A griffon vulture soaring over a granite ridge with a medieval hilltop village in the Alto Alentejo at dawn.

Birdwatching in the Alto Alentejo · Portugal

The land the birds chose, people chose too.

Griffon vultures ride the same crags that carry the watchtowers; great bustards display on the same plains the frontier forts were built to command. Here, wild Iberia and a thousand years of history are one landscape — and you read both from a single base in the medieval town of Castelo de Vide.

The newsletter

What's flying now

A short, seasonal note from the Serra — what to listen for, what's passing through.

The thesis

Two ways to read one land.

Most birding destinations offer the birds and little else. This corner of the Alto Alentejo offers something rarer: a landscape so unspoiled that the birds still thrive, and so long-inhabited that every ridge and river carries its history — and the two are inseparable.

  • The crag where the griffon nests

    is the crag the castle was built on.

  • The open plain that stages the bustard's display

    is the field of fire the star fortress was raised to command.

  • The quiet river the black stork fishes

    is the river the Romans bridged and the menhir was raised beside, seven thousand years ago.

You don't choose between nature and history here. You read the same ground twice — and that is the whole experience.

What you'll find here

Three things, kept inseparable.

The Birds

Two landscapes' worth.

The resident raptors of the Serra de São Mamede — Bonelli's Eagle, Griffon Vulture, Black Stork — and the steppe specialities of the Elvas plains — Great and Little Bustard, sandgrouse, and a winter of cranes. Where to go, what to see, and when.

Explore the birds

The Land & Its People

The deep human story, written into the same country.

A medieval town and its Jewish quarter, the largest menhir in Iberia, a lost Roman city, a fortified eagle's-nest, and a UNESCO star fortress on the frontier — each tied to the birds that share its ground.

Read the land

Your stay

Three houses in Castelo de Vide.

Built for the way birders travel — out before dawn, back at dusk — including a panoramic terrace to watch the raptors from. One medieval base for all of it.

Where to stay

Geography

Two landscapes, one base.

Everything sits within an hour or less of Castelo de Vide.

The sierra
The Serra de São Mamede.
Green, granite, raptor country, and the heritage of Marvão, Ammaia and the megaliths.
The plains
The open steppe of Elvas and Campo Maior.
Bustards, sandgrouse, wintering cranes, and the fortified frontier.

Two worlds, one medieval town to come home to each night.

See the itineraries →
SERRA DE SÃO MAMEDEELVAS PLAINSCastelo de Vide

Map · two rings around Castelo de Vide

All year

There is no off-season.

Spring brings the bustard display and the flood of migration; winter brings the cranes, the wildfowl and the low, clear light; autumn is the quiet passage; and high summer rewards the dawn, with the heritage to fill the heat of the day. Different birds, every season — a reason to come all year.

The seasonal calendar →

Plan your visit

Tell us when you can come and what you'd most like to see.

We'll shape the days around the season — and around you — and reply by email.

The newsletter

What's flying now

A short, seasonal note from the Serra — what to listen for, what's passing through.