Showing posts with label Spain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spain. Show all posts

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Rockin' Around the Rock

The last two travelogues I wrote while still in Spain, so things were kind of fresh.  The next ones will be recollections composed sitting back in Louisville... 

After the short but impressionable stay in Cordoba, it was time to move on to the the coast.  Again, the chosen form of transit being the train.  This time it was nott he super high speed train but a slower, more mundane train.  Still, the scenery was great and since I was well rested I actually stayed awake for the ride.  Pulling out of Cordoba, the train had to stop and change gauge.  Apparently the rails in Spain for "local" service are a different width than the "international" service lines.  I've never experienced this, and while sitting on the side track all i could think was some poor pit crew is underneath change the wheels on a train. 

At any rate, I was off.  Destination was Algeciras.  The only reqgrent I have about this whole trip is not getting off the train in Ronda and spending an afternoon walking around what everyone tells me (in retrospect) is an amazing little town.  Made famous by Hemingway in "For Whom the Bell Tolls", the ancient town is set high on a gorge and is said to be just beautiful.  It did look lovely out the window, and after pulling out of Ronda, the rails wound down through the valley and gorges passing in and out of tunnels.  Quite surreal really.

outside of Ronda, Spain
Pulling into Algeciras, I was a little disappointed.  This was a modern spanish port town.  In other words dirty and industrial.  No wonder the guidebooks all said to spend as little time here as possible before moving on.  Algeciras does have a couple redeeming qualities, it's across a harbor from Gibraltar and the main jumping off point for ferries to Morocco.  I arrived in the early afternoon, and made my way to the hotel.  I splurged on this "4 Star" property, the Reina Cristina.  And I suppose, judging from the surrounding city, it was the best there is in town, and for only about €40 it was a good deal.  The hotel is actually a beautiful historic property opened in 1902 and has hosted numerous famous people from Winston Churchill to Sir Author Conan Doyle to Rock Hudson.  You may notice none of these are recently famous people. 

The hotel was fine enough and did harken back to a bygone era of travel, and the price was more than reasonable.  But it was not enough to amuse me for the afternoon, so off to the bus station and ride over to Tarifa to see what the was to see.  Tarifa is just over the hill so to speak from Algeciras, and is known as the Southernmost point of Continental Europe (and is actually further south than the cities of Tunis and Algiers in North Africa).  From the south end of town, you stand and look ahead 14 km and see Morocco, then look left at the Mediterranean and right at the Atlantic.

Looking across the straight of Gibraltar at (i believe) is Jebel Musa in Morocco, on the way to Tarifa

Tarifa is a beach town and popular with surfers, both kite and regular variety.  However this being middle of winter and a chill in the air, most the shops were closed for the season.  Still, i was able to walk down the Paseo Alameda and find a cafe and a cerveza, or pass through the old walled city.  I did notice that I was, by far, the person on the tourist office guest list that week that was the furthest from home.  I then caught the evening bus back to Algeciras as the sun set over the Atlantic.

The next morning I was up early and back to the bus station for the ride to La Linea.  From the La Linea station, i followed the herd the 300 meters to the border with Gibraltar.  The whole ride over "the rock" loomed out the window with the sun just coming up burning off the morning fog. (Yes I was that early, of course sunrise wasn't till like 830 too).  After "clearing" immigration into Gibraltar (which basically consisted of showing them I had a passport in my possession, but they couldn't be bothered to look past the cover or look in.  I was a little disheartened since I had now been in three countries and yet to get a stamp).  And then, one of the top things I really was looking forward to on this whole trip....

The nation of Gibraltar basically sits on a  peninsular, much of which is reclaimed land or the famous rock.  So due to this goegraphy, the widest point was chosen to for the airport.  And it's right by the border with the runway running the full length, and then some, from east to west.  Famous amongst us aviation nerds, because it's one of the few places in the world where you can easily and regularly walk right across and active runway.  When a plane is coming in, the shut the gates and hold the traffic, both pedestrian and vehicle (since the road bisects the runway) until the plane has landed and taxied back to the gate.  Yes, i really was excited to walk across the runway.

Why did the airplane cross the road?

Being early on a Saturday morning, most the shops in the town were yet to open.  Gibraltar is a tax free shopping area, so a lot of people come across to buy booze and other luxuries.  I found a pub that was open and had a fine full English breakfast.  Having skipped dinner the night before I may have inhaled the whole thing in one breath.  The old city looks like it was transported out of an English port town (for obvious reasons) and has the similar vibe, except the residents may suddenly without warning switch from the Queen's English to Spanish mid thought.  I left breakfast and walked toward the cable car station for a ride to the top of the rock, passing the Trafalgar Cemetery, where many of Lord Nelsons casualties reside after the Battle of Trafalgar.  I kept moving on, and passed a tour guide touting his drive around the rock tour.  Being cheap, and not wanting to wait for him to collect 3 more passengers, I declined and decided to take the cable car up, (it was £4 cheaper).  And up to the top I went.

Trafalgar Cemetery

The rock has been the scene of tons of military sieges and battles due to the uber-strategic location, so lot's or tunnels and embattlements dot the landscape.  There's also the natural formations and the monkeys (the only native primates in Europe live there, and no one is really sure how they got there).  So, from the top of the rock, I thought I'd just walk down and see some of the sights it being a beautiful sunny day, and about 60 degrees.  Yeah, not my best plan.  By the time I got about 2/3's down I was really wishing I had spent that £4.  I did stop at a few of the historical spots, and watched the monkeys scurry about. Then I staggered into the first pub at the bottom I could find, and downed 2 bottles of water and a pint of ale (not in that order).  By this time, the sun was shining bright and the streets were full of shoppers.  There was even a parade of redcoats through town, and I'm sure why.  After some meandering about seeing various monuments and shops, it was off to a different pub for a steak and ale pie for lunch.  A few more pub stops and it was time to head back to Algeciras for the night.  If i thought the immigration procedures getting into Gibraltar were slack, i discovered getting back into Spain was even less formal...  i didn't even see a customs agent.  I'd like to stay longer in Gibraltar sometime, but it's pricey and will have to wait for a future stop.  The next day was going to be busy, up early and off to Africa. 

