The Anaga Rural Park is a national park covering most of the Anaga Massif in the northeast of the island Tenerife, the largest of the Canary Islands. The Anaga Rural Park is the second most important natural heritage site of Tenerife, after the Teide National Park. There are paleontological sites of scientific importance within the boundaries of the park. It was inhabited by the Guanche people before Spanish colonisation, and has historically been important as grazing grounds.
The Anaga Rural Park is a protected natural area in the Anaga Massif. It was declared a Biosphere Reserve in 2015 because it is home to the largest number of endemic species in Europe. It covers most of the northeast of Tenerife with an area of 140 km², spread out over 3 municipalities: Santa Cruz de Tenerife, San Cristóbal de La Laguna, and Tegueste.
There are 26 inhabited settlements in the park, accounting for 2500 people or less than 1% of the population of Tenerife's Metropolitan Region. Due to it isolation and the decline of traditional activities such as agriculture, it has seen significant emigration since the 1960s. This allowed the park to retain much of its charm. The largest settlement within the park boundaries is Taganana. The urbanized southeast coast of the islands, with towns like San Andrés, has been excluded from the park.
Cruz del Carmen has a visitor centre 📍 with information about the park and the routes and trails that traverse it.
The area was first protected as a National Park in 1987, and reclassified as a Rural Park in 1994. The Coordination Council of the Canary Network of Biosphere Reserves unanimously presented and approved the proposal to declare the entire Anaga Massif a new Biosphere Reserve in 2013. The Spanish Committee of the UNESCO Program approved the candidacy later that year, and is supported by the regional government of the Canary Islands, as well as the universities of San Cristóbal de La Laguna and Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. The park achieved its Biosphere Reserve status during the annual UNESCO meeting held in Paris in 2015.
The Anaga Rural Park has a diverse landscape of natural and cultural importance. It is a highland of mountains with sharp peaks and deep ravines. Several geomorphological elements are unique to the island's geology, and of particular scientific interest. Examples include the Chinobre pythons, Anambro, the Taganana arch, and so on.
The highest peak in the park is ca. 1000 m above sea level.
Because of the large variation in altitude, from sea level up to 1000 m, there is a variety in flora each tried to their own altitude ranges. Laurel trees are common on the highlands, whereas palm trees and dragos (Dracaena draco, endemic to the Canary Islands) are found at lower altitudes. The park is a zone of special protection for birds, since the forests are a vital habitat for laurisilva pigeons.
From La Laguna you only need fifteen minutes in car to arrive to the border.
Hiking is possible in many places, however some areas require a permit to enter. Permits have to be booked online in advance – official information in Spanish: El Pijaral trail, Monte de Aguirre Zone).
While the park is relatively small, the roads are very winding: multiply the expected travel time by a factor of 2. The road from La Laguna to Chamorga takes 1 hr 45 min to 2 hours.
There are no loops, and distances are quite considerable (for example the trail from Cruz del Carmen to Bajamar is 10 km). It may be favorable to combine the hike with a TITSA bus ride, i.e. take the bus up to Cruz del Carmen and then walk back to Tegueste, Bajamar, or San Cristóbal de La Laguna.
There are numerous walking trails signposted throughout the park, look for the white signs and yellow-white marks on posts and trees.