We didn't walk the whole way, but Jon is sure that we walked more today than we did on any of the other days of touring. The views were not as good, but we had a clear destination.
It is hard to believe, but we were in our Madrid hotel room this morning at 7 AM. Jon had us fully organized, so we were on our way before 7:30. Walked down the sleepy street to the Teatro Metro stop, dragging our small bags over the cobblestones. One the of connections required that we go down four long flights of stairs -- luckily we never had to climb back out of that level. We got to the airport in plenty of time and then walked from one end all the way to the other end. But no troubles. The plane wasn't even full (for once) so we each had two seats and we watched movies and napped and read for eight hours. We each watched "Spotlight" -- excellent. I finally saw "Wall-E" and Jon finally saw "The Big Lebowski,," movies that we have had on our lists for a long time.
At JFK we had another end-to-end walk through the terminal (Delta must be pretty low on the totem pole there), but the good news is that Jon got them to put us on an earlier flight to National at 3:00 instead of waiting until 7:30 to Dulles.
Got on the not-as-fancy-as-Madrid Metro and headed for home. If we had taken the bus from Spring Hill Road, we would have earned super cool points for getting ourselves all the way on public transportation -- but we texted Anna and she picked us up and that was very nice.
We don't really have a major wrap-up to offer, having shared all the many details of the last two weeks, but there are a couple of categories that come to mind. It is impossible to rate or compare views or scenery -- it was so dramatic and beautiful all over the place.
Best Bathroom of All: Picasso Museum in Malaga
Favorite Kind of Museum: local and focused, with a clear story: Picasso Museum, Sugar Museum in Motril, Catalunya History Museum in Barcelona
Best Guidebook Advice: Sagrada Familia as a TOP CHOICE
Best Spontaneous Day Trip: Gibraltar
Best Discovery for Sitting Down: Cafe con leche (almost 2/3 milk!)
Most Adventuresome Tapas: Mercado San Michel in Madrid
Best Hosts Ever: Peio's family
Longest Day: Touring with Peio's family in the Basque Country
Only Spice We Noticed: Salt
Wednesday, March 2, 2016
Tuesday, March 1, 2016
Madrid All Day Long
The coffee and pastry were quite reasonable, the other stuff made the stop a little more expensive. |
The stairway was the only place you could take pictures inside, but it was pretty impressive in its own right. |
Phil Silvers could always laugh at himself -- good thing in that get-up. (Actually Carlos III.) |
Less than half-way around the courtyard, lots of room for more palace. |
View from outside the courtyard looking west. Some of the vast Madrid can be seen on the left, and the mountains to the right. |
Even at the early tapas hour of noon, the Mercadoas was bustling. |
A demonstration of cooking paella was taking place while we were at lunch, it can be seen in a 4 foot wide pan. |
Again, no cameras inside, but this way we got two very nice looking people in the picture. |
On our way back to the hotel we made a few stops to buy little things (felt like we were in Waikiki) and a second round of yummy frozen yogurt. Our customary break in the hotel room, reading, posting pictures on the blog (Jon), waiting for it to be dinnertime. We walked to an average-looking restaurant, read the menu and decided we had eaten our share of Spanish food. Went to a Morroccan restaurant instead and had some new dishes, but not very spicy or super flavorful. Hearty stews and soups.
And now Jon is packing up while I finish this. It will be a long day tomorrow and we should be home by about 9:00 Eastern time, or 3:00 AM here. There will be an unfortunately long layover in NY, and that is when we will think through all the Best/Worst/Most Memorable things, which I understand comes out of the Groisser family travel tradition.
Monday, February 29, 2016
Madrid
It is 6:30 PM so the day isn't over yet, but we are taking a break before dinner. We are hopeful that we may finally be back in a place that has internet that can post photos, about a week's worth by now.
We drove away from all the dramatic natural beauty (it reminds us of Hawaii, the way the mountains are close to the ocean, and the greenery and the temperature and the clear blue skies) and headed north just as the sun was coming over the mountains. It was an easy trip. We hadn't really planned on doing this much driving in Spain but since we had never been here before it was hard not to want to visit as much as we could reach without straining too hard. On a second trip we might find it easier to settle into some sort of village-based routine (kind of what we thought we might do this time, but we were naive). Anyway, by the time we were ready to turn in the car, we had driven 3419 kilometers (2051 miles).
