Where sea meets stony ridge: La Azohía, on the southeastern coast of Spain, is a compact fishing village in the Región de Murcia, an ideal base for a half-day that pairs coastal scrambling with a calm return by kayak. Senderismo costero por La Azohía y Kayak a Cala Cerrada is a four-hour guided loop that follows the GR92 along exposed cliffs, then drops you into a sheltered cove for a paddle back to town.
The route begins in town at C. Valle de Hucal, 6, La Azohía, where guides kit up the group and outline safety. The hiking leg threads along sea cliffs cut into hard volcanic rock; black basalt outcrops puncture slopes of garrigue where palmito palms and rosemary cling to thin soils. Views open constantly: sheer drops to the Mediterranean, sculpted wave-cut benches, and a compact military castle that marks the landscape’s strategic past. Guides weave natural history, pointing out lava-derived formations and local plants adapted to salt and sun.
After roughly 1 hour 45 minutes on foot you reach Cala Cerrada, a small stony beach framed by darker volcanic cliffs. The exchange is distinctive: kayaks arrive by support boat, and guides run a concise beginners’ lesson—how to sit, brace, and coordinate strokes—before launching. The paddle home is about 45 minutes of easy coastal navigation; from the water the cliffs read differently, their stratified layers and sea caves visible only from sea level. The return rewards hikers with new perspectives and calm bayside silence.
This experience is well suited for travelers who want variety: it’s part mountain walk, part sea trip, and entirely local. Small-group guiding brings attention to geology, endemic flora like palmito, and birds along the shoreline. Practical details matter: minimum age is eight, all kayakers must be able to swim, and the operation notes limited accessibility for wheelchairs. Expect a moderate pace with short interpretive stops and a 10-minute break at Cala Cerrada for a snack.
Why book this trip in La Azohía? It’s an efficient, sensory-rich way to sample the Cartagena coast without committing to an overnight. The combo highlights features you can’t get from one viewpoint—the cliff-top panoramas and the intimate sea-level contours—while local guides manage logistics like kayak delivery and safety briefing. For photographers, naturalists, and active families it’s a compact slice of Murcia’s shore that balances adventure with accessibility; for the curious, it’s an honest encounter with basalt cliffs, fragrant romero, and a small castle that keeps watch over an ancient shoreline. Bring sun protection, sturdy shoes for uneven rock, and a dry bag for essentials; guides provide kayaks and PFDs. The mixed hike-and-paddle format makes this an efficient way to read the coastline and leave with a sense of place.