We work to preserve the natural and cultural heritage of La Palma through a respectful coexistence between those who inhabit the island and those who visit it. Each expedition is designed to reveal the true essence of this land protecting its cultural heritage and contributing to its living continuity: its language, agricultural memory, craftsmanship, gastronomy, oral traditions, and the human relationships that have sustained the island for centuries.
We collaborate with local projects focused on research, conservation, and habitat monitoring, both on land and at sea.
We do not stand as observers. We allocate €20 per person, per day from each journey to support local conservation initiatives in La Palma and to reduce our carbon footprint in a direct and measurable way.
Traveling with Abora means being part of a tourism project built on commitment, respect for the land, and a vision for the future of travel.
We don’t see travel as consumption, but as responsibility.
Abora collaborates with PRUNAS, a project led by Asociación Biocultural La Foresta, focused on land regeneration and wildfire prevention on the island.
The initiative seeks to restore traditional crops on abandoned farmlands and revitalize the local economy through local products reconnecting people, culture, and soil.
Over 600 hectares of farmland lie abandoned, increasing the risk of fires and landscape degradation. We works to recover these lands through sustainable agroforestry systems that promote rural livelihoods and the conservation of biodiversity.
This first phase deepens the scientific and technical knowledge needed to design good practices for managing and regenerating agricultural plots, fostering biodiverse and climate-resilient agroforestry systems that nurture both land and community.
Beyond the environmental dimension, we also values the human landscape researching the social context behind land abandonment to help preserve the cultural and ethnographic heritage carried by those who keep rural memory alive.

