REVIEW · GRAN CANARIA
Gran Canaria: Canyoning Trip
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by MOJO PICON AVENTURA · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Canyoning turns a walk into real adventure. This Gran Canaria 5-hour trip sends you into a canyon with waterfalls (5–20m), natural slides, and plenty of chances to get wet, even if you have zero experience.
I especially like the safety-first guidance from the team (names you’ll hear include Miguel, Victor, and Viktor). You get clear instructions, close supervision during abseils, and even a photo setup so you can enjoy the action without worrying about your phone.
One thing to plan for: the activity is active and the return can be tough. Bring proper sport shoes since they are not included, and expect a steep, hot hike out with gear on your back.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you book
- Gran Canaria Canyoning: What You’re Really Signing Up For
- Meeting at Decathlon Telde and How the Day Actually Flows
- Gear and Safety: The Harness, Helmet, and Human Coaching
- Inside the Barranco: Waterfalls, Natural Slides, Jumps, and Abseiling
- What the Picnic and Photo Report Add (More Than You Think)
- Transportation, Group Size, and the Real Comfort Level
- How Strenuous Is It, Really?
- Price and Value: Is $77 a Good Deal for Canyoning?
- Who Should Book This Canyoning Trip (and Who Should Skip It)
- Should You Book Gran Canaria Canyoning With Mojo Picon Aventura?
- FAQ
- What time do I meet for the Gran Canaria canyoning trip?
- How long is the trip?
- Do I need any prior canyoning experience?
- What equipment is included?
- Is transportation included?
- What’s included for food and photos?
- What should I bring for footwear?
- Can I cancel for a full refund?
Key things to know before you book

- Beginner-friendly setup: no experience required for ages 10 to 70, with helmet, wetsuit (neoprene), harness, carabiner, and descender provided.
- Real waterfall time: the canyon typically includes 4 waterfalls ranging from 5 to 20 meters.
- Action choices: you’ll do a mix of walking, jumping, swimming, and abseiling, plus natural slides.
- Small group feel: capped at 10 participants, so you get more hands-on attention.
- Free photo report: guides take pictures so you can focus on the canyon, not your camera.
- Canyon may change: the exact canyon and meeting point can shift based on conditions, and you’ll get confirmation by email.
Gran Canaria Canyoning: What You’re Really Signing Up For

This is not a scenic hike where you look, take photos, and leave. It’s hands-on canyoning in Gran Canaria, with moving through a watercourse and tackling obstacles like jumps and rappels (abseils).
The big payoff is that you get multiple types of adventure in one block of time. Expect moments where you’re mostly walking and soaking up the forest vibe, then the day flips into height-and-water thrills when you reach the waterfalls.
You also get a format that works for first-timers. The canyon is described as ideal for inexperienced people, and the instructions are part of the experience, not an afterthought. That matters when you’re learning how to move safely around wet rock and rope systems.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Gran Canaria.
Meeting at Decathlon Telde and How the Day Actually Flows

You meet at 9:30 AM in the Decathlon Telde store parking lot. If you’re staying near the coast, it’s also useful that pickup is described as depending on availability, and at least some riders use bus access to reach the meeting point.
From there, you change into your neoprene gear on site, then you head to the canyon entrance. One detail I’d take seriously: the canyon (and even the exact meeting point afterward) can change to match the best conditions. The operator confirms the details by email, so you’ll want to keep an eye on that message.
In practice, this day runs like an organized outdoor morning. You’ll get fitted with your helmet and harness, listen to the basics, then move as a group toward the start. You’re not left to figure things out on your own.
Gear and Safety: The Harness, Helmet, and Human Coaching

What makes this trip feel approachable is the equipment plus the way it’s taught. You’re provided with canyoning gear including a neoprene wetsuit, helmet, harness, and safety hardware (like carabiner and descender). That’s a big value point for $77, because you’re not just paying for a guide—you’re paying for the full safety kit.
The other half is the coaching. Guides like Miguel and Victor/Viktor come up repeatedly in real experiences shared from this activity. The pattern is consistent: clear explanations before each abseil or slide, watching your technique up close, and keeping the pace manageable for the group.
You’ll also feel the difference the included photo report brings. If you’ve ever tried to film canyoning with a phone, you know the instinct to protect it can kill the fun. Here, the photo service is built in, so you can focus on staying balanced and listening for instructions.
Inside the Barranco: Waterfalls, Natural Slides, Jumps, and Abseiling