The Madrid Metro is easy to understand, buying a ticket is simple, and we made our way to our hotel (sweating in our coats), right in the middle of all the historic sights. We are on the fifth floor, we don't have a balcony but we have a window that can open up to the sounds of the city below, and it all feels very fancy. We walked around for a few hours, I wouldn't let Jon get tapas at the fancy Mercado de San Miguel because we would have had to eat standing up. Instead we ate at an uninteresting little place, just patatas bravas and clams, and continued our wandering. Madrid is impressive. Many other people have written much more eloquently than I can about the architecture and the plazas. There is much to see on every street, and street performers in the plazas. Seeing Madrid I now understand where Mexico comes from. This looks like what I remember about Mexico 45 years ago. It also feels like Paris.
Again, olive trees as far as the eye can see. |
On all our road trips, Jon navigates the complicated parts while I drive. We are pretty good at it by now and there is very little angst, although sometimes we do go around the traffic circles more than most people. In Spain there are circles at almost every intersection so Jon tells me which lane to be in so I can get back out without incident. When we got to the train station we tried to find the place to return the car. We even asked some people but they had no idea. So we looped up and around and back and forth until Jon finally spotted the tiny sign that indicated the ramp. We returned the car without a scratch, and without any bad stories at all (see Florence for our least favorite car story) and walked away with our bags.
Half the famous Plaza Mayor. |
For a whole city block they are gutting the building but leaving the facade. |
Last Day in the South
View from the Balcony of Europe toward the sea ... |
... and then back toward the mountains. Note the kids getting their toes wet in the surf. |
A beautiful day, a stunning location, the whole town, young to old. |
They were of all sizes and types. Note the small bike in the crosswalk has no pedals, just her feet on the ground. |
We left the densest tourist area and had lunch in a small cafe. The food was real and fine -- I ordered the vegetable soup and found that it was chicken based, but it was tasty. We got to use the internet there and Jon satisfied himself that he had all the maps we needed to get to Madrid the next day.
Back home for another quiet evening of trying to eat all the groceries before we give up the kitchen. It was a heroic effort involving garlic green beans, a mountain of cauliflower, more chicory salad and store bought flan.
Today Jon got caught up on all the accounting (unlike his father, he does not set a budget before the trip, but like his father, he tries hard to keep track of all the expenses). He even calculated the mileage on the rental car (between 40 and 45 mpg). And while he was hard at work with the calculator, I tried to make a better fingerless mitten using double pointed needles. It came out much better.
Sunday, February 28, 2016
Cordoba
So, we decided that bigger cities have more stuff and that's why you visit them, especially when you don't know anyone to visit and you can't just drop by a farm and introduce yourself because that is about as far as you can go in Spanish. We got up and out by 7:30, back on the road (which is really no hardship because there is no significant traffic and the roads are new and safe and smooth now that tourism has become the economic engine). I went back to sleep and Jon drove the two hours to Cordoba. There were big swaths of olives again, and wide open plains and more geometric expanses of grape vines. It was kind of a rainy/sunny day, maybe in the low 50s. Mostly not raining.
We are much more adept at finding the city center now, following the helpful signs with the circle that looks like a target and the words "ciudad centro." It is not rocket science for sure. The old city is inside of a wall, like Jerusalem, and the parking garage that we used was just inside the wall, which seemed shocking to me. Today we didn't have a good map so we wandered around, slightly disoriented, through the narrow alleys and lanes. We had two destinations: the big cathedral/mosque and the Jewish quarter. Jon thinks that they are trying to support the guided tour industry so they don't put any signs up. A continuous stream of tour groups flowed around us as we walked around corners, doubling back, feeling unmoored by our lack of a map. We did see actual church officials in purple robes and tall hats coming out of the cathedral to meet a casket that was carried by five men who were not particularly dressed in funeral attire. Apparently the church was closed for an hour and a half for the funeral. We felt like we had seen a snippet of real life.
But we had to attend to some physical needs. Since arriving in Spain we have found, to our great satisfaction, that there is always a very nice public bathroom close by, wherever we are. Today they were not so easy to find. We paid 0.30 euros so that I could use one of those funny stand-alone toilets in a cylinder in the street. That was the best 33 cents ever spent. There was even a sink in there and the little round room was clean and cozy. Then we had cafe con leche in a tiny cafe and felt ready to face the work of tourism.
