Tag: PR-TF83.1
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Era la Abejera
Threshing floors like this one remind us of the importance of cereal cultivation in the past The midlands of the south of Tenerife are dotted with threshing floors that remind us of the importance of cereal production for feeding the population. In the seventies of the 20th century, the arrival of tourism and massive food…
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Risco del Muerto
A volcanic eruption changed the relief of the Las Vegas area After the Castilian conquest, the water and fertile land of Las Vegas boosted the settlement of the population, but is there a secret ingredient behind such fertility? From the subhistoric eruption of La Arena Mountain, located some 8 kilometres above, a huge basaltic lava…
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Las casas cuevas
A settlement with basic resources for life Since pre-Hispanic times, the ravines were places where nature provided much of what was necessary for human subsistence: water, shelter and food. If you look closely, on this hillside opposite, you can see a form of dwelling that was very common until recently: the cave-house. The geology of…
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Canales o tajeas
This network of arteries increased the prosperity of Las Vegas. The master stonemasons worked hard to build the network of tajeas, or irrigation channels, that irrigate Las Vegas. It is surprising how many of these channels were carved directly into the outcrops of tuff or volcanic tuff. To prevent infiltration, basalt slabs were used to…
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Casa de Los Guimerá
The oldest house in the village was built in the in the 16th century and was used as a tobacco dryer in the 19th and 20th centuries After the conquest, Las Vegas initially belonged to the Duke of Medina-Sidonia, passed into the hands of the Basque Juan de Gordejuela and, later, to the Augustinian nuns…
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El origen de la comarca de Abona
Las Vegas: one of the seeds that originated the region of Abona. At the beginning of the 16th century, after the conquest of the island, the settler Suárez de Quesada received an enormous but not very productive area of land called Abona. Of all this land, the area of Las Vegas had the greatest agricultural…
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Observar aves
A forest full of life The summits of Granadilla de Abona are covered by an extensive area of canary pine forest, a tree exclusive to the Canary Islands. This large mass of trees is home to a large number of birds, some of them unique to the Canary Islands. Along the network of trails that…
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La Trashumancia
This path was already trodden by the Guanche shepherds before the arrival of Europeans on the island At the beginning of the summer season, herds of goats and sheep would go up to Las Cañadas del Teide to take advantage of the summer pastures. These transhumance practices continued after European colonisation, until the declaration of…