This is where the day earns its adrenaline tag. The trip description points to a canyon in a green forest full of nature, and the structure of the route is built around water movement and obstacles.
Plan on about 4 hours in the canyon experience itself (the whole tour is listed as 5 hours). During that time, you’ll travel through the watercourse and handle multiple challenges, including:
- walking stretches through the canyon
- jumping into calmer sections when conditions allow
- swimming where the route requires it
- abseiling down drops with a controlled rope setup
- natural slides through the canyon sections designed for them
Waterfall action is a core promise. The trip is described as having 4 waterfalls with heights between 5 and 20 meters. You might not do every drop in exactly the same way each day, because conditions can affect what’s safe or usable, but the goal is to give you a meaningful mix of waterfall descent experiences.
A good way to think about the abseiling: it’s a beginner-friendly version of learning how to trust the system. You’ll get instruction, and the guide will help you build confidence step by step, rather than throwing you onto a rope and hoping for the best.
What the Picnic and Photo Report Add (More Than You Think)
Some outdoor tours leave you hungry and leave you empty-handed. This one tries to fix both.
You get a picnic that includes chocolate, biscuits, fruit, and water. That’s not just a snack. When you’ve been moving in wet gear, a real food break helps you reset your energy and keep you from feeling wrecked before the hike out.
Then there’s the included picture report. One of the best practical perks is that it removes the need to risk your phone during rough moments. You can enjoy the abseils and slides without constantly worrying about where your hands are or how to keep a device dry.
It also gives you something to share later without playing catch-up with blurry photos taken one inch above your head.
Transportation, Group Size, and the Real Comfort Level

The group limit is 10 participants, which is small enough to feel personal. Small group sizes matter for canyoning because safety requires attention. More people means more time spent waiting; here you generally keep moving with the group.
Hotel pickup and drop-off are described as available depending on availability, and at least some experiences mention being driven by van to the starting point. So even though the formal meeting point is at Decathlon Telde, you may find the route to the valley is handled for you.
Language support is Spanish and English, and the guide is listed as English-speaking. That’s a big deal in this activity type, because you need to understand commands quickly—especially when you’re learning how to clip into safety gear or how to position your body for a descent.
How Strenuous Is It, Really?

Here’s the honest balance: it’s not a walk in the park.
Even though beginners are welcome, you’re still doing a physical outdoor activity. There are steep and hot parts, you carry your wet gear back, and the hike out can be difficult on narrow or tricky paths. Some experiences mention a harder return than they expected.
That doesn’t mean it’s impossible. It just means you should show up as if you’re going to work a little. If you’re comfortable with moderate hiking, uneven ground, and the idea of getting wet for hours, you’re in the right zone.
The operator also notes it’s not suitable for pregnant women. If you have any medical concerns, you’ll want to contact them before booking.
Price and Value: Is $77 a Good Deal for Canyoning?

At $77 per person, you’re paying for a full package, not just a guide walking you to a waterfall. Included elements that raise the value:
- English-speaking guide with insurance included
- full canyoning safety equipment (helmet, wetsuit, harness, carabiner, descender)
- a picnic with water and snacks
- a free picture report
- hotel pickup/drop-off depending on availability
The biggest value creator is the equipment and insurance. Buying or renting gear and paying for safety supervision adds up fast on your own. Here, the price bundles it so you can focus on the day.
The one extra cost you should budget for is footwear. Sport shoes are not included, so plan to buy or bring something you can trust on wet surfaces.
Who Should Book This Canyoning Trip (and Who Should Skip It)

This canyoning trip fits best if you want real outdoor action and you’re okay with getting wet and moving actively.
You’ll likely enjoy it if:
- you’re a first-timer who wants coaching and a safe-feeling introduction to abseiling
- you want nature time plus adrenaline in the same morning
- you like small group tours with hands-on attention
- you want photos afterward without managing your phone during the hardest bits
You might want to skip it if:
- you’re pregnant (explicitly not suitable)
- you dislike heights or rope descents
- you have mobility issues that make steep hikes out a problem
- you don’t have proper wet-ready footwear
Should You Book Gran Canaria Canyoning With Mojo Picon Aventura?
If you want a canyon day that blends waterfalls, jumps, and controlled rope work—without needing prior skills—this is a strong pick. The setup is beginner-friendly, the safety focus is clear, and the included photo report plus picnic make it feel like a complete experience rather than a quick thrill and goodbye.
Before you book, do two simple things:
1) Prepare wet, grippy sport shoes since they’re not included.
2) Watch for the email that confirms the exact canyon/meeting point, because the plan can shift for best conditions.
Do that, and you’ll be set for a day that trades resort routines for something real: cool canyon water, waterfall drops, and a guided experience that keeps you confident from start to rope.
FAQ
What time do I meet for the Gran Canaria canyoning trip?
You meet at 9:30 AM at the Decathlon Telde store parking lot (meeting point is provided in the booking details).
How long is the trip?
The total experience is listed as 5 hours, with the canyoning portion described as about 4 hours.
Do I need any prior canyoning experience?
No experience is required. It’s suitable for ages 10 to 70.
What equipment is included?
You’re provided with canyoning equipment including a neoprene wetsuit, helmet, and safety gear such as a harness and descender/carabiner setup.
Is transportation included?
It includes hotel pickup and drop-off depending on availability. Otherwise, you meet at Decathlon Telde at 9:30.
What’s included for food and photos?
A picnic is included (chocolate, biscuits, fruit, and water), plus a free picture report.
What should I bring for footwear?
Sport shoes are not included, so you should bring suitable footwear you can get wet and use on uneven surfaces.
Can I cancel for a full refund?
Yes. The policy says free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
(Dates, timing, and language support can vary by departure, so always double-check your confirmation message.)






















