You’ll walk forest trails in Serra da Lousã with a local guide, spot deer tracks (and maybe actual deer), taste homemade cake in a mountain village, and wander slate-lined streets where time moves slower. Includes pickup from your hotel and plenty of small moments you’ll want to remember later.
“Did you hear that?” our guide Rui whispered, holding up a hand as we crunched along the pine needles. I froze, half-expecting some wild creature to leap out — but it was just the wind shifting through the chestnut trees. Still, I swear I caught a flicker of movement between the trunks. The air smelled sharp and earthy, like wet stone and moss after last night’s rain. We’d started early from Coimbra (pickup was right at our door — honestly a relief since I never trust myself with mountain roads), and by the time we reached Serra da Lousã, my shoes were already dusted with red clay.
The drive itself felt like a slow reveal: first those dense oak forests, then suddenly these tiny schist villages tucked into the hillsides. Gondramaz was my favorite — slate roofs, old women sweeping their stoops, one dog barking at us like we were celebrities or maybe just suspicious city folk. Rui knew everyone; he waved at a man stacking wood who grinned back and shouted something about deer sightings this week. We stopped for tea and cake in Coentral (the cake was still warm — I burned my tongue but didn’t care), swapping stories with another couple from Porto who’d also booked this off-road tour of Serra da Lousã on a whim.
I didn’t expect to care so much about “smaller species,” as Rui called them — beetles with metallic shells, birds darting through patches of sunlight. He pointed out tracks in the mud (“deer,” he said confidently; I pretended I could tell) and told us how these forests change color every season. There was this moment where everything went quiet except for distant cowbells; even now it feels kind of suspended in my memory.
By the end, we had mud on our boots and about fifty photos of trees that all looked different to me somehow. The ride back was sleepy — Rui played local music on low volume while mist curled around the hills outside. I keep thinking about that silence in the woods, how it felt both ancient and new at once.
Yes, pickup is included from accommodations in Lousã or Coimbra areas.
The main part of the ride takes place within Serra da Lousã; timing may vary but expect a full day experience.
A small morning snack is included—usually tea or coffee with cake.
Yes, infants can join but must sit on an adult’s lap during transport.
Yes, service animals are allowed on this tour.
The tour is suitable for all physical fitness levels.
Yes, you’ll visit schist villages like Gondramaz and Coentral along the route.
Your day includes pickup from your accommodation in either Lousã or Coimbra, transport throughout the mountain range with qualified guides by your side at all times, personal accident insurance coverage, photographs taken during the journey so you don’t have to fuss with your camera, plus a morning snack—usually tea or coffee paired with fresh cake—shared somewhere cozy along the way before heading back home again.
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