Portugal and Spain June 2019 – Week 4 Second Week in the Algarve and Lisbon

Sat June 22

Had a nice sleep in this AM!! The best part was that coffee had been made when I got up and the DW unloaded.  That has been my job pretty much whole trip since I’m the first one up and need something to do while waiting for the coffee to finish.

Walked into town to get goodies for a BBQ tonight.  We were a little later getting to the market so not enough fish, other than mackerel left. We grabbed the last of the big prawns (24 so only 2 each), huge big beautiful ones with the heads still on.  Cost 20E but would have probably cost $50 at home.  Produce in the market was good, so fresh and colourful looking….the red peppers are massive and gorgeous.  Bought a big bag of huge beans to French, peppers, a couple large heads of lettuce and cucumbers and some apples…..came to 8E and the lady threw in a few extra goodies to boot!  On to the little grocery store that has an incredible meat counter with 2 guys that were crazy busy…..as they have been every time we’ve popped in. Bought 4 skewers of marinated chicken wings (4 whole wings on each skewer), 3 skewers each of pork and beef kebabs and 3 of the bacon wrapped chicken ones.  Also bought, because they looked so good, 3 chicken thigh medallion things (?) with the skin on.   The total came to E18!!!!

Back home by 11.  Everyone went off and did their own things.  Brenda and I went down to our beach and had lunch at the “Yacht Club”…just a beach bar really but great food.  Had a “hotdog” with cheese and bacon and a sangria (all v. good) 9E.  Can’t beat that especially when you’ve got such a great beach and view.  And an exceptionally clean bathroom!

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Rented an unbrella with chairs and spent the rest of the afternoon reading, taking a walk and a dip in the water every now and again and people watching…..managed to somehow get a bit of a burn on my legs, which will hopefully just turn into a nice tan by tomorrow.   Great afternoon…..just sitting and relaxing and no driving!

Back to the house just before 5.  Cleaned up and started getting dinner ready.  Potatoes, beans, salad and all the meat ready to BBQ.  Lots of fun.  Everyone busy doing something, even the big and little boys were in charge of getting the coals on the BBQ going…..some excitement with the started fluid but they all still have hair and eyelashes so all was good!

Tonight is Chris and Marie’s last night with us.  They’re on their way to Lisbon tomorrow at the crack of dawn, so a bit of a celebration tonight…….12 of us survived a week together!  Dinner was excellent and again the wind cooperated so we feasted outside.  Tons of food…..all very good.  Picked up an orange cake at the bakery in town…..this is a specialty of the area.  Was very good too….an eggy cake rolled jelly roll style and soaked….really, really soaked…in an orange liqueur.  One piece was enough though.

Everyone, except Chris and Marie was up very late tonight….after midnight before I went to bed.  Such a great evening…..good food, good friends/family, good wine, lots of laughs and a beautiful evening…really could not ask for more.

Sun June 23

Busy morning!  C & M were off just after 6AM.  Rae, Glen, Jill and Larry are heading to Lisbon for 3 nights so they were out the door just before 10.  Brenda, me, and M & N and the boys are here on our own for a couple days…..certainly a lot quieter!

Brenda and I took a walk into town via the beach.  We really have the best beach…..not the most scenic but beautiful, fine sand, crystal clear water, a few interesting rock formations, a couple of restaurants and the castle.  Into town to pick up a few things and take some pics of “downtown” Ferragudo.  This place is really a prize…..not very big but a really nice place….such a good find.  I think it’s the best place we could have stayed.  The town is small, still a working fishing village but has pretty well everything that you could possibly need…..all within a 10-15 minute was from the house, the beach a 5 minute walk too.  A very good bakery and grocer with an excellent meat counter, the daily fish and veggie market, some lovely artisan shops, a pretty square with cafes and restaurants….really quite the perfect spot. Ferragudo has managed to somewhat “contain” the touristy growth of the town.  There are condos etc. but not right on the beaches and all the new seems to blend in quite well with the old.  Some lovely old buildings and a church with pretty tiles and a few small windy, hilly streets.  Right along the water the fisherman clean their catch and untangle their nets in the morning and then the same process happens in the evening around 7:30 when they come back in .  Love the seagull feeding frenzy!

Brenda and I did a bit of exploring, had our cappuccinos before heading back.  M & N and boys went off to Lagos, Brenda and I went to Praia Marinha….. https://www.algarvetips.com/beaches/lagoa/praia-da-marinha/  No problem getting there, took about 20 minutes.  Parking was at a premium though with cars parked a mile up the road.  We lucked out and found someone just leaving in the big parking lot at the top of the cliff.  Before heading down the steps to the beach there are a couple of stalls selling clothes and purses and a few food trucks selling ice cream and hotdogs.  We grabbed a couple of hotdogs and a drink.  The young guy in the truck put on gloves to get our food ready.  He said they do that because they have to take money too and don’t want to contaminate the food!  I swear this is the cleanest place I have ever travelled too!

The view of the beach from the top is lovely but as you work your way down the very well kept, but windy stairs, the peek-a-boo views get even better and better.  At the bottom there is one restaurant (with a bathroom) but no chair/umbrella rental places.  The cliffs and rock formations are truly breathtaking.  It’s not a huge beach but definitely pretty nice nestled in the surrounding cliffs and large rock formations just off the beach.  The beach itself is not the greatest…..sand is quite coarse and it’s the first beach we’ve been to that had a ton of seaweed.   Was extremely hot with no shade at all unless you were lucky enough to have gotten a spot smack up against the cliff face.   Had our lunch and spent an hour or two there……much of the time was spent trying to give an injured seagull, who decided to join us, some water….poor thing didn’t have a hope but at least we tried.  It started to cloud over a bit, which was kind of a blessing because of the heat.

Packed up and thought we’d check out Praia Benigal with the caves.  It’s listed as the #1 beach!!   https://www.algarvetips.com/beaches/lagoa/praia-de-benagil/  We drove but could have taken the trail at the top of the cliff at Marinha, supposed to be approx. 1/2 hour walk.   Driving was a mistake.  It’s a very small place and it’s crazy busy.  The only road down takes you thru the small town where there is a very narrow hairpin curve at the bottom and basically only one way traffic because of all the cars parked on the side of road going up and down hill.  At the bottom while waiting for the cars to come down the hill before we could go up, all you could see was a blanket of heads down on the beach….very crowded.  We didn’t stop because there was just no place to park within miles, even at the top of the hill the roadside was lined with cars. I think probably the best way to see and get to this beach is from the water….or taking the trail.  Hopefully we’ll see it on the boat trip on Thursdsay.  Supposed to be pretty spectacular.

On the way home we found an “Apollonia” supermarket.  Looked a bit upscale compared to the LIDL or Supermarche.  The biggest and best wine selection, including wines from Italy and France, some at 99E a bottle! Picked up a white vinho verde and a rose…..at 10E a bottle.

Back home and just sat around reading, chatting and drinking our wine.  We sent Mark and Natasha off to town for dinner and date night.  Made the boys a frittata with all the leftovers…..they loved it!  Played cards for a bit and then we all went off to bed.

Brenda moved into Chris and Marie’s room, so was kind of nice having my own room again.  I’m sure she will also enjoy not listening to my snoring!

Mon June 24

Very socked in this morning with a thick marine fog.  Cleared a bit by 10 or 11 but still couldn’t see too much of Poritmao across the river.  Was warm but very muggy.

Brenda and I decided to go to Faro for lunch.  Checked the directions on google maps before we left as our GPS seems to have become quite useless around here.  Not sure if it just hasn’t been updated or what but more often than it not it takes us on a bit of a goose chase as opposed to the quickest and easiest way to get anywhere.

Took the slower, scenic route on N125 and made it to exactly where we wanted to be in Faro…..main parking lot (free!!) without putting the GPS on or using our phones.  What a pretty, quaint place!!  We found a nice restaurant in a square for lunch, Vila Adentro.  We ordered the monkfish and prawn rice for 2.  Came in a terrine and was served into bowls.  It was absolutely delicious….tons of monkfish done perfectly and there had to have been at least 5 or 6 huge prawns for each of us, also done perfectly.  Rice had onions, green peppers and tomato and maybe just a touch of olive oil.  Very simple but tons of flavor.  I had a glass of dry rose to go with it.

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Went in search of the TI office for some information.  Instead of doing the boat trip to the islands we decided just to wander and explore Faro.  It’s really quite lovely.  Very nice buildings, many painted yellow, or white with bright coloured trim, which makes everything look nice and open.  A couple of great squares with cafes and restaurants.  Lots of lovely shops.  The walled city has a couple of big wide open plazas lined with orange trees and restaurants.  A big clock tower at one of the entrance arches has 4 or 5 huge storks nests.    In the new town there’s a large pedestrian only area also full of shops and cafes that have what look like large sails tied up between the buildings to provide lots of shade when you’re wandering.  Back in the old town we went to the cathedral (3.50E), which also gets you up to the bell tower with incredible views of the city in every directions.  You see the outer islands, some with little sandy beaches.  The marina is huge with every kind of boat, big and small.

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Me and Brenda on the bell tower

Lots of boat tour places and lots of boats just anchored out and about among the islands.  Good views of the old walled port of the city and the rooftops.  There are tourists but not a ton so no big crowds.  Just a really pleasant place.  The usual vacation condos and apartment buildings surrounding it but all seems to blend in very nicely. Faro also has an incredibly busy airport……at least 10 or more planes came in during the couple hours we were there.  A really enjoyable lunch and afternoon!

It was about an hour drive each way but so worth the trip.  Our plan had been to go into town tonight for dinner but we just spent the rest of the afternoon sitting around with M & N and the kids.  Cheese, bread, olives and whatever else we could find in the fridge for dinner.  A gorgeous warm evening with little or no wind and another beautiful pink sunset.  Super day!

Tues June 25

Oh what a beautiful morning……had that song going thru my head for hours!!  But it was…. so nice, bright, sunny and no wind.

Beach day!  Brenda and I went down around 10:30.  Got a front row umbrella and chairs.  A bit of the usual marine cloud rolled in but otherwise quite pleasant.  When the sun was out full blast it was really hot so didn’t mind the mix of cloud and sun at all.  Went for a nice long walk down the beach and into the water just to cool off.  Lots of groups of kids today……pre-schoolers I would say all with their bright yellow hats.  Fun to watch.  So impressed here with people on the beach…..kudos to all the women that wear anything, or nothing, and every type of bathing suit regardless of their bodies…..we really are so up tight and judgmental at home on appearances!

Reading, people watching, dozing, lunch again at the “Yacht Club”, more reading and a dip or two until around 4.  A great relaxing day.

Brenda and I headed into town for dinner tonight.  Decided on the Italian place.  Not too busy at 7:30 but within a 1/2 hour it was full.  Shared a pizza and a 1/2 pitcher of sangria.  Both were very good.  Great people watching in the main square.  Will have to come back and try their “hot stone plates”.  The ladies at the next table had them and it looked like lots of fun……you get a smoking hot stone that you put your meat on to cook, big to do made with the waiter putting a plastic bib/apron on you so nothing splatters on your clothes.  Ladies were having a great time, lots of fun with a cute waiter doing the bib thing.  We had another 1/2 pitcher of sangria and sat back and enjoyed the whole scene…..some entertainment too….a singer tonight.  When they brought our bill they also brought out a bottle of some local almond liqueur and 2 shot glasses.  Fun.

I think this would be a great place to come to on Thursday night , which is Mark and Natasha’s last night here.  They are taking off to Rome and the Amalfi coast for a week.  Rae and Glen are taking the boys to London and back home for them.

Stumbled our way to the bakery (which was still open at 10PM!) and picked up some pastries and a couple more bottles of wine and then home.  M & N and the kids were all in bed!

Great day.

Wed June 26

Nice and sunny this AM.  No fog…..yet!  Pretty little cruise ship in this AM.  The Sea Dream 1 Luxury Yacht….1 to 1 crew/passenger ratio $$$$’s !!

Off to pick up a couple of spatchcock chickens again for dinner and the rest of the goodies for MORE pasta and salad.  Really love going into our little town in the morning….the fisherman sorting out their nets, the seagulls hanging around waiting for any bits of whatever, the restaurant guys getting the coals started on the grills.  Best though is the little market with the fresh catch of the day, often mackerel along with sardines.

The small grocer (Amanhecer) that has the incredible meat counter, the bakery (Casa do Panito) with the fresh bread, pastel de nata, almond tarts, croissants and a small stock of some really great wines.  The main square with the coffee shops…..lots of tourists long with locals having morning coffee.  The view of the boats, big and small on the river, even with Portimao across the way.  Life goes on here regardless of the condos, big houses and tourists.  Throw in the great beaches and the castle….well, it’s just a perfect mix of everything you could want!

Booked our boat trip for 10 tomorrow!  Can’t go if it’s too windy so fingers are crossed that the weather cooperates.

Home in time to make lunch…..that’s all we seem to think about here!  Great bread, salami, brie and delicious tomatoes….and a nice glass of wine (or two!) to wash it all down.  M & N and the boys headed off to the beach, Brenda went for a walk and I got my bathing suit on, grabbed my book and yet another glass of wine and settled in by the pool.  Great to have the last 2 days just hanging around, relaxing.  Just a great afternoon……lots of sun, nice and warm with a bit of a breeze every now and again just at the right time to cool you down.

Rae, Glen, Jill and Larry arrived back from their couple of days exploring Lisbon.  They had a great time, rain and all!!  Not a drop here!  Gave us some good tips on what to see when Brenda and I head there for a couple of days on our way home.   Got cleaned up and started getting our appies ready….bruschetta with tomatoes and sardines.  Got the sauce for the pasta going and the chicken ready to go in the oven.

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Dinner was outside again….another beautiful evening.  The guys cleaned up!  Sat around chatting and about our boat trip tomorrow.  That really has to be the best way to see and appreciate the beauty of this coastline.

Thurs June 27

Beautiful this morning.  No marine cloud or fog, just brilliant sunshine!  Jill, Brenda and I headed down to the beach for coffee at the Yacht Club and a bit of a walk.  Into town around noon for lunch before our boat trip at 2 to the caves.  Started to get pretty windy around 1…..too windy to go out 😦  Our boat trip was cancelled and rescheduled for tomorrow morning at 10.  Fingers are crossed that the wind behaves!  Nothing like leaving this til the last minute!  M & N are going to miss it since they’re off early tomorrow morning.

Ferragudo from across the inlet……just the greatest place!

Came back home and everybody spent the rest of the afternoon doing a variety of things……beach, pool, reading, napping and shopping.  Jill, Larry and I drove into town to pick up a few last minute souvenirs/gifts and take pictures of the stork nests.  Stopped by a little art gallery/shop that we’d passed just about every day….Studio Bongard….what an incredible place.  Full of “fantasmagorical” pottery and ceramics, all displayed among plants, ponds etc. inside, outside and up on the roof!!  Very cool place. https://www.studiobongardonlineshop.com/  J & L bought a ceramic sardine!  Everything else was too delicate or too big to attempt to bring home.

Dinner at the Italian restaurant in the square.  Had great dinner.  Really good service with out waiter being very efficient at getting all ten orders right.  Some of us had the “hotstone plates”.  Lots of fun with the waiters putting on the platics bigs.  I had the lamb chops, which were excellent.  Used the sauces to baste them while they sizzled away.  Took only about 5 minutes to cook them.  Dropped one on the ground but found a doggy close by that got to enjoy it.  I had a 1/2 litre of sangria to go with it.  Such a fun dinner and evening.

Walked back home and sat around and chatted about the last two weeks. To bed around 11.

Friday June 28

Another gorgeous morning…..but a bit windy.  M & N were out of the house by 7.  Down to 8 now.

Into town for our boat trip…..walking in we all had our fingers crossed that it would be a go and it was.  A bit of a struggle for Glen and Larry getting on the boat but the 2 ladies and the captain were very good holding the boat and helping them on.  It was a little choppy right where we were getting on so good thing there were helpers.

Very nice leaving Ferragudo and getting a closer look at Portimao.  Out passed our castle, the marina/harbor and our beaches.

I can’t even describe the coastline!!  It is magnificient, there are no other words.  The cliffs, the different colours of the sandstone and rocks, the beaches tucked into coves that would only be accessible by sea unless you rapel down and back up the cliffside.  Many rock arches, some that we went thru with very little headroom to spare.  We were able to get into quite a few of the caves some with skylights with the sun shining down through them that made the water a beautiful turquoise, some with small, pristine beaches, some the captain had to wait for the right swell and then we “jet boated” in.

The water along the coast, close to the shore and the cliffs, is crystal clear…..could see the bottom down at least 30 maybe even 40ft down.  Very beautiful.  Passed a couple of the towns that we’d visited over the last couple weeks.  We were pretty impressed by some of the beaches on the land and even more so from the sea.  Besides the towns, there are a few resorts built on the cliffs that have put in stairs/walkways to access the beach below.  Some pretty spectacular homes.  We saw people fishing from the top of the cliffs up at least a 100ft or more….extremely long, long fishing lines down into the water…..no rails either so hopefully whatever they were catching wasn’t too big or heavy and going to pull them off!  In one of the small bays kids were jumping off the rocks into the water…..someone had carved a rough staircase out of the rocks for them to climb out and back up to do it all over again.

Finally the “piece de resistance” the Benagil cave.  Initially from the water it looked just like all the other cave openings, not even that much bigger, until you get right up to it.  Once thru it opens up into a huge cave the size of a football stadium.  A big beautiful beach which the sun shines down on thru a big skylight……unbelievable.  But unfortunately is was very crowded with tons of people on the beach, kayakers, paddle boarders, othere boats, including one small 30-40ft yacht!  Would be incredible to see it with no one there.

The boat ride back was a bit choppy, very windy and chilly.  We were a bit further out so could really see and appreciate the coastline…..very beautiful.  Great trip and well worth the 30E for 2 hours……you just cannot appreciate the beauty of it from the land.  One of the best parts was seeing our little Ferragudo from the water.  Such a pretty place…..they’ve done an excellent job of maintaining the small fishing village ambiance with the new conds and houses build around the outside of the old town.

Home for a quick change and to put a comb thru our very wind tussled hair and off to Lagos for lunch.  Easy 1/2 hour drive.  Just followed the signs to “centro” where there is street parking as well as a  large multi-level parking garage.

Their annual beer festival was just winding down…..the main square was lined with local breweries, stands, tables set up and a stage with entertainment.  The old town is lovely, very colonial…..reminded me of a Mexican/Spanish town rather than Portuguese.  Nice cathedral and brightly painted buildings and stone patterned streets.  A great main pedestrian street with lots of restaurants and shops.

Had an OK lunch and then wandered around, in an out of shops.  Had planned on heading down to the water but was very, very hot this afternoon….almost unbearable really, that combined with our boat ride this morning I think everyone had pretty much had it after a couple of hours.  Too bad, would have been nice to see the waterfront…..supposedly a “surfer type” place and some of the beaches.

Home to relax for a couple of hours before dinner at the tapas bar again and to do a bit of packing up.

Did our last walk into town…..I’m really going to miss this place!  Sat outside in the street again at Tapas Sao Joao….such a beautiful evening….warm but with enough of a breeze to make is nice and comfortable.  Only 8 of us now.  Did the same thing as last time, everyone picked a few tapas.  Had the peri peri prawns this time, which were delicious.  Our waiter was great…..fun guy.  Told us about the city selling “their” castle to a private party instead of keeping it for the people…..they weren’t too happy.

Everything was still open after dinner so wandered a bit, picked up some goodies at the bakery for the morning so we didn’t have to worry about breakfast.

Walked back home and finished packing up.  Sat around and chatted for a while then to bed.

Sat June 29

Goodbye Ferragudo!  We really could not have picked a better place.  Great village with all the amenities and ambiance one could need, beautiful beaches, minimal hills….etc. etc.

The driver for R & G and boys arrived right on time at 7AM.  They’re off to Faro for their flights back to London, where they’ll spend a few days before heading home. Jill and Larry followed them to the airport, they’re also off to London to visit family for a couple of days.

Just Brenda and I left….finished last minute packing and a quick clean up and walk thru, looking for anything that may have been left behind, and we were out the door by 9 enroute to Lisbon.

No problems at all getting on the the highway.  Drove thru Alentejo area which was very nice.  Quite different landscape as we went further inland.  Very dry, lots of wheatfields and cork oak trees.  Some areas made me think of what the African savanna would like (which I guess I’ll find out soon enough in Sept!)  Stopped for coffee about 1/2 way to Lisbon.  We’d hoped to arrive by noon, which we did, sort of.  No problems driving thru the city. We put the GPS on just before getting to the city……entered the AVIS car rental drop off at the airport information….which you would think would take you directly there seen it’s their car/their GPS.  Not so….took us down an industrial road on the wrong side of the airport to a place where the refueling truck enter the airport.  Thought maybe we’d missed a turn off/roundabout somewhere so turned around and tried it again…..same thing.  Back on the highway and thought we’d take a different exit which took us over the huge Vasco de Gama bridge, 15km long.  Beautiful bridge, which was nice to see, but…..  Stopped on the other side and used good old google maps, which took us straight there.  Very congested rental return place.  It’s right at the airport just past the departures with not the greatest signage.  I was one of many cars in the wrong lane when you first see the sign, so lots of us having to cut over two or three lanes to get to the car rental one.  No problem dropping the car off.

Grabbed a taxi to our hotel (metered taxi….approx. 18E).  The airport is in the middle of the city so was a great drive (didn’t see much while I was driving to the airport).  Some lovely buildings and streets….especially the treelined Avenida da Liberdade! Our hotel is the Augusta Boutique House right on Rua Augusta.  http://augusta-boutique-house.lisbon-hotel.org/en/  It’s a main pedestrian only street that is many blocks long and takes you right to Praca de Comericio (sp??) and the waterfront.  Hotel is great.  Typical small room but facing out on the street with great views in either direction.  Nice little rooftop terrace, with a view, for breakfast.  The hotel is in the perfect location for exploring.  Lots of shops and outdoor cafes, street entertainers….very lively.

Off to explore and grab a quick sangria and a snack at one of the restaurants.  Great people watching but not the best place to eat.  Expensive and mediocre food.  We each had a sangria and shared a sandwich 20+E!   Gal at the hotel said to have dinner at one of the places a block or two on either side of Rua Augusta….better food and better prices.  Fun street though to wander down, in and out of shops.

The Praca do Comercio is a beautiful big plaza on the waterfront surrounded by yellow poritcoed buildings.  You end up in the praca from Augusta thru a big white arch, crossing a busy street with the cable cars and buses.  Cafes and restaurants on one side….very pretty.  More street entertainment.  You can see the redeemer statue across the river.

Started walking our way towards Alfama but decided to take a tuk tuk instead.  15E.  Very bumpy ride over the cobbled streets.  Up and up we went, not quite to the top but up high enough to get great views across the Tagus river.  A few nice plazas with restaurants and cafes.  The cathedral is lovely but wasn’t open.  A few shops and a bit of a market with some nice stuff but also a lot of stuff made in China….the first we’ve seen since arriving a month ago.  Had a drink (Sagres Lemon Radler…..very good!) at a café and came across our first really yukky bathroom!   Wandered down the hill into the older part, small narrow cobbled streets, and a couple stairways, with chock-a-block old buildings.

Thought about going to Castelo de Sao Jorge since we were pretty close but was too late to catch sunset, so maybe tomorrow.

About a 15 minute walk took us back down towards Augusta to find a place for dinner.  Went one block over and found a place called Bread 4 You Bistro that was just packed so figured it must be good…..and it was!  Found a table outside.  Had gotten a bit chilly when the wind picked up around 7.  Brenda had the bacalhau (v. good) and I have the prawn rice, which came in a very hot cast iron pot……was delicious, second only to the prawn and monkfish dish in Faro.

10:30 at night and Rua Augusta was rocking!!  Lots of people, lots of music.  Hung out our window for a while watching all the activity.  Great day, except for the car rental drop off.  Thought we’d be “holiday-ed out” after a month but with only our little smattering of Lisbon, I now wish we’d decided on one extra day.  Went to bed with the window open listening to all the fun.

Sun June 30

Great breakfast on the terrace.  Very good.  Nice tray with fresh squeezed orange juice, bread and croissants, meat and cheese, jam etc.  Also a table set up with hard boiled eggs, coffee, toast etc.  Great view of the castle up on the hill and the buildings surrounding the hotel.

To the train station, only a 5 minute walk, and to Sintra today. 5E return.  Took 40 minutes to get there.  Train was packed, we had to stand, so we were a little worried it would be crazy busy but it wasn’t too bad.  Lots of people but also lots room to spread them out.  Cute train station!  Picked up some info from the TI office and armed with the pages from Rick’s book that Brenda had torn out, off we went to catch the 434 bus (6E) local but you can hop on/off at the various stops.

Sintra was where all the royalty and rich would head in the heat of the summer, much cooler for sure.  Beautiful drive up and up.  Very lush here, almost rainforest.  Very pretty treelined and very narrow roads with lots of peek-a-boo views down towards Lisbon.  Got off at Pena Palace and thought we’d walk up to the Moorish palace.  Found the trail and up went went….nada or nothing we could see to know if we were close.  Ran into some others on their way down because they’d found nothing either.  So not sure if the trail was marked wrong or what….decided we didn’t have enough time to venture further.

Started walking down the road…..15 minutes back to town the bus driver said….NOT.  You pretty much have to walk in the cobbled gutter because of all the traffic on the very narrow road, including buses.  A rickshaw driver offered us a ride to the next bus stop for free!  It took us to the Palacio National de Sintra and the main square where all the action was.  Lots of shops and restaurants and lots of stairs!  Some very nice shops with different and unique stuff…..beautiful handcrafted jewelry, scarves and local pottery artisans.  Bought a bracelet and an olive dish…..but no scarf 😦  Really very pretty here, loved how restaurants would set tables outside on the narrowest little streets or alleys leaving just enough room to walk by single file, or the ones that set their tables out skinny little landings where one wrong move backwards in your chair and you be ass over tea kettle down a few steps.  Lots of potted plants.

Lunch was at a cheap place with a big sign offering an 8E menu.  Sun had finally come out for good so got quite hot but with just enough breeze to keep it comfortable.  Lunch was excellent!  I had a cheeseburger with friend onions and friends, Brenda had “prok” sandwisch with cheese, which was really a salami of some sort….very good though on a nice peasant bread.  Glasses of wine to go with it.  Great waitress and a terrific view of the Moorish Castle up on the hill.  Total bill for both of us was 24E.

Walked back along the road admiring the views and having a look at all the vendors set up selling jewelry, leather and ceramics.  Very pretty looking into the valley with views of the beautiful buildings across and down the valley.  I can see why people would come up here to spend their summers…..cool, fresh air….or at least it would have been before all the buses and tour buses, cars and motorcycles.  Definitely much cooler than down in Lisbon.

The info in Rick’s book about the trains back to Lisbon isn’t quite clear……says there are 2 trains an hour, which is true but one goes to Rossio station, which is where we wanted to be, and the other goes to Orientale station which is no where near our hotel or Rua Augusta.  So really it’s one every hour to each station.  Whatever….it worked out because we were at the station early enough to be able to get seats on the train on the way back.  About 15 minutes before the Rossio train arrived masses of people converged on the station.

http://www.sintra-portugal.com/index.html

Quite an interesting train ride in both directions……an ancient viaduct (big and small parts), the demographics of the burbs, mostly apartment buildings along the route, not a lot of industrial or commercial buildings.

We left the train station out the side doors thinking we’d head up towards Bairro Alto and or the medieval ruins at the Carmo convent but was already almost 5 so just ended up doing some last minute shopping instead……even on a Sunday most stores were open til almost 10.  I left Brenda in the Benneton store and went for a drink at one of the restaurants near our hotel.  A nice big, at least 9 or 10 oz, glass of rose for 4E.  People watched and looked at pics until Brenda came along and ordered a glass of red….same thing 4E……best deal in Lisbon!

Changed into long pants and long sleeves and grabbed my jean jacket for this evening.  The wind had picked up and it quickly became a quite chilly.  Toured around more of the streets in this area, the Baixa.  It’s really very nice and only wish we had more time to explore some of the other areas……if you include Sintra in your plans you definitely need at least 3 or 4 days in Lisbon.  I would have loved to have one more day to wander and work our way up to the castle for sunset….supposed to be beautiful.

Out and about sussing out places for dinner…..our last one here so wanted it to be a good one.  Walked to the Santa Justa elevator and thought about going up but was a bit of a line up so didn’t bother and really as impressive as the view might have been at night, I think daytime would have been better.  It’s really quite an amazing and quirky piece of architecture.  You would think it was a rather recent addition to the city but no, it’s been around for over 100 years. It’s saved a lot of people a lot of steps up the hill.  https://lisbonlisboaportugal.com/Baixa-Lisbon/Elevador-Santa-Justa-Lisbon-elevator-lift-guide.html

Many of the restaurants have guys standing outside trying to entice you in, which kind of bugs me and a lot of them have pretty much the same menu so when someone approached us waving a menu we told him we didn’t want to eat at these restaurants….he said but I’m from down that street.  We had a look at his menu and it did look kind of interesting and different from all the others.  The place was packed, so had to wait a few minutes for a table, people coming out said it was excellent.  Busy and excellent sounded good.  Tasca d’Lyon on Rua dos Sapaterios (no website)

Nice table by the window.  Ordered a 1/2 litre of vinho verde and the prawn appie……hah, we said no to the bread and olives (too much, we thought!).  Chatted with the big group at the table next to us…they were from Yuma, Arizona and here with a big JW convention….said this was the best service and food they’d had all week!  The prawns came…..8 huge ones, in an incredible sauce…definitely some peri peri and lots of garlic and olive oil…..called the waiter over and asked for the bread to sop up every last bit of it.  Absolutely delicious!  Brenda had the peri peri chicken which came in a bowl with rice on the side.  I had a little taste, really good with a hint of curry….very different and tasty.  I ordered the bacalhau, which really was the best I’d had the entire trip….done perfectly, tender (no dry bits) and not too salty.  Came with roasted potato and veg (delicious fat green beans).  We also ordered more wine, a whole bottle this time, to celebrate the end to a great trip.  Or bill was 40E.

Back over to Rua Augusta to see what entertainment there was tonight.  Lots happening right down to the praca.  Some really good puppeteers, a few guys dancing, some singers and a couple, her playing the violin and him the cello…..gave them the last of my euro coins.  What a fun place even at 10:30 on a Sunday night!  Stopped in the pastel de nada place but was just too full to manage even one.  Our last night of a great vacation!

Packed up for the morning.  Really regretting now that we didn’t book one more day here.  Would love to have explored more of the streets and up the treelined de Liberdade (the Champs Elysee of Lisbon) with it’s upscale cafes and shops, so close too but just cannot see and do everything with so little time.

Mon July 1 (Happy Canada Day!!)

Up quite early…..no coffee on our tray!!  Luckily I dug around my bag and found an instant decaf, which kind of held be over until breakfast at 8:30.

Another great breakfast on the terrace…..a mix of sun and cloud this morning so was glad I’d brought my sweater up.

After breakfast we had an hour or two to kill until we left for the airport.  Took a last walk around and down to the praca on the waterfront…….was lovely as there weren’t very many people out and about at 9:30 on a Monday morning.  Was surprised that very few shops, other than a couple of cafes weren’t open….not even the ones with table on the street.  Brenda debated for a bit about getting some pastel de nada to bring home but decided that could end up being pretty messy, so no.

Checked out at 10 and walked a block or so to the taxi stand in the praca across from the train station.  After driving up Avenida da liberdade, I was really sorry to say goodbye to Lisbon….oh well, next time!

