Pinar del Rey (park)

Pinar del Rey is a public park in San Roque, Cádiz in the south of Spain, with mainly pine trees. The Alhaja stream runs through the park.

Pinar del Rey
TypePublic park
LocationSan Roque, Cádiz
Coordinates36°13′56″N 5°24′00″W
Area338 Hectares
Created1800
StatusOpen year round
A wild deer. The previous week I disturbed a family of wild boar; unfortunately I didn't have my camera with me.

History

It was king Ferdinand IV of Castile who donated this area to the City of Gibraltar in 1310.[1]

The forest dates back to 1800 when the Spanish Navy planted pine trees here to supply timber to build warships. The trees were never cut down as the combined Spanish and French fleet were defeated in the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805.

gollark: It seems as if there is not.
gollark: The question is, is there conservation of poetry badness?
gollark: Bad poetry.
gollark: The sun is basically just a giant high-powered gravitational confinement fusion reactor with built-in wide-spectrum power beaming capability.
gollark: Did the river *explicitly permit people* to use the kinetic energy of its water?

References

  1. San Roque Town Council (2016). "Pinar del Rey". San Roque Town Council. Retrieved 2016-01-18.
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