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Things To Do in Lanzarote

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Timanfaya National Park Reviews

  • A Mountain of Fire

  • 4 out of 5 stars
    catsholiday from ashbourne
  • July 5, 2025
  • Best of IgoUgo
Quote: A Mountain of Fire TIMANFAYA NATIONAL PARK:

Lanzarote was almost wiped out by a series of volcanic eruptions which lasted over six years from 1730. Amazingly eleven villages were buried in molten lava but incredibly, no one was killed. In 1974 the area was declared a national park which today provides tourists with an opportunity to see the effects of these years of volcanic activity.

One day we went to visit this famous Timanfaya National Park. This is almost like visiting the dark side of the moon. The landscape is black there is very little vegetation just miles of black rock and sand in various shapes. It cannot really be compared with anywhere else I have seen and is a must see if you are visiting Lanzarote.

A quick factfile for planning a visit:

How to get there: From both Playa Blanca and Puerto del Carmen, take the LZ2 to Yaiza. Follow signposts for Timanfya and the LZ67.
Opening Times: Daily: 10.00 – 18.00
Admission: €8 and Parking: Free

The park has a visitor centre further along the main road after the entrance gate to the park and this is well worth a visit as it explains about volcanic activity generally and more specifically about the eruptions in Lanzarote. It is well laid out and a very interesting and educational visit both geographically and historically.


You pay for the car at the entrance to the park and then you follow the road in the park until you reach the parking area near the Diablo restaurant. To reach this car park it is quite a distance from the gate and I would imagine that the queues really build up in summer as we were in a long line and the car park was very full.

The entrance fee includes the bus tour round the most dramatic and unspoilt area of the park, The road has been very cleverly built so that the area has kept as unspoiled by human interference as possible.


The only way through the National park is to have this bus tour which is okay but the windows do not open so photo opportunities are a bit limited and all photos have to be taken through glass which is a shame. The buses are packed full and they do not leave until they are full. You get on these buses from the reception area near the Diablo restaurant.

Atmospheric music is played on the bus as you wind your way round some very tight corners on the very narrow twisty road. The commentary includes someone reading the emotional and quite dramatic account of the eruptions from Father Lorenzo Curbelo's personal account at the time.

After the bus trip you can go and see a demonstration of the heat just below the surface as a pile of grass is stuffed into a pit and quickly catches alight. Another man pours water down a hole and seconds later a small geyser erupts nearby. This volcano is not extinct only dormant so volcanologists constantly study any changes that take place.

In the Diablo restaurant which was designed by Cesar Manrique you can also enjoy a steak (at a price) cooked on a BBQ pit heated by the volcano below where temperatures of 600 degrees Centigrade are recorded only 10 metres below the surface. Having seen the price of the steak we opted for 4 bowls of very expensive soup instead!

WE RODE A CAMEL TOO:

After you leave the actual park on the way out on the road back to Yaiza we passed the camels that we had seen on the way in Our daughter was very keen to ride one and no-one else would go with her so I agreed so we had a ride up the side of a volcano on a the camel.

The camels are led in a line. We sat two to a camel on sort of chairs strapped across their backs. They have a most ungainly walk, as they move the front and back leg on the same side of their body at the same time –it is a rolling gait and we wobbled from side to side. This is probably why the camel’s nickname of the ship of the desert.

Our camel kept insisting on getting so close to the one in front that my leg was almost under its bottom which I wasn’t too thrilled about. The camel behind also seemed to want to whisper in my ear too so it was a very close and personal experience. Our camel also seemed to be more wobbly in its gait than others and we swung up and down as if we were at sea.

You have to pay extra for the camel ride.

Summary;

This is a landscape that it is difficult to imagine unless you have experienced it. Everywhere is black and there are huge areas of flat black wilderness but this is interspersed with dramatic volcanic sculptures from time to time. The lava flowed down towards the sea and cooled at it hit the sea and this produced some very impressive shapes and sculptures.

I would certainly recommend a visit to this National Park if you go to Lanzarote as I don’t think there are many other such recent volcanic parks that you can visit.

Thanks for reading.
This review may be posted on other sites under my same user name,

From journals Lanzarote with a young baby
  • Timanfaya National Park

  • 4 out of 5 stars
    TravelTess from Malmoe
  • April 5, 2025
Quote: A tour guide will take you across the volcanic landscape! This singularly beautiful park is a living laboratory of scientific, geologic, and geomorphologic interest. The Timanfaya area on Lanzarote is today a large national park that covers about 1/4 of the 805-square-kilometer island, the northeasternmost of the seven larger Canary Islands.

