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Wael Al Sayegh reflects on the dangers of attempting to blend into a crowd, stressing that your true beauty lies in acceptance.

cathedral, the Romanesque Basilica de San Isidoro and Gaudi’s Casa de Botines. NEAREST AIRPORT Leon.

BASE YOURSELF AT Hotel NH Collection Plaza Mayor (nh-hotels.com/hotel/nh-collection-leonplaza-mayor); doubles from €105.

Cuenca

Less than an hour by high-speed train from Madrid, but in the middle of nowhere, Cuenca – which has World Heritage status – is set on a dramatic limestone spur between the Jucar and Huecar rivers. One of its extraordin­ary medieval “hanging houses”, that spill over the top of the gorge, is home to the astounding museum of abstract art (march.es/arte/cuenca), with works by Antonio Saura, Antoni Tapies and Eduardo Chillida. It was founded in the Sixties by the artists Gustavo Torner and Fernando Zobel with the idea that remote Cuenca was a place they were unlikely to be bothered by the Spanish dictator Franco and could just exhibit their work in peace. NEAREST AIRPORT Madrid Barajas

BASE YOURSELF AT Parador de Cuenca (parador.es/en/paradores/parador-de-cuenca); doubles from €111.

Carmona

Carmona – less than an hour by bus from Seville – rivals Andalucia’s capital in terms of history, despite its diminutive size. A Roman necropolis, portals through mighty walls, baroque palaces, a convent and a Moorish fortress partly reborn as a Parador hotel make this ancient town a rewarding add-on to a Seville city break. You may feel deja vu on seeing the town’s main tower; it’s a copy of Seville’s Giralda. Carmona crawls up to a ridge with expansive views of the surroundin­g plains, best viewed from the Parador’s drinks terrace. Come evening, wander the eerily silent cobbled alleys to find ultra-traditiona­l tapas taverns heady with the aroma of cured meats. NEAREST AIRPORT Seville

Comillas

An Antoni Gaudi creation would seem reason enough to visit Comillas, yet El Capricho is among several magnificen­t buildings in this little town on Spain’s north coast. Teasingly hidden behind trees, El Capricho is one of Gaudi’s earlier works and distinguis­hed by a minaretsty­le tower tiled in green and gold. Close by is the intricate Sobrellano Palace, completed by another Catalan architect, Joan Martorell, three years after El Capricho; high on the hill is the giant and very grand Pontifical University from the same decade. Throw in a couple of old squares straight out of a film set and Comillas is well worth the 13-mile detour from medieval Santillana del Mar, which attracts far more visitors. NEAREST AIRPORT Santander BASE YOURSELF AT Hotel Comillas (comillasho­tel.com/en); doubles from €49.

Extremadur­a

Dogged (or perhaps blessed) by poor transport links and an often inhospitab­le climate, Extremadur­a is Spain’s best-kept secret; a vast tract of meadows, vineyards, hills and oak forests. Its grand, honey-coloured towns, once home to Spain’s conquistad­ores, are film set-perfect – indeed, the ancient cities of Caceres and Trujillo are in huge demand from moviemaker­s who barely need tamper with the glorious medieval exteriors to create the backdrop of a bygone age. Merida, the capital of the region, was an important Roman city; its Unesco-protected archaeolog­ical sites are among the world’s most impressive. NEAREST AIRPORT Madrid Barajas or Seville BASE YOURSELF AT Palacio de Santa Marta, Trujillo, or Palacio de Oquendo, Caceres (for both, nh-hotels.com); doubles from €69

COUNTRYSID­E Benidorm’s hinterland (RIGHT)

While value-package tourists slip on sandals to enjoy the beach of Europe’s biggest holiday resort, others are donning hiking boots a few miles inland. The 4,613ft Puig Campana (Bell Hill), 10km from the skyscraper­s, is a magnet for walkers. It has a distinctiv­e notch that is characteri­stic of the malformed peaks that rise above the empty, rocky valleys of this region. The less hardy can aim their rental car at El Castell de Guadalest, where a castle appears to grow out of the granite outcrops above this tiny village, or Les Fonts d’Algar, with wooden walkways providing a route along a series of waterfalls tumbling through lush foliage. NEAREST AIRPORT Alicante BASEYOURSE­LFATVivood­HotelPaisa­je, Benimantel­l(vivood.com/en);doublesfro­m€134.

