back to the trailhead along a gravel road.

Returning to the trailhead
Returning to the trailhead

We were hiking below rough and stunning terrain…

Just stunning...
Just stunning…

Eventually, we returned to the car and called it a day in terms of hiking.

Grateful to have been visiting this area
Grateful to have been visiting this area

We returned to the hotel and decided to buy a meal upgrade at the hotel, which meant that we would be eating dinner at the hotel restaurant for the rest of the week, for 16 Euro per person. This was a good decision, in terms of the quality of the food and the budget. We had spent 70 Euros at a local restaurant the day before, without begin anywhere near happy with the food…

And we looked forward to what the next day on this island would bring…

Trip statistics: 5,9km, 375 vertical meters, 2h:14m
Pictures (Canon EOS RP/Iphone 13 Pro Max) from the hike:

2 thoughts on “Guama, Cedro (Tenerife), Dec 17 2023

  1. Can’t say that I have ever been tempted by the Canary Islands but that because of their reputation as Europes holiday islands although I think that geographically those islands are actually Africa based on how far south they are.However temperature wise you are better off there than the continental Scandinavian nations with their brutal cold at the moment;Oslo -17c!, Stockholm -15, Helsinki (although Finland isn’t technically Scandinavia but English speakers along with others tend to lump it in(same style of flag but not language!))-18, Copenhagen a mild -7!.Non continental Scandinavian nations much warmer because of the Gulf Stream; Reykjavik -1 and Torshaven 3 above!Oslo surprised as I thought it’d be a lot milder than Helsinki because of the influence of the North Sea.

    1. I don’t mind both! I skied a mountain today, with -15 at the trailhead (western Norway!) and came home to publish this post, reliving the nice weather we had down there. I think the Canary islands are just great. We use the hotel as base camp and we hardly see anyone at all in the mountains. Except for the obvious tops like Teide…

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