First of all, you should know that there is no entrance to the house or palace. You pay for access to some small interesting beautiful gardens and money to go down to a mine. I'm not kidding. You go down a few hundred steps from the top of the canyon to the bottom of the water. Walking at different heights, and wet and slow corners. The climb up will definitely get you exercise. So if you are physically injured, uncomfortable, wearing inappropriate shoes, or any excuse you can have, don't try. I recommend the cafe that exits. Just outside the attraction, go there, wait for your friends to come back.
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First of all, you should know that there is no entrance to the house or palace. You pay for access to some small interesting beautiful gardens and money to go down to a mine. I'm not kidding. You go down a few hundred steps from the top of the canyon to the bottom of the water. Walking at different heights, and wet and slow corners. The climb up will definitely get you exercise. So if you are physically injured, uncomfortable, wearing inappropriate shoes, or any excuse you can have, don't try. I recommend the cafe that exits. Just outside the attraction, go there, wait for your friends to come back.
Moore's Palace (Casa del Rey Moro), during the Nasird Kingdom (Moorish regime), this was originally the palace of Prince Abomelic. We wanted to enjoy the garden and canyon scenery, but found a tunnel in the yard, so we went in to explore. Who knows that several floors have gone down, but there is no end yet. Going down for about tens of meters, the steps are full of water, the head is cold and hit by water drops, everyone hurry up with a hat, hold a cat waist, scattered away, busy "ah yo~haha~" smile non-stop. Walking in the dark lacquer valley, I feel isolated from the world.
After the guidance of people, crossing the new bridge and passing through the residential area. In an alley, I saw a dark yellow old building embedded in a white house. The courtyard door was closed, the wall was advertised with pictures and texts. The fog was illiterate in Spain. From the picture, it was presumed that this is the Moore King's House, which is now closed for maintenance. There is no way, take a few photos outside. The Moore King's House house has a certain arc with the path, and its ancient and dilapidated can be seen at a glance. A corner of the courtyard wall collapsed, and a proud peacock flew here, and he was here to attract friends. See this did not feel out "the old time Wang Xie, the front swallow, fly to who home."
The palace of King Moore looked from the outside, except for the Arab king at the door, there was no special residence. The palace was badly damaged, but the courtyard was very chic and Islamic. Deep into its cave, I found that there was no cave underneath. More than 200 tall steps, all the way down, you can reach the bottom of the vertical cliff, suddenly open, the lake is clear to the bottom, the river valley is quiet and far away. Looking up at the world, the hustle and bustle are all over your head, the hole is very cool, it is worth seeing.
The Moore King's House is located between the new bridge of Longda and the old bridge, with a ticket of 5 euros. The Moore King's House is a noble garden more than 100 years ago. There is a tunnel that goes tens of meters underground and reaches the bottom to see the cliffs and the buildings on the cliffs. The scenery is unique. The tunnel entrance is not easy to find, the steps of the tunnel are even more difficult to walk, the inside is slippery, and you have to be careful. There are not many tourists here. Under the hole, we only met two Pakistanis and two Koreans. When the Pakistanis knew we were Chinese, they welcomed us to their country warmly and friendly, what a hard man! It took 40 minutes to visit.
The Moore House is not the residence of the Moore King. It is located near the new bridge and built on the site of the Islamic Palace. The building itself is not open to the public. However, you can visit the garden and secret passages. You can go down more than 300 steps to the Tahoe River, a secret passage built to prevent water from being cut off.