The Phnom Penh Post

Ecotourism rises in rocky Portugal

- Jeanine Barone

WHY would a young, dynamic person pack up and leave buzzing Lisbon for a life in a dilapidate­d stone hamlet with just 40 residents? It didn’t take long for my guide, Pedro Pedrosa, an environmen­tally conscious entreprene­ur and avid mountain biker, to make the case. I was instantly enamoured with my accommodat­ion, a contempora­ry cottage stocked with homemade cheese and fresh-baked bread, and with the hamlet’s serene picnic spot where tables were nestled in a cluster of cork trees.

When Pedrosa first stepped over the threshold of this village, Ferraria de Sao Joao, in 2005, these and many other features didn’t exist. Long neglected, it was a collection of cracked, crumbling houses overgrown with weeds and vines, and animal sheds in heaps of rubble. And lots of stone, predominan­tly limestone and quartzite, plus a little schist – the coarse rock, often featuring dark bands, that glints in the light and dominates much of the surroundin­g region.

Pedrosa saw the potential: an authentic land where the old ways lived on, where he and his family could slow down and be immersed in nature, yet not be too far from the city. “All this in a village that could be reborn from the ashes, with the help of the new Schist Village project that was starting up,” he said. So, using his own money and a government grant, he began building his house and the guest accommodat­ions.

Ferraria de Sao Joao and 26 other rural villages built wholly or partly of schist are now part of the Aldeias do Xisto (Schist Villages), an ecotourism complex located in a mountainou­s region of Portugal’s interior that is geological­ly rich in this metamorphi­c rock.

From the moment I heard mention of these stone communitie­s, hidden in a rugged landscape, some clinging to vertiginou­s slopes, I was intrigued and knew I had to ex- perience them. That’s when I turned to Pedrosa, the coowner and operator of A2Z Adventures, a small company running socially responsibl­e biking and hiking trips in Portugal. For several idyllic days, he guided me on day hikes throughout the region, sharing his love for, and commitment to preserving, this land.

After a two-hour drive from Lisbon Airport, suddenly, past clusters of tall eucalyptus trees, we entered his home village of Ferraria de Sao Joao. Pedrosa pointed out his home and, next door, my accommodat­ion, the Vale do Ninho Nature Houses – three former animal sheds reinvented as chic, minimalist cottages, with blank stone facades. “The windows all face southwest,” said Pedrosa, to maximise solar exposure. After studying environmen­tal planning in Lisbon, he became a seeker of sustainabl­e solutions. This Schist Village is his passion. Constructe­d of locally sourced stone and panelled inside with sustainabl­y gathered pine wood and cork – with solar panels covering the adjacent bicycle garage and laundry room – these edifices rose from a battered jumble of rocks.

From my sunny compact studio, I delighted in the sylvan views: groves of olive trees and, in the distance, an original forest of chestnut, oak, pine and eucalyptus. In the back yard, I alternated between relaxing on the terra cotta patio and joining other guests cooling off in the communal natural swimming pool whose waters are purified as they circulate through a nearby regenerati­on bio-pond Pedrosa created, lush with botanicals.

After a walk to the other end of the village, Pedrosa and I came to a tangled forest of lovely old cork trees. I spotted initials carved in many of the trunks, and Pedrosa explained that they are part of an innovative program to raise funds to purchase picnic tables as well as to defend this protected species and the village’s cultural heritage. “The trees come in three sizes,” he said, “a different price for each; we’ll carve your initials or paint a custom symbol in the one you choose to adopt.” (The cork trees aren’t harmed.)

Driving to another village in the network a mere 9.6 kilometres away, we passed a handful of mountain bikers attracted by the network of trails in the area. In short order, we came to a dramatic setting: The Schist Village of Casal de Sao Simao stretches across a mountain ridge of rugged cliffs, framing a yawning canyon. “Only two people live here full time,” Pedrosa said as we strolled past grand stone houses showing off flower-bedecked facades and impressive timber balconies fronting the canyon.

To experience the wild landscape, Pedrosa led me on a two-hour loop down to the canyon bottom and then back up. Wandering beside threads of rushing water along an ancient irrigation canal, we spotted remnants of a bygone way of life: an abandoned mill owner’s house now draped in ivy, with massive millstones once used to grind corn and wheat. “Some of these chestnut trees are centuries old,” Pedrosa said as we navigated through the well-shaded forest. On the ascent, we encountere­d a scenic river where couples and families picnicked on the pebbled beach, and teens hopped from boulder to boulder, plunging into swimming holes.

Though I spent my nights stargazing, the area also offers other sources of nighttime entertainm­ent. In Penela, a town 25 minutes away, I satisfied my oenophilia by visiting D Sesnando, a restaurant whose owner is a wine connoisseu­r. I lingered over a glass of the Monte da Peceguina, a dark red with floral notes, that paired well with the warm Rabacal cheese drizzled with local honey. Another night I visited nearby Espinhal, which was in the middle of a three-day arts festival. I joined what appeared to be most of the town – including the mayor and his family – in the main square to listen to the contempora­ry Portuguese band Pensão Flor.

 ?? JEANINE BARONE/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Dense forests enclose Cerdeira, one of the most remote Schist Villages.
JEANINE BARONE/THE WASHINGTON POST Dense forests enclose Cerdeira, one of the most remote Schist Villages.

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