Inside the Monte Velho Daily Schedule

Inside the Monte Velho Daily Schedule
The first morning always catches guests by surprise. At 7:00 AM, there's no alarm—just the gradual awareness of light filtering through curtains and the distant sound of waves from Carrapateira beach. Some guests wake naturally to birdsong; others need the gentle knock that staff offer for those who've requested it. By day four, most people are up before any reminder, bodies already attuned to the rhythm.
Morning: The Foundation
At 7:30 AM, the studio doors open for morning meditation. Twenty minutes of silent sitting while the Algarve dawn spills golden light across the wooden floors. On day one, minds race with to-do lists from the life left behind. By mid-week, the silence settles differently—deeper, less resistant.
Morning asana begins at 8:00 AM and runs for ninety minutes. The practice varies by program type: traditional hatha for standard yoga weeks, more vigorous vinyasa for surf-and-yoga programs where bodies need strengthening for the waves. The studio overlooks the property's rolling hills, and instructors often leave windows open so the practice breathes with the ocean breeze. First-day participants struggle with unfamiliar poses; by the end of a week, there's a visible ease in how bodies move through familiar sequences.
Breakfast is served at 9:45 AM on the terrace when weather permits, or in the dining room when coastal winds pick up. The spread emphasizes fresh and local: still-warm bread from nearby bakeries, local honey, seasonal fruits from Portuguese farms, homemade granola, fresh yogurt, and strong coffee. Guests who arrived tense and rushed on day one find themselves lingering over second cups by day three, conversations flowing easily with retreat-mates who were strangers seventy-two hours earlier.
Late Morning: Diving Deeper
From 11:00 AM to 1:00 PM, the schedule diverges based on program type. Standard yoga retreats offer workshops—perhaps pranayama deep-dives, yoga philosophy discussions, or meditation technique sessions. Surf-and-yoga weeks load vans at 11:00 AM sharp for the short drive to Praia da Bordeira or Amado, where surf instructors wait with boards and wetsuits. Holistic wellness weeks might schedule one-on-one sessions with practitioners during these hours: nutritional consultations, energy work, or therapeutic conversations.
Those not in scheduled sessions discover this is prime time for the property's optional offerings. The pool beckons, heated and tranquil. Guests book massage appointments in the wellness room, choosing from deep tissue work or gentler relaxation treatments. Some wander to the paddock where Monte Velho's horses graze, arranging rides through the countryside for later in the week.
Midday: Gathering and Nourishment
Lunch is served at 1:30 PM, always vegetarian, often leaning Mediterranean. Think Portuguese-spiced lentil stews, grilled vegetable platters with olive tapenade, fresh salads built around tomatoes that actually taste like tomatoes, herb-flecked rice dishes, and local cheeses. The meal is substantial—the retreat philosophy embraces nourishment, not deprivation—but guests consistently report feeling energized rather than sluggish afterward.
Afternoon: Freedom and Choice
The hours between 3:00 PM and 6:00 PM are deliberately unstructured. This is when Monte Velho reveals its magic. Some guests claim poolside loungers with books they've been meaning to read for months. Others walk the 3.5 kilometers to Carrapateira beach, where Atlantic swells create the dramatic surf that draws boards from across Europe. Adventurous souls book private yoga sessions or healing treatments during these hours. By mid-week, spontaneous groups form: a cluster heading to explore the nearby village, others gathering for tea and conversation in the garden.
Evening: Winding Down
A gentler yoga or restorative practice runs from 6:00 PM to 7:15 PM—stretching, yin poses, yoga nidra. Bodies appreciate this after morning's exertion.
Dinner is served at 7:30 PM, the day's main gathering. The menu rotates through Portuguese-inspired vegetarian cuisine, occasionally featuring fresh fish for those who eat it. Wine is available; many guests indulge moderately, finding balance rather than abstinence suits their retreat experience.
Evening sessions from 8:30 PM to 9:30 PM vary widely: guided meditation, sound baths, group sharing circles, star-gazing sessions on clear nights. Some programs skip this entirely, trusting guests to find their own closing rhythm.
By 10:00 PM, the property grows quiet. Lights dim. The day completes itself naturally, without force—just like it began.



