The path starts in the center of Haría, in the Plaza León y Castillo. From there we take Calle de la Cilla and Romero street until leaving the town, continuing to the left along a paved road with walls on the sides.
This first stretch is dominated to the north by the Corona Volcano and to the west by the cones of La Cerca and the Ferns , crossing a partially abandoned agricultural plain, in which crops of onions, millet and potatoes with gorse (launaea arborescens), prickly pear or grasses.
We continue to Máguez, where we entered Tahoyo Street. We then turn right along San Pedro street, and thus we arrive at the Plaza de Santa Barbara, where is the hermitage of the same name. We continue along Luis street Morote and turn left onto Calle de Las Casillas to exit from Máguez along a dirt track and volcanic sand.
We headed towards the La Corona Volcano, where we will enjoy attractive views of the Malpaís and the coast, in whose skirts grow gorse (launaea arborescens), cruets (Rumex lunaria), bitter spurges (Euphorbia obtusifolia), verodes (Kleinia nerifolia) and grasses.
We continue walking towards Casas de la Breña path and road coincide again, so we will have to be careful with the cars until we connect with the Camino Viejo de Órzola. This path, slightly stepped, is used to channel the water from the nearby boats to the adjoining topsails and cisterns.
Finally we arrive at Órzola, whose intertidal zone has a rich biodiversity, in which the the avifauna, made up of both migratory wading birds and seabirds that establish their breeding colonies there, such as the Cory's Shearwater (Calonctris diomedea), Cattle Egret (Bulbucus ibis), Little Egret (Egretta garcetta), Gray Heron (ardea cinecera, etc.