Property of the Month

We are often contacted by clients who have walked the Camino de Santiago and now wish to relocate to this beautiful part of northern Spain and to have the opportunity to offer accommodation to fellow pilgrims. The thing is it’s not actually that easy to find a property that meets their criteria. First off it needs to be within very close distance of the Camino – if you’re doing all that walking you’re going to be counting your steps to your accommodation just as carefully as the euros you spend on it. Secondly, any potential property purchase needs to have the space and potential to offer adequate development and space for pilgrims and thirdly, it needs to come in on a reasonable budget.

Sadly, often-times I find myself forced to tell would-be clients that we just don’t have anything suitable to offer them. Which is why I’m so excited about this particular property. A detached, stone-built house in habitable condition and with a ton of further development opportunity – a ground floor ‘llagar’ ripe for conversion, more outbuildings and a further 2,500m2 of buildable land, all within 1km of the Camino in a tranquil location with stunning views to the Sueve mountain.

All in all a very special property and a wonderful opportunity for the right buyer(s).

Contact us to book a viewing.

Click to view the full property details

Detached house with barns, horreo and land

Detached house with barns, horreo and land

 

 

Asturian Still Life

IMG_1612.JPG I took this snap on my phone yesterday as I wandered back from my neighbours’ house at twilight. It’s a bench that sits on the side of the road a few metres from our house. The Asturian countryside has a high bench to people ratio. In our tiny hamlet there is a total of 4 benches and a permanent adult population of 18. Benches are, of course, for sitting on. This one, as you can probably make out from the photo, is under a large fig tree and is the perfect spot to rest out of the heat of the midday sun and to while away half an hour or so, watching the world go (slowly) by or chatting to a friend. A few metres away around the corner in the plazuela (not quite so big or grand as a village square) is another, shadeless, bench; better suited to cooler winter days when there is nothing more nourishing to soul and body than to sit for a while with face upturned to the sun. But back to this bench. Alongside the fig leaf you see poking through the back slats is a well-ripened pepper and underneath the seat is a pair of discarded clogs, both indicators of its location next to the entrance of my neighbour’s huerta (veggie plot). This is the spot where she kicks off her ‘madrenas’ as she exits the field. These Asturian clogs, with their stilts for traction and to keep them out of the mud and their ample size to accommodate the wearing of slippers within, may be funky looking but they are eminently practical. (Before you ask, no, I haven’t got a pair. I haven’t *quite* worked up the courage yet. For now I’m sticking to wellies.) I’ll often see Rosi’s impressive harvest haul piled high here before she stores it in the barn or leaves it to dry under the eaves of the horreo. Often she’ll leave some fresh pickings on the bench for me to take for our tea. It sure beats the supermarket. If you fancy some bench-sitting in Asturias yourself why not take a look at some of the lovely country houses we have for sale in Asturias. With some land to work you’ll have a great excuse to buy yourself some clogs!