There are towns you experience by walking, and others you experience by watching. Ronda is the latter. Although, there was significant amount of walking too :) The town doesn’t reveal itself all at once; it unfolds slowly, asking you to pause, lean against a stone wall, and look down—far, far down—into the gorge that slices the land cleanly in two.

My first view of El Tajo stopped me mid-step. The Puente Nuevo appears almost casually at first, until you realize it spans a chasm so deep it feels improbably real. Water murmurs somewhere far below, reduced to sound rather than sight. Standing there, I felt less like a visitor and more like a witness to something ancient and unbothered by my presence.
Ronda doesn’t try to impress you. It simply exists, confidently, as it has for centuries.

The day itself felt undecided. March in Ronda carried a sharpness I hadn’t expected—partly rainy, partly sunny, and unmistakably cold. The higher altitude, so different from the gentler warmth of the Costa del Sol, made its presence felt immediately. Sunlight would break through for a few moments, only to retreat behind low-moving clouds, the air turning cool just as quickly as it had brightened.

Lunch anchored the day in a very simple, very Andalusian way. I stopped at Restaurante Albacara, and the meal turned out to be one of those quiet travel highlights that don’t need exaggeration. The steak was excellent—perfectly cooked, generous, and unpretentious. Sitting there at the terrace, fed and unrushed, I felt ready to let the rest of the day unfold on foot.

After lunch, my wife and our two daughters wandered ahead of me along the cobblestone streets, their stones darkened and gleaming from the recent rain. The air felt crisp, and the town seemed freshly rinsed, as if the weather had momentarily reset it. Their footsteps echoed softly between the old walls, and there was an ease to that walk—unhurried, shared, and lightly joyful. Ronda, under a washed sky and wet stone, felt gentler then, less monumental and more intimate, a place experienced not just through history and views, but through the simple pleasure of moving together.

From there, we walked down toward the edge of the gorge, descending into the Jardines de Cuenca. The path zigzags along the cliff face, and with every turn the perspective shifts—the town above grows taller, the gorge deeper, the sound of the river more distinct. Ronda reveals itself gradually when you move downward, as though it prefers to be approached with patience.
The walk led me to Puente Viejo, humbler and quieter than the Puente Nuevo, but no less evocative. Standing there, closer to the river than before, the scale of the gorge felt more intimate and more powerful at the same time. It’s one thing to admire Ronda from above; it’s another to feel enclosed by stone on both sides, with centuries pressing in.

I continued down to the Baños Árabes Yacimiento Arqueológico, and the mood shifted again. The Arab Baths sit low and sheltered, earthy and restrained. Inside, light filters through star-shaped openings in the ceiling, casting soft patterns that feel deliberately contemplative. The engineering is elegant, but what struck me most was the sense of calm—this was a place built for quiet, for routine, for care. Even in ruins, it retains that spirit.

Climbing back up through Puerta de la Cijara, I felt the pull of elevation again—the steady return from river level to city walls, lungs working, legs reminding me that Ronda is never flat for long. By the time I reached the Palacio de Mondragón, the day felt layered rather than linear.

Mondragón was a fitting final stop. Its courtyards, gardens, and viewpoints hold multiple eras at once—Islamic, Renaissance, modern—without forcing them into neat separation. Standing there, looking back across the landscape I had just walked through, the route made sense not as a checklist, but as a conversation between heights and depths, openness and enclosure.

Here, from the Palacio de Mondragón, I leaned against the stone and looked down into the valley below. Sheep were grazing quietly on the slopes, small white shapes moving with an untroubled rhythm that contrasted sharply with the dramatic landscape around them. The scene felt timeless, almost symbolic, and it stirred an unexpected association. I was reminded of Santiago in The Alchemist—a solitary figure tending sheep, suspended between the certainty of routine and the pull of something larger just beyond the horizon. Sorry about mentioning The Alchemist again, but I can't help it, this entire trip was inspired by that book for me.

Standing there, with cold air on my face and fragments of sunlight illuminating the valley, the connection made sense. Ronda has that effect. It invites reflection without announcing it. The grazing sheep weren’t a spectacle, yet they grounded the place in something elemental—work, patience, continuity. Against the towering cliffs and layered history of the town, they felt like a quiet reminder that some rhythms endure regardless of elevation, weather, or passing centuries.
In that moment, Ronda felt less like a destination and more like a pause—one shaped by shifting light, thin air, and the simple presence of life continuing below.


