Beech autumn — Hayedo de Tejera Negra
One of Spain's finest and most southerly beech forests, ablaze each autumn with gold, copper, and deep burgundy beneath a cathedral canopy.
About this spectacle
Deep in the Serranía de Guadalajara, the Hayedo de Tejera Negra is one of Spain's finest and most southerly beech forests, and in autumn it transforms into a corridor of fire. Visitors walk beneath a cathedral canopy of European beech trees whose leaves cycle through green, gold, amber, copper, and deep burgundy as the season progresses. The forest floor is thick with fallen leaves, muffling footsteps and filling the air with that particular earthy perfume of damp wood and decay. Shafts of low autumn sunlight filter through the thinning canopy, backlighting leaves so they seem to glow from within. The silence here is profound — broken only by the rustle of leaves, the drip of condensation, and the occasional call of a jay. It is a slow, immersive spectacle: no single dramatic moment, but an accumulating richness of colour and texture that rewards a long, unhurried walk through the reserve.
When to go
Mar — Nov, peak Oct — Nov
Getting there
Nearest airport: MAD. Nearest city: Guadalajara.
Booking options
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