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What's the Spanish equivalent of Land's End to John O'Groats?

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What's the Spanish equivalent of Land's End to John O'Groats?

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  1. Perhaps it is el Land's End to el John O'Grouts


  2. I somehow doubt that the Spanish do such daft things as cycling or walking from one corner of the country to the other, but if they did I would have thought it would be from:

    Ayamonte (far south-west corner, at the mouth of the River Guadiana that separates the southern parts of Spain and Portugal); and the other corner is more difficult....

    Irun is the town on the border with France to the West of the Pyrenees, but the land goes a few miles further up past Akartegi - I don't know whether that point has a name!

    By the way, that's about 675 miles (via Salamanca, or 715 miles if you go via Madrid).

    PS  The Chilean equivalent would be quite interesting!

  3. Could be Portbau to Algericas

  4. Not sure if you mean distance, or actual famous walks. If it's the latter it's probably the pilgrim trail Camino de Santiago - http://www.galiciaguide.com/Santiago-pil...

  5. In terms of distance probably Ayamonte to Portbou

    In terms of furthest North to Furthest South it would be Cabo Ortegal to Tarifa point

  6. There is the road called Ruta de la Plata, (Silver Path) who goes from Gijon in the North to Seville in the South.

    If you do that you can visit some of the most beautiful towns in Spain, Leon, Zamora, Salamanca, Caceres, Seville... beautiful, everybody should do the  Spanish Wild West.

  7. Land's End in spanish is Finisterre

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