One Frame, Two Journeys: Bikepacking Montanas Vacias (Video)

“One Frame, Two Journeys” is a fresh video that follows Luisa Vinueza on an ambitious first bikepacking trip along Spain’s Montañas Vacías route with her partner Nacho Pellejero. It’s a stirring tribute to trust, accomplishment, fear, silence, and the quiet transformation that often results from endeavoring on two wheels. Find the seven-minute video, photos, and some heartfelt words from Luisa here…

Sometimes, the most meaningful things happen in silence. Not the absence of sound, but the kind of silence that slowly fills your senses when you move through a place at the pace of a bicycle. The kind where you begin to notice the wind brushing through pine trees, the smell of wet earth after a short storm, or the sound of small rocks bouncing off your bike as you ride down the trail.

  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias
  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias

That particular silence defines Montañas Vacías. Set in the heart of Spain’s interior, this region is known as La Laponia Española, the Spanish Lapland. It’s not the snow that gives it this name; it’s the emptiness. With population density among the lowest in Europe, entire valleys hold just a handful of residents. Some villages slowly fade away; others quietly cling to life. Yet, the landscape feels incredibly alive.

Montañas Vacías, the bikepacking route created by Ernesto Pastor, crosses this forgotten territory through a network of gravel roads, mountain tracks, and remote backcountry paths. The project was born to draw attention to the region and the people who still live there, offering cyclists the chance to experience one of the wildest corners of Spain.

Bikepacking Montanas Vacias
  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias
  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias
  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias

For us, it became something more personal. Eight days. 517 kilometers. Just over 10,900 meters of climbing. Two riders. One route. But two very different journeys.

Leaving Teruel

We left Teruel late that evening, so my first kilometers were in the dark. It was my first long bikepacking trip, and I was terrified. But I knew this was something I really wanted to try. And sometimes, the only way to move past fear is to confront it.

Two Riders, Two Perspectives

Bikepacking has been part of Nacho’s life for years. Ultra-distance rides, remote routes, long days on the bike—this is his world. For him, the rhythm of pedaling day after day feels familiar, almost natural. For me, this was a completely new world. That contrast became one of the most interesting parts of the journey. Riding with someone who moves so confidently through this world made me believe that maybe I could do it, too.

Bikepacking Montanas Vacias

I followed closely behind him. I watched how he moved through the terrain, how he chose the pace, how he navigated the roads ahead, how he made decisions. At times, it felt like stepping into someone else’s world. But slowly, kilometer by kilometer, it began to feel like my own.

  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias
  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias

We were riding the same bikes—Chiru Highlanders built for long-distance adventure—but what we were experiencing internally couldn’t have been more different. And that’s exactly what the film One Frame, Two Journeys tries to capture: the possibility of traveling in a different way—slower, quieter, and more present.

Learning to Pay Attention

Somewhere during those first days, something shifted inside me. Bikepacking has a way of stripping things down. Your world becomes smaller and simpler. What matters becomes immediate and physical: the next climb, the weather, water, food, and where you’ll sleep that night.

  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias
  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias

And with that simplicity comes attention. I’ve always known I spend too much time inside my own head. I tend to think a lot, worry a lot, plan a lot, and imagine things that haven’t happened yet. But on the bike, surrounded by silence, I realized I could choose something different.

  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias
  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias

So, I started focusing on my senses. What I could smell. What I could hear. What was right in front of me. Real silence is something we rarely experience anymore. Our lives are full of noise, information, and constant stimulation. In Montañas Vacías, that silence comes back. At first, it feels unfamiliar, almost uncomfortable. But after a while, it becomes something else—something calming, something that gently brings you back to the present moment, to you.

The Rhythm of the Mountains

Along the way, we met people who still live in these mountains—shepherds, farmers, villagers who quietly keep this region alive. Regions like this walk a delicate line. They deserve to be seen and appreciated, but not overwhelmed. Routes like Montañas Vacías offer a way to experience them slowly and respectfully.

