The brañas are key elements for understanding rural life and shepherding in the Asturian mountains. They are settlements located in cool, high pastures, generally difficult to access and far from the population, where shepherds and herdsmen herded their livestock in the summer.
They lived there until the arrival of the cold weather, which is why they built huts whose style or architecture varies according to the area. Although, nowadays, many brañas are no longer in use, it is still possible to find examples of exceptional beauty hidden in the Asturian mountains.
One example is the beautiful Braña de las Navariegas, with well-maintained huts and several corros, circular stone structures with conical roofs, used to keep calves or pigs. Follow the PR-AS156 if you want to get here or if you feel like visiting this braña!
Another great option, and easier than the previous one, is to follow the PR-AS 9 route to reach the Llanelo hut in Ibias, located in a glacial excavation basin. The Llanelo hut is made up of a single hut and several trousas, circular or square enclosures, just over a metre high and without roofs, used to keep livestock.