Air Canada check in took forever, even with doing the online check in last night! Both security and customs and immigration had quite long lines but ran pretty efficiently.  Terminal 1 is quite new and big so lots of walking, thru many, many duty free stores, to the gate.  Flight was almost an hour late leaving so a little concerned about our connection in Montreal.  Got a quick peek of the huge Vasco de Gama bridge as we took off……right out over the Atlantic.  Very bumpy ride all the way.  Served dinner and a snack.

Was a bit worried we wouldn’t make our connection in Montreal because we’d have to go thru customs and immigration but we somehow, bumps and all, managed to make up the time and arrived just a few minutes late.  No issues going thru immigration and directly to our connecting gate without having to go thru security again.  Another bumpy flight just about all the way to Vanc.  Arrived on schedule just before 8

What a great trip!  I absolutely love Portugal and cannot believe it’s taken until now to get there.  Spain was great too and will definitely need to go back……a lot of territory to explore between Andalucía in the south and Barcelona up north.  Roads in both countries were excellent….even the narrow windy ones, all nicely pave, no big potlholes.  People in both countries are very friendly and welcoming (except maybe Olga!)  The food and wine was excellent just about everywhere.  Small markets are exceptional and groceries everywhere, even in the big stores, were very reasonably priced.  And I don’t think I’ve ever drank as much sangria!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Portugal and Spain – June 2019 Week 3 – First Week in the Algarve

Sat June 15

Up early….just after 6.  Finished packing up and cleaning up.  Beatriz arrived at 10 as planned and called a taxi for us to get down to the parking garage with all our stuff.  The only thing I won’t miss in Arcos is that walk back up the hill!

On the road to Portugal just after 10:30.  Spain is very beautiful…..very sad to be leaving really.  Must come back some day….so much more to explore!  Would have been nice to get to Cadiz but also nice to not have big driving day…..I really am sorry we didn’t get there but I guess you just can’t see everything!

Had to head back towards Seville to get on the highway to Portugal but no problems getting around it…..great peripheral road that bypasses the city and once on the E1 it’s the same highway all the way to Ferragudo in the Algarve.  The sunflower fields in Spain were absolutely beautiful…..and just no good place to pull over to get a good picture.  I don’t think a picture could have done them justice anyway……really quite spectacular to see at this time of year…..field after field!

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Sunflowers for miles……could not find a spot to stop to be able to capture the beauty of them.

Crossing from Spain back to Portugal down here was different than further north.  Much more mountainous, forested and rocky/boulder areas up north and very little difference crossing from Portugal into Spain.  Down here it’s rolling hills and you go from the very orderly and cultivated Spain into a very scrubby and wild Portugal.  Not sure why, perhaps in Spain it’s all privately owned and in Portugal it’s not so less farming???  The closer we got to Faro it became much more developed.  Stopped in Tavira for lunch, hoping to find a nice little place on the beach but was a very busy little tourist place with no clear access to the beach area.   Found a nice pizza joint not too far off the highway…..good thin crust!!

Just passed Faro we found a “super mall” which included a huge grocery store and IKEA!  Decided to bypass it and find something a little closer to Ferragudo.

Was getting close to 3 (check in was after 3:30) so decided we’d just head to Villa Marlena and wait for Chris and Marie to arrive.  (They, Rae’s son and his girlfriend, had just spent a week biking near Porto and were joining us for the first week in the Algarve.)  The directions we have for the house are absolutely useless!!  Whoever wrote them up can not possibly have ever been to the house……no road names whatsoever once we left the highway.  The final straw was when we had to “turn right at the crooked palm tree”.  We put Villa Marlena in google maps and it came up……we had definitely turned at the wrong palm tree….one of hundreds around here!!

https://www.allure-villas.com/allure/component/villas/view/2382

The house is beautiful……..gorgeous views of the river Arade and the sea.  Four great bedrooms, all ensuite, and a self-contained one bedroom suite downstairs.  Lovely solar heated pool, which looked much bigger in the pics, but will certainly do.  Very, very windy here, nice and sunny but not too hot unless you are sheltered from the wind.  Brenda and I picked our room, got somewhat settled in and headed to the LIDL market in Ferragudo.  Not the greatest…..no deli or meat counter and most of the veg are prepacked.  Nice bakery though and some good wine!  Didn’t stop today but looks like there might be a couple of nice shops in Ferragudo…..bakery and little grocer with a meat counter.  Picked up some basics to get us through tonight and breakfast tomorrow.  Will look for another bigger grocery store on our travels tomorrow before the rest of the group arrive. (Friends Jill and Larry and Rae’s other son Mark, his wife Natasha, and their two boys 8 and 10yrs old…..so for the first week there are 12 of us).

Chris and Marie had arrived by the time we got home.  They got settled in one of the rooms and we sat around getting caught up on their travels.

Dinner tonight was a roasted peri peri marinated spatchcock chicken,  fresh prawns cooked in a little olive oil and garlic and a salad with beets, goat cheese and almonds, and of course some good wine!  Sat around chatting for a bit then to bed.  Quite early for me…..just after 10 but a long day so very tired.

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Beautiful sunsets!

 

Sun June 16

Up very early…..tried not to disturb Brenda!  Lovely sunrise.  Made coffee and sat outside updating my journal, checking emails, FB and catching up on the news.

Everybody was up fairly early this morning…..breakfast and ready to go exploring by 9.  C & M walked into town and Brenda, R & G and I walked to the beach, Praia Grande.  Spectacular beach!  Soft sand, great for walking.  Protected by a jetty that separates the Atlantic from the river.  There are a couple of restaurants and places to rent chairs and umbrellas.  Hoping we get a couple of days to just sit and enjoy it!  The beach carries on around toward the river and the old/new castelo Sao Joao do Arade (now privately owned and not open to the public), where it becomes Praia da Angrinha, another beautiful soft sandy beach with huge big rocks (limestone/sandstone?) with big holes and caves in them.  Walked all along the beach and waterfront and right into the town of Ferragudo……took about 20 min.

Had coffees and picked up a few goodies (pastel de nata) at the bakery and checked out the little grocer…….very little from the front but fantastic meat counter tucked away in the back!!  Picked up a few more things for dinner tonight at the daily veg market.  About a 10 minute walk back to the house.

Did pop out for what should have been a quick trip across the river to Portimao looking for coffee pot!!  All we have here is a medium size French press, which isn’t going to work once everyone is here.   12 minutes according to Google to get to the SuperU…..hahaha.  One wrong/missed turn and it took 1/2 an hour.  Portimao is not a great city to drive in.  It seems to have been added on and added on over the years without much thought to proper city expansion planning….you can see the street you should be on but can’t get to it!  Argh!!!  Did manage to get back across the bridge and into Ferragudo to check out the Staples and a home/hardware type store….nada, no coffee pot.

Back home for a quick lunch and to relax around the pool.  Had a few dips, read, drank some wine…..beautiful afternoon.  No wind!  C & M had gone for a run and down to the beach.

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Bread dipped in, or drizzled with olive oil and a small sprinkle of salt is so good.  We watched people in a restaurant do it so thought we’d try it…..delicious chorizo from the market.

Dinner tonight was pasta, with some of the sausage we bought at the Ferragudo grocer  and veg from the morning market and thru together a salad.  Something simple and could be ready whenever everyone arrived.

J & L arrived just after 7 (at little later than planned!!)  Chatted and got caught up on their adventures…..one of which was finding this house!!

C & M had picked up some goodies this morning and put together a great appetizer……crostini with tomatoes and sardines….(very, very good) and melon wrapped in ham.

Was so pleasant tonight without the wind we ate outside…..great dinner, great wine, great friend and fantastic views.

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Sat around the rest of the evening until Marcus and Natasha and boys arrived around 10.  Their flight was late……they had NO issues finding the house using google maps!

A bit of chaos after they arrived……after getting themselves organized in the suite downstairs they came up for their dinner.  Natasha went back down for something and found that the door had locked!!  It automatically locks when it closes….who would have thought that!  And of course the key was inside.  Called the local manager and he had to bring a spare set of keys.  Took an hour or more for him to get there!  He could not explain why the door automatically locks, other than perhaps for security purposes.  We now have a spare set of keys just in case someone forgets to take their key with them.  That’s actually a bit dangerous….what if someone had fallen in there, or there had been a small child inside, or, or, or……

Brenda and I just got out of the way and went to bed.  C & M had already disappeared……so assuming all ended happily!

Mon June 17

Full house here now….12!  Everybody up and about by 7:30.  Lots of places, inside or out, at this house to enjoy your morning coffee…..either on your own or with company.

I was up first as usual so thoroughly enjoyed watching the sun come up, the fishing boats returning to Ferragudo and the baby seagulls on the roof across the street!!  And the quiet time!  Must look up seagull nesting habits later…..I see nothing on that roof that resembles what I think of as a nest.  During the hottest part of the day the babies (2) just seem to tuck themselves into a crevice between the tiles and the gutter or wander around aimlessly squawking until mommy brings them food.  You would think they’d cook up there!  We have a couple on our roof too but can’ts see them of course…..certainly hear them though!

Tavira today!  At least for some of us. R & G and J & L and Brenda and I. M & N and the kids are doing a beach day, C & M are heading off on a cycling trip near Tavira somewhere.  We have 4 cars between us, which is definitely needed for this many people.

Brenda, Glen and I (the driver) took our car, Rae went with Jill and Larry as she feels they’re directionally challenged!!  The plan was that they would follow us…..and it worked!!  That usually does not happen….someone gets too far behind, takes a wrong turn, misses a turn….thank goodness for cell phones….but this morning was non-eventful.

Tavira is a lovely little town/city.   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tavira  Had originally planned to take the ferry over to Ilha Tavira, a nice beach sandspit just off shore to check out the beach and have lunch there but decided to just wander around Tavira since it was market day.  Very cute place, along the river or inlet, with lots of shops, restaurants and the main square market, a castle, churches and a mosque or two.  The town is on both sides of the inlet with a couple of bridges connecting it….one is a beautiful old roman or possibly moorish bridge from the 13-15th c. (depending on what you read!!)  Lots of history here.  Great place to wander around.  Lovely friendly people.  Bought a fun little black sun dress and the lady “hid” a gift in the bag for me…..a silver (coloured!) and blue stone necklace.  Bought a pair of comfy linen pants (15E!!!) and they threw in a cute little bracelet!

They were setting up for some celebration that was starting this week…..Saints Festival.  Would be fun to come back and check it out…..lots of music, food stalls, dancing etc.

Had a great lunch along the main square/waterfront…..skewered grilled peri peri prawns and monkfish with fries.  The skewer hangs from a little contraption dripping over the plate of fries…….fun!  The monkfish was delicious!  I’ve heard it referred to as the “poor man’s lobster”…..and it really could pass for it!!  A big jug of sangria and coffees and lots of people watching…..could have sat there all afternoon!

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Reluctantly we got up and did a bit more wandering around…..crossed the bridge and walked along the river/inlet.  Very pretty on both sides but could really use a bit of cleaning up here and there but overall a pretty little place.  Lots of old buildings but also lots of new condos everywhere…..definitely a resort type destination.  Had hoped to find a local beach but was told not to waste time and head to Ilha Tavira.  Which we didn’t do as we’d spent too much time at lunch!!  Great place though and definitely worth a visit.

Larry needed an extra pillow!!  And there was limited bedding for the kids on the sofa beds downstairs so the logical place to stop….IKEA!   It was on the way (passed it on the way in the other day) in a town called Loule.   What a great parking lot!!  They have red/green lights at the end of each aisle telling you how many free parking spots there are in it…….then as you’re driving down the aisle each spot has a red/green light indicating where the available spot is!!

 

We need this at our IKEA at home…..on the weekend you spend as much time finding a spot as you do shopping!!   Got all the goodies we needed and picked up a couple packs of their meatballs (one chicken…Natasha doesn’t eat beef!) for a quick dinner and back on the road home.

No problem finding the house now…..have found a quick and easy way thru town to get there.  I really think the people that own this place have never actually been here because the directions we got were really pretty ridiculous considering that we’ve now found the very simple, right way to get here!!

Everyone was back home by the time we got there.  Dinner was great!  Did some roasted potatoes, onions, peppers, carrots and mushrooms to go with the meatballs….was all delicious and quick.  Wine and bread and a couple of local liqueurs and a brandy that C & M had picked up on their travels today.

It’s lots of fun getting dinner ready…..thank goodness the kitchen is big enough for at least 6 or 7 people……cooking, yakking, drinking wine…..what could be better!

To bed around 10:30…..another great day!

Tues June 18

Rain!!!!  Very misty and socked in this morning…..couldn’t even see across to Portimao.  Only rained for a 1/2 hour or so then around 7 started to brighten up a bit.  Had breakfast…..everyone on their own each morning for breakfast whenever they get up.

Rae, Glen, Brenda, Jill, Larry and I and the boys walked to town for MORE coffee…..drizzled again a little when we got there…..just enough to friz my hair.  Picked up a few more veg and fruit and spent time watching the fisherman untangling and rolling their nets back up.  Even at 9AM the big charcoal grills are going and they’re grilling up some of the fish!  Really beautiful, fresh fish in the market, which you have to be really quick to get ……great produce too….all local!.

Chris and Marie are doing dinner tonight!  Fun to take turns doing that.  Rae is making dessert with some beautiful meringues from the local bakery and fresh strawberries…..Eton Mess! https://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/eton-mess   They have great figs here too, the two bite size ones, that are not cloyingly sweet.  Popped in and out of some of the little shops.  Bought a cork watch….cute.  They had a really cute pair of shoes too but did not need.  Had another coffee and pastel de nata then home with our goodies.  Finally started to see bits of blue sky.

Carvoeiro for lunch today.   https://www.algarveuncovered.com/carvoeiro/  Very close to us, only a few minute drive if you don’t take a wrong turn!  Very pretty place tucked in between the cliffs. Nice little beach at the bottom of a very big hill that we parked at the top of.  Street parking down the hill but every spot was taken…..did find a “mall” underground parking lot but didn’t bother trying to find a spot in there.  Great walk down the main street.  Lots of nice shops mixed in with the usual souvenir and beach toy places.  Tons of cafes and restaurants all the way down to the hill right to the main square and the beach.   Many restaurants right on the square just before the beach…..all a bit pricey but you pay for the view right?  We chose “O Patio”  https://www.praiacarvoeiro.com/portfolio/o-patio/  Great view.  Had a prawn and avocado salad, sparkling sangria…..was all really good, good service too.

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Walked on the little beach a bit.  Huge waves, only a few people braving the water.  It’s set in a nice little cove…..sort of like a mini Positano.  Quite pretty.   The beach had very grainy sand, not like our lovely soft sand beach.  Lots and lots of vacation apartments and a few, what appear to be, very expensive hotels, all sort of stacked up and tumbling down the hill surrounding the beach.  A very nice boardwalk on the east side of the square….you go up and up and then walk along the top of the cliff for a 1/2 km or so.  Great views.

The sun had come out just before lunch so made for a great afternoon.  Bought an air mattress and some other floatie toys for our pool.

Home just after 4.  Gave Lucas (Rae’s grandson) 3E to blow up my air mattress!!  Had time for a bit of a swim and some fun in the pool with Jill and Lucas…..air mattress races!

While we were having fun Chris and Marie were putting together a great dinner.  Bacalhau and chicken soft tacos…..absolutely delicious!  They made guacamole, salsa fresca, corn etc.   Had Rae’s Eton Mess for dessert.

Lots of fun today.  Sat around until 10:30 or so making plans for tomorrow.  Possibly up to the mountains to Monchique…..views right down to Cabo Sao Vincente, on a clear day…..but that will be weather permitting….possible showers tomorrow 😦 .  If so we’ll save till Thursday.

Wed June 19

Nice slow start this morning……everyone was up so Larry made his “famous scrambled eggs”, which were very good.  Marie made French toast with yogurt and honey, also very good.  Don’t usually all manage to eat breakfast at the same time so was fun today.

Weather was still a little iffy with the mountain looking a bit socked in at the top, so Lagos was our original destination today.  All the kids, big and small had gone off so the 6 old adults headed out in our two car convoy.   Managed to get separated this time even before we left Ferragudo!  After a number of phone calls and pin pointing where the other car was, we decided that Alvor   https://www.algarvetips.com/beaches/portimao/praia-de-alvor/ would be a good place to regroup because they’ve got a nice big parking lot.  Rae, Brenda and I were in one car, Jill, Larry and Glen in the lost car.

We had a nice walk on the beach, checked out a few of the restaurants.  Alvor has a spectacular beach!  It must be at least 3-4 km of very nice, fine, soft sand.  Fantastic!  Cliffs and a big rock island at one end and I think Lagos at the other.  Big waves.  A few places that rent chairs and umbrealls and a couple of beachfront restaurants.  There’s a boardwalk along the dune that seems to go on forever.  Had a few more phone calls with the lost car….they now seemed to be heading in the right direction and will have one more go at finding Alvor, if not they were just heading back home so we decided to have lunch. Rather forgettable unfortunately and pricey too……but that beach view was amazing!  I had a hotdog……what could possibly go wrong with that!!  Rae and Brenda had burgers, which were OK but basically just the bun and meat….no tomato, lettuce, onion etc.  Fries were good though. BUT…..the sangria was pretty special.  Each drink came in a little jug with a dollop of lime sorbet, which the waiter stirred in with lots of drama!  Very good.

Just as we were finishing the lost car crew arrived!!  Lots of stories to tell about their adventure…..asking directions at a police station was the highlight!  Jill had her phone but would not turn it on to use Google maps because she didn’t have a data plan!!  The waiter quite nicely made room for them and we sat and enjoyed another sangria while they had their lunch.

Nice hour or so walk on the boardwalk after lunch……very hot though.  Alvor is pretty much a resort town but they’ve done a great job of protecting the beach and the dune.  Lots of hotels and condos but all on the other side of the boardwalk so none extend right on to the beach, which is really nice.  A number of umbrella/chair rental kiosks all along the middle part of the beach but that seemed to be it.  Really a lovely unspoiled beach!  Enough excitement for today, so Lagos another day.

Back home via an unplanned detour through Portimao…..took the wrong exit.  There really doesn’t seem to be any rhyme nor reason to how the streets work in that city.  Even using the GPS and Google maps, you get taken through funny little alleys and lanes, even a parking lot or two……and a very narrow one way street with a medieval arch that our car barely fit through!

Mark and Natasha are cooking tonight!  Larry, Brenda, me and the boys played cards…..taught them how to play Garbage (fun, quick, easy game….)  Dinner was a delicious pasta with seafood, salad and really good bread.  Pasta is really a lifesaver meal when feeding masses of people!!  Throw in whatever you’ve got laying around and you really can’t go too wrong….and it’s always good!  No wind tonight so we were able to eat outside….beautiful evening.

Thurs June 20

Everyone on their own for breakfast today.  Chris and Marie left early for their 5 hour hike on Serra de Monchique….the highest point in the Algarve and the dividing line between it and the Alentejo region.  The rest of us (10) left a couple hours after them to drive up, tour around a bit then meet up with them for lunch up there…..everything and anything in peri peri sauce is the area specialty.  We managed to pile into 2 cars.  Mark, Natasha, Brenda and Ollie came in my car.  LOL, I warned Mark to not complain about my driving, and he didn’t! (I’ve known Mark since he was 2!!)  We all managed to stay together the entire way……only because there is really only one road up!  Weather was still a bit questionable when we left, so hoped for the best.

Up and up you go, thru the little towns of Monchique and Foia.  Was a very pretty drive on a good but very twisty road with lots of cyclists going both UP and down (at mach 1 speed!)  Directions were pretty good until we hit the centro of Monchique where our little caravan entertained the old guys just sitting/hanging out at the bus stop by going around the roundabout 2 times and then pulling the same U turn a second time…..they laughed and thru their hands up in the air!!

The road continues up and up further still past a few restaurants that had great views right to the coast.  Stopped at a lookout……amazing views!

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Down thru the hills/mountains, all the towns below and right out to the water…..pretty spectacular.  An old couple were set up selling cookies and “natural” spring water.  We all bought cookies (almond and sugar, v. good) and Natasha tried the water…..said it was better than Starbucks!!??

Up we went still further, right to the top of the mountain.  A couple of the trailheads start up there. Great views in all directions.  Quite windy and definitely a good 10 degrees cooler. Nice local artisan shop, a coffee shop/restaurant and gift store with some really nice stuff….beautiful sweaters, all made locally.  Found a nice blown glass Christmas ornament.  Wandered around to take in the views from all directions. There is a huge rock that hangs over a precipice that people were climbing on, apparently you get an even better view…..the kids climbed it but looked like potential broken ankle stuff to me.  Big parking area with very few cars……a bus load of tourists arrived just as we were leaving…..good timing!

Back down the twisty road to find a restaurant that could handle 12 of us for lunch….which we did, O Luar da Foia (no website but excellent Tripadvisor reviews).  C & M met us there after their hike, which they said was great but a bit chilly.  The restaurant managed to seat all of us at two tables across from one another.  The views from there are spectacular……and luckily much warmer just this much further down the mountain.  And the food was really good…..not cheap but you are paying for the view.  Had the peri peri/piri piri prawns which were huge and full of delicious meat…..right into the head.  Came with what looked like plain old rice but was also really good with herbs and garlic.  It also came with a salad that was pretty much just lettuce, pea shoots and orange wedges in a really tasty orange dressing.

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There were lots of storks up near Monchique too……they are everywhere here in the Algarve.  They build huge nests on anything and everthing that is tall, like chimney stacks, telephone/electric poles, church steeples etc.  All appear to have babies right now which are pretty darn big to start!  You see at least 2 or 3, sometimes more, in each nest.  Amazing birds and fun to watch.

A quick stop at a super market in Monchique town on the way down…..it takes a lot of shopping to feed 12 people!  Was interesting to say the least with 10 of us “shopping”!!  Plan was to only pick up a few things, but as at home, that was not the case.  Toilet paper for 12…….48 roll packages on sale so we grabbed that and honestly they think of everything here….that great big pack at home would mean poking a hole in it somewhere to be able to carry it but here they have plastic HANDLES on the big packs!!   Scotties you really need to step up to the plate at home!!

The weather was a bit iffy today.  Started out a little cloudy, but could still see the mountain off in the distance so gave it a go anyway…..glad we did.  Maybe just marine fog but windier this morning and not terribly hot.  Cleared up quite a bit and got warmer but as we climbed up the mountain it got even windier and was damn cold at the top.  But was definitely worth it.

Back home around 3.  Had warmed up nicely and no wind!!  Kids went for a swim, we sat around yakking and enjoying a couple of glasses of wine.

Jill and Larry decided they were doing dinner tonight…….ordering pizza!!  That worked for everybody.  They would deliver but the house really did not have an address, and they weren’t familiar with the name of the place, so Brenda, Jill and I drove down to pick them up.  Today was the Corpus Christie bank holiday so “downtown” Ferragudo was just rockin’.  Cafes and restaurants were full, a guy entertaining with magic tricks in the square, another singing…..lots of fun.  Pizza from “Delizia”, crazy busy too.  Still ended up waiting 45 minutes for it.   Just as we were leaving home there had been a mass “flyover” of seagulls.  There had to have been hundreds of them coming from every direction heading to town…..the fishing boats were coming in for the evening!  We found them in town!  The fisherman were cleaning their fish and throwing the guts etc. back in the water which created a seagull feeding frenzie.  Quite something to see.  Also managed to get a couple of great pics.

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The pizzas were excellent…..nice thin crispy crust with lots of toppings.

More cards and chatting and bed.  Great day.

Fri June 21

Salema and Sagres today…….a three car caravan, which did not disappoint in comedic relief!  I was in the lead (probably the least directionally challenged of all of us….and that isn’t saying much!) Rae and Jill were my navigators.  After checking google maps, it appeared to be quite simiple…..only two roads to get to Salema, our first stop.  No problem getting out of Ferragudo, bypassing Portimao completely so that was good.  Mark and family were in the second car and Larry, Glen and Brenda in the third.  Larry is not a fast driver so I was constantly slowing down to keep him in sight pulling up the rear.  All was good until the second roundabout when Larry had fallen too far behind and too the wrong turn off……seen him do it, so got on the phone right away.  Tried all their numbers but NONE of them answered their phones!  Oh well……  Found a nice big parking lot at a stadium to pull into and phone again and got Brenda who said they were actually going in the total opposite direction, heading to Faro!!  I started laughing so hard I could hardly breathe……kept them on the phone until they got turned around and were finally heading in the right direction.  Told them where we were and that we’d wait until they came by……you just could not miss this spot, right?  Waited and waited and waited.  No sign of them after almost 1/2 and hour.  Phoned again and they said there were seeing signs for Salema, so would just meet us there.  Told them to look for “praia parking” signs and follow them.

Off we went, on a bit of an adventure of our own.  Took the “a” exit, which was one exit too soon.  Checked google to make sure we could still get to Salema from there and carried on (only 4km away).  What a beautiful drive.  We went through a very nice touristy town/development called Luz. The road then takes you thru some big dunes and inland through farms, cobbled roads and beautiful rockly hillsides and another place called Burghau (sp?) …..a bit of a detour but a very nice one!  And Mark followed all the way….no problem.

Finally made it to Salema.   https://www.travel-in-portugal.com/beaches/praia-da-salema.htm  Parking in Salema is a bit limited, right in the main part of town at the beach.  It’s very tiny with a couple of shops, restaurants, lots of condos but very scenic and a gorgeous beach.  We parked and went off to explore the little town.  Had coffee and walked on the lovely beach. 45 min later and still no sign of car 3.  Called again and said they were now seeing signs for Lisbon!!  More laughing!!   Almost an hour later they’d managed to get turned around again and arrived safe and somewhat sound!

Found a busy little “chippy shop” right on the main drag that could seat all 10 of us….two separate tables but it worked.  Frozen fish and chips but good enough and a nice glass of rose.  Did a bit more exploring with the late arrivals then on to Sagres.

Chris and Marie had headed off surfing somewhere……they never sit still!!  Thought we might see them at Sagres.

Sagres was only a 15-20 minute drive. Three beaches here that we know of….Praia Mareta and Tonel, which supposedly are very touristy and crowded, so we picked Praia do Beliche instead.  Parking is a bit helter skelter at the top of the bluff but there was quite a bit so no problem finding a spot.  Parked at the edge, no guardrail so made sure I left at least 15 feet in front of the car…..could be very scary because there is nada to stop you from just going right over!!  The view of the beach from the top is beautiful.

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Quite the walk down the stairs, which are a bit steep near the bottom with no handrails so you kind of have to find rocks and cliff bits to hang on too if needed, but so worth every stair (down and back up!) and probably why it’s less crowded than the other beaches .  There are no words to describe the beauty of this beach…..a beautiful crescent with soft, fine sand and golden red cliffs surrounding it, small caves to duck into to get some shade.  There are no facilities down at the beach of than an umbrella/chair rental place and a restaurant/café/bar with NO bathroom!  This was by far the most beautiful place we’ve seen so far.  Spent an hour or so on the beach, just walking from end to the other.  Would love to go back for a beach day with a picnic.  My pictures just do not do this place justice!!

https://www.algarvetips.com/beaches/sagres/praia-do-beliche/

Drive home was uneventful……everyone was on their own to find their way back.  At one of the Ferragudo roundabouts there’s a big field and today it was filled with storks…..there must have been a 100 of them.  First time we’d seen them on the ground.  Interesting to watch, thought maybe they were teaching the babies something.

All 12 of us headed into town for dinner at Tapas Bar Sao Joao.  The guy set up a big long table for us in the middle of the street….fun!  Worked out really good.  Everyone ordered a variety of tapas dishes, which we all shared.  Chicken wings (v good) mushrooms stuffed with cheese and bacon (v good), calamari (really tender and v good), mixed seafood fritters and veggie skewers, all washed down with big jugs of a great sangria.  Was lots of fun sitting outside but lucky the streetlights came on when they did or we wouldn’t have been able to see!  Sat there for a few hours…..was a great time.  The bill came to 15E per person, which really wasn’t bad at all considering we were all very full and all a bit tipsy.

Back home…sat outside with more wine and lots of talking and laughing.  Everybody was feeling pretty good by the time I went to bed around 11:30.

Just another great day!  Can’t believe a week has gone by already!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Portugal and Spain – June 2019 Week 2

Sat June 8

No comforters on the beds…..woke up around 2:30AM freezing.  Grabbed one from the closet and warmed up nicely.  Slept until just after 7.   Breakfast at the hotel (9E), the usual smallish continental buffet, good though.

Ready to get on the road by 9:30.  A bit challenging to get the car out of the parking spot…..kind of like between a rock and a hard place but in this case the neighbouring parked car and the concrete wall…..arms got a good work out!  Managed to get out and on to the elevator and on to the street with no problem.  Set the GPS for the Seville airport and off we went.   246km, very much the same terrain….fields, farms, towns here and there and a few more vineyards.  The roads are excellent in Spain too…..no issues with them or the drivers.

Our excitement for the day was trying to find the long term parking (P1) at the Seville airport.  GPS got us to the airport no problem but then tried following the exits and sign for parking.  Found a sign with an arrow for P1 and P2 but that took us on the other side of a barrier with no access to the lot, which we could clearly see.   No other alternative except to go back onto the highway.  Took the first exit and did a repeat of our first attempt (exit 533) hoping that we’d just missed another road….no, ended up in the same place.  Four people watching for the road/sign for P1/P2….not sure how we could have missed it AGAIN!  So this time we took the exit from the opposite direction (exit 532) which had better signage and found the P1 long term lot with no problem.  Fun!!  Parking for 2 nights is 30E…..worth it just to avoid driving in the city and paying for parking there.  Taxi to our hotel 25E.

Our hotel is fantastic!  Hotel Casa Imperial  http://www.casaimperial.com/en-gb  Originally built in the 16th century by possibly a nobleman or a merchant.  Very Moorish with all the arches, walkways and nooks and crannies.  Lots of lovely sitting areas and patios, a little pool/pond, big heavy doors, wrought iron railings and beautiful potted plants.  The rooms have a separate little sitting area, beautiful bed linens and towels, brightly painted walls, lots of wood work and rather antique bathrooms….all very nice.  Brenda and I did a little happy dance because it’s actually better than what it looked like on the website!  We had a complimentary bottle of wine in our room which we wasted no time in opening…..had just enough time to sit in the little seating area right outside our room and enjoy one glass before heading out.

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Lovely streets and plazas in the old town, brightly painted buildings, especially some of the churches…..pink, yellow and orange seemed to be the colours of choice….a lot of beautiful tile work, wrought iron railings, decorations etc., flowers everywhere and many very nice shops…..tons of shoe stores!  I think I’ve found my happy place!!

Wasted so much time at the airport this morning it was almost 3 by the time we had lunch.  With such little time in the city we had to make a decision on what to use our valuable time seeing…..we opted for the Alcazar instead of the cathedral, which from the outside is beautiful and massive.

In line for over half an hour…..we had hoped to be able to buy tickets for tomorrow but that can only be done online….not at the ticket booths, so we paid our 11.50E (3E if your a senior with ID).  Gardens are very beautiful, well tended with a real variety of trees, plants and flowers….some are labeled.  Inside and out the arches, the tile work, all is exquisite, as is the wood and marble carving, fountains and ponds.    Map was pretty useless unfortunately.  Game of Thrones fans will want to see it for sure!  Very interesting history and it is beautiful.  It’s one of those places that you must see when in Seville!

History

https://www.gameofthronesspain.com/film-location/alcazar-of-seville.php

Was after 7 so we just wandered around slowly working our way back towards our hotel.  Really glad we are all “wanderers”…..best part of seeing a lot of places is just coming down a street that opens into a beautiful park or plaza….some very beautiful shops and architecture, which is very Moorish….some of the buildings with the closed in wooden balconies reminds me of the ones in Istanbul (Byzantine/Ottoman?).