Touching the toes of Maimonides for good health -- one his many pursuits was medicine. |
The tiny (20' x 20') synagogue built in 1315. |
One of the two museum guides singing in Ladino. |
One of the ways Jewish women could have a trade was in fine needle-point brocades. They continued the craft, even after becoming marrano, going on to decorate church robes. |
Needless to say, we were curious about the stories of the two tourguides, but it didn't seem appropriate to ask. They were juggling several tours at once, and they were so earnest and hardworking that we could only surmise that they somehow were Jewish themselves, in spite of the lack of Jewish community. We asked the young lady who it was that built the museum and she said a historian who was interested in reviving awareness of the Jewish story.
We had lunch outside (cold, should have been inside) in Plaza Juda Levi. Tourist prices but not tourist flavors. Real food served on real dishes, cooked just right. My "salad" was a plate full of perfectly prepared roasted vegetables. Jon's paella was made with local chicken instead of seafood.
The best parts of the castle: the parapets, the gardens ... |
... and Hana. |
By now I was out of gas and was not at all curious about going into the cathedral that had been built inside a mosque, or vice versa. My feet were tired. We decided to skip the most famous thing in Cordoba and try to find our car instead.
This time I drove and Jon slept. We went to Malaga on the way home, in search of a wifi connection, a snack, a bathroom, and some groceries. I thought to myself, if we were in the States, where would we go? Parking is the biggest challenge, so I thought we would go to a strip mall of some kind. That is not a thing here, but we followed signs to a shopping center, which turned out to be a big mall. Perfect. We joined the crowds at the mall, found a bathroom and a bar that sold snacks -- you just fill out an order form and bring it to the counter and they call your name when it is ready. Jon did all this by himself while I posted my backlog of daily updates. The snacks were unremarkable, even though they had names that we recognized by now. Malls are not really the place to get real food, but the wifi was excellent.
Pig in every style imaginable, including whole himd-quarter and leg. This is only a fraction of the full selection. |
Since arriving in Frigiliana, we have only eaten out for dinner that one time with Benjamin. But we eat on the Spanish time table -- we started cooking dinner at almost 10 PM tonight. We have cooked dinners that are more full of vegetables than anything we ever cook at home in the winter, and we keep re-inventing our leftovers. Tonight Jon blended the soup that I made yesterday and added day old bread. And we have been eating chicory for salad! I really believe that the bitter escarole and endive we grow and the disgustingly bitter greens that Zach and Heinz grow are ALL meant to be grown in the winter in the Mediterranean region. They taste delicious here.
Saturday, February 27, 2016
Getting Out of the Fast Lane
For the first time since last Sunday we woke up as late as we wanted and we moved slowly. Had breakfast at home, left the house at about 11. Headed to Motril, about a half an hour to the east. Parked successfully (having a car can be a mixed blessing, for sure) in an underground garage and looked for the tourist information office. It was not quite obvious enough for us so I went into a farmacia and used my pidgin Spanish and got directions. Not much English spoken in this town, especially not by the people in the shops.
We headed for the only museum of this type in all of Europe -- a museum of pre-industrial sugar cane production. Motril was the capital of sugar cane in the 15th and 16th centuries. The Moors figured out about 500 years before that it would grow here, and somehow it arrived from New Guinea via India and Persia. The warm weather and abundant water here is perfect for it. Sugar cane pushed out all the other normal food crops and took over the economy of the area, but it was mostly exported or eaten by the very rich. It was a huge amount of work making sugar: cutting it by hand with a machete, stripping the leaves, loading it onto donkeys, taking it to the mill, putting it through giant rollers powered by water, then resquishing all the smashed cane again by using a huge press (a lever with a fulcrum near one end; a man at the far end of a beam twisted a giant screw, lifting his end and exerting downward pressure at the other end about 40' away...the smashed cane was stacked just like the cider press at home, with layers sandwiched between, and they squished every last drop out), then boiling it over a hot fire, making a syrup, taking out the impurities, getting it hot enough to crystallize, then packing it into these ceramic jars to make a sugar loaf. Every single ceramic jar had to be broken to get the sugar loaf out, so someone had to make hundreds and hundreds of those cone shaped pots with a hole in the bottom (so the molasses could drip out). It was hard to understand the quantities, but they said this particular sugar mill made 822 tons of sugar (a year?).