La Palma (RIGHT)

On the hairpin-tortured drive from La Palma’s capital Santa Cruz to the near-8,000ft-high rim of the immense Taburiente caldera, you’ll pass through a series of ecosystems. Between the tangled shrubs of the lower slopes and the barren wilderness at the top lies a thick band of beautiful canary pines, their arrow-straight trunks often poking above cotton-wool clouds. Stop to walk on the carpet of fallen needles, accompanie­d only by birdsong. The next day, skirt the other side of the volcano to the Llano del Jable viewpoint for a quite different hiking experience, stumbling across the otherworld­ly mass of broken lava spewed from a 1949 eruption. NEAREST AIRPORT La Palma

BASE YOURSELF AT Hacienda San Jorge, Los Cancajos (hsanjorge.com); doubles from €84.

Monte Perdido National Park (FAR RIGHT)

One of Europe’s most spectacula­r walks attracts surprising­ly few British ramblers. The 10-mile (16km)path through the Ordesa canyon, showpiece of the Monte Perdido National Park, follows a dazzling river between formidable 3,000ft walls, with a fantail waterfall providing a suitably dramatic end point. Alternativ­e balconysty­le trails with awesome views beckon those with a head for heights. Its three sister canyons are even quieter. Anisclo is a wild slice through the mountains that narrows into a slot filled with cool green pools. Pineta begins among alpine meadows and rich forest before ascending to craggier ground. Smaller Escuain is famed for its population of wild lammergeie­r vultures with 10ft wingspans. Nearest airport Zaragoza

BASE YOURSELF AT Hotel Abetos, Torla (hotelabeto­s.es/en); doubles from €58.

Redes and Ponga Natural Parks

Northern Spain’s Picos de Europa rightly attract hikers and photograph­ers, but the splendid mountain scenery is not confined to the invisible limits of the national park. Just to the west are the adjacent natural parks of Redes and Ponga, where peaks soar 6,500ft above deep valleys choked with beech and oak forest. On the rare patches of flatter land, soft-eyed Asturian cows graze on alpine pastures. Lurking within the woods are brown bears, wolves and capercaill­ie. Otters frolic in the crystal streams. Look up, too – chamois climb the rocks while golden eagles and Egyptian vultures swirl their huge wingspans around the tops of crags. NEAREST AIRPORT Asturias

BASE YOURSELF AT Don Felix Hotel, Rioseco (donfelixho­tel.com); doubles from €73.

CerdAnya

Stretching along the eastern Pyrenees, straddling France and Spain, this Catalan region is an area of sprawling plains protected by the mountains. It looks a bit like Austria or Switzerlan­d, but is not far from Girona and the Mediterran­ean. Many of the villages are linked by tracks, so exploring on foot or by bike is easy. You can even follow a lesser-known stretch of

the pilgrimage route to Santiago de Compostela, which crosses Cerdanya. The pretty hilltop town of Puigcerda is a good place to stay. NEAREST AIRPORT Girona

BASE YOURSELF AT Hotel Villa Paulita in Puigcerda (villapauli­tahotel.com); doubles from €87.

Montes Universale­s (RIGHT)

About halfway between Madrid and Valencia, but around 150 miles (241km) from either, this is the least-populated area in Spain.

The mountain range does, however, attract hikers, birdwatche­rs, butterfly enthusiast­s and mushroom hunters. The Tagus is just one of the rivers that has its source here, where waterfalls flow between the pine, oak and juniper trees. By far the best-known place is Albarracin, on a hilltop almost surrounded by the Guadalavia­r river, which frequently tops the list of the prettiest villages in Spain thanks to its lanes lined with mansions in rose-gold stone, not to mention the boutique hotels and abundance of cosy traditiona­l bars and restaurant­s. NEAREST AIRPORTS Zaragoza, Madrid or Valencia BASE YOURSELF AT Hotel Caseron de la Fuente in Albarracin (caserondel­afuente.es); doubles from €63.

Babia

If someone in Spain says you are “in Babia”, they mean you are lost in thought, dreaming you are somewhere else, hiding away, or just happy doing what you’re doing. Not many Spaniards, let alone foreign tourists, have actually been to this area of emerald meadows, snow-capped mountains and glacial lakes in the north-west of Leon province, which borders the Somiedo nature reserve in Asturias. Walkers, cyclists, climbers and people who don’t want to run into anyone they know keep the handful of tiny villages busy at weekends. NEAREST AIRPORT Leon or Asturias BASE YOURSELF AT Hotel El Rincon de Babia (elrinconde­babia.com); doubles from €55.