Found a nice tapas bar for dinner, Lucs’a City Bar.  http://www.lucascitybar.com/  Had my first ever salmorejo, a cold tomato soup  ….so, so good!  Shared meat croquettes, prawn fritters, breaded meatballs, pork cheek stew (excellent!), a big salad and a large jug of sangria  13E each.  Figured out where we were on the map and worked our way back to the hotel.  Fun day (even at the airport!).  Lots of walking in this beautiful city.

Sun June 9

Slept great, other than having the AC a tad too cool…a bit of a sleep-in for all of us, which was nice.  Just after 9, found a great little bar for breakfast. Bar Alfalfa …..coffee, croissant and marmalade for 3E.

Destination today was Plaza Espana, which is FANTASTIC!!  It’s massive and has to be one of the best plazas I’ve ever seen.  Impossible to get a good picture of it all….you would need an aerial view to appreciate it.  Beautiful buildings in an arch around the plaza. Around the bottom of the buildings are niches, representing each Spanish province, with seating and beautifully painted tile scenes that reflect the area. There’s a canal in the middle of the plaza, you can even rent boats to row around, bridges with beautiful ceramic spindles, railings and lamp posts, fountains.  Just incredibly lovely.  Lots of people!!  We caught the end of the kids part of a marathon that was finishing in the plaza.  Beautiful manicured parks on both side of the plaza…..huge shade trees, palms, ficus that resemble banyans, great walking paths and pretty gardens.  What a great place!!

Walked down to the river from there.  Pedestrian walkway, Paseo de las Delicias, along the river, some nice little al fresco bars.  The river was busy with tour boats, canoers, kayakers etc.   Stopped for a sangria and beer break.  Bought a jug that turned out to be way more than we could drink….very strong (brandy and vermouth in it).  Feeling a bit loopy after a glass and half!  Drank all we could and gave the rest to the people at the next table and carried on.

Crossed the river.   Lunch at The Phoenix Pub (Irish!)…..burgers and quesadillas and Guinness…all very good.  My bill came to 8.50E.

Spent the rest of the afternoon wandering through the maze of narrow streets, some not much wider than alleyways….lots of pedestrian only streets.  Into a couple of the smaller churches, which are as beautiful inside as they are colourful on the outside.

Back to the hotel for a bit of rest around 4:30.  Checked emails, updated the journal.  Rae and I finished off the bottle of wine.  I went down to the little pool, which wasn’t really for swimming…..but nice to stick your feet in for a while.  Was nice to just sit and have a bit of quiet time….we did a lot of walking today!!  But one of the best cities ever for walking/wandering/people watching/eating/drinking……

Off to dinner around 7:30….in a different direction tonight.  Went to see the Metropol Parasol…..the “mushroom thing”  Las Setas de la Encarnación (Incarnation’s mushrooms).  There are no words to describe it really.  A bit odd in the middle of the old town but very unique and definitely interesting to wander around and through.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metropol_Parasol   Had a not so good dinner across the plaza from it…..chicken in a cream sauce with bacon on a bed of grilled peppers and onions and roasted potatoes, which were the best part, along with the white sangria (13E).

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Took our time getting back to the hotel….lots of people out and about for a Sunday evening!  Brenda went to bed, Rae, Glen and I checked out the rooftop terrace….nice view but nothing up there.  Down to the bar for a glass of wine and then to pack up for tomorrow.  Such a good day.  Will be sorry to leave Seville……I really love this place!

Mon June 10

Up around 7, finished packing up and around the corner for breakfast.  Very busy everywhere this morning…..people heading to work, kids off to school, bikes, scooters (manual and electric).  Can’t remember the name of the café but was one that everyone seemed to be stopping at to pick up coffees and goodies to go on their way to work.  Breakfast was excellent…..sort of a “semi-English”….scrambled eggs, Serrano ham, tomatoes, toast and coffee for 7E.  Took our time this morning.  Arcos is only a couple hours from Seville and we couldn’t check into our airbnb until 2ish so no hurry.

Taxi back to the airport.  Found the car, loaded up and got on to the highway in a round about sort of way….but certainly easier leaving than arriving!  Off to Arcos de la Frontera.   http://www.andalucia.com/province/cadiz/arcos/home.htm  Put the lower town parking garage address in the GPS and off we went.

The roads here in Spain are really good, excellent highway system.  First toll road (7.45E)….you pay before you get on.  Took just over an hour from the toll booth.

Too early for lunch…..most places don’t start serving food until 1PM.  Had coffee and some pastry to tie us over and headed for the big Carrefour store to stock up.  Trunk was full with our 4 pieces of luggage so everyone except the driver had at least one bag on their lap!  GPS got us to the car park but we missed the entrance the first time by……no signs and looked like it was the road to a park.  That gave us a chance to see Arcos from the road below…..what a beautiful white town up on the sandstone cliff.  Parking is 15E per day or 50E for a 5-7 day pass.  It’s a multi-level parking garage with an attendant (on level 2)…..who very nicely called a taxi for us to take us up the hill to the house.  The taxi came right in to the garage which was handy to load everything from the car.

Arcos is very hilly…..up and up we went through what looked like completely impassable narrow streets, hairpin corners. Calf and thigh busting hills to climb….not to mention the ones we went down.  Roads so narrow on some streets people have to step up onto doorsills so cars can get by….but this place is beautiful!!  Beatriz was there to let us in and show us around.  Our place, on Bovedas Ave,  is pretty close to the top of the town….beautifully restored and renovated 17th century townhouse,  It’s a huge house, lots of room, beautiful arches and woodwork, big well supplied kitchen (lots of good knives!), great air conditioning in all the rooms, big dining room, a funky, windy, ornate metal staircase to the bedrooms, office/library and patios on the second floor.

https://www.airbnb.ca/rooms/5295393?location=Arcos%20de%20la%20Frontera%2C%20Spain&adults=4&source_impression_id=p3_1565504527_DoSn7%2Baonfz%2Fe0Oz

Unloaded our groceries and got settled in.  I didn’t even attempt to carry my suitcase up the stairs…..simply took out my packing cubes and toiletry bag and left the bag downstairs.

Out to explore!! Up and down, in and out of doorways to let cars pass.  There is a little bus stop and a little alimentaria shop a few yards down the street. Lots of restaurants, cafes and local artisan type shops.

The views around the perimeter streets out into the valley around this place are amazing.  One side looks down on a lake, the other out over the river.  The town sits on a tufa or sandstone cliff with buildings clinging to the top.  Great views from the Mirador de la Peña that look out over the valley for miles.  Some of the ancient wall still exists here and there….and the old Castillo, which is now privately owned.

Stopped at a nice little bar (on the road!) for beer and sangria (very good!) 2.50E.  Got some wonderfully garlicky olives and a plate of chips to go with the drinks.  Lots of stores and restaurants were closed for siesta….most close around 1 and open again between 5-6.

Next to the bar is Convento de las Mercedarias Descalzas, an old convent from the 16th century that is still occupied by nuns….it’s closed to the public except when they supposedly have their cookie sales once a week on Tuesdays…..we were told it was originally done for fundraising for the old orphanage, which is long closed up, but the cookie baking continues today. Will have to have a look tomorrow.  This is onone of the many churches in this town!

Checked out the little store down the street…..some basic goodies and veg, wine but all pretty expensive.  The Carrefour was a good size so had pretty well everything we needed.  Also a Dia, so might check that out next time we need more food.  Had a great dinner in……nice big kitchen for us all to prep and cook in!!  Ravioli in a tomato sauce with peppers, onions and chorizo.  Very good.

Great day…..love Arcos!  Couldn’t have picked a better place in this area really….the old town is beautiful but with lots of amenities just down the road in the newer town, was easy to get to right off the highway.  So much to see right here!

To bed around 11.  Hard bed but great pillows…..you can hear the cars bumping down our cobbled road, which is one of the streets that you have to step into the doorway when one comes along.

Tues June 11

Beautiful morning!  Slept great.

Walked down to the car park…..not too bad at all.   Took about 15 minutes….the walk back up was a different story!!

On the road by 10 today…..Pueblos Blancos!  Most of them are in the el Bosque and Sierra & Grazelema National park.  The scenery is breathtaking, as is the road!  Up and up we went for what seemed like hours.  Road is in excellent condition but very narrow, barely enough room for 2 cars to pass a lot of the way.  The views though are spectacular in every direction.

Field after field of sunflowers, neatly cultivated groves of olive trees and what appear to be oak trees (acorns for the pigs??), wheatfields, fragrant pine and eucalyptus forests, beautiful lush deep valleys, steep rockfaced cliffs (seen a couple of climbers!).  Shared the road with a lot of cyclists….most coming down from the mountain at breakneck speeds!!  This area has to be a close second in beauty, although very different, to the Tuscan hills.  Had really no idea Andalucía was like this.  Saw a number of the pueblos blancos clinging to the hills, drove thru a couple of them….just picture perfect!  Some were pretty small with few, if any amenities, so we were glad we’d chosen Arcos as a base for touring this area.

10 Beautiful White Villages in Spain + Map & Itinerary

Made it to Grazelema just before noon…..took a bit longer than we thought because of the road and the times we stopped at viewpoints to admire the scenery.  What a pretty place.  Beautiful little plazas, white houses all with tons of potted plants.  It was market day so spent some time wandering thru……never get tired of the weekly markets!  Back to the plaza for cappuccinos and the Abuela Augustine cheese and sausage shop.  Bought some chorizo, great goat cheese and a bottle of wine.  So nice but other than the local shops there is nothing else for miles and miles……you’d have to be pretty stocked up to stay here…..no such thing as popping out to pick up a few things such a toilet paper if you ran out!  Siesta is strictly followed here…..everything was closing up so we headed to Ronda.

The road was mostly downhill from Grazelema but still very narrow and windy until we hit the main highway heading to Ronda.  Was hoping the see the bridge from the valley on our way in but appears that we came from the wrong direction for that.  Found a parking garage in the “new” town at the top of a pedestrian street.  Beautiful shops and lots of restaurants.  Stopped for lunch…..ordered gazpacho and some tapas, prawns in a spicy/garlic oil (so good we ordered a 2nd one!), mushrooms in a creamy garlic sauce and garlic cheese bread…..all was excellent and certainly had our fill of garlic for a few days!!  The street takes you right down to the park with the botanical gardens and the bullring (8E just to get in to see it).  The view from the garden is unbelievable…..goes on forever….fields, forest etc.  The town clings to the top of the cliffs.  The bridge, Puente Neuvo, approx. 300+ft high.  It crosses a very deep gorge (El Tajo).  Built in the 17-18th century…..it is really quite amazing.

Crossed the bridge into the old town…..very nice but very busy, at least on the main street.  Lots of narrow streets that go up and down…..didn’t explore too much but definitely much bigger than Arcos and way more tourists and touristy type shops mixed with some beautiful local artisan type shops.  Besides a very interesting history, the  attraction here is definitely the bridge and the view of the old town built choc-a-bloc on top and hanging off the cliffs.

Almost 5 when we left Ronda.  Uneventful drive home on a different route that was much easier to drive.  Supposedly the long way around but took only 1.5 hours instead of 3!  Still beautiful views, mountains dotted with more pueblos blancos.  Got a peek of Zahara off in the distance but decided it was too late to head there……it truly was one of the prettiest towns cascading down the hillside with the old fortress above and the very blue man-made reservoir below.

Back in Arcos, we parked and walked back up the hill…..not too bad really but definitely would not want to be dragging luggage and groceries up.  Had some time to relax and clean up before dinner.  Just up the street to Meson Los Murales for paella.  What a nice man!!  We stopped there yesterday for beer and sangria and chatted with him for a bit.  Tonight he made up a “special” paella mixto which was delicious….shrimp, prawns, mussels, squid, chicken, pork and veg. (still the “tourist” version…..one day I’ll get the real paella!)

IMG_6591He gave us a complimentary cheese plate appy to start.  Ordered sangria for Rae and me, Brenda had red wine, Glen a beer.  After dinner we had coffees and out came the Spanish equivalent of limoncello….very good.  He gave us a gift of a bottle of the red wine Brenda was drinking.  15E each!! Great day, fun evening, good food.  Late night for us….home after 11!

Wed June 12

Up at 7:30….late for me!  Coffee and breakfast and off to Jerez de la Frontera today.  Horses and sherry!  Only about a 1/2 hour drive from Arcos but a zillion roundabouts and one missed exit ended up taking another 1/2 hour to get back to the parking lot we wanted.  Even with wrong turns, missed exits etc. we’ve had no issues driving here.  Excellent roads, no problems with other drivers…..they actually stop for people in crosswalks here and keep to the right except to pass!  Found Plaza Arenal, had coffee and churros with chocolate for dipping.  Was market day so had a walk thru it..beautiful looking produce and lots of snails!!  Big piles of them on the tables….all very much alive.

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Grabbed a taxi up to the equestrian centre, to make sure we caught the training/exercising which only goes until 1:30, and then Sandeman Bodega for our sherry tour and tasting.

Very beautiful horses……what they were doing was all a bit greek to me but Rae explained as they went long which was helpful (she had horses many years ago and spent a year or two in England at riding school, so was really a treat for her to see this). No photos allowed inside!  Wandered around the yard after and enjoyed watching them work with horses outside as well but unfortunately you cannot go anywhere near the stables.

Sandemans was just around the corner so arrived at 1:30 for our tour/tasting.  Beautiful bodega!  Our guide explained the different kinds of sherry, the ageing process and why the barrels are stacked 3 or 4 high……the oldest on the bottom and youngest on top…..the “solera blending system”.  When the sherry from the bottom barrels is bottled, those barrels are topped up with sherry from the barrels above and so on.  https://www.sherrynotes.com/2013/background/sherry-solera-system/  They use only American oak for the barrels which are torched inside and painted black outside to help with the ageing. They’re used for 50-70 years then go to Ireland or Scotland for whiskey/scotch ageing.  Grapes are picked by hand and dried in the sun to bring out the sugar.  The pressing is all automated, unlike Port.  Tasting and tour was 8E each, which included two charcuterie plates….cheese, ham, crackers and olives.  Lasted about an hour….really enjoyed it and found it all very interesting.  Still not a big sherry fan though…….

Walked back to the main pedestrian street on the way back to the plaza only to find everything except a couple of cafes and restaurants closed up tight for siesta!  Had coffee and then to see the Jerez Alcazar, which was also closed!  Nice from the outside.  Jerez is a city of just over 200,000 people but at siesta time the streets are virtually empty of people and cars.   Jerez is not one of most picturesque places for sure……Rick Steves called it “gritty”, which is a good description.  Some nice pedestrian only streets with big trees and nice shops but also lots of big, kind of “soviet bloc” type apartments.  Was good to see it but not on my list of places to go to again and very glad we didn’t stay there, which was an option we had originally tossed around because of the location.

Back home for dinner……declicious frittata with cheese and chorizo that we bought yesterday in Grazelema.

Gibraltar tomorrow.

Thurs June 13

Left around 9 for Gibraltar.  Just Brenda and me today.  Took about an hour and 1/2 to get there.  Was beautiful when we left Arcos but started to cloud over the close we got to the coast (marine cloud??) and much cooler!  Parked in the big lot in La Linea and walked across the border.  Immediately noticed the chaos as we started walking…..horns honking, mega traffic congestion, sirens, line up at the border, tons of people.  It was also really windy….almost chilly.  Crossed the border and thru customs.  The road then crosses the airport runway!  There’s a traffic light that turns red when a plane is landing.  Was kind of fun standing in the middle of a runway!  Didn’t see any planes land, which would have been interesting.  Got a good cloudy picture of “the rock” from there.

Says it’s a 1.5km walk to the main square, which it may have been.  As soon as you walk thru customs there are guys selling tours…..in hindsight we probably should have taken one to see the sites but for whatever reason I just wasn’t “feeling” the place.  Maybe it was the weather, which was verging on drizzle at that point.  The gondola was closed because of the wind, so we couldn’t have gone up if we’d wanted too.  Grand Casemates Square is huge, ringed with lots of cafés and restaurants…..not terribly pretty though.  Main street was also a bit disappointing…..it’s pedestrian only with lots of souvenir shops, clothing and shoe stores, cafes etc. also lots of bits of paper, wrappers and cups…..kind of messy.  There were hanging baskets but with dead or dried up plants in them.  Many of buildings needed a nice new coat paint, some had big chips of paint or peeling paint….sort of dingy.   Very crowded and just no ambiance to me…..certainly not “pretty”.  Walked thru Irish Lane…..a couple of pubs but again not terribly attractive.  Maybe it would look better in the sun.  Walked to the end of Main Street and back.  We did see the changing of the guards which was fun.  Had fish and chips at a pub (good)….the staff was nice enough but we were asked twice if we wanted our bill before we’d even finished our lunch!  That just never happens in Spain!   Walked back thru what the gal at the pub had told us was “old town”, but unless we missed something, it looked just like the rest of town but with a lot of steps to get up to it.  Had hoped to find some of the pretty streets with cafes that I’d seen online but was not to be.   We did think for a minute or two about taking a tour but had pretty much decided we’d seen enough.  I’m sure we probably missed a lot and maybe would have changed our minds about the place…..maybe I’ll come back another time and see it in a completely different light!  Would have been fun to see the apes, but oh well.

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The sun finally came out when we were leaving……

Drive home took just over and hour.  Did a bit of shopping in some of the craft/artisan shops on the walk back up the hill….lots of very nice ceramic places.   Rae had made a great dinner….roast chicken, potatoes, sautéed green beans and tomatoes and stuffed mushrooms!!  All really yummy.  Thought we’d go out for dessert down the street…..Rae and I ordered sangria, which pretty much came with an entire fruit salad in it…..huge! B & G had coffee and cheesecake…..all very good.

Long day with Gibraltar trip, which was unfortunately a little disappointing to me.

Fri June 14

Slow start this morning……had thought about going to Cadiz but decided to just stay close to Arcos.  Dawdled down to the parking lot….in and out of shops…..so many nice shoe stores!  Drove down the “low” road (south of Arcos) to get some good pics of the dramatic towering sandstone cliffs on the south side of Arcos.  Really quite beautiful and amazing the whole place hasn’t come crashing down.  Looks like one good rain storm could do it!  Drove around the outskirts to find the nice little lake we can see from the top of town.  It’s a man-made reservoir.   There’s a hotel, Meson dela Molinera, with a nice big patio over the lake and another sort of beach area with all sorts of floaty water toys like slides and a climbing wall, peddle boats and motorized boats that pulled rafts around.  Lots of fun for kids.  Had a great lunch at the hotel….layered salad of avocado, lettuce, tomato, egg, smoked salmon and mayo all topped off with a balsamic drizzle.  A bit further along is a nice man-made beach/picnic area with lovely soft sand, picnic table and lots of trees for shade.  A few people but no one in the water, which felt quite warm.  A great spot to get pictures of Arcos from the other direction…..not quite as dramatic but still very pretty because you could see more of the town up on the hill.

 

Back to Arcos.  Did a bit more souvenir shopping on the way back to the house….tee shirt for Karter, very pretty embroidered mantilla for Cadence and a hot pink and black polka dot flamenco dress for Kallie.  Had a bit of siesta and packed up.

Dinner tonight was Moroccan, Aljibe.  Was OK…..hummus was delicious with deep fried eggplant chips, bacalhau spring rolls were good too but the beef tajine was kind of boring….like pot roast with figs and apricots.  Good service though and very good wine.  Not cheap though, the most expensive dinner we’ve had so far,  112E for all of us.

Was a great 5 days here.  After touring around we decided that Arcos was definitely the best place to have stayed.  Great town, lots of restaurants and little shops as well as some good sized grocery stores like a Dia, Carmela, Carrefour etc. in the newer part of town.  Good location for day trips in all directions.  Had originally found a place in Grazelema that we’d really liked but after being there we were glad we didn’t stay…..very pretty but also quite isolated in the middle of the park with no real amenities other than a couple of shops, cafes and the local weekly market.

Back to Portugal tomorrow!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Italy 2012 – Abruzzo Cooking School and Puglia – Week 2

Sat Sept 15

Oh what a night!!  Looked like it was clearing up last night before we went to bed but was not to be!  A wicked thunderstorm…..lightening, wind, rain.  The outside shutter woke me up around 1:30AM banging around.   Got up to close them only to find my feet wet!!  The water was just pouring in under the closed inside shutters.   As soon as I opened them, to get the window and shutters closed, it was like someone had turned a hose on and in thru the window the rain came……I was wet, the bed was wet, the night table was wet, ….the floor was even wetter!!  Finally managed to get them all closed, and then the wind then blew thru the bathroom shutters and knocked the curtain rod down…..bathroom floor now wet too!   Luckily Connie was up by then and we got everything put back and dried up, with our towels!!,  and managed to get back to sleep.

Took our time this morning….didn’t have to be out of the room until 10:30, so we had breakfast then finished packing and had the hotel call a taxi to take us to the car rental office in new town Termoli (which is still rather old).

This was the first time that I’ve ever been asked to show my international drivers license!  Just lucky that I had one (from our trip in June).  Not sure what would have happened if I hadn’t.  Connie was also a driver but they didn’t ask for hers…..good thing because she didn’t have one!  Our car is a Fiat Twingo.  Good enough…..the main thing was the luggage fitting in it.

Made it out of Termoli safe and sound and on to the SS16 south (trying to avoid auto routes…much more scenic and we had lots of time)…..following the signs to Bari.  Just after crossing into Puglia we saw a gal walking along the highway…..all dressed up.  Strange since we were really in the middle of no where…..vineyards and orchards on both sides of the highway for miles.  Then we saw another…..and another!  We’re a little slow I guess but we finally clued in to who, or what, they were!  The grape harvest was in full swing with lots of workers…..so I guess this was a prime area for business opportunities.  It went on for miles….just about all the way to Bari.  Sometimes there was only one gal, sometimes two or three.  Some just walking, others sitting in plastic lawn chairs at the side of the road…..or just hanging out in the back of pick-up trucks.  Bizarre but very interesting!!

We were dying for a break and some coffee but the area seemed to be a bit sketchy to us.  Besides the ladies, the road was in really quite terrible condition, lots of farm vehicles and trucks and a ton of garbage along with sides of the road…..so un-Italian!  But that said, it’s really quite beautiful driving through this area…..vineyards, and the Gargano peninsula off in the distance.  We kept on going until we came to an autogrille that had lots of cars and a tour bus.

The road was only one lane in either direction so a bit of a slow go to start.  I did pass a few of the slow moving vehicles and was going around 100kms/hr and cars/trucks were still passing me!  Made it to Alberobello around 3:30.

Excellent blog https://www.wanderingitaly.com/maps/puglia-maps-guide.html  Not a lot of information on Puglia, compared to all the other touristy places in Italy.  Alberobello, yes but beyond that all the travel books have very small sections for this area.

Called Francesca and she met us at the car wash.  We followed her to the trullo.  It was supposed to be 5 minutes from Alberobello, and I guess if you are a crow, it would be!  It was quite isolated down a terrible gravel, potholed road that is only wide enough for one car.  Stone walls along the sides, so not sure what will happen if we run into another car along that stretch of road.  Took way more than 5 minutes to get here…….you can only go 2 kms per hour.

The trullo is absolutely lovely!  Francesca gave us a tour.  The only bedroom that was made up was the pretty master bedroom???  When we asked where the bedding was for the other big bedroom, she looked at us and started laughing!  She thought Connie and I were a “couple”.  LOL!  Off she had to go, down that horrid road, to somewhere to get bedding for the other room.  The kitchen is really big, which is nice with doors opening onto the covered patio.  Lots of counter space.  Nice big living room with a fireplace and one other teeny little other bedroom that we didn’t use.  Ensuite was lovely, other bathroom was big and good enough….right next to the other bedroom.  We flipped and Connie got the big room.  Loved the dome ceilings!

The only problem so far has been the bloody millipieds!  They are absolutely gross….some big ones that almost look like leeches, some very tiny and everything in between!  YUCK!  There were a couple on the ceiling in the kitchen….they curl up and fall asleep or whatever they do, and then fall down!   Just gross.  Got rid of those and figured out that keeping the patio doors closed seemed to stop them from coming in en masse.  The covered area is really nice….big table, lots of chairs and a gorgeous view with trulli dotting the valley and off in the distance.  The millis also like to climb up the walls outside and curl up on the ceiling of the patio too……a quick sweep with the broom got rid of them for a while.  Connie does the sweeping…..I stand way off to the side horrified by those things!!

Off down the bumpy road to pick up some groceries.  Shopped at the DOK…picked up some essentials (wine!) and back home.  It got dark rather quickly and we really didn’t pay much attention to the road on the way in or out unfortunately.  Completely missed the turn off from the main road (just about to Locorotondo before we turned around).  Found “our” turn off and then the other turn off (thanks to the pizza joint in the middle of nowhere) to OUR road.  All good until we came to a fork in the road….of course we took the wrong one.  Kept going and going….pitch black by now and the road was just as bad as OUR road…..came to a dead end after a good 10 minutes.  A gate with nowhere to turn around….ditches on both side of the road instead on stone walls!  Argh!!  I had seen a driveway of sorts back a little ways, so I started backing up with only the backup lights to keep us on the road.  Was a little worried I was going to burn out the clutch.  Finally came to the “driveway” which was only a couple feet before another gate.  Connie got out and helped navigate the back and forth, inch by inch, so I didn’t end up in the ditch.  Happy to say we made it, not without a bit of sweat!  What an adventure!  We also decided at that point that we would never go out for dinner….or after dark!  Just too scary on that road.

Got home and immediately opened a bottle of wine.  Connie did the milli sweep outside….had a glass or two and put together a tomato and onion salad, cheese and sausage, olives and crackers for dinner.  Sat outside and chatted until just after 11.

No millis in my bedroom….thank god!  Took a gravol.

Sun Sept 16

Slept good….wine + gravol!  Up at 7:30.  Coffee and milli patrol on the patio….all good after I swept and I think squished/crushed quite a few of the buggers.  Had rained overnight!!  Nice and sunny tho this AM.  Some nasty looking clouds off in the distance.  Not in a hurry this morning…..sat around drinking coffee and yakking until lunch time.  Just going to Alberbello today.

Getting out of our road was no problem….we also made sure we noted some landmarks to make our return trip a little easier.  That road is wicked.  Really kind of worried about bottoming out the car in a few spots.

Took a good 10 minutes to get into Alberbello (not 5!) Just parked in the first lot we came to so a bit of walking, which was OK.

Ah, what can I say about Alberobello!!  It is a place out of a fairytale!  Very pretty, unique with the trulli.  Very beautiful but also very Disneyland-ish!  You can go on horse and carriage rides, tours etc. There are many, many tacky tourist souvenir shops as well as some really nice local artisan shops…some rather expensive.  Wandered around for a couple of hours.  Lots of trulli, of course.  The church is beautiful.  Found an artisan shop and bought a couple of really cute hand painted Christmas ornaments and some beautifully embroidered tea towels for gifts.

It was pretty crowded being Sunday I guess??  This is the first place we’ve been that had a ton of tourists from all over.  Many Italian tourist also.  The weather was a little iffy….hot and sunny alternating with cloudy, cold and windy and the odd drop of rain thrown in.

Stopped and had a coffee and a Panini (not good).  Found an ATM then explored a bit more.  Found a nice Prodotti tipici store hoping we’d be able to get some sausages but nothing in the way of meats left.  Bought some more wine, sour cherry jam and artichoke spread.

Made it back to our trullo without any wrong turns….definitely much easier in the daylight.

Dinner was a beet salad, tomato bruschetta , the salumi and cheese we bought yesterday.  All really good!  Just the kind of dinner I like.  We finished off the bottle of rosato wine.

I swear I am going to kill off the entire millipied population in Puglia!  I found one in my room….on the floor.  Caused me much anxiety!  Thank god for gravol!

 

Mon Sept 17

Market day in Cisternino!  http://www.madeinsouthitalytoday.com/cisternino.php   What a beautiful place it is!  It’s one of the white villages from Roman/Greco times.  Up on a hill with gorgeous views in all directions.  The drive there was beautiful too…..through well tended countryside, trulli in every direction you look.  Vineyards, orchards and olive trees everywhere.  Very nice “country” road, in relatively good repair.

The market in Cisternino is fantastic!  It’s huge on many streets and piazzas….the usual stuff….clothes, shoes, underwear, housewares etc. and food!  The food was at the very end.  Many veggie and fruit stands, a few cheese and meat trucks….no chicken or porchetta trucks though.  Have decided that since we’re eating in, we’ll use some of the receipes from our cooking classes!  Bought some veg for our sauce (4E) some parm cheese…huge big chunk for 3.42E that would have cost $15 at home.  Meat for our sauce…2 veal chops, 1 large chunk of pork with the bone, and 4 sausages…all of which cost 4E!  So basically dinner plus extra stuff for under 10E…pretty incredible really.  We had a cooler bag and ice packs to stuck everything in there.

Walked back (uphill) to the car…..to find a ticket on it!  1E….I guess we parked somewhere we shouldn’t have but saw no sign anywhere….and there were lots of other cars parked there too, so who knows??  There was so much more of Cisternino that we could have seen but oh well.

On the road to Ostuni…..beautiful drive too.  Ostuni is also a “white city”.  Very, very pretty and hardly any tourists!  Very “greek-ish”.  Parked in a lot near the elementary school.  Crazy!  Because everyone arrived at the same time to pick up their kids for lunch.  Absolute mayhem.  People parking everywhere and anywhere, yelling and waving at their kids, the kids waving and yelling back, people honking their horns…..WOW!  It was like they hadn’t seen their kids for months!  Fun though to watch all the chaos!  We pretty much had to just stop….almost impossible to even walk along the street.

Walked along the lower wall for a bit….the views are incredible!  The valley below Ostuni is all olive groves, right to the sea.  Blue sky, blue water and green olive groves….amazing.  There really aren’t enough descriptive words in my head to come close to describing just how beautiful it is!

The old town, or centro storico, is lots of hills, stairs and narrow streets and alleys.  You could hear people having lunch in their homes….talking, dishes rattling etc.  After a 1/2 hour or so we ran into some tourists, otherwise not many people around at all.  Nice to be able to wander all over with very few people.  Lots of potted plants around the doorways, some very pretty doors with very elaborate frames of wood and carved stone.  Many steps and lots of laundry!  Finally hit the “touristy” area, which wasn’t very touristy at all!  A few restaurants and shops but far from what Alberobello is like.  Had lunch at a little bar….pizza for me, smoked cheese and meat, no  red sauce (yeah!)….Connie had a tuna salad which of course was huge and could have fed a family of 4.  A couple of Peronis and coffees.

Thought we were walking in the direction of the car but ended up at the top of the wall…..could see our car waaaaay down in the parking lot below.  But walking around and down we got the best view of the centro storico.

Found a back road for Connie to have a go at driving (had been a while since she’d driven a manual transmission car).  Followed that road for quite a while and ended up back on the highway next to the freeway.  Used secondary roads all the way back to Alberobello…..just so much more scenic and less frenetic!  A quick stop to pick up pecorino cheese, wine, water and bread on the way home.

Connie and I had a great time making our sauce, which was really good.  Chopped, diced and cooked, laughed and talked and drank wine!  Perfetto!  Had orecchiette with it.  Cheese and truffle honey and olives for appies first.  We ate a lot but have lots of leftovers that we’ll have to finish off tomorrow.  Coffee and the liqueur that Connie picked up.