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Your posts on Spain have a lyricism to them that I don't remember seeing in your other posts (I guess when you are writing about world events or geology a different tone is appropriate).
:)
I think it must be a special kind of tourist who makes this trip, up the mountain, away from the sunny beaches and shopping.
What did your daughters think? Did it impress them? Memories for a lifetime, I think. Maybe requiring more effort than a week at a resort with a swimming pool, but oh so much more worthwhile.
The pictures and narrative are amazing. I think we must have been there at night. I don't remember any of it. I don't know why we were there. We had no car. Had to take a train. Thanks for filling in what I don't remember, what I must have missed.
Appreciated!
It must be the location :) Andalusia can make a Shepard boy a "legend seeker" so certainly can make a blunt geologist into hobby lyricist...
Both daughters loved Ronda. Older has already travelled more in Europe than me, and that is saying something! So, when she loves a place, I have to take her word for it. She said she can potentially live in Ronda, if there is a way to make a living there. I will take that as a YES!
😇
It says so much about your children that they love Ronda. I'm very happy for you that they enjoy the intrinsic.
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I'm from the neighbour country and Ronda has been on my places to see list for quite a while! Thanks for reminding me to start an actual visit planning.
France or Portugal?
Portugal.
Yep, the sunniest european country! ;)
https://www.reddit.com/r/TravelPorn/comments/1s865mt/ronda_spain/
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Waoo. Que lugar tan hermoso...
The view is interesting.
I agree with @agmoore - this destination seems to have brought out the poet in you! But then that's what I have always appreciated about your writing, @azircon - you're always a suprise.
I can't recall if I've been to Ronda before to be fair - I think I might be thinking of Montepulciano or some other Europoean cities and towns built on the edges of cliffs. Some truly astounding locations. Certainly it would have been a long time ago, and I've put it on the list should i ever escape Australia again. The photos are just stunning and I'm pained with absolute jealousy and very, very itchy feet.
Thank you. You said the same at one of my post during my Japan trip last year.
After my surgery I progressively feel that I have an expiration date. I am at peace with it but I also feel I don't have enough time to see all the things I wanted to see.
So I have been traveling more.
People say Ronda is where Santiago might have started his journey so since my college days I wanted to visit Ronda. I am glad to find that it indeed is a special place.
We are heading off to Arches and Canyonlands NP. It was my wife's PhD thesis area and also my old stomping grounds. Want to show the girls what mom and dad used to be when they were young! :) Lots of memories there.
They were there before but don’t remember as they were little, hopefully this time they’ll remember it.
This was the girls in 2016 at Canyonlands you can perhaps see the Shafer Trail below. Back in the days my wife and I used to “commute” there.
Holy shit, dude! Your bag is disintegrating into nothingness!!!
https://twiggy.lat/@outofthematrix/ga7fzpkkcu5sjddvboie9a
Oh wow, that is a pretty big drop! :) I was just down near the New River Gorge this past weekend. I was hoping to get some photos, but we didn't quite make it there. This looks like a beautiful area and even more has me wanting to visit Spain now.
It is beautiful and not particularly hard to get to. I recommend a rental car. The cars are LHD and they do drive to the right like us here, so that is easy.
Oh yeah, that would definitely be a plus since that is what I am used to :)
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Qué hermoso relato; lograste que Ronda se sintiera no solo como un lugar, sino como una experiencia vivida con pausa y profundidad. Me encantó cómo mezclaste el paisaje, la historia y esos momentos sencillos en familia, porque le dan mucha alma al post. Dan ganas de caminar esas calles y quedarse un buen rato contemplando el valle.
Much appreciated comment and thank you for the visit.
Beautiful pics, I've always had a soft spot for Spain. I need to explore some more
I haven't really thought too much about Spain but I was very pleasantly surprised on this first trip.
The landscape with the gorge looks like something unreal! I can't imagine the coexistence of such a huge gorge and a city together. It's like a place from a legend. I loved your description of the combination of the sheep and the city. Your text is so poetic!
All the photos made me feel so small in the face of the majestic landscape—they're beautiful!!
Wow! Reading your fascinating story, Ronda has become my next dream city! I have never been to Spain before. This country is first on my list of places I want to go 😊