Most people have never heard of this place. That's part of what makes it extraordinary.
The Iberian Highlands stretch across the meeting point of Guadalajara, Cuenca, Teruel, and Zaragoza — a vast elevated territory of deep river canyons, high moorland plateaus, ancient pine and oak forests, medieval walled towns, and some of the most ambitious wildlife restoration projects in Europe. It is one of the least densely populated regions on the continent, and one of the most intact. The landscapes here are not preserved behind fences: they are simply still here, doing what they have always done, largely undisturbed.
There is no single right way to travel through a territory this size. Some people come for five days focused entirely on the rewilding projects — wild horses, European bison, ecosystem engineers at work in landscapes that burned or emptied and are slowly, visibly recovering. Others arrive wanting to walk the Tajo Canyon from rim to river, sleep in a village that has barely changed in three centuries, eat roast lamb in a bar with no menu, and spend a night under a sky so dark it takes your eyes twenty minutes to adjust. Some come to photograph. Some come to do absolutely nothing, in a place that has the space and silence for it. Some come for all of the above and ask for three weeks.
We design the programme around what you actually want from the trip — not a fixed itinerary.
The rewilding layer
Running through all of this is one of the most active rewilding programmes in southern Europe. Rewilding Spain has reintroduced Przewalski horses, European bison, Tauros cattle, Serrano horses, and Pottoka horses across several sites in the Iberian Highlands — each one chosen because the land was ready, and each one now demonstrably changing the landscape around it.
Visits to these projects can be a full day, a half day, or the backbone of an entire week, depending on what you want to understand and how closely you want to get to the work.
Duration: one day to one month — genuinely. A single afternoon with the horses, a long weekend across two landscapes, a ten-day traverse of the full territory from Albarracín to Beteta, a month-long deep dive into everything. We've done them all.
The process is simple. Tell us your dates, your group, your interests, and roughly what kind of experience you want — active or slow, wildlife-led or culturally-led, comfortable or simple. We'll come back with questions, an outline, and a full personalised quote.