From Monte Agruxiau to Funtana Coperta (D-314)
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Starting from the small square of the Monte Agruxiau village - built in the mid-19th century by the Belgian company Vieille Montagne - you will leave behind the Station of the Forestas Regional Agency and the small church of Santa Barbara and head south, flanking the pine forest that separates the village from that of Bindua.
After a few hundred metres on the asphalted municipal road, you will reach the building that once housed the hamlet’s primary school: the village, which lies on the left of the route, developed spontaneously next to the San Giovanni Mine in the first half of the 20th century. It is still inhabited and has a bar/coffee shop which is open from the early morning.
Near the school, on the opposite side of the road, you will see the ruins of a railway bridge, which you will take via a small ramp to enter, in a westerly direction, the former railway route that was operated by FMS (Ferrovie Meridionali Sarde, Southern Sardinia Railways): this is a narrow-gauge railway, opened in 1926, which provided passenger and freight service over a 113 km route on the lines Iglesias-San Giovanni Suergiu-Calasetta and San Giovanni Suergiu-Narcao-Siliqua until 1974, when the railway was replaced a bus service. The course of the railway track, now without rails and sleepers, has become a pleasant and fascinating hiking track that allows you to enjoy the view of Monte San Giovanni with the mine and the 19th-century ore processing plants emerging from the dense vegetation.
This stretch is made even more fascinating by the crossing of a railway tunnel and several bridges, the last of which crosses State road SS 126 at Funtana Coperta, where, like in a fascinating model train set, you will find the intersection of two former railways (the FMS railway and the Monteponi Company’s private line) and of a road, in the place where once stood the area’s first semi-mechanical ore processing plant, Keller Nobilioni, of which very little remains.
From here, where Trail 314 ends, you can take three different directions: Gonnesa (on Trail 513) or Monte Scorra (on Trail 315) or Laveria Vecchia (on Trail 513-A).
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