And that'll be in the next installment.

Thursday, February 28, 2013

Cordoba Chillaxing

Cordoba, Spain

What a neat town!  I really tend to dig these old European towns.  There's so much character and charm. It's easy to see how Cordoba was selected as a World Heritage Site.  Walking through the narrow "streets" of white walled buildings just takes you backs a few hundred years or so, then around the corner there's an excavation of something Roman. The square where I'm currently having "lunch" occupies the site where a colessium once stood.  Too bad there's not still gladiators running amok. 

Plaza de la Corredera
Walking through the old town, you start imagine there's a distant melody of a Spanish guitar wafting through the streets.  Turns out, there's actually a street musician around the corner playing the perfect sound track for being lost. 

A little bit of tourism stuff, My hotel is right next to en Mezquita, with it's 930 AM bell ringing, I was aroused after a long night sleep.  The hotel was a great find.  Location and cleanliness for low price, and the added bonus of character.  The morning started with a walk to the river and the Punte Roman, an old roman bridge from way back, though restored and modernized.  I'm pretty sure the Romans didn't have the electrical wiring needed to light the bridge.  After that, a trip to the Alcazar de Los Reyes Cristiano, or castle of the Christian kings.  Today admission was "gratis" and I got to explore the old castle and gardens. Seems oranges are big thing here, as the place is lousy with orange trees

Alcazar de Los Reyes Cristiano


After the castle, a stop for coffee and breakfast right inside the old city walls.  Enter the narrow winding paths through white walled buildings.  A stop in the sinogoga, one of three surviving medieval synagogues in Spain, dating from the 14th century. 

Next was the Mezquita.  This Mosque was founded in 785 (and was built in top of a previous church that was razed by the Muslim occupiers) and has since been "recently" converted to a cathedral (in the 16th century). This place is huge and giantly impressive.  Words can't really do the place justice, so check out the pictures.

Inside the Mezquita

And that brings me to my current location.  I'll finish this snack and press on.. Well. For another cerveza. And a snack.  I feel like I eat constantly here, except its all small foods. So maybe that's healthier? 

Lunch, for example, was the tuna and potato salad sample with the beer, followed by a walk to a different bodega, this one specializing in Argentine foods.  So another beer and an empanada.  There was a couple hours in between those two snacks, as I swung by a former inn once occupied by Cervantes and referred to by Don Quixote as a "den of thieves".

After the obligatory visit to an Irish pub, dinner was tapas..  Small portions of beef in a sherry sauce, potatoes with a red sauce, and grilled shrimp and mushrooms on a skewer. Not a lot, but did the trick.  That was about I for the day.  Went walking but seemed the place was quiet for the night by 2300. Tomorrow it's off on another train ride to Algeciras for a couple days by the Med and hanging around a big rock.

Mornings in Madrid

Madrid

After the long trip from Louisville, and since I had gotten some sleep in Cologne, I decided to go meander about Madrid for the morning.  After finally finding the airport express and stashing my bag at Atocha Station in town, I set off to see what I could see.  Armed with an one day tourist pass on the Metro, I started my trip at Plaza del Sol.  I was looking for a sign that Grace has memorialized on celluloid in her abodes for years.

Unfortunately it has been removed. 

Palacio Real
From there I walked down Calle Mayor and found a coffee shop to stop into for a caffeine jolt and wifi.  On down the road I came to the royal palace and Plaza de Oriente.  There's a rally neat, if pricy, cafe there.  I maybe just enjoy plush red velvet covered furniture.  But I dug it.  So I had another coffee while waiting for the Palaca to open.  Turns out, it didn't that day. I bet the flocks of Asian tourists were even more disheartened than I.  By lunch I was in the Plaza Mayor watching the crowds and street performers with a cerveza and tapas.  I also discovered there was a rather significant fĂștbol match in town that day between RealMadrid and Manchester United.  This is my second trip to Spain, and for the second time there was a big match in the city I was visiting (last time FC Barcelona vs Chelsea in a semifinals match).

Plaza Mayor
After lunch, back to Plaza del Sol and another cafe, complete with cerveza and wifi check in.  The the obligatory Irish Pub world tour stop for a Guinness.  My last item on the to do list before leaving town was a stop at the Hard Rock for a pin.  After locating the HRC, back to Atocha and off to Cordoba.  The high speed train (270 km/h) whisked me away, and it was all I could do not to nod off...  And more than I could do at times.  I had this giant fear of sleeping right through my stop.  But I do remember some lovely scenery out the window.

Arrived unscathed in Cordoba, and found my way to my hotel thanx to a helpful cab driver.  Found a nice bar to watch the fĂștbol and have a couple cervezas, which all came with snacks.  I like it.  By the time I got to sleep, it'd had be 24 hours of wakefulness.  Involving 3 cities in 2 countries.  I plan to make a return visit to Madrid when I can focus more on just that area, perhaps some one I know who's spent some time there will be happy to show me around :-).  Next day, to see Cordoba in earnest.
  
Cerveza and a snack??  Yes please!