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Sat outside after I wiped out a few more millipieds…..they seem to come out at night when it’s cooler.  Not as many though tonight…..I did find another one in the house…at least it wasn’t in my bedroom!  To bed after midnight!

Tues Sept 18

Slept OK.  Woke up at 5:30 but didn’t get up…..woke up again just after 7!

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Our trullo in the early morning sun

Off to Matera this morning….a little later than we’d planned.  Did some laundry!

Took just over an hour to get there.  Matera is just into Basilicata.  Not a terribly pretty area enroute or once there.  I guess all the brown dug up fields were probably wheat or semolina or something and may have been lovely in the summer but at this time of year it just looks barren or very stark.  Not many olive trees or vineyards….not many trees at all!  Roads were OK for the most part but lots of garbage….not really a nice drive at all, very disappointing after yesterday.

Matera, aside from the sassi, is quite a bit city.  Seen lots of the blue “P” signs but never really came across any parking lots.  We drove and drove for almost an hour.  Finally found a lot by the bus depot.  Then had to figure out where we were.  Found the TI office hoping to get a map but they were closed for lunch….everything here closes for lunch around 11:30.  Did manage to get a map from a hotel.

http://www.italyheaven.co.uk/basilicata/matera.html

The sassi are right in the middle of the city, so where we parked was about as close as one can get.  The place was just about deserted except for a couple of Japanese tour groups…..just amazes me that there are so few people around….I know this isn’t Tuscany but so much to see….some people just don’t know what they’re missing!  Bonus for us I guess.

The sassi are really quite amazing.  From the front they look like pretty standard Italian hilltown buildings but once inside they are definitely cave dwellings!  There are a couple…or 5….very poorly marked routes you can follow but we never did finish one before we ran into a different coloured sign and then started on that one.  The streets are very, very narrow….some are just steps.  It’s like you are in a big hole in the ground that works it’s way back up the hillside around it.

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Had a great lunch at a little restaurant, Nadi, https://www.ristorantenadi.com/it/index.asp?nav=ristorante .  We both had the pasta, I had wine and Connie had a beer.  Excellent!

Off exploring the maze of little alleys.  Lots of nice restaurants and B&B’s tucked away.  We toured a “Casa Grotto”, which is a re-creation depicting life living in the caves years ago.  On to a couple of the churches, Madonna delle Virtu and San Nicola dei Greci (Santa Claus!).  Some very well preserved frescoes and cavernous rooms carved out of the rock.  Lots of little nooks and crannies.  There was a modern art display in there too but pretty weird stuff….like tables on their sides with electric cables around them…..hahaha…we thought they were getting it set up for the display but were told, no, this IS the art!  Up to the duomo, only to find out it is closed for restoration work which was too bad because you could see the beautiful stained glass windows so can only imagine how lovely it would have been from inside.  We spent about 5 hours there and probably could have spent even more time….really quite a place.  It’s a UNESCO world heritage sight…..I see why.  Definitely worth the time and effort getting there…..and back!

Got lost trying to find our way back to the car!  Just as confusing trying to get out of Matera as it was getting in.  Had hoped we’d get back home before dark but was not to be!  Took many wrong turns before finding a sign for Gioia delle Colle (jewel of the hill/mountain….not!) but it turned out to be a bit of back road so the long way around.  G delle C almost broke me!  Would see a sign for Alberobello, exit the roundabout and never see another sign again…..only to turn around and end up at the same roundabout yet again.  After the 3rd time at the same roundabout, decided to take the exit for Putignano instead because I knew we could get to Alberobello from there too.   Made it to Alberobello, but came in from a different direction…..straight through the main part of town.  Dark as anything but we didn’t even get lost coming home from there.

Leftover pasta tonight for dinner.

Will definitely put gas in the car tomorrow…..we’ve got 2 bars left but who knows where we’ll end up tomorrow!

Wed Sept 19

Up early for us today….off to the Grotte di Castellana.  The millis seem to be slowly disappearing…..not sure if it’s because I’ve killed them all or really I think it’s just getting too chilly for them now…..hopefully they have snuggled in under all the rocks for the winter!!

Very uneventful drive….took about 40 min to get there.  Big parking lot with 1 bus and a handful of cars…..not sure if it’s just not tourist season anymore or what……again, very few people really.  Arrived just after 10 and the English tour started at 11 so went and had coffees and paninis (not good!) at the snack bar .  Very clean washrooms!

http://www.grottedicastellana.it/en/the-caves/

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Cavernous entrance to the grotto…..

Our tour had about 10 people.  Tour guide was really good.  We could only take pictures in the first part of the cave.  We did the 2 hours tour (15E per person).  We toured all the various “rooms”, seen lots of stalactites and stalagmites in varying stages of development…..it’s quite amazing what one little drop of what will do over millennia!  The “curtains” were my fav….looks like sheets of candles wax drips.  The cave was discovered by some guy in 1938.  They figure there are still hundreds of miles of underground to be explored.  At first it was quite chilly in the cave so I put my sweater on but as we got further and further into it (close to the “white room”) the humidity level increased at lot (really bad hair!!).  It was strange in that it seemed to get pretty warm but my skin was ice cold!  All in all a good tour, very interesting and lovely but this is not the most spectacular cave I’ve visited.

A quick drink and bathroom stop and back to Alberobello to pick up a few more things…..tea towel for me, a couple more Christmas ornaments for gifts, a nice golf shirt for Ken, and a visit to the tour office to get info on the trains to Lecce.  Very helpful guy!  Checked the internet to get the train times…..pretty much run once an hour, so no problem.  Got maps for Monopoli and info on the Brindisi airport (driving time, exits etc.).  Also asked about our 1E parking ticket from Cisternino….not to worry he said….I hope he’s right!   Not very crowded to day at all.  Bought a nice little print of the trulli.  Stopped at the DOK…picked up a chicken and some snacks.

Home early!  5:30.  Opened the wine and got the chicken ready, olive oil and fresh herb rub which I also put under the skin.  Connie did the eggplant parmesan……used the leftover sauce from Mon. and a lots of cheese.  Had lots of fun getting everything ready…..yakking and drinking our wine!  The oven didn’t really brown the chicken very well or get the parm bubbling so changed to the convection mode, which seemed to work better…..not terribly easy when there are no manuals on what exactly all the knobs and stuff do!   In the end it was all delicious!

Quite chilly tonight.  What a difference a week can make.  It’s like after the storms blew in Termoli, they headed south with us.  It’s lovely thru the day though….except for the wind.  If the sun is not out it’s definitely sweater and jean weather.  Very uneventful driving day….did not get lost anywhere!

Thurs Sept 20

Lecce today!  Up at 5:30 to get ready and drive into Monopoli to catch the train at 9:13.  The TI guy said it was about a 1/2 hour Italian drive so we allowed a little more than 1 hour!  Left at 7:50 and quite by accident ended up at the train station at 8:45.  Followed the signs for Monopoli and then the ones for the train station…..we saw 2 and then no more!  Ended up in a dead end parking lot which turned out to be the one for the train station….bonus! How lucky was that.  And we could park all day for free!  Amazing.  You buy your train tickets at the bar next to the station.  7.10E each way so 28.40E for both of us return…..much better than trying to drive there and park etc.

The train stopped at many towns along the way, including Cisternino.  Could see it up on the hill, also saw Ostuni…..both just lovely! From there the train runs pretty close to the coastline so everything looked very wind swept.  Olive groves for as far as you can see.  Definitely see why 70% of Italy’s olive oil comes from Puglia.  Other than olive groves, a few vineyards here and there, but nothing terribly spectacular scenery wise.  Some of the towns looked pretty sad with many derelict buildings, lots of graffiti and surprisingly a lot of garbage…..reminded me of around Naples!

The train station was about a 15 min walk from the centro.  We arrived just after 11 when everything that wasn’t a restaurant was closing up for siesta.  First to Basilica di Santa Croce.  Covered in scaffolding….which was too bad but we could at least see the rose window. Inside it is quite beautiful but not as spectacular as we were expecting.  All the pillars, capitals, side altars….everything has carved flowers, fruit, faces etc.  It looks like someone went crazy at a pottery/ceramic shop sale! This is baroque at it’s best!  A lot of the carving reminded me of della Robbia works….without the bright coloured paint.  The ceilings are amazing though.  They’re brown with lots of gold and have pictures in the middle.  Really pretty wrought iron chandeliers between each pillar and then the dome.  Each and every pillar has some…or a lot….of carving on the capitals…above, below, in the middle.  That is what makes it unique, otherwise not one of the best that I’ve seen.

From there we went straight to the Duomo (Duomo di Maria Santissima Assunta) ….was worried it would close up for the afternoon.  Nice belltower, which looked rather new but was from 1620ish.  Very nice wide open piazza…..with nothing in it. Very plain from the outside but really quite nice inside. Ceiling was much the same, beautiful, almost byzantine, chandeliers, many, many elaborately carved/decorated side chapels/altars (one is Bernini inspired….looks like a mini baldacchino from St Peters), very pretty stained glass windows and lovely tile floors.  Definitely a must see…..found it much more interesting than Santa Croce……more colourful, more alive!

Just after 1 by then so we found a nice little restaurant in an alley.  We ordered the “frittini misti” to start but really had no idea what we were going to get.  A couple of different kinds of croquettes (cheese and potatoes???), deep fried breaded olives (that were to die for!), deep fried meatballs…..which could have been horse meat , who knows….there is a lot of that on the menus down this way.  It was all really good!  For lunch I ordered the tagliatelli con agostinetta, which was one crayfish thing.  The pasta and sauce was excellent.  Connie ordered the calamari and prawns….also really good.  And a 1/2 litre of white wine for me and beer for Connie. Then coffee.

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It was a fun restaurant.  Lots of people….really busy with some family groups.  At one point some people had to move their table and chairs so that a man, who lived in the buiding across the alley, could park his car!!  Family run business…..fun owner and wait staff.  Not cheap though….44E.  Was 3:30 by the time we finished!

https://trattoria-storica-san-carlino.business.site/   (Still there but has some terrible reviews on tripadvisor, so we must have hit it on a good day!)

While having lunch we’d made a list and circled stuff on the map that we wanted to see, so started off with the idea that we’d do the route working our way back to the train station.  It had gotten really windy…..argh.  Wandered around….over to the Roman forum ruin, which might have been nice but couldn’t really see much of it because of a “Red Bull Soccer Exhibition” going on inside…..lots of tarps and promo tents, people, soccer players etc.  Some beautiful palazzo but unfortunately they were still closed (til 5) so couldn’t go in.  Quite by accident we found Museo Faggiani  http://www.museofaggiano.it/en/how-was-born/  ….which is quite small but set up really well and a very nice man at the entrance.  He had bought the house and rented it out for years.  Had some plumbing problems and as a result had to do some digging…..only then did he discover all the old wells and passage ways that went back centuries.  Each area is numbered and you follow the route and the descriptions….besides the Duomo, I think this might have been the highlight of the day.

They call Lecce the “Florence of the South”.  I would beg to differ with that description.  It’s a lovely place and definitely worth the visit but it really needs a lot of work.  Some very unique and lovely buildings with wrought iron balconies,  intricate carvings surrounding beautiful (and huge!) doors etc. but the city needs a good scrubbing!  A good powerwash is in order or however they’d clean the buildings.  So much black (dirt, pollution??) on everything….such a shame really.  I’m glad we went though.

Caught the 6:33 back to Monopoli.  That was a little stressful in that the train didn’t stop at the same stations as it did on the way down…..and you couldn’t always tell which station we were at because of where the train, or our car, stopped (not at the station sign, which you couldn’t always read anyway).  I knew we were close when I saw Ostuni lit up on the hill.  Had to watch very carefully from that point, in the dark, to make sure we were getting off at the right station……you have only like 2 or 3 minutes, or less!

Driving out of Monopoli was a bit of a challenge.  Many, many cars at that time of night and many narrow and one way street.  Kept heading in the direction we thought was the right way and finally found a sign for Alberobello.  The drive back was the same road that we came in on but it’s very dark at night….not a light to be seen.  Took my time, not without cars right on my ass pretty well the whole way.  They pass at any opportunity….or just pass anywhere, period….even on curves.  Didn’t worry too much about the guy behind me but the ones coming towards me….you just don’t know if someone will come around a curve in your lane!  The train arrived at 7:35 and we were home by 8:30…..did pretty good!

Opened the bottle of 2007 wine from our winery tour/tasting in Vasto.  Leftover eggplant parm and the frittini that Connie had bagged up at lunch, cheese with the truffle honey, olives, sausage, artichoke spread.  All good.

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I think I have managed to put the millipied population into extinction…..or its too cold for them now.  Only a couple of small ones lurking when we got home and none in the house the last couple of days!!

Sleep in day tomorrow.  Martina Franca and maybe Locorotondo.

Fri Sept 21

Up at 6:30.  So much for sleeping in!.  Coffee outside, as I’ve done each day so far.  Roosters crowing, dogs barking (morning, noon and night!).  It’s very pretty when the sun is coming up….a bit of a mist over the valley that last couple days.

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One of our views across the valley

Slow start this morning…..I updated my journal.  Connie had a nice sleep in until almost 10.  Finally got going around 11:30.

Martina Franca….a bit of a stressful place to drive thru.  Thought we had pretty good maps, and they probably were, but the big problem was finding the names of the streets…..not a lot of signs.  Got honked at a lot LOL!  After driving around for what seemed like forever we ended up in a parking lot that we’d driven by a couple of times already.  It was empty except for a few cars, so even after reading the signs we still weren’t really sure if we should park.  We did and it was OK luckily.  Had a bit of a walk to centro storico though.

Martina Franca is quite nice…..also a white town.  The old town is the usual narrow streets and alleys, but very well maintained and clean.  Some pretty old buildings palazzo and churches.  Lots of wrought iron railings, potted plants and flowers….quite lovely!  Of course though everything was closed except for a couple of restaurants.  We ended up at Due Agnelli, which was only OK.  Service was a bit snooty  really….maybe they were “the” ritzy restaurant in town??? Lunch was OK.  I had the cavatelli and mussels and wine, Connie had pasta as well.  They automatically added a 2.50E service charge, the first time we’d seen it anywhere down here.  Total bill was 32E for both of us.

MF is really quite a nice place.  Wandered around up and down and around the streets and through the piazzi.  Absolutely nothing was open…..not even a place to get coffee or a glass of wine!  But definitely quite enjoyable with so few people around.

Back to the car and thought about stopping at Locorotondo but was close to 5:30 already and had lots of packing and cleaning up to do.  A quick stop in Alberbello to grab some cash and one last bottle of wine.

Was quite pleasant (no wind!) so we sat outside….had a couple of glasses of wine and chatted.  Had all our leftovers for dinner and fried eggs and toast!

Got packed up before bed…..have slept pretty good the last couple of night without the damn millis to worry about…..none tonight at all!  Called Francesca to make sure she was here by 7:30 tomorrow.  Set the clock to 5:30.

Sat Sept 22

Up at 5:30 as planned.  A little anxious about the drive to Brindisi, finding the car rental place etc.  Our flight wasn’t until 11:20 and although the driving time was only supposed to be an hour, we know that isn’t always the case.

Cleaned out the fridge, took some of the cheese, sausage and crackers.  Francesca showed up right at 7:30.  Gave us back the 200E cash damage deposit and we were off.

Connie’s ceramic dish was broken…..cracked right in half!  How that happened who knows…I haven’t checked mine so I hope it’s OK.

On the road by 7:45, thru Fasano and on to the highway (no toll) heading towards Brindisi.  Even after being stuck behind a little old slow car we made it in just over and hour.  Dropped the car at the rental place, which was really simple because it’s right next to…almost attached….the airport.  Had tons of time…..a bit of wasted stress earlier!  Check in was quick and simple….no problems.  Went and grabbed coffees and dolci and just sat around until it  was time to go thru security etc. around 10:50.  Once thru security there is a food store…..an amazing food store!!  Many different kinds of pasta, sauces, salumi, cheeses, jars of everything, dishes, you name it they’ve got it! Got some dried cavatelli for Steve (brother).  Have to go outside and up the portable stairs to the plane.  Very nice, pretty new looking airport.  Easy to get to from the highway and very easy to drop off the rental car….good to know if I ever come back this way!

Flight to Rome on Alitalia was good…..first time with them for me.  Just over an hour.  Lots of hilltowns below…..quite interesting seeing them from above.  On some of them, you could very clearly see the circular roadways and the zigzaggy roads to get up to them.

Luggage came down quickly and Eduard was waiting just as planned.  It was nice driving through the outskirts of Rome and then recognizing things like Palatine Hill and Circus Maximux when we came to them.

Our hotel/B&B, In And Out B&B,  was such a find!  $99CDN per night.  It’s down a little alley, Viale de Fico, just around the corner from Piazza Navona.  Location is perfect.  Eduard had to maneuver down alleys with restaurants….people actually had to pull in their chairs for the car to go by!  Arrived at the B&B by 2.  The room is HUGE, 2 single bed, huge bathroom, 2 windows overlooking a different alley with bars and restaurants.  We finally have internet again so back in touch with the world!  This place is almost a must stay next time I come to Rome.

https://www.trivago.ca/rome-44337/hotel/in-and-out—piazza-navona-1942065

We hit the streets of Rome by 3.  It had been 20+ years since Connie had been to Rome so we thought we’d try and cover as much of it as was humanly possible in a few hours.  Beautiful day….bright and sunny and really hot!

Walked to Piazza Navona, a 2 minute walk, then off to find Orso 80 to make a reservation for dinner, if possible.  Had tried to eat there the last time we were in Rome….excellent reviews….but just didn’t work out so wanted to try it this time.  Unfortunately it wasn’t open until 7:30 so nothing we could do…..I guess I could have tried phoning!  Really nice leather shop across the street…..had a look around and bought a nice little black purse.

http://www.orso80.it/

Pantheon was our first stop……this building just amazes me every time I see it!!  It’s HUGE, it’s unique and it’s old!  Went through it quickly….saw Raphaels tomb again. Wasn’t as crowded as the last time.

Santa Maria sopra Minerva I think is my most favorite church in Rome!  I love the obelisk and Bernini’s elephant out front and inside is just beautiful….ceiling is blue with gold stars and of course Michelangelos Redeemer sculpture.    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Risen_Christ_(Michelangelo,_Santa_Maria_sopra_Minerva)  Lovely stained glass windows and altar. Spent over an hour inside….I touched the statue!!  How exciting really to have touched something Michelangelo touched 500+ years ago. Lots of interesting art and a chapel that was painted by Lippi.

Off to Campo di Fiore.  The restaurant that we wanted to eat at there wasn’t open until 7:15 and it was just 6:30, so found a café right in the campo and had a quick dinner….drinks and appies (fried veg, bruschetta with spinach and sausage).  Sat and rested our feet and just took in all the action.

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The campo is really a neat place with lots of stuff going on all the time.  Guys selling those stupid glow in the dark/throw up in the air flying things, others selling purses and bags from blankets they’ve laid down….which they can quickly scoop up when the Carabinieri (?) come along .  A few flower stalls left from the morning market (one of the best in Rome first thing in the morning!).

Stopped at Largo di Argentina   https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/torre-argentina-roman-cat-sanctuary.

From the campo we walked to Vittorio Emanuele, just a massive building!  Looking down Via del Fiore Imperiale you we saw the Colosseum lit up at night.  Walked by the Foro Traiana and the Colonna Traiana (which they have a cast of in the “cast room” at the V&A in London).  Next was the Trevi Fountain…took a bunch of pics and threw in coins, of course!  Very crowded around there at night but quite lovely with the fountain lit up.  Walked up to the Spanish Steps…..window shopped on Via Condotti!!  Steps are just steps without all the potted plants (rhodos I think) that are out in the spring.  Very crowded there as well.

Back to Piazza Navona by 10:30….really only the second time today that we’d sat down!  Had a glass of wine, talked about our trip and people watched for an hour or so.  Very busy place even at that time of night.  It was a beautiful evening…nice and warm, no wind.  We covered a lot of ground today!  Rome is probably one of the most “walkable” cities ever!

Back to the B&B around 11:30 only to be met by a crush of people hanging out at the restaurants at the end of our street…..our window looks out over it.  There must have been a few hundred people.  Lots of coming and going, talking, yelling, cars, scooters…..the noise level was thru the roof!  And thru the windows…..we hung out the window for a while watching all the activity…..noisy but fun!  Had to leave the window open to get some air circulation.  Finally went to bed just after midnight.

Sun Sept 23

Amazingly, even with all the noise, my head hit the pillow last night and that was it!  What was more amazing was that, looking out the window this morning, there was virtually no mess left on that street!  The street cleaners had been there very early and did a great job!

Left the keys at the desk and down the 3 flights of stairs.  Our stay included breakfast but that didn’t start until 9!  Eduard was outside right at 8:30.  Half hour drive to the airport.  Arrivederci Roma!  I really enjoyed our whirlwind time in Rome.  Traffic to the airport was horrendous but made it with lots of time to spare.

Thru security, flight was on time.

All in all I think this was a super trip!  The cooking school week was fantastic!  Way more than I had expected…..all the food and wine that was included was great.  Cooking classes and “field trips” were excellent. The hotel, one bed and all was good.  Weather was great the first few days then changed to fall (cold, windy, rainy) almost overnight.  Puglia was very interesting…a bit strange though.  Lovely in some areas and then really unattractive in others….and the hookers along the highway of course!  Alberobello was very pretty/cute but probably a little too commercial/Disneyland-ish.  Other towns, Ostuni, Cisternino, Martina Franca were very lovely and the completely the opposite of Alberobello….hardly any tourists.  Just about everything (including the TI offices!) in the area closed for siesta…..good to know for next time!  Matera was interesting but not very pretty around there at all…..and not terribly clean looking either.  Lecce was a bit of a disappointment…..was interesting and certainly not an awful place but was touted as the “Florence of the South” so maybe had just set the bar for it a little high.  Fun lunch tho.   Driving was OK….the usual in Italy really.  Signage has been an issue everytime I’ve been here…..no matter how many maps you have!  Connie and I got along great…..good traveling companions are very important!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Italy 2012 – Abruzzo Cooking School and Puglia…..Week 1

Connie (a friend that I worked with for 25 years) and I talked about doing just such a trip for many years.  We both love to cook AND to travel.  A two for the price of one Groupon special popped up, thru a company called Edible Destinations by Epitourean.          https://www.epitourean.com/master/345/a-taste-of-abruzzo-culinary-vacation  Rather than just going all that way for one week, neither of us had been to Puglia, so we added a week there to our adventure.  I’m doing this in two parts….first week at the cooking school, second week on our own in Puglia.

Sat. Sept 8

Met Connie at the airport at 6AM.  Checked in, had coffee and off we went.  A 3 hour stopover in Toronto then 8.5 hours to Rome.

Sun. Sept 9

Arrived on time around 9:45AM.  Customs and immigration was crazy busy….the guy at the counter just waved us thru.  Didn’t check or stamp our passports or anything!  Luggage came down pretty quick and then found our way outside and the meeting spot outside the bookstore.  Found the some of the group waiting for Fabrizio (our tour guide).  Had a few hours to kill before everyone arrived.  By 12:30 we were off!  There are 16 of us.  All Americans except for Connie and me.

A 3+ hour bus ride to Termoli.  One stop for lunch/coffee break at an autogrille (coffee and a huge arancini).  Termoli is right on the Adriatic in Molise, which has now merged with Abruzzo .  Lovely old town with gorgeous views of the coast and big beautiful sandy beaches.

The hotel (Residenza Sveva) is referred to as “Alberghi diffuse” https://www.alberghidiffusi.it/?lang=en .  Our room is a little odd….one big bed and one very tiny bed.  Bathroom is big enough.  We’re in #5, which is in a building just around the corner from the main piazza, with the church, restaurants etc.,  where the main part of the hotel is. We got checked in an met back at the hotel at 7:15 for our orientation, dinner and drinks.

They gave us two bottles of wine in the room!  But no corkscrew so we met the neighbour, who kindly opened it for us!  Funny, narrow little alley that you can almost touch the wall across from our little balcony.  All the locals are sitting outside their doors, drinking their wine and visiting.  Very warm, pleasant evening.

Had dinner at Ristorante Svevia (where our cooking classes will be) with the group.  http://www.svevia.it/index_en.php  Fantastic meal!  Antipasto was mashed potato topped with a couple of really good and big shrimp and a drizzled with a mild light tomoato sauce…and a little salad.  Primi was a cuttlefish risotto that was excellent….the cuttlefish was diced and very much like clams in texture and taste.  Secondi was fish en papillote but clear paper (fata paper?) which was sort of like trout but came from the Adriatic.  Dolce was a semifreddo with wine reduction sauce….very good.  Then a cherry liqueur that was really good…..20% alcohol!

Termoli is very resort-ish until you get to the old town.  Typical Italian town with piazzas, restaurants etc.  Very nice.  Lots of narrow little streets, balconies, tons of potted plants and flowers tumbling over railings and in the evenings, people sitting outside their doors.  Really quite a cute place.

http://www.madeinsouthitalytoday.com/termoli.php

After dinner we had coffee at the café next to the hotel, chatted and got to know our companions for the week.  Called Ken….all is OK.  Also found out we’re the only ones with a room without a view!!  It was 11:30PM and there were people of all ages wandering around.  Little kids riding their bikes, women with babies in strollers etc.  It’s still pretty warm so maybe this is just what you do when it’s too hot to stay inside.  Temp is quite pleasant.

Mon Sept 10

Busy, busy day!  Beautiful day….lots of sun, not too warm, just perfect!

Got our room changed….yeah.  So right after breakfast we had to quickly go back, repack and take our suitcases to the lobby.  Couldn’t move in right away so we had no idea where it was going to be other than it had a view and bigger balcony.

Off we went in our little bus to the Trabucco, which is a fishing contraption built out over the rocks….big net that is hooked up to a boom type thing with what looks like a big tangled mess of ropes attached to the corners.  As a school of fish approach, the net is lowered into the water and the fish swim in and voila!  They raise the net using a big crank…..was interesting as I’d never heard or saw one before.  Very common on the Adriatic coast.  http://www.italianways.com/the-trabocchi-coast/

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While they did a demo for us, they served some sparkling white wine, bread with olive oil  and pizzelle (waffle type cookie) with orange marmalade.  Fun!

Off to San Giovanni Abbey.  Built in the 12 century overlooking the Adriatic.  Beautiful outside and I’m sure just as beautiful inside……we couldn’t go in because of a wedding.  Very nice garden with a 1000 yr old olive tree that they thought had been dead for years but it bloomed this year!  The views down the coast are spectacular! https://magazine.dooid.it/en/interests-en/rocca-san-giovanni-and-the-abbey-of-san-giovanni-in-venere/

Enroute to Vasto we had a quick stop at a local ceramiche workshop.  She gave info on the local clay used, technic, etc, a quick demo and painted a number of pieces….all interesting but surprisingly nothing in her workshop was for sale for us!!  She did mostly commissioned pieces….usually get the big sale run around but this was strictly to familiarize us with the local artisan and her work….kind of nice for a change but there were a couple of pieces that I wouldn’t of minded having!

Picnic lunch at Riserva Naturale Regionale Punta Aderci   https://www.puntaderci.it/gallery/  a beautiful park on the coast…..spectacular views in both directions, some great trails for quick or long hikes.  Fabrizio sent us off to explore telling us to come back in 45 min. at which point lunch had arrived!  Many different kinds of pizza and buns/meat etc. and a number of bottles of “homemade” wine to wash it all down!  Quite fun!

Fabrizio is new at this job…..it’s his own company that he started only a few months ago,  Italia Sweet Italia. He has a degree in hospitality and tourism from a university in London, where he had initially hoped to stay.  But after realizing that his Abruzzo had so much to offer and is relatively untouched by tourism (except on the coast) he saw an opportunity to make a business out of it and share his lovely Abruzzo with others.  With some help from friends and family he got his company off to a start.  We are only the 3rd tour of this type that he’s done.  Using Groupon and getting connected with Edible Destinations was a good start for him.  He told us to give him all feedback, positive and negative, so he can ensure a good experience.  Abruzzo has been referred to a the poor man’s Tuscany….lol.  More mountainous but just as beautiful in a bit of a different way.

Into Vasto proper for a tour around and a visit to the museum/art gallery in the Palazzo Avalos. Quite a history….   https://www.italyheritage.com/magazine/2002_02/0202_a.htm Many of the paintings were done by two brothers from the area.  Beautiful garden with gorgeous views!

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Met up at a café, had a quick drink and off on a walking tour of Vasto.  Very pretty town/city.  Beautiful doors…..old doors on many buildings, the usual old guys sitting in the piazza visiting.

Long day!  Back to Termoli around 7:30.  Got our new room.  Much smaller but lovely view over looking the bay and beach.  AND….there is only one bed!!  Luckily it’s a queen size one so Connie and I divvied it up with our books/laptops etc.  We’ll manage!

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Dinner tonight was at a restaurant round the corner, Battello Ebbro. http://www.ilbattelloebbro.eu/  Antipasti was meats and cheese, primi was pasta and ceci and then secondi, chicken stew along with lots of wine and a “bitter” that wasn’t too good.  Excellent dinner.  It appears that “our” restaurant is closed on Monday, so we ate here instead.  All this is included in the price we paid…..certainly cannot complain!  All food so far has been local and so, so good!  Chatted with our tour companions, got to know some a bit better.  The couple from Utah….he won the trip through a pizza cooking contest on a radio station!  Too fun!  Wandered around town a bit after dinner, bought mugs/cups for our coffee in the morning (no coffee makers in the rooms so brought French press, electric water boiler and Starbucks café Via!) then met up with and sat and chatted with another couple until 11:30.  NO internet….argh.  Will deal with that tomorrow!

We have 3 sets of doors to our balcony.  An outside set of shutters/doors, a middle set of glass doors and then an inner set of shutter type doors.  Was quite warm in the room so wanted to leave them all open except the outside shutters….this is when we discovered that not only do those shutters open like normal doors but that they also tilt, but only the top part…..we thought we’d broken them and had a bit of a laugh about that.  Apparently though they should not both, tilt and open at the same time…..we did manage to get them back to where they should have been and tilted properly.  We then discovered that our bathroom window had exactly the same type of set up….so figured out to just tilt that one open except we somehow ended up knocking the curtain rod off and was surprisingly quite challenging to get back on!!  Again, lots of laughs and a bit of cursing to get that done!

Excited about our first class tomorrow!

Tues Sept 11

Up very late last night…..couldn’t sleep even after taking a Benadryl.  No more coffee at that time of night for me….or maybe just too much excitement.

Up at 6:30.  Made coffee in the French press that Connie brought.  I brought the water boiler, which worked ok but didn’t boil the water in the bottom of the press so you have to take it out and stir it every now and again……worked good enough.  Tried to do this without waking Connie….she is not an early bird!  Sat on our little balcony enjoying the view and updating my journal.

Breakfast was around 8:00 at the main hotel.  Continental but very good…..lovely fresh buns and breads with local preserves to go with them….and more coffee….our choice of Americano, Cappuccino, tea, juice etc.

Our first cooking class “Homemade Pasta”.  At the Svevia restaurant with Chef Massimo.  We’re in a private room, which was set up really nice with workstations for everyone around the huge table.  We each get aprons and a cookbook with all the recipes that we’re making.

First thing we made was the regular past dough with the flour well and 2 eggs.  Kneaded it A LOT….way more than I ever do at home but it was also way better!  Chef came by and said mine was “perfetto”!  Wrapped that up and left it while we prepared the dough for the cavatelli (local pasta…).  It’s semolina and water with just a touch of olive oil only.  Took a little bit to finally get it the right texture….a drier dough without the eggs.  Has to be kneaded way more than the regular dough…..I think mine was “perfetto” again 🙂  Will definitely have some achy shoulders in the morning!