There were many downsides to this enterprise, both ecological and societal. It used up all the wood in the whole region eventually. The sugar was taxed so heavily that the people who were making it really didn't benefit from the money that was flowing. Eventually the New World became too competitive with its slave labor and vast capacity for production, plus someone else discovered sugar beets which was a whole lot easier than sugar cane. The industry died out, was reinvigorated when steam power was invented, but ten years ago the very last sugar mill closed.
Motril is another port town, full of regular people doing regular shopping and work. We did not find a quaint city center but there were certainly narrow streets lined with classic looking residential buildings, and fountains and squares, just nothing that looked ancient or precious. At about 2:00 the whole place closed. We walked around trying to figure out how to find a wifi connection (the one at the library was too weak) and eventually found an open network when we were sitting in a plaza. Jon discovered there had been no major crises at work. Then we had some lunch at an outdoor cafe even though it was getting cold and grey out. I can order food as long as I don't have to construct a whole, coherent sentence.
It turns out all those acres of plastic greenhouse structures are filled with a variety of vegetables and fruits. Apparently about 20-some years ago this whole region started growing produce under cover during the winter months. It is too hot in the summer. The guidebook moans that this is unaesthetic and has lots of issues, but I would say that if they are producing most of the fresh fruits and vegetables in the winter for Northern Europe, more power to them. They must have figured out that this works best, although it must create a different kind of problem-solving. They work on some intensely steep slopes in this region. I don't think there are many farms in the US that would attempt that.
Instead of going straight home we went up a long and winding mountain road to see the town of Competa, famous for its Muscatel wine and probably other things. By the time we got up there I didn't even want to get out of the car. It was getting dark and looked like rain and it was about 15 miles back down the same switchbacks all the way to the coast. It was certainly picturesque, tucked up in the mountains -- the guidebook said that about half the residents are expats from Northern Europe.
A "white" town: like little boxes rolled down the hillside until they stop, one on top of another. |
Malaga
ANOTHER early morning, this time to get Benjamin to the airport in Malaga (there is an accent over the first "a" but I can't manage that on this keyboard). Dropped him off at 8:00 and he headed off to Austria, via Rome. We will miss him, and not only for his Spanish and his internet connection. He is good company, and so patient with us (I still am always surprised). He and Jon can talk for hours, and he is on my team when it comes to not worrying. He has a lot of confidence as a traveler, which makes everything seem easy.
So we were one our own, just like when Rebecca left us in Venice by ourselves after taking care of us through Greece and much of Italy. We do need to take a trip with Alissa sometime so she can take care of us too!
We drove into Malaga, got our bearings by missing several key turns and driving all the way through the interesting part of town in both directions, eventually figuring out where to find a parking garage right in the old city. Go us. It was so early that the streets were still pretty empty of pedestrians and shops and restaurants were just barely getting open. Malaga is a port city, first inhabited by the Phoenicians, then the Romans and so on. We went into the big chunky cathedral (that is maligned in the guidebooks for its mix of architecture and dark interior) and heard mass being sung on the other side of a screen. As usual, the cathedral was built on the site of a mosque, about four or five centuries ago.
Wandered around in the pedestrian-friendly streets, stopped at a cafe to sit in the sun and drink cafe con leche and have churros with chocolate. Went to the Picasso Museum and appreciated the beautiful building, the organization (thematic), the way they really want you to understand what Picasso was doing, and the small number of paintings (about 200 or so).
Went to the bustling market that was full of shoppers buying fish and olives and vegetables and fruits and meat. We bought another round of beautiful vegetables, this time from an organic farmer, plus some delicious looking pastries and some olives and oranges. Felt pretty pleased with ourselves.
The Costa del Sol. |
Between all those houses on the hill-side are groves of olives, or vegetables or citrus or avocados. |
Frigiliana, another "white" town. |
Alhambra
Since there are no furnishings ... |
... in the Alhambra, all the ... |
... views are up ... |
... until you get outside. |
From a parapet, looking back at the palace. |
Looking up into the Sierra Nevadas. |
Looking out over Granada. |
Running water where handrails would be. |
View of palace complex from some of the newer gardens. |
Hana, trying to join a work crew, but she forgot her green and blue jacket. |
The view of the mountains and valleys was much clearer this time -- snow on the peaks and rugged, craggy, shadowy ridges.
