UK: M-S 08:00 AM - 08:00 PM GMT
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Private Day Trip from Malaga to soaring over the abyss Ronda city and the white village Mijas

Malaga, Mijas, Ronda
Book online or call: +44 0800 015 4961
Duration: 8 h
Activity Level: Easy
Experience: Backpacker, Historical
Language: English, Español
Photo permit included
Tour by public transport
Canal Boat tour included
Train tickets included
Suitable for little children
Wheelchair accessible tour
Museum ticket included
Light snack included
Lunch included
Transportation included
Walking Tour

Overview

The fact that Andalusia is one of the brightest and most colorful regions of Spain is known to everyone who has been here at least once.
If you want to see the real Andalusia, you need to deviate from the traditional route and go deep into Andalusia, where, high in the mountains literally “hovering” over the El Tajo Gorge ones of the most beautiful cities in Spain - Ronda and Mijas - cities for those who love breathtaking views.

What's included

  • Professional licensed guide
  • Pick-up and drop-off
  • Transportation in a private vehicle
  • All fees and taxes
  • Food and drinks
  • Entrance tickets

Highlights

Alameda del Tajo
A beautiful 19th-century public park, the Alameda del Tajo is next to Plaza de Toros overlooking the Tajo gorge. Filled with towering pines, this lush and spacious garden provides a welcome shady spot to relax on warm days. The park's tree-lined paths are ideal for taking walks. Many local families head to this park for the paseo (evening stroll). A duck pond adds to the peaceful environment. Some areas of the park offer magnificent panoramic views of the Ronda landscapes.
Arab Baths (Moorish Baths)
A hidden treasure of Ronda, these 13th- to 15th-century thermal baths are considered the best-preserved Moorish Baths in Spain. The Baños Arabes are near the Puente Viejo in the Barrio de San Miguel just outside of La Cuidad. The baths were built along the Arroyo de las Culebras (Snakes' Stream), a source of spring water, which has a perfectly preserved water wheel from the Moorish era. Similar to ancient Roman baths, the complex has cold, warm, and hot baths (the heating system was entirely hydraulic). However, the architecture exemplifies Moorish design with a central hall and two other sections separated by the characteristic Islamic-style horseshoe-shaped arches. The barrel-vaulted ceiling features beautiful star-shaped skylights. The baths are no longer in use, but the site is open to the public for visits.
Church of Santa Maria la Mayor
Located in the same square as Ronda's Town Hall (Plaza Duquesa de Parcent), this historic church is locally known as the Iglesia de Santa María de la Encarnación la Mayor. The site has long been home to places of worship, beginning as a pre-Christian Roman altar, then a Visigoth church, later a Muslim mosque built in the 14th century, and then converted to a cathedral and added to in the late 15th century; most of what remains today was rebuilt after a major earthquake in 1580.
Jardines de Cuenca (Cuenca Gardens)
Jardines De Cuenca offers spectacular views from literally every corner, the Jardines de Cuenca, is a garden, perfect to spend the day out. Have a picnic, pluck fresh olives, sleep under the trees amidst life-sized gorges, and the sky disappearing into eternity. The walkway full of ascends and descends has several pit stops perfect to just pause and take in the panoramic views. Summers can get a little too hot to take strolls in the garden, but there is ample shade to your respite.
Malaga
Málaga, port city, capital of Málaga Provincia (province), in the Comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Andalusia, southern Spain. The city lies along a wide bay of the Mediterranean Sea at the mouth of the Guadalmedina River in the center of the Costa del Sol. It was founded by the Phoenicians in the 12th century, conquered successively by the Romans and the Visigoths, and taken by the Moors in 711. Under Moorish rule, it became one of the most important cities in Andalusia. When the caliphate of Córdoba disintegrated, the kingdom of Málaga was founded, ruled over by emirs who named it “terrestrial paradise.” After they had failed several times, Christians took the city on August 19, 1487.
Mijas