Valles Pasiegos (RIGHT)

The Pas, Pisuena and Miera valleys south of Santander in Cantabria make up the Valles Pasiegos, an area of lush green hills where farmers pick their crops with the traditiona­l cuevano deep baskets on their backs and livestock are moved from lower to higher ground in summer. For centuries, the wet nurses for the Spanish royal family traditiona­lly came from this area, as it was deemed to be the healthiest place in Spain. Nowadays, with easy access from Santander, visitors come to see cave art, fish for salmon and trout, plunge into hillside pools, and scoff the excellent cheeses and cakes. NEAREST AIRPORT Santander

BASE YOURSELF AT Gran Hotel Balneario de Puente Viesgo (balneariod­epuentevie­sgo.com); doubles from €83.

COAST

Camarinas (BELOW)

A fishing village, estuary and peninsula on the Costa da Morte in Galicia, Camarinas is a great area for experienci­ng the Galician way of life in summer, staying in small hotels or traditiona­l fishermen’s houses. A string of splendid, unspoilt beaches are linked by paths, making this a popular area for walking. It all looks idyllic and peaceful in the sunshine, but this coast can be treacherou­s too. Follow the lighthouse and shipwreck routes to get an idea, visiting the English Cemetery right by the sea, which is the burial place of some of the sailors who lost their lives when the battleship HMS Serpent foundered on the rocks in 1890. NEAREST AIRPORT A Coruna or Santiago de Compostela.

BASE YOURSELF AT Hotel Puerto Arnela (hotelpuert­oarnela.com); doubles from €49.

Arousa Island

In the Ria de Arousa inlet in the Salnes area of the Rias Baixas, the small island is linked to the town of Vilanova de Arousa by a bridge, so is easily accessible. The southern part is a nature reserve, with white sand beaches flanked by dunes and dense pine forests. You can walk or cycle right around the island, or spend the day diving, snorkellin­g or fishing. Get out on a boat to see how oysters and mussels are grown on thick ropes dangling from wooden rafts and watch the skilled women known as mariscador­as harvest clams from the sand at low tide. Then devour huge platefuls. NEAREST AIRPORT Santiago de Compostela BASE YOURSELF AT Parador de Cambados (parador.es/en/paradores/parador-de-cambados); doubles from €72.

Cabo de - Gata-Nijar

Among Spain’s most remote beaches are those on the fringe of Europe’s only true desert on the south-east tip of the country. Ochre cliffs and sharp rocks define the landscapes of Cabo de Gata-Nijar Natural Park, but it’s the sands that attract those willing to brave the bumpy access road – including the makers of Lawrence of Arabia and the Indiana Jones films. Playa de los Genoveses, near the village of San Jose, is the most accessible, but make a beeline for Playa de Monsul, split by a fat volcanic rock. If the wind isn’t blowing, it offers great swimming in shallow seas. Explorers will discover several smaller coves hidden below the cliffs. NEAREST AIRPORT Almeria

BASE YOURSELF AT Barcelo Cabo de Gata (barcelo.com); doubles from €78.

Cudillero

As cute as they come, the fishing village of Cudillero would look quite at home in Cornwall. Shutter-windowed dwellings, some painted in the same pastel colours as their owners’ fishing boats, step sharply down and around a natural amphitheat­re to a diminutive harbour. Lining the little square closest to the glassy water are restaurant­s serving the day’s catch. Work up an appetite by climbing to one of the secret viewpoints for views over the terracotta roofs. And when Cudillero falls asleep in the afternoon, jump in your car for a short ride to one of several outstandin­g sandy beaches. NEAREST AIRPORT Asturias

BASE YOURSELF AT Casona de la Paca (casonadela­paca.com); doubles from €83.

Zahara de los Atunes

On the Costa de la Luz on the Atlantic coast of Andalucia, this is a proper little town with spectacula­r beaches attached. Although it is very popular with Spanish tourists in summer, late spring is perhaps the most interestin­g time to visit, when the bluefin tuna fishing season is underway and you can amuse yourself trawling around the many tapas bars trying the different cuts of the fish. With the attractive white towns of Tarifa and Vejer de la Frontera about half an hour away, and Cadiz and Jerez around an hour’s drive, Zahara suits people who aren’t keen on full-on resorts and like to sink into local life. NEAREST AIRPORT Jerez or Gibraltar BASE YOURSELF AT Hotel Antonio (antoniohot­eles.com) doubles from €61.

 ??  ?? CLOCKWISE FROM ABOVE: Carmona, Comillas, Extremadur­a and Cuenca
CLOCKWISE FROM ABOVE: Carmona, Comillas, Extremadur­a and Cuenca
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 ??  ?? BASE YOURSELF AT Parador de Carmona (parador.es/en/paradores/parador-de-carmona); doubles from €106.
BASE YOURSELF AT Parador de Carmona (parador.es/en/paradores/parador-de-carmona); doubles from €106.
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