Next the sauce….into the kitchen, where the prep staff were getting all the seafood ready (fresh off the boat!).  Chef M chopped up the veggies for the soffritto (as in the French mirepoix)….he peeled the freakin’ celery for goodness sakes!!  Carrots, celery, white and red onion, a bit of olive oil and some salt.  Once that was all just translucent, he added the meat….veal, pork, and lamb just hacked into big chunks.  Browned it all nicely then added WHITE wine and then tomato sauce.  Boiled it on high for 1/2 an hour then turned it down to simmer for at least 2 hours.  All the veg were so fresh and so pretty!!  Straight from the market that morning.

Then we made meatballs!  They went into the tomato sauce that was simmering away.

Back to the pasta (and the wine had appeared!!)….chitarra, or guitar pasta because of the thing to cut it…looks like a square guitar with a million strings.  Had to roll it out our regular dough and then cut it to fit in the guitar.  Then you used a rolling pin to roll it over the strings which cuts the past into perfect spaghetti.  To make the cavatelli (traditional pasta from Abruzzo) you cut the dough ball into small pieces then roll it into long skinny snakes a little thicker than you baby finger.  Cut off 1/4 – 1/2 inch pieces, then with two fingers push the bits of dough forward and it kind of rolls over on itself, making a shell or “hotdog bun” shape.  Chef M had made a veggie sauce earlier that we had later with the cavatelli.

Lunch was excellent….the chitarra pasta with just the tomato sauce, no meat, then the cavatelli with the veg sauce, then separately all the meat, including the meatballs.  Absolutely delicious!  Tiramisu for dessert…..finished around 2:30.

Off on a field trip……olive oil tour and tasting was our first stop at La Selvotta.  Some very different oils.  A couple with quite the citrus flavor (lemon and orange very distinguishable…) would be great on fish and/or chicken.  The oil was very good….gave that nice little after burn.  Beautiful olive grove with trees anywhere from 5 – 50 years old.  They process and sell all their own and also process small batches for personal use for local people.  For their own (commercial use) they used all the new high tech presses but they still have the old stone presses that are used for the locals.  They no longer use the old fashioned press with the mats….too much bacteria and mixing of old and new. https://www.oliveoilsitaly.com/producer/la-selvotta/

Wine tasting was next…..I forgot to grab a business card and now can’t remember the name of the winery!!  Must remember to ask Fabrizio tomorrow.  Toured the vineyard and he explained the “arbor” or “pergola” method of growing and shaping the canopy….protects the grapes from too much sun and also reduces moisture loss.  They had vineyards using that method and also just the regular staked method.  Tasted some Montipulciano d’Abruzzo, which is all they grow there.  They make a reserve, DOC, IFH as well as vino d’tavola.  Had a taste of prosciutto, headcheese (very good!) and bread with olive oil to go with our tasting.  I bought a 2007 DOC.

Almost 7 before we headed back to Termoli.  Dinner tonight was at Svevia Restaurant. Salted cod with a bread crumb topping, pan fired potatoes and beans.  It was really good.  I got my own special chocolalte crème brulee and everyone else had ice cream with pistachio nuts….which I could have eaten but oh well!  Lots of wine and liqueurs to sample tonight.  Sat around an chatted for a long time.

It’s midnight and I’m going to take a gravol….I really need a good nights sleep!

Wed Sept 12

Slept good!  Another beautiful morning and another great continental breakfast

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Class today was “L’arte Dei Ripieni – The Art of Stuffing”.  We made ravioli pasta then the spinach and ricotta stuffing.  Next was stuffed mussels……which was cheese and bread crumbs stuffed back into the mussel shells, then they were tied closed with little bits of string and poached in the mussels liquid……these were to die for!!  Stuffed veggies…..little eggplants, zucchini, peppers….meat stuffing for the eggplant and zucchini and cheese for the peppers.  Then we made egg and cheese balls which were really good!  They were deep fried and served as appies or fried and covered with a tomato sauce.  Lots of wine as usual.

Lunch was absolutely delicious…..we ate everything we made!  At each meal we have many different drinks….usually one that is like a special of the day, aperitif, wine, various local made liqueurs to choose from and thankfully lots of water!!  Finished around 2.

Had a bit of a rest and then on the bus and Vasto again to visit a cook shop…..same idea as our Gourmet Warehouse or Williams Sonoma….lots of great bits and pieces and some beautiful big pots and pans and gorgeous ceramics.  I bought one of the clay/terracotta bowls that can go on the stove……..our mussels were cooked in a similar bowl/pot.  Hope it makes it home in one piece!

Tonight some of us (10) opted for a dinner with Fabrizios family at his aunts place.  Up on a hillside with views to the sea.  Nice brick and stone house among olive trees and a vineyard.  They have a little farm with a donkey, goats, chicken etc.  They make their own wine, of course, so we got to fill the jugs from their big stainless steel vats.  Lots of dried garlic ropes, onions and peppers hanging from the ceiling in their sort of lean-to type shed (which was quite lovely!)  There were salumi hanging/drying from the rafters in the living room!!  Quite enjoyable wandering around, chatting with his uncle and grandpa, drinking wine.

His mom and aunt started making the pasta for the lasagna and we rolled it out and put it all together.   A local traditional lasagna…..layers of pasta, mushrooms in a sauce, béchamel, ham, parm and mozza cheese, topped with beaten egg and more parm.  That went into the oven and back outside to enjoy all the goodies they’d put out for appies….their homemade salumi, olives from their trees, a couple of different kinds of cheese (can’t recall if from their goats…) and lots of wine of course.

They got the bbq going…..skewers of lamb done on a neat little contraption that has a bunch of little tube things that you stick the end of the skewers into and then they rotate over the fire.

First course was the best ever tomato salad….dressed simply with olive oil, basil, parsley and a bit of chili along with the antipasti of melon with prosciutto and more cheese.  Lasagna was next….so simple but so delicious.  Then the lamb skewers, which went well with the last bit of the salad.  Dessert was olive oil cookies filled with grape marmalade….very good and lastly homemade limoncello and cherry liqueur to wash it all down.   20 of us all for dinner under the olive trees….so lovely.   (I have lost all my pictures from that evening….I have no idea what happened to them but they are gone from my SD card….so disappointing) 

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Visited for a while after dinner and then back to Termoli.  Had coffee with Rocky and Kathy (Philadelphia)…..chatted about healthcare (their system and ours…..they wished for ours!).  She had worked in Healthcare Admin and Connie and I in insurance.  A few of the younger ones came along with a few drinks under their belts and entertained us for a long time…..lots of laughs.  Almost 2AM before we packed it in!

Thurs Sept 13

“Traditional Homemade Desserts” today.  Zia Rosaria (Chef Massimos aunt!) was our party chef.  We made 4 different kinds of cookies…all very good.  First ones were Mostaccioli, which they said were kind of chocolate molasses (mustardo) cookie, then one that was like a big scored sugar cookie that was cut into pieces, brushed with olive oil and sprinkled with sugar, Breakfast biscuits and finally Cavicioni which, besides flour, are made with chickpeas that have been boiled and blended….the dough is rolled out (using a pasta machine) very thin then stuffed with a filling like ravioli!

A couple of interesting things…..a couple of the recipes used baking ammonia.  It’s crystals that come in big jar and it really smells like ammonia….it makes everything more light and airy.  I’ve never seen it at home, but that said, nor have I ever looked for it or used a recipe that called for it!  You can substitute 1tsp of the baking ammonia = 1 tsp baking soda and 1tsp baking powder.  The other was the vanilla…..at home our recipes call for a tsp of pure vanilla extract, which is liquid, here they use pre-measured packets of powdered vanilla…..these I have seen at home but never thought to use them….are they “pure” vanilla??  Zia Rosaria didn’t use a bowl at all….made all her pastry dough the same a you would your pasta dough….kneading by hand and using the pasta maker to roll it out. No salt was added to any of the baked goodies!  She also used a wine bottle to crush the ammonia crystals and to roll out some of the dough.  Lot of wine while making all these…..before lunch.  Fun morning!

Lunch today was delicious!  Pork scallopine in a truffle gravy…..absolutely fantastic.  I sopped up every last drop of it with the bread….and honestly would have licked the plate.  It came with a tomato and onion salad that was great too.  All the pastries for dessert.  This was referred to as a “light lunch”!

After lunch we were supposed to have walking tour of old town Termoli artisan area but it was so windy and rainy….and COLD…I only did the tour of the fort and tower.  My umbrella and blown inside out about 4 times just getting that far so didn’t bother with the rest of the tour.  The info on the tower was interesting…..not terribly much there other than an old cannon and a few rather bizarre paintings.  They can’t afford to do all the necessary restoration work so it’s not usually open unless someone has an exhibit of some sort (the art??).  Just went back to the room, checked emails, reloaded the phone, napped and read for a while.

Dinner tonight was  roast chicken….really moist and wonderfully crispy skin.  First course was a delicious soup…..a very tasty broth with kidney beans, flat noodles, a bit of carrot and pancetta.  More of the pastries for dessert along with limoncello.

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After dinner Connie and I went in search of a café for a nightcap or coffee but because of the weather pretty well everything was closed up tight.  Old town Termoli isn’t very big but there must be at least 10 or more really nice looking restaurants…..if they are anything like the Svevia, that is incredible for such a small place!

Just back to the room, made our own decaf coffee.  Emails, reading….kind of a nice quiet day for a change.

Fri Sept 14

Up very early today.  Had to be on the bus by 8:15.  Much nicer this morning than yesterday….windy with the sun popping out every now and again…..definitely needed a jacket!

Our beach had taken quite a beating the night before!

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First was the visit to the bell foundry, about an hour or so outside of Termoli, in the hilltown of Agnone.  Beautiful drive inland with towns on the top…..the very top….of just about every hill or mountain we passed.  Lots and lots of olive trees, some vineyards up the side of the hills.

The bell foundry was incredibly interesting….who would have thought!  They have a very nice little museum and store, of course.  Quite an amazing process that they go thru making the inner and outer moulds and the moulds for the decorations and inscriptions.  Then the entire tuning process was interesting in itself….had never thought about “tuning” bells!!  http://campanemarinelli.com/en/

On to Caseificio de Nucci Antonio.  Had a great tour.  Couldn’t go in the room where they make the curds but watched them dump big buckets of then into a big bin where they mooshed around, then someone takes big handfuls and shapes them into the cheeses….we seen the cacciocavello being made.  After the cheese is shaped it sits in a saltwater bath for anywhere from 20 – 40 days, then into the cold room.  We did get to go in there.  All the cheeses, in various stages of maturity, were hanging.  Some really dark yellow and covered in mold, others barely any colour at all.  Very damp and moldy smelling…..there’s a well under the stone floor that keeps the humidity level correct.  Connie and I bought a cacciocavello and scmorza.  Finished the tour in their little museum with some information on the history and samples!

Our lunch was at Santa Lucia Massaria.  Up on the hillside with incredible views in every direction.  Beautiful place!  We had a very simple lunch of porchetta buns and fresh tomato bruschetta.  The porchetta was good but not as good as the Tuscan one….not as flavourful, but still good.  Some pretty harsh homemade wine to go with it….watered it down quite a bit.  Espresso’s and fresh figs and other fruit for dessert.  She had a bunch of homemade products as well….confits, jams, honey, including truffle honey!  5E a jar….a real deal considering I paid almost $25 at home for a jar.  I bought 3!  Killed the rest of an hour or so wandering around the property.  We were supposed to have lunch outside under a pergola, which looked lovely but a little too iffy to do that today.  Very pretty place with lots of cozy little sitting areas and big stone patio with planters full of geraniums and other colourful flowers.  Tons of olive trees and many other fruit trees. Unfortunately it was a bit windy and chilly just to sit though…..sun poked in and out….good while it was out, not so good when it wasn’t.  One of the hilltowns across the way was Agnone, where the bell foundry was.

Back on the bus to Termoli at 5 for our Pizza Making class.  Chef M had some of the pizza dough ready for kneading so some of us took a stab at that, others made the dough from scratch themselves.  When it was all ready to go, rolled and pressed it into the pans and put the sauce on them…..which was simply canned tomatoes that had been put through a food mill, a bit of fresh basil, oregano and salt.  I’m not a big sauce person so a little too much on the pizza for me, nor it thick crust pizza one of my favs…..lots of fun putting it all together…..lots of wine while we were doing it.  Made a couple of different kinds of pizza as well as a bruschetta with mozza and stracchino cheese and Italian sausage and a pizza tart (covered) with onions and anchovies.  All was delicious…..too much sauce, thick crust and all!  One thing he did that I really liked was after putting the sauce on the pizza dough you back it!  In a really hot oven for 10 or so minutes just to get the crust rising, cook the bottom and starting to brown around the edges.  Take it out, put on whatever toppings you want and cheese, then back in the hot oven for just a few minutes to heat everything up and melt the cheese.

The bruschetta and pizza for dinner……our last dinner 😦  Lots of pics and hugs and Italian style cheek kisses.  Jim and Susan from Iowa, Karen and Florence from NY were the ones that Connie and I hung around with most of the time.  Great people.  Susan had kidney cancer and luckily had recovered and was in full remission….small world really!  We braved a coffee in the wind at the bar under our room.  Looked like it was going to clear up quite nicely….lots of stars peeking out through the clouds.

A fun, very busy week.  Learned some good technics for my future pasta and pizza making endeavours….looking forward to trying some of these things at home.  Fabrizio was a great tour guide…..very attentive to everyones needs, open to suggestions and overall just a very nice guy.  I hope his company is a great success for him.  We certainly had no complaints….everything was what we thought and more!  So impressed with the restaurant…..really quite an elegant place.

Back to the room to pack up and get ready for our next adventure…..Puglia!  Have never been so looking forward to visiting….and of course staying in our trullo for the next week!

China 2015 – Chongqing to Shanghai

Sun Nov 29 cont’d….

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Goodbye Sinorama Gold 8….a bit of a hike so very glad someone took our luggage to the bus for us!

We started the morning with a tour of Chongqing.  What a great city it is!  It’s old and new.  It’s high enough that it wasn’t impacted as much by the dam as other cities along the river.   The morning started off rather cloudy and overcast.  It was a bit hard to tell what was cloud versus pollution!  But still quite a lovely city…to me.  Brightened up nicely later in the morning.

To me it’s a “real” city.  BIG still applies to everything but it doesn’t seem a garish, or over the top like Beijing.  Lots of activity and lots of people.  Winston says it’s the largest city in China….30+ million.  I thought Shanghai was but apparently not.  Many interesting side streets and alleys.  It’s quite a clean city.

First stop was lovely Eling park overlooking the city.  Beautiful gardens…which are probably even nicer in spring and summer.  Busy place being a Sunday.  Family parties/picnics, people doing tai chi, playing badminton, groups playing cards etc.  There is a children’s area with little rollercoasters and other amusement park type rides, restaurants, cafes, some vendors selling some quite lovely handmade items (lots of paintings!) and just lots of places to sit or walk around.  The park overlooks the river.  Even with all the people it was a relatively quiet and peaceful place to wander thru.

Another park/plaza was our next stop, again with lots happening.  Kids bring their bikes, scooters and whatever else they have to ride on.  There a little toy kiosk that puts things out for the kids to play with.  A couple big trees with wooden benches built around them that the old people, mostly men, sit and visit.  A couple of food trucks too…..looked and smelled really good.  The original building, that was a palace, is now a huge big hotel.  Wandered around and people watched for the hour we had there.

I had heard about, but had never saw, until today, baby pants with slits in the bum…..strange concept to us but it’s been around in China for eons!   Thought “whatever” until seeing someone hold their baby over a garbage can…..kind of ewwwww.

https://m.dailyhunt.in/news/india/english/wittyfeed+global-epaper-wittyglo/ever+wondered+why+chinese+babies+wear+split+pants+instead+of+diapers-newsid-79620344

A really nice day and really very nice driving around this city and to the airport.  Still lots of “stuff” everywhere but generally clean and relatively tidy in comparison to Beijing.

Lunch on the plane was “chicken rice”

Tonight we’re in Suzhou.  It took over 2 hours to drive from the Shanghai airport….mostly just lots of traffic.

Suzhou is known for a big garden and it’s canals, which we’ll see tomorrow.  Dinner was at a place in the old part of town.  Really pretty pedestrian area along a canal.  Lots of nice little store, including a Starbucks.  Dinner was pretty disappointing….some of it was OK but again just not enough food.

Tonight we’re at the Wyndham Garden Hotel…..really nice.  After checking in we had time to wander around.  Very nice area with lots of shopping (expensive), restaurants and clubs.  So many shops with beautiful coats!!  I’d love to get one but I doubt very much they’d have my size.  Donna, Dave and Loyanne headed back to the hotel.  Shirl, Neil and I explored a bit more……we came across a KFC!!  Neil was still hungry so in we went.  He had a 3 piece meal and Shirl and I just shared a 2 piece….was delicious!!

This was the first time on this trip that we’ve been able to wander freely!!  The electric motorbikes are the scariest thing we came across…..because not everyone stops for red lights you just about take your life in your hands when crossing on a green light….you cannot hear them coming!!  Definitely caught on to that after a near miss the first time we crossed a street!!

Back to the hotel for a drink in the lounge and to bed.  Very busy day….not a lot of walking just planes and buses.

Mon Nov 30

Up early to visit The Lingering Garden (UNESCO site).  Very beautiful with the fall colours, especially the yellow leaves on the ginko trees……they’re shaped like little fans!  The central garden has a little manmade lake that all the trees and building around it reflect on.  It must be pretty amazing here when the flowes are in bloom.  Lots of parts to the garden, including over 100 bonsai.  Very nice.  Small shop where I bought a picture of bamboo painted in black ink on silk.  Could have spent a lot more time there!

https://www.chinadiscovery.com/jiangsu/suzhou/lingering-garden.html

The weather the last couple of days has been great!  No coats required 🙂

The rest of the morning was spent at the canals.  Very pretty and referred to as the Venice of the East.  Lots of little shops and cafes….and a Dairy Queen!  Unfortunately we didn’t have a lot of  time to explore the canals and the market, which was too bad because both were incredibly interesting.

The market was unbelievable.  It went for blocks and blocks.  Local food…..lots of vegetables, stands selling cooked and uncooked (but dead!) chicken, duck and pork…..probably beef too but can’t say that I recognized it if it was there.  Fish in big tubs, crabs, clams, shrimp, prawns, eels…..all were very much a live.  Some keep hoses running constantly in the tubs to keep it all fresh.  There were live chickens and ducks.  Some things I had no idea what they were.  One place was selling frogs, but they were dried and on display in a nice case, so assumed they were expensive.  Margaret bought some little apple type things on a stick….6 or so of them.  They were kind of like baby candy apples coated in sugar……quite tasty.  Lots of stands selling nuts (lots of walnuts) and beautiful looking pastries but was afraid to try them because of all the nuts.  One guy was making what looked like 3 ft round shrimp chips….started with a little piece of dough about as big as a fist, threw it in the hot oil in a big wok and poof…..almost instantly it puffed up into the giant chip.  Also stands selling clothes, purses, cooking stuff and pretty well anything else you think of.  You could also have clothes made!!  Could easily have spent another hour or more there.  Tons of people, lots of scooters driving down the narrow alley, some even had carts attached.  Lots of hand carts, bicycles and pretty much anything with a couple of wheels to get the goods in or out.

On the road again to Shanghai, with a stop for lunch…..great buffet today with lots to eat!  Not exactly sure where we were, still along the canals.  Very nice complex….a combo of restaurants and townhouses.  Very neat and tidy with a lovely park  across the canal.  Still a portion of the old city wall from 1000 yrs ago (?).  Not sure what city though!!  Had some time to wander around, cross the old bridge and take a few pics.

Back on bus and into Shanghai.  Busy, busy place!! Took almost 2 hours.  The first stop was the Shanghai Museum.  Excellent museum!!  Very well laid out and really nice, interesting displays…..most with English descriptions.  We only had a couple of hours to see it so I went off on my own and was selective as to which rooms to go into.  I did the silk and clothing, the bronzes, ceramics and pottery.  Quickly went thru the furniture and the seals and stamps rooms.  Could easily have spent at least another hour there.  Very nice store with some expensive things.

https://www.shanghaimuseum.net/museum/frontend/en/collection/index.action

Dinner!  Also very good….buffet at a big fancy hotel.  Much the same stuff but all really good…..today I think were the best two meals we had along with the one in Jingzhou.

Tonight we saw the famous Chinese acrobats.  They are all pretty incredible.  The girls on the bikes at the beginning were unbelievable and then the 6 or 8 motorbikes in the big ball cage were pretty amazing.  How they stayed so focused was unreal….one little missed queue and they would have been a mess on the bottom.  I think we saw the watered down tourist version but still really good.  A few circ de soliel type acts as well.  We were told that the company has helped a lot of young people.  They offer free education to kids (some as young as 6 or 7) from some of the poorest villages around China.  They come to the city and along with their schooling are trained to become these acrobats.  As they get older their experience with the acrobat troop supposedly helps them get better careers.  Good/bad??  Regardless they were excellent!

Finally at almost 10 we arrived at our hotel, the Radisson Blu Shanghai.  Nice rooms except for the shower, the tile of which could have used a good scrubbing with some bleach.  It had a two part shower, hand held and rain head.  The hand held one HURT if you turned it on full blast….like pins poking you everywhere….definitely good water pressure.  It was also one of those hotel rooms that had a window/glass wall between the bedroom into the bathroom!  There were blinds but still….I don’t get this set up!  Had a glass of wine in the bar before going up to bed….a big glass.  Wine was from Argentina….very good.  Bar was in the lobby which was so cold you had to wear your coat.

A very busy day today…..but a very good one!

Tues Dec 1

Up not so early this AM.  Not on the bus until 9.

Our room was very hot and no matter how low we turned the heat it never got any cooler…..made up for the no heat in the lobby I guess.

Breakfast here is good but not as good as the other places we’ve stayed.   Not a lot of variety….but there was an egg guy.  I think the Wyndham was the nicest overall, or the Holiday Inn in Xi’an,

Our first stop this morning was to the silk factory.  We watched a demo of how they make the silk threads from the cocoons and also how it is stretched and then layered to make the comforters and pillows.  Would have liked to buy a duvet cover but very expensive so didn’t bother.  They had some lovely clothes as well.  Jackets, shirts, blouses etc.  I tried on a cute vest but it was a little too tight and too short.  The next size up, a 2XL (!), fit ok except the armholes were too big so let that pass too.

Lunch was a little different today….all you could eat Mongolian Grill.  Was great and lots of fun.  You go thru the raw food buffet filling your bowl with meat and veg and the sauces you want then take it up to the 3 people cooking it on a big round grill (Mongolian grill!).  There was also a salad bar and rice and Chinese noodles.  Very good!

There was a cashmere store upstairs…..some very nice stuff but again, all way too expensive…..honestly we could buy at home for way less.  They kept insisting that it was way better quality….not terribly sure about that!   The stairs to go up were tile….white, or would have been,  really quite a mess…cracked tile, tiles missing altogether, and not very clean BUT at the top of the stairs is a great big beautiful crystal chandelier hanging from a gold ceiling!!

After lunch it was a visit to Chinatown!  Yes they have a special area for that even here!  It’s the old original area of Shanghai.  Most of the buildings have been redone/rebuilt and are full of touristy type shops, bars and teahouses.  Dave got taken to one by a lady that had asked him “what was he looking for”…..BEER he said!  Donna and I were a little worried because we’d been warned not to do that!!  I went after him and Donna waited for Loyanne.  As it turned out it was an OK place….a nice teahouse and bar on the 4th floor of one of the pagoda buildings.  It had one of the best skyline views of Shanghai that I’d seen so far!  We had a beer, took a bunch of pictures and went back down to meet up with everyone.

I managed to find jammies for the kids, had their names written on cards in Chinese and picked up a shot glass for Craig’s collection and a pretty ivory (plastic!) fan for Kim.

Back on the bus for some shopping and people watching on Nanjing Road.  We all wandered around a bit but really wasn’t into anymore shopping…..this is a famous road for shopping!  Most of it is pedestrian only.  Was still daylight when we arrived and it was quite busy but within an hour or so, once it was dark the street was packed!!  Donna, Loyanne, Dave and I found a coffee/beer bar right on a busy corner and just parked ourselves there for the rest of the time we had on our own….another hour or so.  Lots of big name stores on Nanjing Road and lots of big prices to go with them.  Great people watching!  It’s pedestrian only but there are still crossroads…..so even when the light was red on Nanjing, the people just kept walking and the cars, buses, bikes scooters etc., who had a green, had to go slow and nose their way thru the people!  A lady had a doggy dressed in a little plaid shirt, jeans and pink booties!  Kathy from RI came by and shared some of her roasted pigeon!!  A little over done but tasted like chicken!

https://www.travelchinaguide.com/attraction/shanghai/nanjing_road.htm

The bamboo scaffolding around buildings that were being worked on was amazing…..I can’t believe in this day and age it is still used.

Dinner was at a restaurant on the Bund!  Finally get to see this famous area….in the dark!   After dinner we went across the street to the park on the Huangpu river.  Great views across the water of Pudong with the Oriental Pearl tower and Jinmao Tower and another new huge building (118 floors) still under construction that will be a “self-sufficient” living environment when it’s completed.  The night view was lovely…..lots of lights of course across the way, ferries, also lit up, going up and down the river.  There is the first iron/steel bridge ever built in China, that was 100 yrs old.  I just wish we’d have more time to wander around in the daylight……was looking forward to seeing all the historic buildings and would also have been nice to visit Pudong across the river.

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Back on the bus and to the hotel by just after 7:30 to get packed up.  Stopped for a drink in the lobby with N & S.  Rhode Island people came in and had a drink but left to get more food.  When they came back I went up to the 27th floor to have a drink with them up there…..nice view but not of anything too exciting.

Finished packing and to bed….wake up call at 6:45.

Tues Dec 2

Up and packed before 6.  Breakfast and on the bus to the airport by 8:30.  Some flights (Calif) left an hour before ours so we all just went together.

We had all checked in but sort of all wandered off in different directions….I had put my boarding pass in my passport and thought I’d just check the gate and time again…..I noticed the gal had given me my passport but Donna’s boarding pass!!  A little bit of a panic because Donna was on her way to go thru security.  I went racing over to find her but no sign of her…..I assumed that she had gotten thru with MY boarding pass no problem.  I was with Neil so told him when we were going thru, if I had any issues, he’d have to go and find Donna to get MY boarding pass.  As it turned out, it wasn’t an issue….the guy glanced at it but didn’t bat an eye lash….thought maybe he couldn’t read it or just one of those “for show” security things???  A bit worrisome though when you think about it!

Caught up with our group and found a coffee place not far from our gate and ran into the RI folks.  Donna and I had beer and dumplings that were really good!  We did not see many dumplings on this trip.

Flight left on time at 1:30.  The route home was a direct route over the Pacific to Vancouver.  It started out really bumpy for the first few hours, even hitting an air pocket or two…..one big one that had people screaming!!  I drank my wine with dinner, took a gravol and managed to sleep over 4 hours, which was great because we were more than half way home when I woke up.  Flight had smoothed out nicely…..read and dozed for the rest of it.  Breakfast was really yucky…..scrambled rubbery eggs, incredibly greasy bacon(ish) and a couple of warm tomatoes.  We got a Chinese style “croissant” after??  Weird because the same thing happened with the dinner bun….it came AFTER dinner.

Our flight was 10 hours, way shorter than going, and we even arrived a bit early.  We left Shanghai on Dec 2 at 1:30PM and arrived in Vancouver on Dec 2 at 8:30AM!  So we not only gained our day back, but an extra 5 hours!

Overall this was a fantastic trip.  We saw some amazing things! Very busy and not a lot of time to see or do anything on our own but that’s what tours are like.  Some of my best pictures are ones taken out of the bus window…..traffic, people….just going about their daily business.

It was the only way to go to China to me….unless I knew someone who spoke the language and was familiar with all the quirky things.  Based on stories we heard and Winston’s warnings, getting ripped off was a bit of a concern….not just in the markets but even the bigger stores too.  Our experience with the bottle of wine…..bought one thing and found when we’d got back to the hotel that they’d put something totally different in our bag…similar thing happened again.  That said, I really enjoyed the markets, including the bargaining! I’m not a “major” purchase shopper….thank goodness!

The food was the most disappointing thing.  Only 3 or 4 meals that I’d call really good.  Was really hoping to experience a variety of some great local dishes in each of the areas we visited.  Friends of friends that had done the exact same trip in September said food was excellent and in abundance!!  They did pay a bit more but presumed it was also because of the time of year….maybe not!

China is so advanced in some ways….huge buildings, dams, cars, electronics etc. but then they still use bamboo scaffolding and twig brooms, such a mix but that’s what makes it interesting!  BIG is important to them, clean (as in floors and windows being washed) and maintenance of some things, not so much.

A great trip with great friends…even made some new ones!

 

 

 

 

 

 

China 2015 – Yangtze River Cruise

Part two……..

Wed Nov 25

Slept really good!  The bed is very hard….very, very hard!! But nice fluffy pillows and comforters.  I think they turn the heat down to zero at night.  Woke up to go to the bathroom and almost froze…it was really cold but OK once I got back into bed.

Didn’t set the alarm for this morning because we didn’t have an excursion until later.  At 7:30, thru the PA system, they start playing music or something and then a guy comes on and says “have you had your breakfast…..blah blah blah….!!!!  This was a good thing I guess because I think I could have slept for a few more hours.  Looked outside and there is another boat right up against ours….a cargo boat of some kind…..a man was hanging up his laundry and waved at me!!

Breakfast buffet was really good.  The bacon looked a little odd but tasted really good.  After breakfast we went to the acupuncture and TCM lecture at 8:30 with Dr. Lui.  It was very interesting.

Our shore excursion today was back to the ancient city of Jingzhou (where we were supposed to start the cruise).  First we did the wall, which surrounds the old city and was quite lovely.  There was also a “ancient” pagoda (with shops underneath).  Lots of little shops across the road.  Shirl and I bought “bracelets”, which are really prayer beads, made from apricot pits.  Donna bought a couple of bottles of “Great Wall” wine (which was NOT good). Quite a lot of history and really quite a very nice place.

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https://www.chinahighlights.com/jingzhou/attraction/jingzhou-ancient-city.htm

Next stop after driving thru the “old town” (any city name with “hou” on the end means it’s the old or original town name).  Lots to look at going thru this city of 4+ million people!  In a matter of one day, yesterday, I was in 4 of some of just about the biggest cities I’ve ever been in in my whole life!  Xi’an has 9 million, Wuhan 14 million, between Jingzhou and Yichang, another 10 million or so…..the population of the 4 cities is just about the entire population of Canada!

Had the best lunch yet!  or dinner for that matter.  It was in the old walled part of the town.  Lots of great dishes……sweet and sour pork, sautéed beef, fried and breaded fish, cucumber and fungus (really good!), some sort of a roll filled with yams and maybe lotus paste (breaded too), rice of course and even more dishes than I can remember now.  And beer….only one glass was free but you could get a big bottle for 20Y.  The restaurant had a big moving sign that said “Welcome Sinorama Tour Group”.  Definitely the best meal, and most food, we’ve had so far.

After lunch we drove thru the town again…..after the bus did a U turn on a very busy street!  So much activity on the streets here.  I really like the cooking shops/pop up restaurants, or whatever you would call them, that have all the big pots and woks or steamers set up right on the sidewalks. I bet that food is fantastic!  Lots of people on the street, shopping, visiting etc.  Took a picture of a very old lady sitting with a guy selling chestnuts and peanuts, then he wanted some money!!  So I bought some of the roasted chestnuts….he wanted 20Y but I only had 7 so he took the bag back and took some out….lol!

