En venant de la A-432 (de Cazalla), à l’entrée du village, il y a une série de rues portant le nom de provinces andalouses ; je me gare, en faisant ma patrie, dans la rue Córdoba et de là, je me dirige vers la rue adjacente Manuel Díaz, où je quitte le village, à côté du terrain de football. Je commence la montée vers le premier jalon de la journée, le Cerro del Cura ; le chemin atteint une section bétonnée, où la pente devient plus raide, bien qu’elle devienne ensuite plus douce, voire plus plate, avant d’atteindre le point de vue du Cerro del Cura. Malheureusement, le brouillard nous empêche de profiter de la vue sur le village (nous devons nous contenter de la photo panoramique sur le panneau) ; le chemin (depuis Guindales) descend à nouveau vers le village, où l’on peut voir les traditionnels murs de pierres sèches qui délimitent les oliveraies ou les terres pour le bétail.
En arrivant à la route, continuez à droite vers le rond-point et ensuite par une route à côté de la A-433 (vers Guadalcanal), qui a encore quelques tronçons asphaltés ; après presque 2 kilomètres de cette route, quittez-la pour une autre route plus intéressante à gauche, la Cañada Real de Merinas (sur laquelle vous pouvez voir une flèche jaune, car c’est le parcours d’un chemin de pèlerinage jacobéen, le Camino de la Frontera, qui continue vers Guadalcanal). Le chemin, bordé d’une ormaie, est parallèle au ruisseau Rivera de Benalija (bien qu’il soit pratiquement à sec) et un petit sentier nous mène à la Cueva, un élargissement du ruisseau qui descend une colline avec un petit lac à l’intérieur d’une grotte.
Plus loin, le chemin bifurque ; en continuant sur le chemin de droite, je m’approche ensuite du ruisseau de El Pueblo, avant de revenir sur le chemin qui rejoint ensuite celui qui part sur la gauche et mène à la A-432. Je continue à droite sur cette route pendant environ 700 mètres, puis je prends un chemin sur la gauche (Camino Siete Caminos), qui mène à l’ermitage de la Virgen de las Angustias, patronne d’Alanís. Il a été érigé pour commémorer une victoire sur les “Maures” dans la vallée voisine de Matamoros. Les deux premières sections datent du XVe siècle et la troisième, ainsi que la chapelle principale, du XVIIIe siècle. Le retable principal, de style gothique, présente un groupe sculptural de la Pietà, avec Saint Jean et la Madeleine, du XVIe siècle, qui a été détruit, tout comme l’image originale de la Vierge de l’Angoisse, également gothique, au début de la guerre civile.
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Our website implements the ARIA attributes (Accessible Rich Internet Applications) technique, alongside various different behavioral changes, to ensure blind users visiting with screen-readers are able to read, comprehend, and enjoy the website’s functions. As soon as a user with a screen-reader enters your site, they immediately receive a prompt to enter the Screen-Reader Profile so they can browse and operate your site effectively. Here’s how our website covers some of the most important screen-reader requirements, alongside console screenshots of code examples:
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