Day 1: Fall in love with Girona"Girona makes me fall in love!", says the lyrics of a popular Catalan song. You too will feel a love similar to that of its writer when you arrive in the capital of the Costa Brava. Girona must be consciously discovered and savoured step by step. Here begins the first day of this route. Surely in other cities walking has been the option you have chosen to visit them. A theatrical tour of the Call, the city's old Jewish quarter, awaits you. You can end the day Ullastret. Zigzag through the narrow alleys of the medieval town protected by the walls. Your imagination will be able to soar and you'll feel like a knight from the Middle Ages. Don't leave Ullastret without tasting the Illes Medes. These islands form a tiny archipelago full of caves rich in red coral and vast meadows of posidonia. It is a proposal that respects the environment and seeks to minimise the impact of human action on the seabed.For the following activity we don't have to get out of the sea. Would you like to swim the Via Brava that connects Escala and Planasses? These routes, which run parallel to the walking paths of the Costa Brava are signposted, so you can safely enjoy the coast from the sea. The route is more than one kilometre long, which you can do in between 18 and 30 minutes. If you need to make a stop on the way to get some air, it is best to do so at Cala del Salpatx, which is approximately halfway along the route. Surrounded by cliffs, it is a small cove of grey pebbles.The fourth day of the route will continue with a tasting of anchovies from l'Escala de Besalú. This town gathers in the medieval alleys that make up its urban framework several examples of the coexistence between the Jewish community settled in the area at the beginning of the Middle Ages and the citizens who professed the Catholic religion.