Friday 14 January 2011

Levada da Referta

Since I have a GPS enabled android phone, and my mother is a geek about Levada walks in Madeira, I wanted to experiment a bit with the gadget and wandering around.

I used MyTracks to, obviously, track my path and Rmaps for mapping, with offline Google Earth tiles from the location compiled by Mobile Atlas Creator (you can try MapDroyd as well).

I’ll put these Levada walk tracks on a google map over here, joining my other maps with favourite places in Madeira, Berlin, Milan and Lisbon.


View Levadas da Madeira in a larger map

Here’s some data:

Recorded: Wed Jan 12 11:10:27 GMT 2011

Total Distance: 6.06 km (3.8 mi)
Total Time: 1:31:24
Moving Time: 42:02
Average Speed: 3.98 km/h (2.5 mi/h)
Average Moving Speed: 8.65 km/h (5.4 mi/h)
Min Elevation: 296 m (972 ft)
Max Elevation: 360 m (1181 ft)

The elevation data is not so accurate, for known reasons: the error is two or three times the horizontal error, which can explain the 100m-150m difference to the real elevation. Some time ago I was at a beach and it was displaying an elevation of 60m…

During this walk we were heading “against” the flow of the Levada. That is visible in the elevation graphic: it is higher in the end of the track than in the beginning.

Surprisingly, a Levada has also some upward slopes (flow-wise): you can also notice the (real) valleys, depicted as small “hills” in the graph. This is strange since they should transport water by gravity only.  It works because the water flowing upwardly should has enough kinetic energy to make it over the top of these small hills (or there are some ant gravitational fields engineered in 18th century state-of-the-art technology).

We also were more than half of the time stopped because I was shooting some birds photos.

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“Poios” are platforms built for cultivating the land and they can be seen in the steepest places imagined.
Since this Levada is quite near population, we saw a lot of people working the land. Due to the so-called crisis Portugal is faced upon, being worse in Madeira because of construct-like-crazy-debt, maybe it needs to rethink its priorities nowadays: shift from high tech nonsense to agriculture expertise…?

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When you pass along this peace of rock, it smells like sulphur and rust. Almost pure Iron comes straight out of the rock face.

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Even though there has been a (fake) economical boom in the past years in Madeira( it passed 105% of mean EU GDP, “confirmed” by yesterday’s news), there are still people throwing TVs and miscellaneous waste into river streams…

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Porto Santo was barely visible from the northern shore.
Can you see a strip of it’s golden beach in the photo..?

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Can you spot the (female?) Turdus merula?

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Magnificent view, in spite of the overcast weather

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One of my best photos to date.. but this is not the final one… It will be posted to my flickr.

2 comments:

Bruno Bass Rodrigues said...

dude very nice blog ! are you from madeira? please take a look into my blog, it is about the 'levada walks' in madeira :) cheers

http://madeira-walking.blogspot.pt/

Unknown said...

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