Mijas is a municipality in the Province of Málaga, in the autonomous community of Andalusia. Located on the southeastern coast of Spain, Mijas belongs to the region of Costa del Sol Occidental. Its center is a typical Andalusian white-washed village, Mijas Pueblo, located on a mountainside about 430 metres or 1,476 feet above sea level, in the heart of the Costa del Sol region. Mijas, a tourist town at the foot of the hills of the same name, possesses typically Andalusian houses. Its traditional status as a mountain village has been combined harmoniously with a major tourist complex located in the coastal enclave of La Cala, where there are 12 kilometres of beaches. The whitewashed streets of historic quarter, Arab in layout and nestling in the mountain landscape, houses some buildings of interest, among them some churches and hermitages. The surrounding area, meanwhile, preserves some archaeological sites, testimony to the town's rich prehistoric past. Not forgetting other attractions Mijas offers, such as its gastronomy, inherited from Andalusia's rich culinary tradition and its deep-rooted custom of fairs and festivals.
Plaza de Toros
The second oldest bullfighting ring in Spain, the Plaza de Toros is a living testament to the region's most famous custom. Ronda was the home of the Romero dynasty of matadors (Francisco, Juan, and Pedro), who developed the rules of the present-day bullfight in the 18th and 19th centuries. This site is the main tourist attraction in El Mercadillo, the new town of Ronda, and was immortalized by Hemingway in his novel Death in the Afternoon. The Mercadillo quarter is separated from La Cuidad (the old Moorish town) by the El Tajo ravine. Built in 1785, the Plaza de Toros is a monumental bullring with a 66-square-meter arena and two tiers of arcaded galleries for seating spectators. The covered galleries feature elegant arches of Tuscany columns as well as Royal Box Seats.
Puente Nuevo (New Bridge)
The Puente Nuevo is the most emblematic monument of Ronda. Built in 1788, the bridge is a feat of engineering and a masterpiece of stone masonry. The 70-meter-long bridge crosses the El Tajo Gorge at its narrowest point and reaches a height of 98 meters from the bottom of the ravine. The bridge connects La Cuidad, the historic old Moorish town of Ronda, with El Mercadillo (Market Quarter), the modern part of town. From the bridge, the views of the gorge and the Río Guadalevín are stunning. Tourists can also get a great view of the Puente Nuevo by walking along the trails of El Tajo. The main path takes a zigzag course (a 30-minute walk) to the lower mills. A side path on the right (a 20-minute walk) travels through a small Moorish gate, the Arco Arabe, to the upper mills. From either path, hikers are rewarded with gorgeous views of the waterfalls and the Puente Nuevo.
Ronda
Ronda is a village in the Spanish province of Málaga. It is located about 105 km (65 mi) west of the city of Málaga, within the autonomous community of Andalusia. Its population is about 35,000 inhabitants. It now is one of the towns and villages that is included in the Sierra de las Nieves National Park.
The viewpoint and the Muralla gardens of Mijas
hese beautiful gardens are the remains of the ancient fortress where the village was located in the Muslim era. They currently offer a pleasant walk, a gorge where rock climbing takes place and several panoramic viewpoints. From the gardens you can see Gibraltar and the coast of Africa on clear days. The parish church of the Immaculate Conception can also be found here. The church was built adjoining the bell tower of the sixteenth century and served as a shelter for neighbors in case of attacks on the town.

Itinerary

09:00 10:00 11:00 12:00

The tour starts with pick-up at the cruise port of Malaga or your hotel in Malaga.

First, you will go to Ronda where you will have 2 hours private walking tour.
Here you will see an impressive stone bridge that connects two parts of the city.
At your request, you can visit the Plaza de Toros (Bullring) (entrance fees are not included in the tour price).

You will see all the important sites of Ronda: Puente Nuevo (New Bridge), Plaza de Toros, Arab Baths (Moorish Baths), Alameda del Tajo, Church of Santa Maria la Mayor, The Jardines de Cuenca.
At the end of a two-hour Ronda city walking tour, your guide will show you the best panorama of the city with a glass of legendary local wine! Also, you will have time for lunch after Ronda city tour.

Your next stop is Mijas – the white village located on the mountainside right above the Costa del Sol. Probably one of the most picturesque towns in the province of Malaga. Mijas is one of many White Villages of Andalucia, but locals like to believe it is by far the most beautiful one – on this tour you will be able to check it by yourself.

The tour will end with a return back to your hotel or cruise port.

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