Thursday, 12 November 2015

Tuesday 3rd November 2015 – Torre de Moncorvo, Portugal

Last night we joked about waking up in the night because it had stopped raining but that is exactly what I did. I woke to hear the rain starting to ease and it finally stopped at 03:15. That was 21.5 hours of continuous rain – there was genuinely not a single break in that time. It started raining again after a minute but finally stopped half an hour later – the silence was deafening!
A week ago I booked two English language tours at the Coa Archaeological Park for today. This is Europe’s most important open-air Palaeolithic rock-art and is a UNESCO World Heritage site. We had seen the paintings and engravings in the Pyrenean caves earlier in this trip and so we wanted to see what the Coa Valley had to offer. With yesterday’s rain we thought that the trips may be cancelled but we were incredibly lucky as we were able to visit both sites without getting wet.
We had to be at the Coa museum for 09:45 and we drove down a 2 km road from Vila Nova de Foz Coa to one of the ugliest modern buildings we have ever seen. The concrete blockhouse is in a beautiful position overlooking stunning countryside including the confluence of the Douro and Coa rivers. Entering the building feels like going into a dingy prison with high walls of unpainted concrete sections and virtually no lights. This might have been slightly more appropriate if it was meant to evoke a cave setting but the art here is in the open air. After descending massive concrete steps into the concrete bowels of the building we found reception and the receptionist lit by a desk lamp, without which we would not have been able to see her. We paid for our combined ticket for the morning visit and museum (€12 each) and at 10:00 were greeted by our guide. There was only one other visitor who was Portuguese but said that he spoke English so he was happy for the whole tour to be done in English. The guide apologised for his poor English but, as long as he was on his subject, he was fine.
The museum is high above the Coa Valley and the engravings are by the river so the visit is accomplished in a 4x4 Land Rover. A security guard greeted us when we got to the Canada do Inferno site next to the river and then there was a half kilometre walk to the first engravings. Visits here are planned in the morning as that is when the light is best for viewing the art. Unfortunately the weather was overcast, so some of the more subtle engravings were very difficult to make out. Others were however very clear and the guide traced out the lines of many animals – mainly aurochs, deer, ibex, horses and goats. As with the paintings and engravings in the Pyrenees, the engravings were superimposed on each other and only some of the rocks were chosen for the artwork. The drawings started in approx. 20,000BC and the last were in 10,000BC when climate change meant that hunting would not have been as good and it is thought that man no longer visited the area. Hunter-gatherer people made the engravings and they drew the larger animals that they hunted in the place that they hunted them as they were drinking at the river. Most unusually in art of this period, there are many engravings in the Coa valley that show a form of animation e.g. a horse with two heads showing the head up and then down in the act of drinking. Our guide told us that artistic style of the engravings had very similar characteristics to the drawings and engravings in central Spain and the Pyrenees. It is thought that the same people moved around these areas following the animals.
We returned to the museum building where we visited the museum itself, rather sparse but interesting, set in high concrete rooms together with some strange modern art. We followed a sign to the restaurant down a bleak staircase further into the bowels and met some Portuguese schoolgirls who stopped to ask a question. We couldn’t help them but soon afterwards we realised that they were asking where the restaurant was. At the bottom of the staircase was a dark concrete corridor that lead to a space with two large metal doors, no natural light and virtually no artificial light. We thought that we had arrived at the toilets until, through the gloom, we saw on one of the doors that said ‘Restaurant – Open’. The architect of this build should be shot or at least locked in a windowless concrete room. We opened the door, closely followed by the two schoolgirls, and found ourselves in a lovely space with huge glass windows overlooking the rivers, vineyards and the countryside. We went into the restaurant rather than the café, opted for the ‘menu’ and had a fantastic meal overlooking that tremendous view. The ‘menu’ consisted of bread, olives, olive oil followed by a two large grilled pork chops with mushrooms, garlic baked new potatoes and vegetables, followed by a pudding (cinnamon-baked apple or tiramisu with chocolate ice cream) and coffee. Oh, plus a glass of local wine and all for €11 (£8). Everything was top quality and we will definitely come back for another meal if we are ever in the area, even if we aren’t visiting the museum.
There is an interesting background story to the discovery of the engravings. The Portuguese energy company EDP were building a dam in the Coa valley (we passed part of the workings this morning) and ignored an archaeologist’s report that said that there were Palaeolithic rock engravings on the site. When the report was published and bought to UNESCO’s attention, a public outcry followed, though EDP contested the dating of the engravings. There was a public campaign (‘The carvings don’t know how to swim’) and investigations by UNESCO and a Portuguese archaeological association proved that the Pocinho dam built on the Douro had already drowned engravings at Coa. There was huge pressure on the government to cancel the project but it was only after a change of government in 1995 that it was finally cancelled. UNESCO awarded Coa World Heritage status in 1998. Also in that year the water in the Pocinho reservoir was deliberately allowed to drop by 5m to allow for archaeologists to look for engravings below the water line. Many hundreds of engravings were found and there are probably many hundreds more under the further 5m of silt caused by the dam.
In the afternoon we drove the 16 km to Castelo Melhor where our next trip started. There were six of this time plus the same guide. He drove us 5km down a very bumpy dirt track past huge vineyards (we were in the Douro wine / port area) to the Penascosa site. This is 4km further up the Coa River from Canada do Inferno and here there is no effect from the Pocinho dam, so the river is at the height that it would have been in Palaeolithic times. It was much easier to visualise animals drinking at the river here as there was flat land beside it which would also have provided pasture as well. The lighting was better than this morning and the engravings were better and easier to see. The guide explained that many of the later engravings (10,000BC) were done as very fine lines and can only really be seen at night with torch light illuminating them from below. They run night visits in the summer but not at this time of the year.
On then to our overnight stop at the Torre de Moncorvo aire through some lovely scenery that would have been even lovelier if it hadn’t been dark!

Photos: The view from the Coa museum at the confluence of the rivers – the Coa river joins from the bottom right, hidden below the hill; The view from the restaurant; As we waited in the Land Rover at Castelo Melhor, this lady walked up the main street – great balance and she obviously didn’t trust the weather; Some of the Duoro vineyards see on the way to Penascosa; One of the Penascosa engravings, slightly enhanced to make it clearer – there is a goat in the centre with its head to the right and also a larger horse with its head in the top-right corner.




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