Bikepacking Montanas Vacias
  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias
  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias
  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias

What surprised me the most about the trip was how many emotions could live inside a single journey. Gratitude. Connection. Fear. Joy. Nostalgia. Admiration for the landscape and for the people who live there. And something I didn’t expect: a growing trust in myself. Every climb, every long day on the bike quietly reminded me that I was capable of more than I had imagined.

Sleeping in the Silence

Most nights, we slept outside. Sometimes in small mountain refuges, sometimes pitching our tent somewhere along the route. One thing that surprised me was how well cared for many of the refuges are. Small shelters, simple but thoughtfully maintained, offering a place to rest after long days. They felt like quiet reminders that people still care deeply about these landscapes. I hope riders who pass through treat them with the same respect, so they can continue to exist for those who come after.

  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias
  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias

Sleeping in remote places was something new for me. The darkness, the forest, and the thought of animals moving somewhere nearby made those first nights a little intimidating. One night, we set up our tent without really knowing where we were. It was already dark, and we decided it was a good place to stop. The next morning, when we opened the tent, we realized we had camped right next to a viewpoint, so we had a beautiful sunrise.

Bikepacking Montanas Vacias

Moments like that are impossible to plan; they simply happen when you travel this way. Experiences like these also remind you how important it is to take care of places like these: to respect the animals that live there, leave no trace, and move through the landscape with care. Because part of the beauty of Montañas Vacías is that it still feels wild.

Bringing Home Into the Landscape

For me, the landscapes of Montañas Vacías triggered unexpected memories. Growing up in Ecuador, I often found myself comparing these mountains to the high plains of the Andes, the Páramo.

Bikepacking Montanas Vacias
  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias
  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias

Living far from home now, I often miss that connection and the people I shared it with. Even though the landscapes are completely different, the feeling of open space and vast silence carried something familiar. It wasn’t really about similarity. It was about connection. About finding small pieces of home in unfamiliar places.

Life and Time

In many ways, the trip changed how I think about life itself. Bikepacking is simple: you move forward, you adapt to what the day brings, and you learn to trust your decisions. It reminds me that life works in much the same way. The path unfolds little by little, and the best thing we can do is experience it fully, slowly, and with as much presence as possible.

Bikepacking Montanas Vacias

For years, I admired the women I saw online who were doing long bikepacking trips through remote places. They seemed strong, free, independent, and super cool. Part of me always wondered if I could ever feel like that, too. Somewhere during this trip, I realized something simple: maybe I already was.

Returning to the Noise

By the final days, the body begins to feel everything. The wind. The climbs. The accumulated fatigue. But also something else: the quiet sadness that appears when you realize the journey is almost over.

  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias
  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias

Bikepacking creates a strange rhythm. Each day, you make small decisions: where to sleep, how far to ride, whether to push forward or stop early. Life becomes simple. Food. Shelter. Movement. And that simplicity is surprisingly beautiful.

Bikepacking Montanas Vacias
  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias
  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias

When we finally rolled back toward civilization, the contrast was immediate. Traffic. Noise. Hassle. After days of sharing everything—the road, the effort, the silence—the city suddenly felt overwhelming.

Sharing the Road

At one point during the trip, I remembered a quote from Into the Wild that had stayed with me for years: “Happiness is only real when shared.” Looking back, that’s what made Montañas Vacías special. Not just the landscapes. Not the kilometers. Not the elevation. But the experience of sharing the journey.

Bikepacking Montanas Vacias

I’m deeply grateful to Nacho. He was the one who introduced me to the bikepacking world, the one who gave me the bike I rode on this trip, and the one who kept encouraging me to trust myself and become more confident. More than anything, what made this journey special was sharing it with him.

  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias
  • Bikepacking Montanas Vacias

If someone feels curious about Montañas Vacías after watching the film, my only advice would be this: Go with an open heart, take it slowly, and pay attention to the small things, because sometimes the most meaningful journeys are not about distance at all, but about learning to experience the world more fully.

Love you marido,

Luisa

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