The eruptions in the 18th century are amongst the most important stories of eruptions in modern times, not only because of the large volume erupted, but also the duration in time. To day there is a restaurant on the top of one of the volcanos, in the Hilario's Islet, where the temperature is at 600 degrees Celcius just 10 meters below the surface, and only 10 centimeters (4 inches) below the surface, the temperature can go as high as 160°C. Large crowds of tourists are visiting this center every day. Everybody is offered a guided tour by bus around the volcano area, with information given either in English or German. The tour is included in the entrance-ticket to Timanfaya Park, as it is forbidden for other cars to drive around inside the park!


From journals Lanzarote-The Vulcano Island in the World!
  • Timanfaya National Park

  • 4 out of 5 stars
    wgaldred from Dunfermline
  • December 29, 2025
Quote: Timanfaya National Park is about a 20-minute drive from Puerto del Carmen. Upon arriving at the car park, you go on a bus tour around the mountains, which lasts about 40 minutes. You see the many craters formed by the volcano and the large holes in the ground where the lava flowed from.

At the end of the bus tour there are demonstrations on how hot the earth is just a few feet under the ground. During one demonstration, a bush is placed in a hole about 1 metre deep, and after a few seconds, it bursts into flames, and during another, water is poured down a hole, and then a jet of steam shoots high into the air.

The restaurant also uses the heat from the volcano to cook the food.


From journals Lanzarote
  • Timanfaya National Park

  • 4 out of 5 stars
    MichaelJM from Nottingham
  • December 6, 2025
  • Best of IgoUgo
Quote: Timanfaya National Park Our trip to the Timanfaya National Park was a real educational experience -- full of sensational views and interesting spectacles. Lanzarote was devastated by a series of volcanic eruption lasting over six years from 1730. Eleven villages were buried in molten lava, creating barren land out of highly fertile farmland, but incredibly, no one was killed. Now the area is a national park (declared in 1974) and provides tourists with a fascinating day's activity.

We entered the park just north of the village of Yaiza and within yards saw rows of camels waiting to give short rides to the tourists. We’ve never really fancied a camel ride, and the sight of these heavily muzzled beasts didn’t really encourage us. We paused, took a few photos, and then entered the park (the entrance fee includes an hour’s bus tour of the park from Islote de Hilario).

The bus tour gave an amazing incite into the history of the area with atmospheric music playing, accompanied by the powerful words of Father Lorenzo Curbelo's personal account of the eruptions. Factual information was presented in a very straightforward fashion and the bus regularly stopped to pander for the photographic wished of the passengers. The scenery is quite haunting in places and the caverns and shapes caused by the eruption as fascinating to check out. Your guide will point out the lines of volcanoes, the tongues of lava, partially collapsed craters, and leaking fissures. Even the bus route through the man made roads on a bright sunny day, is somewhat eerie. There is bizarre but incredibly interesting scenery to observe as the bus picks its way precariously through the dark black lava flows. The volcanoes desolated the land but I suspect the Lanzarote tourist board would be lost without this fantastic landscape.

At the end of our tour we joined the rest of the tourists to witness the unleashing of Fire Mountains’ true power and to confirm that this volcano is truly dormant and not extinct. Local guides push brushwood into fissures and after a few seconds the twigs burst into a ball of fire as the assembled audience gasps with amazement. We were invited to grab some volcanic grit off a nearby ledge and were staggered at the heat, and finally, we waited as water was poured into hollow pipes and startled as a jet of steam erupted from the ground. We were ready for it a second time around but it still made us jump!

Up in El Diablo, the restaurant, we watched as the natural heat of the Mountain cooked fast food on a large griddle –- apparently temperatures of 600 degrees Centigrade are recorded only 10 metres below the surface. We took in the panoramic views of the lunar-type landscape from this amazing restaurant designed by (yes, you’ve guessed) Cesar Manrique. Incorporated into the building is an olive tree that allegedly survived the eruptions but has since then failed to bear fruit (it looked dead to me!)


From journals Lanzarote - a place in the sun
  • Timanfaya National Park

  • 5 out of 5 stars
    Holiday Jo from Kettering
  • February 13, 2025
Quote: Fire Mountain was amazing (this is the only word to describe the park). You can visit the park on one of the many tours that are on offer either at your resort or in the town of Puerto del Carmen. Once you get to the park, you can get around by bus or on camel, but beware because the smell can be quite strong especially first thing in the morning. All around the park are large craters of the volcano and some are still active. At El Diablo at certain times, you can even have your food cooked on one of the craters at 140 degrees C.
From journals Lanzarote the Lazy Way