LOCATION MAP  
LOCATION Monte Pando, Ramales de la Victoria.

VISITING TIMES
The cave is open all year round, with a guide service. Visits last 45 minutes. Groups of 6 are organized from 1st May to 30th September and for groups of 10 from 1st October to 30th April.

TIMETABLE
From 1st May to 30th September, open every day of the week from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and from 4:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. From 1st October to 30th April, open from Wednesdays to Sundays from 9:30 a.m. to 1:45 p.m. and from 2:45 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.

FACILITIES
The centre has the following facilities available:
- Visitor service point
- Car park for cars
- Guided visit

ACCESS
Access for vehicles: coming from Ramales de la Victoria, take the N-629 main road heading for Burgos. Just 2 km. down the road (at km. 188), on the left, take the turning to the car park and the visitor's information point. From here, walk up a footpath for about 600 m. until reaching the cave.

Access on foot: from the village of Ramales de la Victoria, take the path to the Caves (footpath PR-S.22), which runs parallel to Monte de La Haza. After some 1.8 km., you reach the car park and the visitor's information point. From here, walk along a footpath for about 600 m. to the cave.

DESCRIPTION
The Covalanas cave, the cave with red hind, lies on the northeast slope of Monte Pando, over the El Mirón cavity, used as a habitation at least for the last 45,000 years.

It was surveyed in 1903 by L. Sierra and Hermilio Alcalde del Río, two key figures in archaeological research in Cantabria. Its discovery sets it at the origins of prehistoric science and, more specifically, of palaeolithic art.

This is a small cave, with two galleries sharing an exterior shelter zone apparently not used as a habitat. The gallery on the right houses the graphic cave wall expressions.

After two small series of dots, 65 meters from the entrance, the first animal forms appear. Moving on from this spot, the red figures are depicted to the right and left along the main gallery and inside a small bypass. Eighteen hind in all, a stag, a horse, an auroch, a possible hybrid type figure and three rectangular signs, apart from small dots and lines are arranged on friezes.

After 90 meters, now in small dimensions, the number of figures falls drastically, with only one complete animal figure and, conversely, numerous small dots and lines.

The figures are formed by a dotted outline made with the fingers. This technique is very characteristics of some of the caves located in the Nervión River basin (Biscay) and the Sella River (Asturias), with the highest number around the Asón River basin, although there are outstanding groups such as that found in El Pendo. This distribution points to the existence of groups of human with strong graphic links between them, an example of social networks and contacts. Although it is difficult to date this with any precision, it would appear to have been made in remote antiquity, around 20,000 B.C.

The freshness of the red, the large size of the motifs, the dotted tracing used in the outline of the animals and the concentration of the greater part of the figures in a clearly demarcated area, envelop the visitor in surroundings imbued with mystery.

In the semi-darkness of the cave, it is as if the animal figures came to life and flee away from the rock. As pointed out earlier, this reddish flock, standing restless in the shadows, has been a witness, over the millennia, of the life of Mankind.

BOOKINGS
Website: www.culturadecantabria.com
E-mail: reservascuevas@culturadecantabria.es
Telephone: (+34) 942 646 504. Mobile: (+34) 629 13 54 44.
 

 
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