El Soplao region is located between the townships of Herrerías, Valdáliga and Rionansa, high up in the Sierra de Arnero mountains, at an altitude of 540 m. The site has splendid, extensive views of the Sierra de Peña Sagra and Picos de Europa mountain ranges, the Nansa valley and the Cantabrian Sea.
The Cave is 60 km from Torrelavega and 83 km from Santander, near attractive towns such as San Vicente de la Barquera, Comillas, Santillana del Mar, La Hermida Gorge or Cabuérniga.
The mine visit is located in Plaza del Monte, according to the location map.
Visitors do not need to get to the complex of El Soplao.
The Cave can be reached trough the A-8 motorway that goes from Santander to Oviedo, exit 269 (Los Tánagos-Pesués-Puente Nansa).
Before reaching the town of Pesués, take the detour to Puente Nansa until arriving at Rábago. From there, follow the road to El Soplao.
You can also leave the A-8 motorway at exit 258 (Lamadrid, Roiz, Caviedes). Travel via Las Cuevas and La Florida. This itinerary cannot be done by coach.
To access Plaza del Monte (mine visit) you need to take the main road from La Florida to Plaza del Monte.
You can also get there by SUV following the forest trails of Celis-Rionansa and La Florida-Labarces.
4º 24’ 42” W
43º 17’ 45” N
43º 17’ 45” N
43º 18’ 03” N
The Saja-Nansa region, which is included in the CANTABRIA INFINITA route, was recently converted into an "Ecomuseum", meaning that it will be conserved in all its purity, due to its considerable ecological value. Located between the coast and the mountains of Escudo de Cabuérniga, Barcena Mayor, Cordel and Peña Sagra, it includes the protected natural areas of Oyambre Nature Reserve and Saja National Park. It is a peaceful area, with lush vegetation. The landscape is dominated by twisting folds and rugged terrain. It includes the valleys of Nansa and Cabuérniga. This part of the region has its own particular character.
Is characterised by the profound interrelation between the marine and the agrarian environments. The sea penetrates inside the land through the estuaries of Tinamayor, Tinamenor and San Vicente, enriching both landscape and customs. This is the best preserved part of the Cantabrian coast, with an important protected nature area, Oyambre Reserve.
Some of the most deeply-rooted customs of the land are also preserved, as well us sports such as dragging stones with oxen, together with traditions related to the sea, such as the marine procession of La Folía. It is a paradise for ecological, rural and active tourism, and it also has an important historic and artistic heritage.
There are vast extensions of woodland with oak, beech and birch, creating a mosaic of amazing colours in the spring and summer months, and in particularly, during the autumn.
It has many different species of fauna, including the red deer, roe deer, boar and fox. In more remote, solitary areas, wolves can often be found, and occasionally, bears too. The birds that inhabit this region include the vulture, the capercaillie and the golden eagle, but it is more common to see kestrels and kites. In the autumn the "bellowing" of the deer can be heard, since this is the time when the males of these species make their mating calls, as well as the "passage", when the herds of cows from Tudanca (a species native to this zone) pass through on their way back from the higher pasturelands.
The vast meadows where the dairy cattle graze run down to the coastline, which has some of the largest, most solitary and beautiful beaches in the region of Cantabria. These beaches include those of Merón, Jerra or Oyambre. These beaches are never overrun with people, even in the months of July and August, and those who dare to visit them at the start of the summer season, in May or June, have the privilege of having these beaches all to themselves.
Oyambre Nature Reserve has diverse ecosystems, from the dunes of Oyambre beach to the forest reserve of Monte Corona, and through the estuary of La Rabia, a paradise for water birds.