Province of Jaen, Andalucia, southern Spain
Length: 15.0 kms
Altitude: 1,779 metres
Height Gain: 931 metres
Average Gradient: 6.2%
Maximum gradient: 15%
Category: Hors Categorie
One of the Vuelta's less used climbs today is the Sierra de la Pandera. Perhaps not the easiest venue for accompanying team cars and camera crews, it's nevertheless an intriguing and mystical climb, typical of the rugged Spanish South.
Difficult to climb and even more difficult to locate, the Spanish press have referred to the Sierra de la Pandera as the ‘Angliru of the South’. While this is something of an overstatement given Angliru’s incessantly agonizing upper slopes, the Pandera nevertheless has its own share of misery; particularly the 15 per cent gradients that drift along its denuded ridge for over four torturous kilometres. But the mountain holds a wonderful sense of fascination as well.
Only 21 kilometres apart, the Andalucía towns of Los Villares and Valdepeñas de Jaén are the gateways to la Pandera. More or less half way between them, along the wide and sweeping A-6060, is a rather inconspicuous rusty green gate that lies half-hidden by trees off what you’d assume is a driveway rather than another road. But it’s a road all right, the virtually abandoned A-1104, which like a flight of lighthouse stairs wends its way slowly up towards the military radar station at the summit. From this point the road is closed to motorized vehicles save for bulldozers and trucks that frequent the dust-ridden quarry just metres from the road’s edge. In essence, this is really where the true climb begins, a 7.6 per cent average gradient along a four-metre-wide strip of rough asphalt that ironically merges into sections of loose gravel the higher it travels.
An excavator busy at work near the quarry that you pass on your way up the climb. |
Other than the road and the intermittent yellow signs warning cyclists of the next 15 per cent gradient, I had little in common with Cunego’s day on the mountain. Keeping his competitors at bay he would have had little time, nor inclination to absorb the views on offer. But there are plenty to be had and they are spectacular, whether the Sierra Nevada, almost one hundred kilometres to the southeast or the 13th century Castillo de Santa Catalina which, like a sentinel, watches over the white-walled town of Valdepeñas de Jaén from high above.
Next: My 6th Most Difficult Spanish Climb - Col del Canto
I like the look of this one.
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