We stopped at a big supermarket in Nerja where many of the signs were in English as well as Spanish because this is a big destination for British tourists. They were in evidence. Apparently many have timeshares here and spend the winter months in the sunny south. We bought nice vegetables and other supplies and headed back up the valley to our whitewashed village in the hills.
Benjamin got two new hats on this trip, a total success. |
Jon gave Benjamin his leather hat, saying that now that he has found one he likes he will be able to find another.
We have not been able to post any pictures because we have been using Benjamin's phone as a hot spot (leaving us tomorrow) and it just isn't quite strong enough to do that task.
Friday, February 26, 2016
Off Line
Ever since Benjamin left us yesterday, we have been without the Internet. But I am dutifully writing posts to be shared when we get back on line. At the moment we are sitting in a quiet square in Motril using someone's open wifi after unsuccessful attempts at a public library. On our tenth day of beautiful weather. Like Hawaii but a little cooler.
Woman at market selling one bunch of leeks, one endive, two cabbages and one bunch of chard. |
Tuesday, February 23, 2016
La Costa del Sol and the Rock
The Army Corps of Engineers (or the equivalent) commissioned their own statue, as would we all, given the chance. |
After reading through the Lonely Planet guidebook that Laura passed on to us, Benjamin decided that today we should go to Gibraltar. I have to say I didn't even know such a place existed, except sort of mythically. It took two hours to get there (the roads are very good, if expensive) and then we showed our passports to the guard and were driving into a British territory, or something along those lines. Britain controls this four mile peninsula, a giant rock with a small town at the base and a very long history. We parked and went to study a map on the main pedestrian street. Immediately a gentleman with a comically perfect British accent offered to help us, and showed us how to find the Gibraltar Museum. The street was filled with shoppers speaking mostly Spanish and English, and there were tea shops and pubs and red telephone boxes and post boxes. It was hard to take it seriously, but we did have to change some money to spend pounds instead of euros.
Two big macaques, one very small. |
Jon has been thinking about a certain hat for years, and even tried to buy one from Amazon before we left. But Amazon made about three different mistakes (uncharacteristically) and sent the wrong size hat to the wrong post office, not giving him correct information on the location of the package. Anyway, I said that maybe he could buy a hat in Spain. Turns out no one wears hats in Spain. But they do in England. So Benjamin and Jon actually bought a hat, for a price that Jon could live with, and Benjamin put it on and wore it for the rest of the day. He looks like a guy in a Western, except for the dreadlocks.
Benjamin, with new hat and new friend on rental car. |
Like the "Guns Of Navarone" (WWII novel reference). |
We had dinner in Frigiliana at one of the few establishments that was open. It ended up being perfect. Nothing written in English, only Spanish spoken, but we each got a nice meal that wasn't exactly what we expected but was perfectly fine. Mine was the best because I got a mix of seasonal vegetables cooked perfectly, seasoned only with salt, in addition to a skewer of some meat that might have been pork tenderloin. They are not into seasoning beyond olive oil and salt here. And we sat out on the veranda, away from the smoke and the noise of the game on the TV. There was a full moon and stars and it was warm enough to be without a jacket, although it might have been a little better with one more layer.
Monday, February 22, 2016
Road Trip from Pamplona to Frigiliana
We were on the road by 8:00, heading south. In Spain they do not put any hints about east/west/north/south on their signs. They just put the name of a town that is ahead, usually a major one. We americanos miss the sense of direction greatly, especially as we occasionally head off in the wrong direction, not really knowing which towns are relevant all the time as we are relying on erratic GPS information through the phones. Not my problem, I just go where they tell me when it is my turn to drive and if we get off course they eventually find us and get us back on track.
We drove through big agricultural spaces all day long. In the morning it was mostly vineyards, patchworked up the hills on both sides of the roads, in addition to olives and green cover crop. Both today and on the trip from Barcelona there were big wind turbines on the ridges and acres of solar panels sprinkled around. For the first half of the day it didn't seem like there were any houses or tractors or farm equipment associated with the fields (where do the people live who do all this work?) and then when we got closer to Madrid there were small farms with houses and trees around them. And the olive trees kept on coming.