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There were no highrises in the old city…..the rule is no buildings over 7 stories but off in the distance you can see all the huge mega story apartments…..there is never just one building….they build at least 3 or 10 exactly the same.  Some are still brand new, some not so, and most seem pretty empty.  They build them in anticipation of more people moving to the city.  Lots of laundry hanging off both new and old buildings….they have spiffy clothes line contraptions that can extend out a few feet giving them more clothes hanging room.

Many modes of transportation…..

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Car carrier…..twice as long and wide as the ones at home!

On to the Jingzhou Museum.  Very nice museum with the 2000+ yr old mummy that is extremely well preserved.  Some really nice lacquer ware found in the excavations, all quite well preserved and in great shape and ancient silk garments and other fabrics.  The museum is in a couple of pagoda buildings with a little lake and lots of trees.  Even some bonsai.  Pretty baskets and pots of what look like those small winter mums, which had been trained to tumble over the sides.  The grounds could have been very beautiful and may well be come summer.

The drive back to Yichang was about an hour and half.  All through the countryside, which was really very nice.  The houses, or at least some of them, are bigger and look much like houses at home.  Some stand all alone in the middle of nowhere, others in little hamlet type communities.  Very beautiful and well tended gardens and rice paddies.  There are ponds (presuming for irrigation) all over the place, almost like little lakes….even with men fishing on some of them.

Back into Yichang.  Huge railway station with bridges crisscrossing in every directions.  Tons of new building complexes here too.  A real mix of old and new, all with laundry! Love it!  Again, lots of new buildings that have no one living in them.  All the highrises here and in the other cities must be at least 50 stories or more.

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Sinorama Gold ships in Yichang……water level is usually at least up to the steps.

Onto the boat with just enough time to shower and get ready for “formal night” and the captains “welcome aboard” dinner.  He (thru an interpreter) introduced all the important people on the boat and thanked us for joining them.

Buffet as usual.  Thought they might have something a little more exciting or fancy, but no……  After dinner there was a show, some dancers and then music for dancing….they played YMCA and the chicken dance, which got everyone up on the floor.  A few good songs but the bar and everything else was pretty much closed/finished by 9:30.

Long day today but a really good one!  Weather started out iffy but turned our quite lovely…..some sun! Very tired tonight.

Thurs Nov 26

Did not sleep well last night.  Woke up a 1/2 dozen times.  The light from the battery charger was bugging me….but did I get up and move it…no.  Tossed and turned.  Maybe got 2 hours sleep altogether.

At some point last night we left Yichang and started up the river.  We went thru the first lock just past Yichang….I guess not important enough to mention….maybe that was some of the noises that kept me awake….lots of banging and clanging.

Breakfast was good again.  Off to the “Water Village” tribe of the Three Gorges.

There are 4 Sinorama cruise ships…most of the “ports” can only fit 2 of them, so whoever gets there last has to tie up to the one that is already docked so you have to get off your boat and walk across/thru the one that’s tied up…..not always a cruise ship either!

The Water Village is man made but at the original tribal site from eons ago.  It was a bit of a walk from the ship.  First we had to get off the ship by crossing over what appeared to have been an old freighter or may not have been??  I think they use these a piers or docks.  No bus for this excursion….a very long walkway along the river….seems like we walked for miles. Very pretty with benches that were covered with trellises shaped like a “C”.  The path then turned and went along side a small river/stream.  Well worth the walk once we got there. They had some junk type boats and fishing net things set up to show what life was like on the river villages years ago.  There were some rock statues that looked more Mayan than Chinese along the way.  It was all very pretty, especially with the big bamboo forested hillside. They put on a “wedding show” for us…..volunteers from the audience to take part.  There are monkeys too!  We seen 4 or 5 of them at first.  When we got to the end of the walk there was a temple or pagoda and a very pretty waterfall.  A person was sitting in a little house/shed that was calling the moneys….and we think feeding them.  One was on the rocks in the stream and the others came flying thru the trees and across the platform that we were standing on.  One of them had a baby on her tummy.

We walked back on the other side of the stream so got a bit of a different view.  I really liked all the bamboo!!  So pretty, blows so gently in the breeze….very softly and gently.  Most of the trees still have leaves , some were starting to turn to fall colours here and there.

There was a little market/food stall place near the end.  The food smelled so good! Some of it didn’t look too terribly appetizing tho.   All in all, man made or whatever, it was a really interesting, entertaining and fun morning.

Back along the river again and on to the ship.  We sailed just a few minutes after everyone was on board.  Buffet lunch and cruising the river until around 2.  Donna and I had some quiet time after lunch…..made some tea and sat on our balcony (with coats and scarves)…..was very pleasant just sitting and watching the scenery……so beautiful, almost mystical with the mist/haze hanging over the river and the mountains and cliffs.  Lots of bridges!  Old ones and new ones!

Three Gorges Dam this afternoon.  Picked up by buses after walking thru a market selling all sorts of stuff….souvenirs, food, clothes etc…..very aggressive vendors!  Tour of the Three Gorges Dam was really interesting.  It is huge of course like everything else and not without a lot of controversy….. environmental, political and social issues….though of course, none of this is mentioned anywhere…but just the size of it boggles the mind!  The largest hydroelectric dam in the world.  We visited the information centre first where there is a great big scale model of the dam and locks.   Then back out and up some mega escalators, 5 altogether….all big and one really big one (was a bit scary even looking back down).  This took us to the top of Jar Mountain, so named because of the thing/building/monument, or whatever it was, that they built at the top that looks like a jar!  We were able to see the ship locks from there.  There are five locks but sometimes, depending on where they have the river level, the last lock is not used.  The locks are HUGE.  There were at least 3 or 4 ships (freighters, car carriers/ferries) in each one.  There is also an “elevator” that will be in use by 2016 sometime for smaller boats, which are still pretty big.  It’s a massive project and like everything else here everything that goes with the dam, such a the information centre, the viewpoints, lookouts, parks (2 or 3) etc. is big too.  There are also a few towns (BIG…..1-3 million) in the area that were created for the workers, but most of them are almost empty now that the dam is mostly finished.  The city on Jar Mountain has some people and they hope more will move  there.  There are hotels, sports stadiums, hospitals etc., most of which don’t get used.  Kind of bizarre really……a lot of expensive ghost towns!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Gorges_Dam

It was a bit chilly to start today and biting cold at the top of the mountain, so was good to get back down and on the bus.  We stopped in a market, on the reservoir side of the dam, clothes, souvenirs, food etc.  Bought some sweet potato chips (good).  I think the lady may have given me a fake 5, so I bought a bunch of oranges and used that bill!  Winston warned us to not buy wine or beer from vendors like this….they actually sell fake beer and wine (which I think Donna and I have already discovered!).  How they fake beer, I have no idea….it looks pretty much the real stuff to me in 6 packs with the plastic holders and all!

Not a good day for pictures 😦  too dull.

Our boat stayed at the dock for most of the evening until just before 9 when we got in line for our turn to go thru the locks.  The locks are big enough to hold our boat, a small car carrier and one of the sand/rock barges, with room to spare!  It took 40 minutes or thereabouts to go thru each lock.

Lots of clanking, clunking and banging going on, mostly from the boats rubbing on the side of the locks.  Donna and I went down to the room and on to the balcony and touched the wall (the dry part!)….it was just right there!  Managed to be on deck (very bundled up!) to go thru 3 of them but went to bed before we went thru the last one.  Certainly not all the hoopla like when you go thru the Panama Canal….I don’t know why because it was really quite interesting and I think we would have enjoyed it much more if it had happened during the daylight hours, but appears commercial traffic gets priority.  Regardless of all the controversy surrounding this project it really is quite amazing to see it.

Fri Nov 27 (Happy birthday Linds!)

Up early again!  The breakfast was pretty good today.  They had bacon(ish), beans and a potato something…..the egg guy and today a waffle guy too!  Funny though….he flipped my eggs and I told him I would like them “well done”, so he gave them to the person behind me in the line up and cracked two more for me!!!  Ah sigh…..but I had coffee so all was good.

Excursion today was on a smaller boat thru the Lesser Three Gorges.  We went 2 hours or so one way and then back the same route.  It was pretty nice.  Each of the three gorge areas was just a little different.  One famous place was the “3000 year old” wooden coffin in a cave up the mountain with no sign of any access.  Story has it that they built a cantilevered walkway along the rock side of the mountain to get it in there and then tore it down after so no one could get to it and pillage it….hmmmm.  Don’t think anything wood would last that long!  Good story though.

The gorges are quite narrow with just about sheer rock walls that are fairly high…..it’s hard to imagine just how steep and deep the gorges were before the dam was built…..water level, depending on what they’re doing at the dam is 300 – 500ft higher than pre-dam.

The boats that we were one were pretty big, probably holding a couple hundred people.  There was only a tiny indoor area where you really couldn’t see too much, so we stayed outside, bundled up again as it was pretty chilly on the water.   Was really very pretty thru those gorges.  Little villages or a house or two clinging to the side of the hills, terraced gardens and near the end/turn around point, fishing traps or weirs.  There is a ferry, more like a big rowboat that is like a water taxi to take people across the river.

Chatted with some people from Bus 6…..from Argentina!  Maria and Alfredo…..got some good tips on where to stay in Buenos Aires for our trip in April next year.  Fun bunch but a little overbearing after a while!  (DO NOT STAY IN SAN TELMO not safe at night, she says…good to know!)

We just stayed on the same side on the way back so see the other side of the gorges.  We saw monkeys.  Except near the turn around point, everything pretty much just clings to the sides of the mountains…..it’s very pretty going thru this area.

There always seems to be food for sale everywhere we stop…..even on the dock/pier when we get off the ship, if not a market.  Loved some of the signs!!

Back on the boat around 12:30 for lunch.  The lunches seem to be a little better than the dinners but still not terribly good….at least there is enough food.  Spent the rest of the afternoon in the bar, watching the scenery go by.   I had the one Bacardi Breezer that was in the fridge.  When I went up and ordered another, it was warm so I asked if I could have a cold one and he took the bottle and put it in an ice bucket??  I asked if I could have a glass with some ice instead.   Kathy from RI ordered a gimlet, which was one of the 1/2 price happy hour specials for the day, and they brought her a vodka martini with two black olives in it…..I think gimlets are gin??  We had to go up to the bar and order our drinks from a lady, who then, while you were standing there, told the guy behind the bar what you wanted (in English!).  Once in a while a waiter was on the floor and would take your order but he could only take one order at a time???  Ah well…..made for an interesting afternoon!  It was really an enjoyable afternoon….good to just sit and watch the scenery for the day.  We did move the big screen TV that was right in the middle of the front window…..it’s  for a game where you can drive the ship.

Donna went for a foot massage…..one hour….said it was great.  We have been tracking our walking on her fitbit and it’s been at 10,000 minimum a day.  One day it was almost 20,000!

Went for dinner around 6:45.  Unfortunately the only good things were the dumplings, chicken wings (spicy) and yam rolls.

Back to the bar/lounge after for the guest talent show.  Lots of fun!  A couple of the buses entire groups put on a show…the best one was the ladies from Seattle….their flight was cancelled , then they showed up in Beijing without anyone there to meet them….they reinacted the whole thing…..lots of laughs.  One group did tai chi and a bunch of ladies did their dancing.  One group danced to a Neil Diamond song sung by one of the men (Chinese….could not speak English!!)….very good!  And one of the Argentinian groups did a striptease….lol.  They were actually quite rude and pushy a lot of the time on the boat….sort of taking over areas, loud etc.

Just before bed time we passed another “mega” city.  Tons of new buildings, 30 – 50 stories high, all light up….not just regular lights but ones that changed colours or looked like waterfalls or zigzags or whatever they could think of.  On top of one of the hills was a building that looked like St Peter’s in Rome (was probably just as big too!) with columns and all.  It was lit up gold.  There was some huge, like bigger than our BC Place Stadium, thing that kind of looked like an upside down satellite dish or UFO that was lit up and changed from silver to blue and back.  Then we came to the massive stadium that also changed colours….blue, green, red, purple, orange etc. and a street that went up the hill that was also lit up with all different coloured lights.  We passed at least one city like this every night.  Margaret (from China….now lives in Seattle) said they turn the lights out as soon as the last ship goes around the bend???  There were 4 cruise ships in a row (we were #3), so only one behind us.  I think I might actually believe her in that we should have been able to see the lights of that city up over the mountain, reflecting off the clouds for miles…..but all we seen was darkness behind the last boat.  That is pretty ridiculous, if true!

Sat Nov 28

Up early today for our excursion to the Shibaozhai Pagoda.  Breakfast was good.  Apparently coffee is very expensive in China.  There is no freaking way to get a cup of coffee before “early bird” coffee which is only a 1/2 hour before the dining room opens…..and today they didn’t have it because the dining room opened earlier for the excursion…..not good if you’re up at 6AM!  Seriously will remember to take instant packets next time regardless of where I go!

Very pretty…..we sailed in past the pagodas.  One was part way up a hill/mountain on the river and because it would have been underwater, or at least part of it, when the dam was built, they created a coffer dam around it.  To get to it you walk thru the town/city of Shenbao, where there are tons of vendors selling anything and everything.  Shirl and I found some cute pajamas we really like and tried to do some bargaining.  We thought we were going to get 2 pair for 60Y but she meant TWO PIECES….lol. Top and bottom, not two pair.  Winston was trying to help us but suggested we just keep moving on to the pagoda and try again on the way back (when the ships are going to be leaving as well as any profit!!).

The walkway or boulevard to the pagoda was also lined with vendors selling the same stuff.  Mostly scarves, jammies and really cute sweaters.  Once you’ve walked thru the town and all the vendors you come to a bridge, sort of a suspension type, that will get you to the pagoda.  It’s all very pretty.  The pagoda was built right into the rock.  All the grounds around it have been preserved by the coffer dame, which is what you walk on to get there.  There are supposed to be 99 steps to the top of the pagoda…..not sure there are quite that many but definitely a lot of them.  They’re very steep, small wooden steps, so you need relatively strong legs to get up.  You can tell the stairs are old by the way they’ve been made.  We (Loyanne, Donna and I) made it all the way to the top.  There was also a stone set of stairs that you could go up with a chain for a railing.  It was even more steep than the wooden ones.  Once at the top there is the temple that has 3 chapels…not sure exactly what you’d call them, the rice cave and the duck cave, each with their own story.  It’s a Buddhist temple but parts of it looked Hindu.  No monks anymore, just a couple more vendors selling the same stuff the ones below sell.  I did by a pillow cover….very pretty with mostly gold, some black figures and a red circle.  The views from the top are pretty  nice.  You get a view of the bridge, the town, the river and all the ships tied up in port.

To get back down you take the new, wide and easy to use, stairway.  Getting back to the ship you have to walk the same way you came in thru all the vendors.  I bought a very pretty scarf for 60Y, thought I’d done OK until another vendor offered exactly the same scarf for 25Y!! Oh well, I like it and I guess that’s what really counts.  I was trying to take a picture of some strange fungus that was for sale and the guy that was selling it came running up to me and tried to stuff a piece of orange in my mouth!!  Ewwww.  We did buy some oranges, which are really good.  We had started to see orange groves on the hillsides as we’re getting closer to Chongqing.  So juicy and sweet….we almost wondered if they hadn’t been injected with orange juice!  It’s really easy to be skeptical of everything after you hear some of the stories…..

IMG_7685
At the market….so just what would one do with the nose?  The good part I guess is that absolutely nothing gets wasted!

Caught up with Neil and Shirl for the rest of the walk back.  Neil bought some “silver” US coins…..against the advice of Winston….but he thought he was getting a deal.  Seen a lot of others selling the same ones. Hopefully he didn’t get ripped off.  Shirl and I found the same jammie person and proceeded to bargain with her again.  She still wouldn’t take our 2 pair for 60….offered us 2 for 70 but after all that we didn’t think they’d fit after holding them up to our hips! They were size XXL!!  She didn’t have any XXXL so we kept going.  Another vendor said she did have XXXL.  I tried them on OVER my jeans to make sure they fit and they seemed to be OK so we offered her 2 pair (or 4 pieces!) for 60….which she wouldn’t take either, she wanted 80…..told her the other lady up the street was 35 per pair…..she said BUT these had more material so were more expensive…lol  Not a terribly good way to make a sale! We ended up paying 80, which was OK.  We did have a lot of fun.

Just before getting on the ramp/walkway or whatever you wanted to call it (very wibbly sheets of metal laid against more floaty things….only in China!) there were people washing their clothes in the river….yuck.  I thought they were staged for our benefit but then saw more people doing the same thing a little further along around a bend.

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Oops!  I guess upside down doesn’t matter as long as there is one!

Back on the ship by 10ish and we headed to the bar after all the excitement!  Had a Breezer at 10:45!!!  Called Linds to wish her happy birthday (it’s 7PM yesterday at home….so she was at dinner with some friends).  Fun to talk all the way from China!

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a “snack” from the bar to go with our drinks……not too bad but definitely strange tasting!

Lunch buffet was good today.  Had a special counter with someone making noodles and ground pork in a really tasty broth.  Some of the things in the buffet had strange names such as “chicken gristle” for one.

After lunch Donna, Shirl and Loyanne went to see the movie, The Last Emperor,  They said it was good. Dave and Neil were napping.  I enjoyed some quiet time….reading, journaling and watching the scenery.  Was quite pleasant outside so sat out there for a while.

Off to Captains Farewell Dinner at 6:30.  It was a “special sit down dinner” not buffet…..which was too bad!!  The captain made a speech and then they had some door prizes for people that filled in the favorite crew cards.  Dave and Loyanne’s name was drawn….they won a cell phone holder.  They sang happy birthday to a few people.  Winston found out it was Neil and Shirl’s 43rd anniversary so gave them one of the little snuff bottles that the guy was painting in the ship store.  It said 43 and then long life and happiness……very nice of him to do that.

Dinner was absolutely the worst yet!!  Dishes included……one smaller than a normal small PIZZA with cheese and green peppers cut into 10 slices, French fries, beef and bok choy (only really good thing but as usual, not enough….someone took most of the beef!), deep fried prawns (one each) on a bed of frozen corn, braised celery with “cashnuts” (10 cashews), a sticky rice packet with a bone with no meat on it in the middle, tomato soup….broth of some sort with chopped up tomatoes, thinly slice beef which we decided was tongue based on the texture.  Dessert was one piece of cake each and a plate of cantelope and cherry tomatoes!  Luckily there were buns available where the buffet usually was.  We think they had ran out of food for the buffet and basically put together a dinner with whatever they had left in the fridge!

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After dinner I finished packing and then up to the bar.  Had a Breezer that was in the fridge this time.  Sat with the Mexi family and RI people.

Good day….fun day and quite nice weather wise….definitely warmer here.

Sun Nov 29 (end of cruise)

Had to be off the boat by just after 8 this morning.  Settled up our bills last night…..mine was 646Y which is probably around $160CDN (had to pay extra for the Water Village excursion for Donna and me), not too bad really.

The good and the bad……

  • rooms good
  • breakfast buffet good
  • room steward(ess) very good
  • food was really hit or miss….more miss than hit!
  • excursions were excellent
  • bar service was hit or miss and just kind of silly to us
  • no coffee until just a 1/2 hour before breakfast

Not quite the cruise experience that you’d normally get if you are used to Princess or even Carnival, but hey…..where we were and what we saw made up for all things lacking.

Watched them bringing on all the new supplies….mostly vegetables, some meat.  It is all amazing that the only way to get this stuff on board the ship is by “Coolies” (sounds terrible but that is what we were told they’re still called!) walking from the end of the pier to the ship with this stuff loaded on their backs or on the end of their sticks on their backs.  Definitely back breaking labour!  The chefs were out there weighing things and taking inventory I guess.

A day in Chongqing and on to Shanghai next……..

 

 

 

 

China 2015 – Beijing and Xi’an

This was a tour…..a cheap tour!  ($2100CDN including taxes) One that we had second thoughts about because the price just seemed to good to be true.  After reading reviews and going to the agency to check it all out we booked it.  It was late November so we went knowing that the price also reflected that the weather could be iffy….not unlike our Vancouver weather at that time of year.  15 Day Dream of China tour.  It was Beijing, Xi’an, 5 day Yangtze River cruise, Suzhou and Shanghai, 3 domestic flights, all entrance fees and all food.  It also included, besides the 6 of us traveling together, 23 other people on Bus 2 (of 6).  We pretty much knew what to expect “group tour” wise and weren’t disappointed nor were we disappointed in the trip itself!  It was really a great trip to an incredibly interesting country with a fascinating culture and history!  Will do this journal in three parts……

Wed Nov 18

We did a selfie at the airport and sent it to Linds and the girls at work.  (Donna and I worked together and have been friends for 35 years….I retired in May 2015, she was still working when we went on this trip).

While we were having breakfast at the airport Neil and Shirl and Dave and Loyanne all arrived.  Met up and off thru security.  I, as usual, got picked for a random check.  Had the choice of a pat down or going thru the fancy xray machine.  Can’t take your stuff with you to the machine, so I opted for the pat down….no issues.

On the plane loading up.  Donna and I had seats together which was good.  We were pretty close to the back of the plane (China Eastern Airbus A330).  Row 70 of 75, seats J & L….I have the window 🙂  Left the gate a little early….just before 12 noon.   Take off was good…..out over the water so headed in the right direction!    Seats are OK.  Not sure I’d refer to the legroom as “above average” but good enough.

Dinner/lunch was served pretty well right after we leveled off.  Choice of “chicken rice” or “seafood noodle”……had the chicken.  Actually pretty good with teriyaki sauce, rice and veg.  Had the red wine to go with it….pretty yucky.  The meal came with a piece of cake, a bun, coleslaw with a big shrimp and a little Kit Kat bar.

At some point during the flight we changed to tomorrow!  Beijing is 16 hours ahead of Vancouver.

Thurs Nov 19/Fri Nov 20

It’s still the same day to me!  Long, long flight (just about 14 hours) but was OK considering.  Did manage to sleep a couple of hours here and there.  We flew up the coast, not directly out over the Pacific.  Over Alaska, Russia, Siberia….maybe Mongolia too.  I really enjoyed looking out the window at the different landscapes along the way.  The flight attendents were constantly coming along and telling people to close their blinds because…..”sleep now”….it was like 4 in the afternoon for us at that point!!

Breakfast we had the choice of congee (sp?) or eggs…..chose the eggs!  OK, just regular plane food.

Arrived in Shanghai on time…..8PMish, I think….really had no idea of the time at that point.  After customs, everyone went right thru security again and on to the gate for our flight to Beijing.  Had a few hours to kill so found a restaurant/bar and had beers and G & T’s.

No problems going through security there…other than the umbrella!  The flight to Beijing was good….a little less than 2 hours, most of which I managed to sleep!

Arrival was good but a  little chaotic…..luggage from 3 planes on the same carousel.  It was well after midnight by then.  12:01AM China time Nov 20, 6AM (Nov19) Vancouver time.  Have lost a day just in travel and time zones.  A ton of people on these tours!  Lots of different buses.  Finally collected all the people and luggage for our bus and arrived at the Loong Palace at 1:30AM.

What a HUGE hotel!!  Looked nice in the dark.  It was an incredibly long day(s) and I’m glad we won’t do this again on the way home.

Our tour guide is Winston.  They did a bit of a tour change……..we’re going to the Great Wall tomorrow because it’s supposed to snow the next day.  Will do Tiananmen (sp?) and Forbidden City then.

So tired, can’t see straight enough to write anymore….

Fri Nov 20

Up at 7AM.  Very “hung over” feeling even though I didn’t have anything to drink!  Jetlag?  Very long day yesterday, or whatever day it was….

The lobby is a mile away from the rooms!  Down for breakfast around 8.  NO HOT COFFEE!!  Buffet was pretty typical except with the addition of various Chinese dishes like noodles, rice, congee etc.  There was a “Muslim Food” section but had bacon in with the potatoes……shouldn’t have laughed really but was kind of funny!

On the bus at 9:15 to the Great Wall…..in the snow!!  It started a bit earlier than predicted!  It was about an hour drive north…..still kind of in Beijing, Badaling area/section.  Traffic was horrendous!  Snow was coming down pretty good but as we got closer to Badaling we caught glimpses of the wall through the snow, buildings and fences.

Very touristy up there.  Buses parked quite far from the entrance…..15-20 minute walk in the snow.  Shops, a museum, coffee shops etc. along the way.

Very pretty though with the snow and I think it was really quite an opportunity to see it like that.  Unfortunately the visability was minimal so could really only see about 3 or 4 sections and the towers between them.  The wall walkways were very, very slippery.  It was OK for me because I had good tread on my boots, not so for many others.  Other than Loyanne none of us ventured beyond the first tower.  People were slipping and sliding going up and down so just not worth breaking a leg or an arm going further.  They were falling and then, because it was icy too, just sliding down out of control, taking out anyone in their path.  Was quite entertaining to watch really!  Most people ended up on their bums either on purpose, because they’d fallen or someone had wiped them out.  Found a good, safe, out of the way place to enjoy the beauty of it and take a few pictures.  Quite magical really!

Had some time to kill so went and got HOT coffee and then used the washrooms….checking first to make sure they weren’t all the hole in the floor models!!

Next stop was a Cloisonne factory.  Had a quick tour to show how they make it before lunch (there).  Very interesting and intricate work…..very pretty.   https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/clos/hd_clos.htm

Lunch was OK….noodles, rice, chicken, spring rolls (1 each!) sort of sweet and sour pork….but not sure if there was enough for everyone.  There are 29 of us on our bus so our bus group was sat at 3 tables of 10.  Whatever food was put on the table was what you got…..if someone took too much, someone else didn’t get any….especially the meat!  (Food is very subjective, right?. We were prepared for whatever as we had read in the reviews that the food varied from trip to trip…some people saying there was a ton of it, it was great, others said not enough, not good, too “Americanized”, some suggested packing cup a soup/noodles for snacks later!)  What we did have was good…just not enough.

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Cloisonné shopping after lunch.  I bought a blouse!!  Cute Chinese style with toggle buttons and some cloisonné Christmas ornaments.  They offered to convert our purchases to Canadian dollars…..no, thank you!  Exchange rate is often higher and regardless of which currency, it still goes through the credit cards a yuan first, so almost like two conversions happen.  Found this out the hard way years ago on a cruise!

Snow was coming down quite heavy…..traffic was worse.  Our next stop was the 2008 Olympic venues back in Beijing.  The birds nest stadium and the “Ice Cube”, which was the water sports centre.  There are also two towers, one called the “5 nails” and the other with the Olympic circles.  Donna, Loyanne and I did the plaza walk.  Just after 4PM and everything was starting to light up.  It was bloody cold by then…..and the wind was whipping up too, making it even colder.  Pretty though with the lights and the snow.  We walked to the end of the plaza and back…..took about an hour.  Was pretty impressive really.  The birds nest is huge.  The plaza was filled with tourists, most of which were Chinese people.  Winston, our tour leader/guide, said seeing this is very important to Chinese people…..they are very proud of what their country did for the Olympics.

Next we were off to dinner at a restaurant that was very similar to the place we had lunch.  It was OK but not all that impressive….Americanized again.  One of our tables ordered Peking duck….which was brought to the table and carved by the waiter…quite a show was put on.  IMG_6386Again, not a lot of food.  You do get a drink with meals…..a glass of beer or coke….but only one!  No coffee or tea….not even green tea!

Back to the hotel just after 7.  We all headed to the bar for a drink or 2.  Lots of fun talking about everything we saw and did today.  Fantastic really….you can’t beat seeing the Great Wall in the snow!  Drinks are NOT cheap here.

Too bed very early for me….9:30.

Sat. Nov 21

Didn’t sleep too bad.  Woke up a couple of times then finally just stayed up at 5:30 (wrote in journal….no coffee makers in the rooms….argh!) .

Off early today 8:15.  Long day.  Tiananmen Square etc. and a rickshaw ride!

Breakfast at the hotel….coffee is NOT hot….if there is any!!  Had to wait for what seemed like forever!  Must remember to bring some packets of instant next time…better than nothing and there was always HOT water for tea.  They do have an omelet station but I didn’t have one.  They also fry up a bunch of eggs and keep them in a warm pan so they’re done just right….were quite good and not mushy like the scrambled eggs.

We were on road by 8:30.  T Square was our first stop.  To get to the square you have to go thru security checks ???  One of the guards was hassling our guide over something…..one of the women in our group, Margaret from Seattle, who is Chinese, told us it was all for show because we were tourists from America….maybe so??  You have to walk thru underground walkways to get to it, then along the street and thru another security check.  The square is HUGE/MASSIVE.  Chairman Mao’s tomb is in one of the buildings….that building too is massive, almost ridiculously so.  There are quite a few monuments, including the big one in the middle that recognizes all the people of China.  Besides the tomb, the square is surrounded by huge buildings, perhaps government offices, flying flags and most covered with red and yellow banners.  There are a ton of street lights in the square each with 5 or 6 or more cameras on them.  There is NO reference anywhere to the massacre that took place here in 1989…….ironically Tiananmen means “gate of heavenly peace”.

It was sooooo cold walking across there I swore my fingertips were going to fall off!  I was also amazed at the number of people…..lots of tourists of course but many people just sort of congregate to socialize/pay respects etc.

At the end of the square there is a building with a big picture of Mao, which is the entrance to the Forbidden City.  Thru security again, which was a bit of joke…..there were so many people they couldn’t have possibly checked everyone.  There were at least 2, or even 3, people at a time walking through the scanners, which just beeped continually.  They didn’t stop anyone.

Once inside, it was pretty incredible.  Just the size of it, bright colours and the elaborate decorations are unreal.   https://www.chinahighlights.com/beijing/forbidden-city/  Virtually impossible to capture the size of the place in a picture…..or the decadence.  The weather also did not help for picture quality!  You don’t know which way to look!  Statues, pots (for plants?), dragons, swans etc. and gardens that I’m sure are beautiful in spring and summer.  Huge stairways. There are outer courtyards, inner courtyards, the palace, all in all over 8,000 rooms.

The only building that was open….not to go in, only to look in….was the emperors bedroom.  It is all just amazing.  We went through just about the entire place, which took over 2 hours.  Very cold….mixed rain, ice and snow the entire time we were wandering around.  Donna’s fitbit has already registered over 10,000 steps and we weren’t anywhere near finished for the day.  We went out thru the back (?) entrance….very pretty, lots of trees, beautiful building, shops and the moat that still surrounds it which was actually very pretty with the misty, sleety weather.

There were so many people though….Winston said probably at least 50,000 and in the summer that number would more than double on any day.  I think half of the 50,000 had umbrellas, which was a bit challenging while wandering around (we had our rain ponchos)  Bad, bad hair day!!

Lunch….was good but again not enough, at least for the men.  After lunch we went to the Temple of Heaven.  Another amazing example of Chinese architecture and history.  A really beautiful park area with a big Pagoda in the centre and some museum buildings surrounding it.  There are a number of covered walkways that local people, mostly retired (men can retire at 60 and women at 55), congregate at.  That’s where they do their socializing as opposed to going to each others houses/apartments.  They play checkers and cards, have tea and chat.  There was another group that had put together a choir….they practiced there every day.  It was pretty neat.  They socialize outside, even all winter, because their houses aren’t very big or too many people live with them.  They can meet with more friends at the same time this way.  They are certainly a hardy bunch!!  It was freezing.

https://www.travelchinaguide.com/attraction/beijing/heaven/

Next was our rickshaw ride in the old Beijing area of Hutong.  Loved it there!  We were in rickshaw #38.  You get tucked in pretty good with a nice warm blanket for your legs.  Once he started pedaling though the wind froze your face and head!  What a neat area Hutong is!! Little alleyways full of houses, shops, bars etc.  Was historically also where the opium dens used to be.

