5 Feb, 2023 @ 14:17
3 mins read

IN PICTURES: If trees could talk then these 10 amazing trees in Spain would have some tales to tell

Dragon Tree Tenerife

TREES are one of the most breathtaking natural wonders in our world and Spain has its fair share of truly exceptional ones.

The Olive Press takes a look at some of the most beautiful and interesting trees found across Spain.

The Sacred Chestnut of Istan, Malaga

Castano Santo De Istan

The huge and ancient chestnut tree known locally as El Castaño Sagrado can be found in an area known as Hoyo del Bote in the Sierra Real de Istan in Malaga province.

Estimated at between 800 and 1,000 years old it is likely to have been a mere sapling when the Moors ruled Spain.

But it’s trunk now has a circumference of 13.5 metres.

Roblón de Estayala, Parque Natural de Fuentes Carrionas, Castilla y León

Roblon

This legendary oak tree is called “El Abuelo” by locals and is thought to be the largest and oldest tree in the Montaña Palencia in the region Castilla y Leon

Found in a forest near the town of Vañes some 32 km from Brañosera in Palencia province it lies just off the Camino de Santiago in the Parque Natural de Fuentes Carrionas

Estimated at between 500 and 800 years old, it measures 9.8metres around the base of its trunk.

Sabina Albar,  Parque Natural Sierra María-Los Vélez,  Almeria

Sabina

On the northernmost part of Almeria province on a wind blasted plateau at 1,600 metres above sea stands an ancient juniper tree that is so special it has been awarded ‘natural monument’ status.

Estimated to be around 1,000 years old, this variety of tree dates from the dense forests of the Tertiary period of 2.5 to 65 million years ago.

 You can find this tree with its gnarled trunk and thick green canopy at the eastern end of the Cordillera Bética mountain range in the Parque Natural Sierra María-Los Vélez.

Dragon tree, Tenerife

Eldrago

El Drago or The Dragon is also known as Drago Milenario because it is said to be over 1,000 years old.

It is the oldest and largest living specimen of dragon tree (Dracaena draco), found in the Parque del Drago, in Icod de los Vinos, on the Canary Island of Tenerife, Spain.

It is one of the symbols of Tenerife and was declared a national monument in 1917 and once appeared on the 1,000 peseta note.

It is the only tree species in the world whose sap is red and what makes this one extra unusual is that the trunk contains a 6-metre-high cavity accessible by a door, with a fan installed to provide ventilation.

Olive tree in Fuentebuena, Jaen

Olivo Fuentebuena

The town of Arroyo del Ojanco is notable for little else but this most impressive of olive trees. Such is its size that it is recorded in the Guinness Book of Records as the largest olive tree in the world and has earned itself Natural Monument status by Andalucia.

Standing at a height of 10metres and with a trunk that exceeds 4m in circumference, its canopy measures 116m2 and is thought to be more than 1,000 years old.

Encina de la Pica, Olmeda de las Fuentes Madrid

Olmeda De Las Fuentes Oak

The small town of Olmeda de las Fuentes just an hour’s drive southeast from the capital Madrid is a site of pilgrimage for tree lovers.

For it is here that you can find one of the more notable trees in the Community of Madrid, a holm oak that stands over 18 metres tall and is thought to be over 900 years old.

Giant Sequoia, La Granja de San Ildefonso, Segovia

Granja

Known as La Reina, this giant sequoia stands almost 40 metres high in the gardens of the royal place in La Granja in Segovia province.

She has stood at the gates to the Royal Palace with her partner, El Rey since at least 1867 and is thought to be one of the oldest examples of the trees imported from America into into Europe.

But she is just a baby, as giant sequoias are among the tallest in the world reaching over 1,000 metres tall and with a lifespan of up to 4,000 years.

Pino Castrejon, El Hoyo de Pinares (Avila)

Pinocastrejon 2 1

 This tree, a variety of stone pine (Pinus pinea) stands alone next to a stream in a stretch of pasture outside Avila in Castilla y Leon and has been awarded protected status.

It is said to produce more than 2,000 pine cones in each harvest and is a favourite for family picnics offering shade beneath its vast boughs with a canopy stretching across 25 metres.

Moreton Bay Fig tree, La Orotava, Tenerife

Arboles Singulares 07 46535

The Ficus macrophylla, commonly known as the Moreton Bay fig or Australian banyan, is a large evergreen banyan tree of the family Moraceae native to eastern Australia. There are examples of it found in public parks across Spain but nowhere is there a more impressive example than in La Orotava park in Tenerife thanks to its enormous crown and eye-catching roots which stretch from the canopy to the ground.

Ancient yew, San Cristóbal de Valdueza, León

Tejo Sancristobal

This sacred yew tree planted beside a chapel in the Bierzo region of Castilla y Leon is said to have stood even before the first stone was laid to build the cathedral of Leon.

Known as El Teixo, this tree provides shade over the cemetery and has grown to a height of 15m with a truck circumference of 4.75m.

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Dilip Kuner

Dilip Kuner is a NCTJ-trained journalist whose first job was on the Folkestone Herald as a trainee in 1988.
He worked up the ladder to be chief reporter and sub editor on the Hastings Observer and later news editor on the Bridlington Free Press.
At the time of the first Gulf War he started working for the Sunday Mirror, covering news stories as diverse as Mick Jagger’s wedding to Jerry Hall (a scoop gleaned at the bar at Heathrow Airport) to massive rent rises at the ‘feudal village’ of Princess Diana’s childhood home of Althorp Park.
In 1994 he decided to move to Spain with his girlfriend (now wife) and brought up three children here.
He initially worked in restaurants with his father, before rejoining the media world in 2013, working in the local press before becoming a copywriter for international firms including Accenture, as well as within a well-known local marketing agency.
He joined the Olive Press as a self-employed journalist during the pandemic lock-down, becoming news editor a few months later.
Since then he has overseen the news desk and production of all six print editions of the Olive Press and had stories published in UK national newspapers and appeared on Sky News.

1 Comment

  1. What a nice gigantism! Where on earth may I watch a sequoia tree over 1000 m tall?
    To my knowledge, the General Sherman Tree at Sequoia National Park in California with a hight of 83.80 meters ‘only’ is the highest Sequoia tree on earth. Isn’t it?

    Location : Germany

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