The small hermitage from which we look at the beach for the first time divides two territories - the countryside and the beach: on one side agricultural implements and on the other, towels and sunbeds.

In Beach Castro São Paio we are shrunken in a small rocky valley, with the world to pass away. The horizon is not wide, because the ocean is cut by rocks - the dives are not easy, but the tides sometimes draw pools; and the sand is also populated by rocks, which are made (even more) windswept.

It is also an archaeological site, therefore (with warnings like "the ruins are very fragile, please do not stone them"), and we read in the informative plates that follow the route that the Castro of San Paio was inhabited by calaicos people and is "the the only national specimen in which the sea touches the defenses."
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