It’s next to a pretty lake.  It would have been great to be able to walk around there…..but such as tours go, we were on a schedule!  We stopped part way through and walked a bit to visit a local family in their “typical” home.  It’s sort of a courtyard affair with 3 or 4 separate buildings around it.  The family (grandparents, parents, kids etc.) usually all live there.  Kitchen and dining room (with a big screen TV!) is one building, the others are basically bedrooms.  Very tiny little kitchen but only one person does the cooking….usually Grandma.  They have chickens running around and various outbuildings for storing food.  Had a garden too but all had been harvested by this time of year.

Back on the rickshaw thru a maze of alleys that were fun and interesting to see.  Lots of chickens, little shops set up in front of peoples houses/courtyards…selling food (lots of chestnut stands)

or flea market type stuff, cars (some rather fancy ones) bicycles galore, carts of all shapes and sizes and of course motorcycles.

Finished the rest of the tour thru Hutong and back to where we started.  Was a really fun experience.  Was very interesting to see how they lived….based on things Winston has told us, and Margaret, I’m becoming a bit of skeptic when it comes to what “normal life” here is…..could some of it be staged for our benefit??

Dinner was bizarre!!  A restaurant at the Ramada Inn, but instead of our tables being IN the restaurant, we were pretty much right in the middle of the lobby!  They left the doors open….for what reason, who knows.  The waitstaff wore coats with aprons over them!!  It was pretty ridiculous really.  We kept getting up and closing the doors.  The real restaurant was up a couple of steps from where we were.  Food was pretty well the same as what we’ve been having everywhere else.  I was hoping that there would be a bit of variety, but no.  Donna thought she’d buy a bottle of wine from the restaurant because it was cheaper than buying it by the glass at the hotel.  Much confusion!!!  She picked out a bottle, which they bagged for her (turned out to be a 2009!!  Not the one she actually picked out!  We tried it but absolutely not drinkable….ah sigh.)

After dinner we took a drive by the Olympic Park to see it all lit up.  Pretty nice!  The Ice Cube/watersport centre changes colours, the sides kind of look like bubbles.  It was interesting driving back in the dark looking down some of the smaller side streets.

The city is an incredible mix of old, ancient, art deco-ish, modern and ultra-modern.  Some things are just a strange mix side by side…..other things are just foreign to us, like squatty potties….haven’t had to use one yet and will try to avoid at all costs, or you walk into a little store with gold plated ceiling and a massive chandelier but everything else in it is a mess…shelves half falling down, dirty cracked floors etc.  They build big beautiful buildings with grand gardens and statues but don’t bother with any upkeep.  At our hotel, which has a big beautiful garden with tumbled over statues and green stagnant water in ponds that had some fountains going, others not, there are two huge bowl-like planters on the driveway, they’re at least 10ft across, filled with dead, and now snow covered, summer plants still in them.  One of the bowls is tilted a bit, probably hit by a car!?  There’s a big fountain in the courtyard, probably 25-30ft tall but the pinecone top thing has tipped over and they’ve just left it that way.  I hope lots of the pictures I’ve taken from the bus turn out.  The best pictures ever……every day life on the streets/down alleys is so fascinating to me.

Every traffic light and a lot of the street lights, especially at major intersections, have cameras on them…..about 10 of them facing each direction.  Not sure if they are for traffic or for spying on people!

To the bar for a nightcap…..was 1/2 price happy hour but too tired to take advantage of it!  To bed a bit later tonight.  Very tired after a long, chilly but fascinating day!

Sun Nov 22

Bizarre, crazy day…..will begin with the normal part……

Up early again but we didn’t have to leave until 9:30.  We did have to have our checked bag out in the hallway by 8AM for loading on the bus.  Breakfast was good…..there was lots of HOT coffee!  It was snowing….A LOT!

Our first stop was at the pearl farm.  Interesting little bit of info on pearls and a short video, then shopping.  They certainly weren’t very pushy,  which was good, but not what we were expecting.  The place was packed….many tour buses in the parking lot.  If they pulled a tray out for you to look at, you had about 30 seconds to make your pick, if you didn’t make a decision quickly, they’d whip the tray away and move on to someone else……didn’t need that bracelet anyway!  Everything was pretty expensive, definitely catering to tourists…on buses!

The snow was really coming down when we left and headed for the Summer Palace.  I think this has been my favorite spot so far!  Absolutely beautiful and more so in the snow.  There is a really nice park surrounding it.  Lots of trees…..beautiful willows, weeping right into the water of the lake.  A big pagoda at the entrance gate that you go through that opens onto the lake and another pagoda on a little jut of land into the lake.  The temple (Buddhist) is up on the hillside partway around the lake.  It looked surreal in the snow! Many photo ops here…..the canal with little bridges, the bamboo forest, then way around the lake, you can walk along a path, supposedly 7km, out onto a big bridge that goes to a little island out in the middle of the late.  All of it manmade for the “Dragon Lady” who was the mother of the last Emperor (the movie).  We walked on the covered walkway on the right side…walls and ceiling covered in artwork that took 20 years and many artists to complete.

Many, many willow trees that look very pretty around all the buildings and quite magical in the snow.  Would have loved to spend a lot more time there…..so much to see and so many places to wander and be awed by the views in every direction.  Was beautiful today in the snow but would love to see it some day in the summer when everything is in bloom.

https://www.travelchinaguide.com/cityguides/beijing/summer.htm

Off to lunch…..very interesting restaurant today!  After going through these heavy plastic or whatever hanging things over the doors (kind of like the matts at the gym!!) it was like walking into a country and western bar/restaurant.  All the railings had chuckwagon wheels, checkered tablecloths and ranchy/farm type decorations everywhere…..oh boy we thought….burgers!  Nope, was Chinese and pretty much the same stuff we’ve had the other days.  It was kind of a fun place though….spent lots of time just looking around at everything….and they had good, clean bathrooms!

After lunch we visited a tea house.  Fun!  I liked it there…..very clean and orderly shop.  We went upstairs where they demonstrated how to make and pour tea properly.  We tried 4 or 5 different ones.  The first one was oolong.  All the teas are natural so no caffeine (?).  All were interesting and quite good.  It’s very important that the water temp is correct!  Too hot is not good…..water is boiled but then left to cool a bit.  I bought 2 different kinds.  One was the fruity kind…..all diced and dried fruit (apricots, berries) and rose buds!  I don’t like sweet tea but this was really quite good and would make an excellent iced tea for the summer.

Bought a tea mug for Linds that changes picture/colour when you pour in the hot water….cute.  And a little “pee pee boy” ……this helps you tell if the water is the right temperature for your tea.  It’s red clay and you soak it in water so that the little hole in the penis fills up with water…..when you pour your hot water for tea on the little guy, if it’s the right temperature, he will pee!  Cute too…..think the grandkids will get a kick out of it.

Then the not so normal…..

From the tea shop it was directly to the airport.  It was snowing a lot more by then and getting colder by the minute so the snow was really sticking.  Traffic to the airport was a mess…..also rush hour (not really sure that you can distinguish a difference here though….it seems like it’s always rush hour!)  When we arrived we found that a bunch of flight were delayed and/or cancelled.  Ours wasn’t even on the board yet.  We were issued boarding passes but with no gate assigned.  Had a some time to kill before we had to meet back up with Winston so headed to a restaurant more snacks and drinks.  Back at the desk, he didn’t have anymore details, other than what we had seen, which was the flight was on the board but showing as delayed, still no gate #.  He told us to keep checking and to meet again either at the gate if it was going to go, or if it showed up as cancelled back at the desk.  If still showing delayed to meet again….or send someone to get the info…..at 8PM (our flight was supposed to depart at 7)!

Back to a different restaurant where we ordered beer and wine.  Met up there with the 2 couples from Rhode Island and proceeded to go through a lot more beer!  Someone kept going out every 15 min or so to check the board for a gate and boarding time.  At just after 7:30 it popped up with gate 67 and boarding at 8!  Hooray we thought!  At the gate an announcement came on telling us it was now delayed, then about 10 minutes later another one telling us it was now cancelled.  Not all 6 buses were flying…..a couple had gone via highspeed train earlier in the day, lucky them assuming there were no issues with the trains.  There were enough of us at that gate plus all the non-tour passengers too to cause a lot of chaos.  Winston and the other tour guides tried to keep everything and everyone as organized as possible….they did a pretty darn good job considering!  We all (the tour groups at least) were herded out of the airport outside (really snowing and really cold!) to wait for buses.  It took what seemed like forever.  There were other tour buses, shuttle buses from various hotels and a zillion people.  A bus from the “Super 8” hotel pulled up and we were told to get on.  It was a little bus that only held about 10 people!!  So a mad scramble.  Some of our group managed to get on it, but most of us were left in the line(ish).  We finally managed to get on the second to last bus…..was way past 11PM by then.  Patience, patience.   I think they said 300 flights (!), coming and going, had been cancelled and were continuing to be cancelled….that makes for a lot of people hanging around outside the airport.  Eventually arrived at the “Super 8” hotel (just about midnight by then) to find that our RI friends and the Mexican family had managed to get rooms but now it was full……I was secretly wishing bedbugs on them at that point…lol!!

We ended up being bused to another hotel….or MOT L (E was burnt out!).  Was a little worried at first.  The lobby, which was very cold, temp wise and very unaesthetically appealing (really bright lights, industrial mishmash of chairs, rather dirty tile floor…fair enough it was snowing and there were a LOT of people…. bars on windows etc.)  was full of tour people and some Armenian (?) business people……all yelling!  Chinese people yelling, Armenian people yelling….at each other… in their own languages!!  Not sure how effective it was.  Tour guides were trying to get a word in edgewise regarding accommodation for their groups…tour people and guides were all looking quite exhausted….it was well after midnight and everyone just wanted to sleep.  Finally, finally, we got a room!  The MOT L looked like it might have been an army barracks at some point in it’s life.  The room was actually really good!  It had all been redone to look like sort of a boutique hotel.  It had comfy beds with nice puffy comforters and pillows.  BUT….NO HEAT!  It was freezing.  The window looked out onto another hallway.  The floors were marble or tile so cold too.  It was really clean, which was all that really mattered.

Donna and I both crawled into our beds half dressed.  We had no idea what time we had to be up or if we were even going to be able to leave in the morning.

Monday Nov 23

Wake up call at 4:45.  Donna hopped in the shower, I went looking for coffee, only to see the buses loading up!  Mad rush at that point to get going….no breakfast, no coffee or anything.  Winston had got us booked on the 7AM flight to Xi’an.  He is such a good tour guide even through all the chaos last night…he made sure all 29 of his group had somewhere to sleep and had managed to get us on one of the first flight out this morning!  Good job…..even though no coffee!!

Our flight (China Eastern) was an hour late leaving because of the back up from all the cancellations and delays yesterday.   As we were taking off the sun came out!!  Flight was an hour and a half.  “Breakfast” was served….a very dry bun with fish of some sort in the middle, yogurt, pickled veg salad and congee…..NO BLOODY COFFEE!!  Just water.  Overall was pretty crappy.

Xi’an is supposed to be warmer because it’s a bit further south but it was mixed rain and snow.  Xi’an has 9 million people!  Lots of new highrise apartments…..like really lots!! They use coal but we also saw what looked like nuclear silos.  There are so many new buildings it’s hard to believe anyone will ever live in half of them.  Lots of traffic of course, which includes scooters, bicycles, funny little 3 wheeled trucks (sort of like tuks tuks).  You see whole families on scooters! Little trucks with wooden sides filled with men/women….maybe for work? Way more here than we saw in Beijing.  A local tour guide joined us for the hour long bus ride.  She talked about how the terracotta warriors were found and the Emperor that had them made.  She also talked a lot about the other various dynasties but in all honesty I think most of our group were dozing thru the whole talk.  It was interesting but a little too much to process after last night….and no coffee this morning.  Our first stop was NOT the hotel.

We were off to lunch at the Terracotta Museum where they make replica warriors, emperors and captains and horses.  Lunch was a huge big buffet on the 3rd floor of the museum building.  Still Americanized Chinese but with some different dishes….still no coffee! So I had a beer, what the hell eh?!!  The 2nd floor was art and furniture.  The first was all the terracotta stuff with some demonstrations of how they made miniature warriors etc. using the original method that was used to make the real ones.  Very interesting!  I bought a warrior for 140Y (about $40 CDN).  The detail on these is incredible.  I was wandering around and found…..a coffee bar!!  I had a cappuccino.

Off to see the warriors!  So exciting….this was one of the main highlights of this trip for me.  Who would have thought that I’d actually get to see this place??  The site is massive.  It was a 1km+ walk from the bus and then the site itself, if you manage to visit everything it is another 2 or 3km of walking.  There are 3 separate building for the warriors and horses and another for the chariots.  #1 building is the original site where they were found.  It’s set up really well so you can walk all the way around.  The front part is all the warriors and their horses and even wagons/carts in rows.  They have taken great care to rebuild/restore them properly…..which was good to know!  It was pretty amazing to be able to see this!  They are still doing excavations at site #1 so you could watch some of the work they were doing.  At the back end there was what they called the “warrior hospital”.  You could see how they were painstakingly rebuilding the warriors and horses.  The detail on everyone of them is incredible.  Each one is different and unique, since they are replicas of real warriors, so it is like putting together a bunch of giant jigsaw puzzles where someone kind of threw all the pieces together and you have to sort out which pieces go with which puzzle.  There were piles of bits and pieces, all numbered just waiting to be put on the warrior they belonged too.  Many of the warriors were pretty much intact but still quite a few with bits missing…..probably in those piles somewhere.

Building #2 is the second site found.  There wasn’t as much to see there other than rows of the dirt and more digging and excavation work…..and more bits and pieces.  How and when they are ever going to put all this together seems quite formidable.

We were advised to skip building #3 because there wasn’t much to see there yet…..smaller site and still a work in progress, nor did we go to the mausoleum.  We did go to the Exhibition Hall that holds beautiful bronze statues of warriors, captains, horses  chariots.  One of the chariots was for the guy who was like the police chief or head of security.  The other was the Emperors…it was smaller and all closed up except for a few slits that he could see out of.  He had a bunch of different ones so people wouldn’t know which one he was going to use…..he was quite the tyrant so lots of people wanted to get rid of him.  There is also a little movie that tells about the Qin dynasty.  Very interesting!

The whole site is a park, which was very well tended, even at this time of year….would probably be quite lovely in spring and summer.  We all met up at the gift store/coffee shop at 4:30.  I had another coffee….Americano with extra hot water….a bit of a challenge language wise but it all worked out!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terracotta_Army

Long walk back to the bus through a market/shopping area with lots of sourvenir stores. Very cold but not snowing/sleeting/raining…..certainly felt and looked like it could any minute.

Off to dinner……took almost 2 hours to get there.  It was so fascinating driving thru the city in rush hour.  Traffic lights don’t mean too much….they are simply a “suggestion”.  Cars, carts, bikes, moped, pedestrians….everywhere and going in every direction regardless of which side of the road or the colour of the traffic lights.  It had started to snow/rain by then so people had umbrellas attached to their bikes and scooters.  Some had proper covers on them.  Looking down the side streets was so interesting….lots to see.  Stores, stands selling fruit (white pomegranites!), cook food, soup, noodles etc.  People, anyone….seems to set up big pots or woks on the sidewalks selling whatever they were cooking.

The place we went for dinner was huge big beautiful hotel….not ours…..have no clue though which one….was right across the street from one of the entrances to the ancient walled city.  Big staircases, mega chandeliers, huge pots of plants and some very elaborate floral displays.  Dinner was a buffet, which included soups and noodles made to order and ALL the beer you could drink.  We had our fair share even though everyone was pretty tired.  Excellent food and by far the best meal/buffet we’ve had so far……could the food be getting better??  Pinched a couple of instant coffee packets!

Winston told us our hotel was a 10 minute drive…..not quite!  Close to an hour to get there…..10PM!  Hotel is the Holiday Inn Xi’an Big Goose Pagoda.  Also huge and beautiful.  We had room 710….very nice room, comfy beds and everything, like the lights and TV, worked…bonus!  Sent Linds an email for her birthday just in case we don’t get internet/wifi on the boat.   Facebook is blocked in China….unless you have VPN, which John, the guy from Delta, said he could help with….not sure if I’ll bother though.

Tues Nov 24

Wake up call at 7 but both Donna and I were up around 6.  Slept great…..lucky I brought the coffee packets from the other hotel because the ones there already had the cream and sugar in it!  This hotel had the best breakfast buffet yet.  Bacon….so exciting and HOT coffee and lots of it!  Had scrambled eggs with spring onion…..made to order, really hot and very tasty.  Luggage had to be outside our door by 8.  They took it directly to the airport for us so we won’t see it again until be get on board the boat.

It will be nice to stay in the same place for 5 nights!  This is the problem with these kinds of tours…..even without snowstorms.  I was really sorry we only had one night at the Holiday Inn….it was pretty darn nice and we should have been there the day before but oh well, not much we can do about it.

On the bus by 9 to go and see the Big Goose Pagoda.  Didn’t get to go in but wandered around for an hour so.  Nice park and a big wide avenue with lots of statues and trees. the park is surrounded by restaurants, souvenir stands and lots of vendors selling toys and kind of junky stuff.  Quite a nice day….so far.  Chilly but brighter and no rain/snow.

Off to the Jade factory.  I didn’t really listen to the spiel and just wandered around the shop instead….was not in the market for anything, but some very lovely stuff.  All the jade, good quality of whatever, was really ridiculously expensive.  I did buy 3 small pictures with the Chinese characters for longevity, good health and fortune (at least I think that’s what they say!) Spent way too much time there to me.

Then headed for the airport for the buffet lunch and all the beer you want!  Lunch buffet was good, not very big but enough variety.

Driving around Xi’an, or Beijing for that matter, is really an incredible experience.  It is hard for me, or probably most people from North America, to understand how people can live like they do here….we really are spoiled!  Kind of like Mexico or Jordan I guess….you get used to what you have.  Huge modern buildings right next to old dilapidated ones, some in such a state that you can’t tell if they are new ones being built and have just been left as is, or old ones being torn down.  Most newer apartments have, or had, balconies but they have been closed in to make more living space.  Terribly messy store fronts with a mishmash of businesses side by side, tacky storefronts with bronze lions on either side of the door but cracked or boarded up windows….etc. etc.  Not really a lot of “garbage” garbage just a lot of junk and stuff!  Sidewalks with big chunks missing, or heaved with lots of cracks….Winston says they aren’t very good at repairing things!!  And no one complains about it!  Supposedly the city wouldn’t fix it anyway…..they say it’s the responsibility of the shop/building owner and the owners say it’s the cities so it just stays as is.  Once it was dark you could see in the windows of some buildings and most had only bare lightbulbs or fluorescent bulbs, ….but big screen TV’s.  Lots of laundry of course and because most windows have bars or some sort of a bar contraption on them, even food gets stored outside (take advantage of whatever space you can find) There are big empty lots full of bricks, water and garbage (real garbage). A lot of buildings old and new that are just empty shells.  It does look like they start to do things and then never finish or build big beautiful things but don’t look after them.  Or build really tacky things and then try to fill them with big expensive (looking?) things like chandeliers and statues.   This is not bad, it is just different…..I find it all amazing and incredibly interesting.  Truly, travel does open your eyes!

After lunch we went thru security…..who did not want to see my umbrella, or iPad, or anything in my bag this time but I did get a pat down.  Xi’an airport is very big and very nice.

Flight was just over one hour….very bumpy the entire time.   Very beautiful seeing all the rice paddies enroute.

Wuhan is a huge city of 14 million people.  Didn’t see much, or any of it really.  Because the bus ride to Yichang is 4+ hours, Winston got us KFC chicken sandwiches and fries to eat on the go.  (was supposed to start our cruise in Jingzhou but river was too low so had to move an hour or two further down river to Yichang)  Off to a good start, until we hit a BLIZZARD!  It very rarely snows here apparently.  Because of the weather the drive took closer to 5 hours…..and was quite scary really!  Snow blowing, huge big trucks whipping by us.  We had a big bus so all 29 of us pretty much had our own seats…..I used my bag for a pillow and managed to get in a bit of a nap.  We did have a pit stop at a Chinese auto stop/store.  One poor old lady working….lots of buses and trucks stopped.  Terrible bathrooms, only hot things were eggs boiled in tea and a coffee vending machine…..grabbed a coffee out of it and a bag of chips.

Arrived in Yichang sometime after 10PM.  Very chilly on the water and very breezy.  The river IS really low….you can tell by the number of steps we had to walk down and they set up sort of gangplanks at the bottom to get on the boat….a mix of wooden and metal planks to get us to the pier/dock.  Donna and I are in cabin 232.  Very nice cabin with a balcony.  Bathroom is a good size for a cruiseship.  Big shower….storage is lacking tho.  Only the closet and night table drawers.  Lobby is nice, big chandelier in the centre which is open all the way up to deck 6.  Lots of gold and black on the railings, big staircase.  Two elevators that are glass on the waterside…..all quite lovely!

Nothing is open on the ship!  No bars, no coffee, no food, nada. They said everyone is tired from traveling all day??  Except most people had slept for a couple hours on the bus.  There is a kettle and a couple different kinds of tea in the room.  Unpacked a bit and to bed.  Looking forward to starting this cruise!

Our ship  https://www.chinahighlights.com/yangtzecruise/yangtze-gold-8/

5 days on the Yangtze River next…….

Links to posts for the rest of this trip:

China 2015 – Yangtze River Cruise

Corsica 2008 – Week 2….

Saturday June 21

Dolphins this morning!!  They were aways out but could still clearly see them jumping.  What a treat!

Market day in Sartene.  Got there nice and early (8:30) to get a good parking spot.  A little too early since the market hadn’t opened yet…..half the vendors were still working on their set ups.  Had petit dejeuner across the street and watched them all finish setting up.  A man (oldish) in a nice new sporty car had some trouble maneuvering around the baracades…..which were up for obvious reasons…..and got stuck, the dragged the gate a few feet until it hit a truck.  Another guy helped unhook the gate from his car and then he just drove off!  Couldn’t see that side of his car but there had to have been quite a bit of damage to it because even the truck was scraped up….oh well!  No one seemed to bat an eyelash….

The market, in the main place, is quite small but with all the essentials.  A few jewelry stands, pottery, veg, meat and cheese stalls and a fish truck.  And the guy selling furniture…..mattresses and chairs etc. all set out on display.

Found a pretty bracelet for Shelly (sister-in-law) with little silver elephants and amethyst stones ….a nice present for her for doing the estate stuff for my parents.  Got Linds (daughter) a couple of bracelets…silver stars and the one with shells that are the “eyes” of  St. Lucia….cute story.   I bought a nice little pot….for sugar maybe??  Got Kim (daughter-in-law) some myrtle soap and sel de bain.  Stocked up on the saucisson, cheese and veg.

Story of St. Lucia http://www.lespierresdecorse.com/PrestaShop/en/content/7-the-eye-of-saint-lucia-legend

Sartene is really a very nice place! We were lucky we got there when we did though  because it was crazy busy by the time we were leaving at 10:30.

Back home, unpacked, read  and lazed around for a bit before lunch then down to the beach for a couple of hours.  Water was calm and pleasant today.  Got burnt 😦 ….one knee and half my back???  Even with sunscreen on!

Went to Chez Antoines, at the marina, for dinner tonight.  Thought we’d try the lobster (homard) but just way too expensive….it would have been at least 120E per meal!  Had the sea bass (loup) instead, Ken had the St. Pierre, both were really good.  For appies we had verrine du saumon, tomatoe and avocat, which came with a green salad.  A glass of pastis to start and pink wine with dinner.  Total bill for the 4 of us came to 120E.   All was good….even the fish with all the damn bones!!.

Sunday June 22

Off to Porto Pollo and Filatosa this AM.  Left around 10 and it was already incredibly hot.  Filatosa has a great little museum with bits and pieces of the relics found on the site.  It cost 10E and 2E for the booklet.  It is the most elaborate and organized site with the museum and little speaker boxes along the way that you could push a button for you language.  Very interesting and informative.  The museum is still run by the Cesari family which was interesting because of Dorothy Carrington’s book and her reference to them.  The site is great and shows not only the menhirs but also a rough outline of a community or settlement.  It is all in the middle of a farmer’s (Cesari’s??) field, cattle and all….bales of hay, outbuildings etc.  There is an olive tree that is supposedly over 1000 years old.  It’s very lovely.   Very, very hot though, so glad we went earlier.  Would have been horrid there in the middle of the afternoon.  Had a lemonade at the restaurant to cool down a bit.  There’s also a nice little artisan shop with some great jewelry and beautiful hand woven scarves.  Rae bought her girls a couple of cute bracelets.

Filatosa https://www.filitosa.fr/en/

Enroute to Plage de Cupabia stopped in Porto Pollo for lunch at a little restaurant near the marina….always seems to be great places to eat at marinas!  It’s a very cute little town with beautiful beaches and views of the mountain to Sartene.  Very scenic and surprisingly quite a few people.  Many places to stay around there….and many gorgeous beaches.  Lunch was excellent! I had moules gratin which were delicious….sopped all the butter/oil, garlic and gratin after with the bread….yummy!  Ken and Glen had pizza….really good with all really fresh goodies on it.

Found Plage de Cupabia but there was absolutely no shade and we hadn’t brought our umbrella.  It was way too hot to just sit there.  Interestingly though….the guys at the store in Filatosa told us that up until this week the weather had been terrible.  Cool and lots of rain.  He said the local “old” people hadn’t seen it this green in June since the 1940’s.

Decided to just head back home to our beach.  Rae and Glen went for a walk to the bakery for bread, Ken snoozed, I read and got stuff ready for dinner, then went for a swim.

Good dinner with all the leftover bits!  And beer and wine 🙂  Tomorrow we’re heading north to Calvi and will stay overnight somewhere around there….maybe two…and then head back thru Corte.

Monday June 23

Three hours he (Madame’s husband) said it would take to get to Calvi…..hah!

Left bright and early to Calvi.  Took approximately 2 hours just to get to Ajaccio, so good to know for when we have to get to the airport.  The road (coast road) started out very windy and got a lot worse.  Stopped for coffee and a croissant at a little café overlooking a beautiful bay.  From that point we wound our way up and up and up.  Past some of the most beautiful bays and coves with gorgeous beaches.  Some very beautiful little downs clinging to the sides of the mountains.  Between Piana and Porto is the Calanque de Piana….absolutely amazing!  The views in every direction are stunning…pink/red/rust colour rock cliffs and towers against the blue sky and water can’t , brush etc.)  But the views were spectacular….if you weren’t the driver!!  THEN we hit the canyon!!

From Porto just about all the way to Galeria the road is even narrower.  Very, very narrow!  Rock face straight up on one side and straight down into who knows where on the other side. This road is shared with TOUR BUSES!!  In some places it is NOT wide enough for two cars to pass, let a lone a bloody tour bus!  Luckily we only seen them parked at lookout points and didn’t have pass one anywhere along the way.   The beauty of this area managed to make up for the stress of driving through it.  We started to see what looked like cow patties at the side of road???  We thought it must be something else…..then low and behold around one of the very narrow curves….walking along the side of the road is a cow!!  How in the hell it got on the road was beyond us.  There must have been a little valley or something that we missed or that poor bugger had been walking for a long time!

The road finally started DOWN the mountain, still windy and curvy but a little wider and less cliffy.  Came to a nice little rest area and pulled over so Ken (the driver) could take a bit of a break.  He’s really a good driver thank goodness……as he says “I want to live!”

We kept thinking we’d see Calvi around the next corner but it was still a little ways off.  32km took us over an hour!

La calanches de Piana & Reserve Naturelle de Scandola – UNESCO World Heritage site http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/258/

Finally arrived in Calvi at 3PM…..not 1PM like we’d hoped, which was already adding at least 2 or 3 hours to what Marie’s husband had told us.

Found a hotel room/suite for 4 at the Calvi Hotel.  TV didn’t work!  Still didn’t after they fixed it. Late lunch of pizza at a place on the beach.

Calvi is a very pretty place but very crowded and touristy.  The beaches are lovely but packed with chairs and umbrellas that you can rent from the bars…and if you don’t you can’t reallt use the beach in front of them.  There is another beach further along that can be used by anybody with no bars.  The water is very clean and very shallow for a long way out.  The view of the town and citadel from there is great.  And the bay with the mountains in the background is beautiful.  R & G wandered into the town and Ken  and I to the beach.  Had a swim and did some people watching…..lots to watch!

At 5:30 is was still way to hot to be sitting in the sun so back to the room, cleaned up and sat out on the deck with a glass of wine and read for a bit.

Headed along the marina and out to look at some of the huge yachts.  Some massive ones with the crews cleaning the railings, folding towels, setting tables for dinner and getting ready for their owners/renters or whoever was lucky enough to be going out on them….how decadent!  Could see inside a couple of them…..unreal!

Had a great dinner at one of the many restaurants that line the marina, the guys had steaks that were really good, Rae and I had the moules which were really good too but service was probably the worst of any of those restaurants.  The waiter was frazzled, running around like crazy…not a very relaxed atmosphere.  It was called Le Nautic….ok for a quick meal but not someplace to sit around, people watch and enjoy the scenery.

Walked up to the citadel in the dark.  Views down to the marina and out towards the beaches was very nice at night.  The citadel and Calvi has a lot of history attached to them…..Christopher Columbus may have been born here, Nelson lost an eye in some battle, sieges and wars, part of the French Foreign Legion is there.  Most of it was closed by the time we got up there.  It was a bit of a tough walk up and down on the cobblestones.  The way is not very well lit.

The old town of Calvi at the top is really nice with lots of narrow little alleys, restaurants and cafes and shops.  Back down in the port area off the main drag are also lots of nice little restaurants and touristy boutiques etc.  It’s actually very pretty but really crowded, much like the Riviera.

Back to the hotel close to midnight.  Very bad headache tonight….maybe all the stress of the drive or the heat or a combo of both.  Haven’t decided if we’re going to stay here again tomorrow…..we’ll figure that out in the morning.

Tues June 24

Decided not to stay another night.  It would have been nice to wander around a bit more in the daylight but it’s really busy and really touristy so thought we’d go to Corte….maybe stay there.

Stopped at L’ile Rousse on the way.  More beautiful coast between there and Calvi.  L’ile Rousse is a very pretty little place.  We arrived before it got too crowded.  There’s a ruined tower down by the marina that looks like it just grows out of the rock.  The central square is gorgeous.

Big plane trees down one side with little cafes under them and a statue of Pascali Paoli in the middle.  On the other side is the big covered portico that the daily produce market is set up in.  It’s a great setting.  There are some great little shops and cafes up and down a few streets.  It’s a very quaint little place…..I would stay here if I were going to come back and stay at this end of the island!  Had coffees under the trees before starting on to Corte.

After leaving the coast we started to climb towards the interior.  It’s really very different scenery there.  Lots of little towns clinging to the mountainside.  Very green and foresty….very pretty.

Corte is awesome!  Parked at the bottom in the newer town and walked up and up the little windy streets, some cobbled, some with sort of big sloping stairs….definitely not wheelchair accessible!  Wonder what someone with disabilities would do?  Many cute little restaurants and cafes.  Lots of nice shops and an old monastery (which I couldn’t go in because I was sleeveless and was NOT going back to the car to get my sweater….too hot to wear one anyway!)  A couple of nice old churches and the citadel at the top….up way more stairs/cobbled streets.  Some of the building are built right into the rock mountainside, all are sort of the beige/grey/brown coloured with shutters and laundry hanging out.  Corte is probably one of the most picturesque towns we’ve been too.

