Loading
  • 21 Aug, 2019

  • By, Wikipedia

Fageda D'en Jordà

The fageda d'en Jordà – in English: the Jordà beech forest – is a natural reserve that includes a beech forest with unique characteristics in Spain, as it grows on relatively flat terrain, formed by a cooled lava flow from the volcano del Croscat, at an altitude that is not common in the Mediterranean area of the Iberian Peninsula for this type of forest, between 550 and 650 m. It has an area of about 4.8 km and its floor is made up of lava prominences that can reach more than 20 m in height, which are locally called tossols.

One of the tossols in the Fageda d'en Jordà, Garrotxa

The beech forest is famous because the Catalan poet Joan Maragall wrote a well-known poem in its honor ("La fageda d'en Jordà"). At the main entrance to the beech forest, at kilometer 4 of the road from Olot to Santa Pau, where the Can Serra car park is located, there is a monolith in his honour. The use of motor vehicles is prohibited within the forest, however, there are several walking routes and you can rent a horse or an old horse-drawn carriage at kilometer 7 of the road from Olot to Santa Pau.

Location

La fageda d'en Jordà is located in the La Garrotxa region, about 5.5 km from Olot. It occupies part of the municipalities of Santa Pau, Olot and Las Presas and is part of the Garrocha Volcanic Zone natural park. The beech forest is surrounded by several of the 21 volcanoes in the Garrocha region. At one end of the forest is the Can Jordà farmhouse, which gives it its name, and which today is a Cultivated Plant Conservation Center. Its objective is the cultivation of fruit tree species close to extinction and varieties of plants that have gone into decline, such as some varieties of buckwheat. Within the forest is the La Fageda cooperative, dedicated to the production of dairy products and which employs mentally handicapped people.

Climate and vegetation

The Jordà fageda is made up almost entirely of medium and large beech trees on land that has not been plowed for many years, although you can still see the old paths of old agricultural and forestry farms. The beech (Fagus sylvatica) benefits from a generous climate, abundant in rain (900 to 1000 mm), cool, with a Mediterranean transition from humid mountain to Atlantic, facing slightly north, with a substrate of relatively recent reddish clays, andosols and other brown soils in which these trees grow easily.

References

  1. ^ Bassols, Emili (2007). "Parc Natural de la Zona Volcànica de la Garrotxa. 25 anys de gestió del territori" [Garrotxa Volcanic Zone Natural Park. 25 years of land management.] (PDF). Annals del Patronat d'Estudis Històrics d'Olot i Comarca (in Catalan) (18): 189–245. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 April 2012. Retrieved 18 March 2012.
  2. ^ Itineraris pedestres 2: Sender Joan Maragall - La Fageda d'en Jordà». Parc Natural de la Zona Volcànica de la Garrotxa, 16-01-1998
  3. ^ Fortià Rius, Ramon. 1993. El medi natural a les Comarques Gironines. L'estat de la qüestió. 683 pàgines. 1a edició. ISBN 9788486812355
  4. ^ "El municipi en xifres". Institut d'Estadística de Catalunya. Retrieved 2015-05-25.
  5. ^ Dades del Parc Natural de la Zona Volcànica de la Garrotxa, Department of the Environment and Housing, Generalitat de Catalunya, April 2006, archived from the original on 2009-04-26, retrieved 2009-10-11.
  6. ^ He mirat aquesta terra. Xarxa de Parcs Naturals de la Diputació de Barcelona. Primera edició. 2002. 283 pp." Book in catalán. ISBN 8477948933.

42°08′58″N 2°30′50″E / 42.14944°N 2.51389°E / 42.14944; 2.51389