The north of the island can be subdivided into two different routes,
the first a tour of inland towns and villages and the second
following the coastline. In both cases, as a starting point we can
use the Autovía Marítima at the Alcaravaneras Beach section
where the Julio Luengo tunnels link up with the Autovía del Norte
(the main road for the north of the island).
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Church of San Juan Bautista
Arucas is the main town of the north of Gran Canaria.The town possesses its own
quarries which produce stone of a bluish hue and the finest example of the traditional
craft of carving this stone can be seen in the paris church of San Juan Bautista (Saint
John the Baptist), whose building was initiated in 1909. The church was designed in
Catalonian neo-Gothic style and features spires of thirty metres in height with delicately
carved turrets. In many ways it sums up the hard-working and
religious nature of the Arucas people who reflected in this work the prosperity enjoyed by
the town from the late nineteenth century to the golden age of banana
cultivation, which still plays an importan part in the local economy.
City of Firgas
Known mostly for its famous mineral waters and medicinal table.
Whose source is located in the Barranco del precipice of mothers
City of Moya
Firgas found near the city of Moya, at the top of deep precipices.
A Moya is the forest (of Tigli), small forest plant laurel "laurel"
which at the time of the Conquest covered the wide valley that
separates from Firgas Moya and reach the common Valleseco and Teror.
Opposite the church, where you can contemplate the impressive cliff
with steep slopes and walls, is the museum dedicated to Tomás Morales
Valleseco
A short distance inland from is Valleseco, which means literlly "Dry Valley“.
The irony of the name is that this part of the island actually receives the most
rainfall per year. In this township we can find the Laguna de Valleseco
(Valleseco Lagoon) which fills with fresh water during the winter months and
which has recently been the object of important environmental restoration
programs. In the winter months it plays host to several breeds of migratory
birds including the common egret. Nearby there is a chestnut tree wood and
a recreation area
City of Teror
A drive from the Pinos de Gáldar to Teror completes our tour. Teror is
home to the Virgen del Pino, the island´s patron saint. The Basilica
was built in the seventeenth century although it also features a
tower, whose plan is octagonal, from the era following the Conquest,
which was constructed in the Gothic style of the late fifteenth
century. The Basilica was built to venerate a fifteenth century carved
image of the Virgin sculpted in the style of the Sevillian School.
Nuestra Señora del Pino
The fiesta day of the island´s patron saint, Nuestra Señora del Pino is held on
the 8th September, and is a day on which thousands of pilgrims from both this
and other islands congregate in Teror to offer their finest agricultural produce to
the Virgin. Every different type of traditional regional dress con be seen in Teror
on this day.
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The town of Santa María de Guía
After the Puente (Bridge) de Silva, the road runs on towards the town of Santa
María de Guía, at a distance of some 37 kilometres from Las Palmas de Gran
Canaria. One of the outstanding features of the town is its parish church which
possesses several works of the Guía-born artist Luján Pérez, a figure sculptor,
whose work, dating from the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, is to be
found all over the Canary Islands. Some examples of his work can be also admired
in the Catedral de Canarias (Canary Island Cathedral) of Las Palmas de Gran
Canaria.
Galdar
A couple of kilometres further on we come to Gáldar,
home to the guanartemes or original island rulers and
rich in archaeological sites demonstrating how densely
populated the area was in pre-Hispanic times.
Playa del Agujero and Agaete
Near the Playa del Agujero are the remains of another pre-Hispanic settlement –
one of the largest concentrations of houses and burial mounds in this part of the
island. The remains of irrigation ditches confirm that this pre-Hispanic civilisation
was agricultural. The settlement also features a necropolis where some of Gran
Canaria´s most important burial mounds have been preserved intact. From Gáldar,
the road runs on to Agaete, where the visitor can observe the Pinar (pine forest) of
Tamadaba, perched at the top of the majestic cliffs which surround the town´s
fishing port of Puerto de Las Nieves. These cliffs fall steeply into the sea which is
guarded by a distinctive needle of rock, known as Dedo de Dios ( The Finger of
God), which just out from it. In the post Las Nieves was one of the few points along
this rugged coastline which gave access to the island´s interior.