De rigeur picture of picnic table. |
While the boys napped and I drove I began to notice that the olive trees were endless. For over an hour, at 120 km/hour, there were olives growing all the way to the horizon, up the hills and over the plains. When Benjamin and Jon woke up, we talked about the incredible number of olives and of course Benj did some research since we couldn't even begin to describe the quantity. He read that there are 300 million olive trees on 5 million acres in Spain and most of them are right in the region we were crossing through. In 2012, an especially good year, Spain produced almost half of the world's entire olive oil crop. Italy came in second with 25%, Greece was third with 20%. In recent years there has been a bad pest that has damaged the crops in Europe and Tunisia has stepped up production. But still Spain ends up pressing most of the olive oil, and Italy ends up blending and packaging the most. Or so says the google.
Very hard to relay how the olive trees go on as far as the eye can see. |
Finally we got to the east-west road that would take us to our destination, Frigiliana, about 6 km inland from the coast. We went east instead of west for a while, which made Jon fret, but we saw acres and acres of some mysterious crop that was shrouded in a tight cover. We have to find out what is inside those plastic structures wrapped up so snugly. It can't be olives, unless the fly is particularly terrible near the coast.
We arrived at our lovely apartment which we have rented for a whole week -- a friend of our neighbors owns this place. The back balcony overlooks a deep chasm in the mountains, and way down the hill we can see the Mediterranean. The town is perched on a steep hillside, rows of white houses along curvy narrow roads, all very tippy. After we got ourselves settled in, had some tea, read the guide book about local points of interest, we decided it was time to go out in search of dinner. We have been trained to think that dinner is not until 9:00 at the earliest but when we walked around, almost everything was dark and closed. After about two blocks we decided we were not that hungry anyway and we would go home and make dinner from the leftover groceries plus things that were nicely left in the pantry. It was still a mulit-course dinner with salad, soup, bread and cheese, a fried egg, an after dinner hot drink and chocolate. We know how to camp.
Jon found a lizard from Muskitz hiding in our dirty clothes and Benjamin caught it for us, then tortured me with it before letting it go outside. Poor lizard has been moved to an entirely alien climate.
Benjamin is with us for two more days so he gets to choose what we do until he leaves. We can be lazy after he goes.
Sunday, February 21, 2016
Muskitz, Day Two
We all slept as long as we wanted this morning, wandering into the kitchen whenever we got up. Found nice rolls baked by Uxua (sister of Ramon, not niece), tea, fruit. By about noon we were all ready for some low level activity -- although it must be said that Ramon's brother Mickey was cooking up a storm in the kitchen. He had pots bubbling on many burners, preparing the vegetables for a huge dish for dinner.
Ramon's siblings and in-laws arrived through the day, and by lunchtime they were all here: Mickey and Teresa, Koldo and Sylvia and daughter Uxua, Maria, Uxua, Javier, Inaki, Ramon and Laura, Marta and 3 year old Otto. Their oldest brother Juan died about ten years ago.
Un-renovated house to the left. |
Pretty loud when so close. |
A reasonable distance when the bells ring. |
I can absolutely imagine Peio being the mayor of this village at some time. He is exactly the same here as he was in Virginia. He stops and talks to everyone, everyone is a friend, he is interested in every possible conversation.
At left, tuna, canned by Mickey; in center, big pan of vegetables with white asparagus spokes and fried cauliflower; and at the right, a salad of pickled onions and olives. |
Javier (not sure of relation), Inaki, Mickey, Koldo, Uxua (the younger), Antxon (standing) and Sylvia during the cheese course. |
10:30 PM update --
We are now back at the apartment in Pamplona, have said goodbye to Peio who went back to school about 100 km away (a school for Basque people only, training them in maintaining and fabricating industrial machinery), and have had yet another delicious meal. Chicory raw and cooked, both delicious. Not bitter at all, just like lettuce in salad or like spinach or chard when cooked. Eggs, then cheese and apple jelly for dessert. More lively conversation about the chicken/egg question, snapping turtles, and Laura's grandfather and father's life work spreading adult literacy throughout the world. Tomorrow we leave the cozy care of the Ayestaran family and head south.
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