Checked at the TI office to see if any hotels had anything but there wasn’t.  We had lunch and wandered around a bit then decided to just head back to Tizzano.  First though we went to the Gorges de la Restonica…..absolutely fabulous! Just beautiful!   Corsica 2008 324Very forested valley/gorge with big trees and the fast flowing river full of huge rocks/boulders and crystal clear water.  Walked a bit of the trail (GR20 goes thru), soaked our feet and headed back to the car.  Was very pleasant and much cooler than up in Corte.

The road back to Ajaccio goes up and up through the mountains with more towns hanging off the sides, stone bridges/aquaducts and deep valleys with that are still quite green for June.  Lots of pine trees, very fragrant.  A windy but good road.  The mountains are the huge jagged ones that we can see in the distance.

Stopped in Propriano for dinner on the way home .  Very, very hot today.  The temp in Corte was 37C.  Cooler back by the water but not much.

Wed June 25

Quiet day today.  Up to Sartene around 11 to hit the bank machine and do some shopping.  Arrived about the same time the tour buses did….very crowded.  Shops, not all but quite a few, closed at 12:30 – 1:00.  Very hot again today.

Picked up some cute olive wood cheese boards, for Donna and Steve and Di, shaped like Corsica.  Some Corsica shaped keychains that I’ll make into Christmas ornaments, nougat for the office and a bottle of myrtle liqueur that we’ll try later.  Chestnuts are another thing that is big here…..

Back in Tizzano, we walked up to the bakery this AM and rented a boat for tomorrow! A very little boat is all you can get without a license.  Hopefully the sea is nice and calm otherwise we won’t be going too far.

Made a big pot of soup/stew with all the leftover sausage and veggies….was really good.  Spent the afternoon lazing around, reading, snoozing etc..

Went for a swim after dinner…..9PM!  Was very nice.  Beautiful sunset tonight on the beach but I didn’t take my camera down.

I really like Sartene….it has everything you could want really….views, nice plaza, shops, cafes etc.

Thurs June 26

Another nice day!  We rented a dingy….a very small plastic boat with an outboard motor but it went pretty good for having 4 people and a picnic on it!  Headed out to sea and finally to Plage du Tralicettu.  A beautiful crescent shaped sandy beach……there are actually 3 different beaches there.  Parked the boat, went for a swim and wandered around for a while.  Very few people. A little further down the beach, out of the maquis, comes a herd of cattle!  Cows, calves and a bull.  Right down onto the sand at the edge of the water…..some of them laid down, others just stood around with the big bull watching over it all.  There were a couple of boys with a big surfboard and a dog.  The boys went into the water on the board and the dog tried to swim after them but too far for the dog to go so the boys came back to the beach and the dog hopped on the board with them and away they all went….the dog stood on the back as they paddled.  They went over to some rocks and the dog hopped off with them and ran all over the place….they all got back on the board and went off to some different rocks…..really cute and fun to watch.

Loaded our little red dingy back up and back out to sea in search of another beach further up the coast.  Found a rocky one, with lots interesting tide pools.  Had our picnic there.  Lots of shells and fish, even red/pink jelly fish.  Off around the point to another small but really nice beach.  Corsica 2008 358There was a HUGE yacht anchored.  “Champagne Lady of London”.  We seen it in the marina in Calvi.  Must google it later.  It must have been 70 feet or more.  Quite deceiving sizewise until you get right up to it!  It had a whole little marina of it’s own at the back……a thing folded down and out came all the sea-doos, other floatie toys etc. and someone set up a table and chairs with an umbrella!  Must be nice 😦

Corsica 2008 368
“downtown” Tizzano……the bar, marina, restaurant and bakery

 

 

Back on “our yacht” for a little tour around before took the boat back.  It was 90E for the rental and 15E for the gas.  A pretty darn nice day!

Home for a snooze and went to the marina for dinner at the bar.  The plat du jour as sanglier.  Rae and I had that……very good.  It was in a “daub”.   Tasted like a pot roast, not porky at all, which I thought it might be.

Very hot today, even on the water…..new sunburns.

Friday June 27

Nice day today, weather-wise and doing things.  Had a great breakfast then sat around   until 10 before going off to Olmeto via a backroad.  The fields are alive with poppies!  Bright red ones….so, so pretty!

We packed our bathing suits because we thought we’d stop a the plage de Baracci but missed it totally and ended up at a vineyard for a tasting.  Did the gris (a lighter rose),  the rose and the red which was a blend of syrah and Grenache….very, very good!  Bought a bottle of the gris and the rose (8E and 6E).

 

You can see Olmeto from the valley as you approach it…..beautiful town clinging….literally….to the mountainside.  Not a lot of parking but found a spot near the church and just hoped it was OK to park.  Had an excellent lunch at a restaurant called “La Source”.  Great food, service and incredible views of the valley.  I ordered the stuffed zucchini…..or so I thought, but ended up the best lamb shank I’ve ever had!  Was a huge order and delicious….I ate it all!  Would have thought our French had improved by now but apparently not…..although no one has asked up to “just speak English” for a while now….this is good!

After lunch nothing was open….siesta time!  But there really wasn’t much there in the line of shops anyway.  The town is famous for Colomba (factual and fictional in Merrimee’s book) and the vendettas that she caused.  Lovely Franciscan church, which also wasn’t open.

Was very hot again today…..actually thought I might be getting sick!!  Drank lots of water which helped so maybe just a bit dehydrated.

Back home around 5:30 and thankfully felt good again just in time for a quick swim and for some gin and tonics 🙂 for the girls and beer for the guys.  We also somehow managed to drink our way through a bottle of wine.  I don’t know how we do it on vacation……I do not drink this much at home, nor could I and still function!!

Down to the hotel restaurant for dinner, lasagna, more wine and coffee….all very good for 95.50E for the 4 of us.  We drank a lot, laughed a lot and had a great time tonight.  Everybody feeling a little tipsy.

Corsica 2008 412

Market day in Sartene again tomorrow….will pick up some coffee for home and gifts and get the matching necklace for Shelly.

Saturday June 28

Our last day in Corsica!!

Off to the market, not quite so early this time.  Bought Linds the St. Lucia shell ring to go with the bracelet and Shelly the necklace to go with the bracelet I bought her last week.  Wandered around looking for something to buy for me but didn’t find anything I just had to have.  Ken got a couple of tee shirts with the Corsican guy on them.  Had lunch, wandered in and out of a couple of shops then picked up the coffee and back home around 2.

Another really nice day.  Really hot too.  Big, big waves today so off to the beach.  Glen went in and got pummeled about but had a great time.  Ken and I just went in knee deep, which was bad enough when a wave came roaring in.

Corsica 2008 440

Big blobs of what looked like tar all over the beach this afternoon…..probably an oil spill of some sort that was getting washed in with the waves.  Discovered we had it stuck all over the bottom of our flipflops when we got back in the apartment….had tracked it all over and right into the showers.  The stuff was like glue.  We had tried wiping it to no avail, then scraping it, which just made it worse.  Finally soaked some paper towels in dish soap and that seemed to be the trick to getting is cleaned up…..what a bloody mess!

Happy hour(s) around 5:30 with the leftover beer, wine and gin and tonic.  Just ended up having a salad and cheesebread/toast and the last leftover bits of whatever food we had left.  Ken and I went down to the hotel bar for coffee and to get some last sunset pictures from the beach.

Finished packing up and set the alarm for 4AM.

Sunday June 29

Up early, cleaned up and out the door.  Bye Les Dunes!

Took about 2 hours to drive back to Ajaccio.  Dropped the car off, no problem.  No gas stations open so couldn’t top up the tank.  Probably wouldn’t have been much anyway….more than 3/4 of tank left.

Flight back to London was good.  Arrived a 1/2 hour early.  Took the train into London…..got a “small group” discount – 2 for the price of 4 – 60L (UK pounds) return for all of us.  At the hotel by 1.

Regency Hotel in South Kensington (now a Doubletree) on Queens Gate.  Really nice hotel, smallish rooms, but in one of those regency style row house buildings….very pretty white buildings with black trim and lots of flower boxes.  We’re on the 4th floor looking out on Queens Gate and at all the rooftop chimney pots!

Back out the door at 1:30 to a pub down the street for lunch.  Ken had fish and chips, I had bangers and mash, Rae and Glen had the roast beef/Yorkshire pudding special.

Was Ken’s first time in London, so we took our time wandering around the area and then on to Harrods.  Rae and I wanted to do some shopping so sent the boys to the Food Hall to get coffee and dessert…..fantastic baked goodies in there.  What were they eating when we came back?  Bloody Crispy Crème donuts!!  Really???

From there we walked to Buckingham Palace then thru Green Park down the beautiful tree lined street.  Next stop was Westminster Abbey.  Seen Big Ben and the Millenium Wheel.  Walked along the river toward Charing Cross.  Very warm here!  Found another pub, the Sherlock Holmes, beer and G & T’s then off to Leicester Square to check out the cheap, or not cheap, play tickets.  Stopped at Trafalgar Square which was all covered up because of some Jewish rally/celebration of some sort.

After checking out tickets (will probably do the Jersey Boy’s) went to find Larry’s cousins restaurant on Frith St., La Cantara…..kind of a mix of Spanish and N. African food.  We didn’t say who we were just in case the food wasn’t very good….we had a couple of tapas type dishes, which were just OK…..we never did say who we were and probably won’t tell Larry we went!!   Walked up to Picadilly Circus (2nd time today) and found Carnaby street…..oh what I wouldn’t have done to be here back in the late 60’s/early 70’s!!  It’s changed a lot but fun and lively, with lots of restaurants and pubs, to walk thru and take pics.  Ended up at the Picadilly Circus tube station and bought our day pass for tomorrow, then back to the hotel

Long day.  Walked A LOT and seen a LOT of London.

Monday June 30

Up early to start another very busy day.  Breakfast at the hotel…..continental buffet or 7L for full English breakfast.

Off to Leicester Sq. to buy tickets to the Jersey Boy’s….the story of Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons.  Had to wait for the tickets for 1/2 and hour so we watched them setting up for the grand opening of the movie Mamma Mia in the square.  They had brought in big potted lemon trees and people were tying lemons on them!!  All the stars were going to be there so much hoopla going on.  Picked up our tickets (55L each) and worked our way over to Covent Garden, which is a really neat indoor/outdoor shopping area with some great shops, restaurants and a big market/flea market.  Lots of fun to wander around.  Down to the Strand and past the Royal Courts of Justice.  Very impressive building!

Had a great lunch in a pub….fish pie for me, that was excellent, a burger for Ken.  Walked along Fleet street to St Pauls Cathedral.  Beautiful church…..just too big to get the whole thing in a picture from anywhere around there.  Didn’t pay to go in (18L!!) but did just stick our heads in the door to have a quick look…what we saw was impressive.  London is a little odd in that you pay to go into the churches but the museum entrance is by donation!!  Probably a better deal anyway!  Walked down to the river past the Tower of London…..was going to go in but huge line-ups.

Walked over the Tower Bridge and then all along the south bank.  A good mix of shops, pubs and restaurants and streets with neat names like Clink Street and Puddle Dock !  It goes on for miles.  Hay’s Galleria (Hay’s Wharf) is a covered mall with more of the same.  Stopped for drinks at a nice little pub to give our feet a rest then on past the Globe Theatre and the Tate Modern where there was a “street art” exhibit.  The Tate is an old power station that has been converted to an art gallery…..no time to go in this trip, next time.

Crossed the Milleneum pedestrian bridge and caught the tube to go back to the hotel.  Had just got on the tube only hear an announcement that there had been a fire at Earls Court station and all Circle Line trains were delayed or rerouted….not good because we didn’t leave time (after 5 already!) for an unexpected tube issue.  We got off and walked to a different tube station which meant we had to change trains….seemed like it took forever.  Made it back to the hotel just in time for a quick clean up, change and back out the door.

No time for dinner…..decided we’d just have Chinese or Japanese after the play.  Made it to the theatre with about half an hour to spare (play started at 7:30) and found out we’d been upgraded to the lower orchestra or “stalls”….so a good deal, I guess!  The play was excellent.  Good story with lots of great music.  Lasted way longer than we thought (10:30).  Ate at a little greasy Chinese joint just down the street.  Ordered wings and noodles which was surprisingly very good.  Back on the tube and to the hotel.  It was close to midnight….read for a bit and slept great.  Wake up call for 6AM.

Tues July 1 (Happy Canada Day!)

Up earlier than the alarm.  Checked our flight to make sure it was on time, had a quick breakfast and off to Victoria station to catch the train back to Gatwick.

Got to the airport only find out that our flight was delayed 4 hours!!  A bit of head scratching on that one.  Sat around outside in the sun for a bit, headed in and wandered around in some of the stores….bought a couple of books and finally time to board.

Uneventful flight home.

A great trip!  Corsica is amazing and worth another visit some day.  In hindsight, of course, we probably should have split our time there between the north and south end….a week at each end.  We covered a lot of territory in the south but other than Calvi we really didn’t see much of what the north had to offer.  Missed Bastia all together and, other than the airport, Ajaccio too, which is where Napoleon was born!  The east coast had some glorious beaches, not major resort areas, that would have been nice to spend some time at.  But you can only do and see so much and I think we did a pretty good job.  We also didn’t get an opportunity to hear any of the Corsican traditional polyphonic songs (a capella) or see the folk dances.  Next time!  I could live without the myrtle liqueur and chestnut anything.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Corsica 2008 – Week 1…..

Why Corsica?  A couple of years before were planning a trip to Italy and Corsica came across our radar…..how could we scoot over there for a few days?  It just wasn’t going to work out as our 3 weeks had already morphed into 4, then 5 and fitting Corsica in just wasn’t going to happen but our interest had been piqued and thought that perhaps it was a vacation destination all on it’s own….and we were right!   So much history….Napoleon, vendettas, wars and invasions, megaliths and of course food…..seafood, cheese, chestnut everything, myrtle liqueurs, beaches, mountains, twisty roads….just so much in such a small space!!  Our sources of information were a DK Corsica guide book, Lonely Planet and worth the read if you are interested in the history of Corsica regarding vendettas and the megaliths is a book by Dorothy Carrington called “Granite Island: A Portrait of Corsica (a bit of a slog read but quite interesting).

Map and some useful info on Corsica  https://www.go-to-corsica.com/corsica-infos/map-of-corsica

Week 1……

Friday June 13

Rae and Glen picked us up at 11:00 and off we went.  At the airport within an hour.  Had lunch and wandered around until we boarded.  Zoom airlines (now defunct but was a no frills airline out of Vancouver for a few years) was pretty good.  Similar to Air Transat….fed and watered us which was good enough.

Saturday June 14

Arrived in London (Gatwick) just after 9AM.  Took what seemed like forever to get through customs.  Grabbed the Holiday Inn airport hotel shuttle, checked in and back to the airport by 11:30 to catch the train to Brighton for the day!  Good day too….bright and sunny!

Train ride was about 45 min.  The train station at Brighton is quite nice, old, built in the 1840’s with a few renovations/additions since but they managed to keep the glass roof!  Cool!  Was about a 15 minute walk down to the water.  Had a nice lunch, fish and chips for Ken and scampi and chips for me at one of the many “chippie” places along the waterfront near the carousels, just across from the pier.  Lots of goodies to try including eels and oysters. Did NOT try the gellied eels…..sorry Larry, no matter how much you loved them as a kid, it was just not going to happen….I left them ALL for you!

After lunch we visited the pier…..fun, loud, busy place full of arcade games and rollercoaster type rides.  Sort of scary though when you look at the structure that is holding all that up!!  You can see the sea through the cracks in the floor boards!  Probably looks just as it did 50 years ago!  Wandered along the pebbly (shingle?) beach for a while….thought about taking the little tourist train but we were running out of time….and getting a bit tired (jetlag…).  Headed up to the Royal Pavilion only to find out it closed at 3…oh well!  Beautiful building and park.  Took a few pics and started working our way back to the train station.  So many pretty streets along the way.  Quaint rows houses painted with bright colours and lots of flowers. Came across a nice little pub for a refreshment stop then found a Marks and Spencer so we stopped and picked up goodies to have a picnic of sorts for dinner back at the hotel.

Hotel had picnic tables out front so enjoyed our picnic until it got windy and chilly with a few drops of rain.   Inside and to our rooms by 7:30…..Ken was in bed and sound a sleep by 8!  I read for a bit, lights out by 9 and then wide awake at 1AM!  Those first few days of travel really mess up ones sleep schedule!

Sunday June 15

Ended up just staying up since the alarm was going off at 2AM for our easyjet flight to Ajaccio.  Checked in and had breakfast (full English) at the airport….really quite good.

Flight was good…..seats were a bit squishy.  Went to put my bag on the floor and the guy in front of me put his seat back just at that moment and clonked me in the head…..truly seen stars for a few seconds.  Flight was about two hours…..flew out over the Alps then headed south to Corsica.  Flying over you can see why it’s called the Granite Isle!  Huge mountains…..it just looks like a big, really big rock stuck in the middle of the Med.  You could also see what looks like beautiful beaches along the coastline.

Luggage arrived with us….yeah!  Very busy at the car rental place so it took over an hour to get that all sorted out.  Ken and Glen are the drivers.  Have a  Megane Scenic, which we finally found after covering half the parking area because pretty well all the cars are Megane Scenics!  They send you out with the keys and the license plate number and you’re on your own from there.

Off we went….no issues getting out of the airport and on to the highway.  Just WOW how mountainous it is.  Read about it but really can’t appreciate it until you are here and hit the road.  Very beautiful.  A bit of a mix of the south of France and Italy.  Much greener than we’d expected at this time of year.  The hill (mountain!) sides are covered in maquis (looks like a type of juniper maybe), myrtle and lots of olive trees.  Little peeks here and there of the coastline.

Stopped in Propriano to pick up some groceries and have lunch at a little restaurant at the marina….had our first pastis!  Left there around 2:30 heading to Tizzano.  Went through a town called Olmeto…..a definite must go back to place.  It is truly just clinging to the hillside overlooking a valley with incredible views of the sea.  Also has a history about a lady named Colomba and vendettas….will have to read up on that again.  Stopped at a roadside market and picked up some salami and cheese etc. for dinner tonight.  Fun, busy little place.  Our first opportunity to try out our rusty French!

Made it to Tizzano a little too early to check in to our apartment so wandered around a bit.  Found a restaurant at the marina, a very little bakery/epicure and one other sort of all purpose little shop……other than the hotel across from our apartment and a few houses scattered here and there that is Tizzano!  Had a beer or two at the hotel bar…..right on the beach, almost in the sand.  Beautiful big beach surrounded by mountains.

Into the apartment “Les Dunes” by 4.  Marie is a lovely lady.  The apartment is great.  Three bedrooms (just in case Jill and Larry changed their minds) beautiful views of the beach and water.  Pretty much exactly as described on the website.  Marie left us a bottle of pink wine, which we happily consumed.  Had out saucisson and fromage…..one of which we threw away because it smelled so bad…..what a shame.  It was sort of brie-ish.  As soon as we cut into it Rae and I almost fell over.  I did taste it and it was really quite good but short of eating it out of an airtight container it had to go….I like cheese like that but this was just a bit too much.  Bread and strawberries and more wine made for a great first night dinner.  Down to the restaurant on the beach at the hotel for dessert…at least we thought dessert….. but ended up ordering appies and dinner!!  Glen ordered apple pie but got a salad, can’t remember what Ken ordered but he ended up with a pasta dish hahaha….  Rae and I shared a tapas plate with too much octopus (yetch….no matter how it’s cooked!) and MORE wine.  Had a great time, laughed a lot and stumbled our way across the road back to the apartment.  To bed by 10.  A couple of long, long days, but lots of fun.

Monday June 16

Up early.  Breakfast was toast, peanut butter (exciting to find in the store!) and some of the Corsican honey we bought at the roadside stand…..very good.

Into Propriano again to the Casino for a bigger grocery shopping.  180E but picked up the staples we’ll need for the next couple of weeks.  Wandered around a bit, stopped for cappuccinos and pastry then back to Tizzano.

Lunch was more of the sauccisson……hahaha!  We thought it was beef because when we asked what kind of meat the lady said “Ane”, which she translated to English for us as what sounded like “Ox” but really what she was saying as “ASS”.  Browsing through our Corsica book I discovered that “Ane” is DONKEY!!  On the way to our apartment we pass a very pretty pasture with lots of donkeys……I can’t bear to look at them now 😦   It was pretty darn good sausage though.

Down to the beach for our first ever swim in the Mediterranean.  A bit chilly at first but quite nice once you’re in.  Very warm out today.  Spent a good part of the afternoon sitting under our umbrella (supplied by the apartment) reading, in and out of the water and just enjoying the beautiful beach with only a handful of people around!

Back at the apartment we roasted a couple of chickens and potatoes for dinner and another bottle of wine, or two.

Another early night for us….not as early as yesterday though.  Off to Bonifacio tomorrow.

Tuesday June 17

Hit the road around 8 this morning to Bonifacio.  A bit cloudy to start and not as warm as yesterday.  Absolutely spectacular coastline and mountains enroute.  Stopped in a cork oak forest on the way…..who knew!  I’d never seen them before.  They strip the bark to make corks and it grows back!  Big knobbles of it.  Also tons of eucalyptus trees…..very fragrant and pretty.

Bonifacio is beautiful.  Built on and into the cliffs with a very pretty marina tucked into a cove.  Very hilly, narrow alleys and streets.  Started to rain a bit so we popped into a café for coffees and croissants (yummy!).  Rain stopped so decided to do a little boat trip/tour around the coastline.  Wasn’t sunny but had started to brighten up…..then the sun popped out and it got nice and warm (had dressed in layers just in case!).

The marina, the coastline cliffs, the Kings Stairway (escallier du roi d’aragon) and caves all along the coast are incredible!  The building are perched on top of the cliffs, some actually hanging over hundreds of feet up….a little scary but I guess they’ve been there forever.  The boat went into one of the caves called “Mouth of the Dragon”.  The hole in the top is shaped like Corsica! The water was nice and calm as I don’t think the boat would have gotten in there if it wasn’t.  Some very pretty secluded bays and the “haute ville” hanging precariously over the cliffs in some places is unreal.

Back on dry land we took the little tourist train (5E each return) to the top of the old citadel.  A mix of 1500-2000 century war and defense stuff.  A bit of a mishmash up there with car parks, a cemetery and a big hotel.  Found the entrance to the stairway  but was 5E to get in and look at it let alone walk down it (almost 200 steps)…..then of course we’d have had to walk back UP it!!  Supposedly it was carved in one night during a siege in 1400 something or other….hmmmm.  The views from up there are amazing…..you can see Sardinia (on a clear day) off in the distance.

Back into town for lunch.  I had moules et frites (delicious), Ken had a burger (OK) Rae and Glen had pasta (very good) with the famous national cheese of Corsica brocciu.  Kind of ricotta-ish….but apparently lactose free because of ???  The whey maybe??

Bonifacio is a very pretty place.  Lots of nice little shops, restaurants, a great marina and views to die for!

Left there just before 4 and decided to head up to Porto Vecchio, which is where we were going to stay.  Luckily we didn’t!  Wasn’t quite what we thought and are glad we decided on Tizzano even though there isn’t much there.  PV is a bit dumpy, not terribly pretty and very touristy.  Didn’t go up to the old town, which was probably quite lovely but had kind of had it for the day.  Back to Tizzano through Figari, a very little town with nothing other than an airport.

Cleaned up an headed to the restaurant by the marina for dinner.  Excellent! Rae and I had the scampi and pasta, the guys had the “entre cote” (steaks) and frites.  Dessert and a bottle of wine 120E for the 4 of us.  Very good.  And very exciting that we actually got what we thought we’d ordered!

Wed June 18

Up early but slept very good last night…..I’m either finally in the right time zone or had enough wine!  Enjoying having coffee on one of the decks each morning….beautiful beach and the Med sparkles when then sun peeks over the mountain, really not much more one could ask for!

Off to Sartene this morning.  It is the closest town to us, way up, clinging to the side of the mountain.  Stopped at a local winery enroute.  Tasted and bought a bottle of their rose and bottle of the “gris” which was also a  very light rose colour.

Sartene is yet another incredible town built on and into the mountainside.  It’s very medieval in many places with narrow alleys and lots of stairways.  The views are spectacular…..mountains, valleys and the sea!  There’s a lovely piazza/place in the centre of town (Place de Libertation??) where they were having a memorial type ceremony with the mayor and a couple war veterans laying wreaths on the statue.  And birds…..many, many birds.  Lots of swallows flying around the church bell tower…..fascinating just sitting and watching them.  Did a bit of wandering up and down the narrow streets and alleys.

Lots of great shops, restaurants, cafes, bakeries etc.  Not at all how it was described in one of the books as “grey and depressing”…..maybe on dark, gloomy winter day but certainly not today!  Had a café in the main square and off to pick up more groceries……we eat a lot!  Hit the Spar market where they do not use plastic bags…..how eco friendly is that!!  We bought a couple of their big reusable bags, which I’m sure we’ll get lots of use out of and they’ll be kind of a fun, useful souvenir to take home.

On the way out of town you pass the cemetery, that you can see from town, that is clinging to the side of the mountain…..lots of crypts and tombs.  Would have been nice to have a look but wasn’t sure just how one got up there.

Stopped at the Cauria Megalith site on the way home.  Ancient Menhir (aka “standing stones”) and/dolmen  possibly dating back to 5000BC…wow!  It was a bit of a hike in the heat from the parking lot but well worth it.  And we were the only people there!  These are just standing in the middle of no where or farmers fields.  Quite incredible that the few hundred standing or laying around have survived.  Many were broken up and used for buildings or stone walls years ago.  They are now protected.  Much more than we could have seen.  There is another site across the road a bit further down but just too hot at that time of day to be out there.

Back home and off to the beach.  Big, big waves today.  Only Glen was brave enough to go in and get banged around a bit.  Dinner was pasta with sausage and some of the fresh veg we picked up today.

Got quite windy and chilly so we sat around the rest of the evening inside watching French cooking shows!  Tomorrow we’re off to Campmoro and Plage de Tralicettu, which is supposed to be very beautiful.  I hope this wind stops!

Thurs June 19

Today we went to Campomoro.  It was a beautiful day.  We packed and planned to picnic at the Plage de T but that didn’t work out.

Off to Campomoro via Grossa on a very windy, narrow road.  A couple of lovely little hill towns along the way.  All of a sudden the mountains open up and on to an incredible view down towards Propriano…you see the bay, the Med and the mountains….just WoW!  Stopped at a pullout spot to take some pics.  Around the next corner you get a view way down of Campomoro.  A beautiful crescent shaped bay with aquamarine water.

Campomoro is a very little town with only about 50 people during the winter but many gorgeous homes built all up and around the hills for as summer homes.  The place was packed with people today.  Had trouble finding a parking spot at 10AM.  There’s a bit of the old town off to the right hand side with a pretty little white church and a couple of old stone buildings and little pizza restaurants at that end of the beach.  To the left is the really nice big beach with soft, fine, white sand.  One store and restaurant where we had coffees before our climb up to the tower.

Walked up the road through a “community” of big beautiful villas, all with incredible views in every direction.  About a 15-20 minute hike up to the tower, a very neat, windy trail with signs/markers along the way telling something about the tower and the area but all were in French so I’m pretty sure we missed a lot of what they were trying to share with us!    The views from the top of the tower were great.  It’s a Genovese tower dating from the 1500’s and the largest on Corsica.  There are more trails, one that would actually take us back to Tizzano, that run along the coast.  Would be a great hike if one were prepared.  France has a great trail system all over the mainland and Corsica….the Grande Randonnee.  The GR20 is the big one that would take you over the mountains from the north to south coast.

Left there and headed up towards Propriano on a very scary road.  Past a beach/resort town call Portic.  It was probably one of the nicest beaches we’ve seen but very windy and apparently only good for wind surfing.  Back the other way heading to Plage de Tralicettu, that Madame Marie told us we could drive too…..NOT!  The worst road we’ve come to yet.  All rutted and pot-holed, lots of loose gravel etc.  Looks like half of it has been washed away.  Up and up we went and finally got a glimpse of what looked like an incredibly beautiful beach down below but we just had to turn around because the road down to it looked even worse than what we’d come up so far.  Really disappointing.

Came back home and had our picnic on the deck with wine!  Sat around and read then headed down to the beach for a swim.  Sea was much calmer today but with the breeze just a bit on the chilly side when you came out.

Plan for dinner was to get take out pizza from the bar at the hotel but just ended up going and staying there to eat.  Very good pizza,  Ken had pomme frites too.  A bottle of local wine and café crèmes .  Decided to see where the gravel road from there went……maybe another nice beach or tower???  But the road was too crappy and it was getting a bit late for an adventure on that kind of road.

Tomorrow we’re off to Aleria for the Roman and Etruscan ruins.

Friday June 20

Can’t believe we’ve been gone a week already!  We’ve certainly done and see quite a bit.

Headed for Aleria today .  On Corsica there is no quick and easy way to get there (or anywhere for that matter!!)……there are no straight roads, except on the east coast so that was the way we headed…..the long way around but seriously the other options would have taken just as long because of all the twists and turns and quite possibly the condition of some of the roads based on our experiences so far.

A quick (ha!) stop at Cauria again to see the rest of the menhirs and dolmen.  Again a bit of hike (1/2 hour or so) but it is beautiful up there.  You can see down into a valley that looks very Tuscan with vineyards and old stone houses.  About half way up we came across an old ruined stone house.  No roof but all the old walls are completely intact.  Even part of the ceiling of the main floor is still there (old tile ceiling!!) in some places.  The kitchen at one time had a big fireplace.  We speculated/dreamed of how we could restore it.  The view from there is really something to see.  The place was surrounded by beautiful old olive trees.  Too bad the road, or whatever you want to call it, is so bad…no way to get a vehicle of any kind up to it…..oh well.  On to the menhirs….there are supposed to be 260 of them here but very few are still standing.  Surprising though you could still make out some of the carving.  And then we seen the bull…..a really big bull!!  He seemed to be just minding is own business but was a little too close for comfort so we very slowly turned around and headed back to the car.

On to Solenzara via Figari and Porto Vecchio, which we just bypassed this time.  Just north of there are some beautiful and very accessible beaches.  Lots of little towns that are very touristy all along the highway.  Some areas there are almost like parts of Hawaii…..very nice condos, restaurants and shops.  Might have been OK to spend a few days there but I think it doesn’t really represent the Corsica we want to see…..but those beaches are pretty nice!  In Solenzara we had a lunch at a great little restaurant at the marina.  Croq Monsieur for me, which was basically just a plain old grilled cheese, not the nice gooey, melty cheesy kind.  Nice place and great location though.  Super waitress who studied English in Paris…..fun to chat with her.

Finally back on the road at 2 and on to Aleria.  Very cute little…very little…town.  Quite picturesque with a very old church and only a few other buildings.  Great little museum with all the stuff they discovered during the excavation…..good explanations of what everything was, Etruscan or Roman and what period.  Pottery, jewelry, tools, weapons etc.

The ruins there are not very big and it was hard to tell what was what or what something used to be with the maps they gave us.  It was touted as a great site pre-dating Pompei…..possibly could be some day but more excavation to be done and certainly better maps and site info.  The museum made up for what the site lacked.

Left there around 5:30 after making a quick stop to pick up goodies for dinner just in case everything close to home was closed.  It took forever to get as far a PV…..altogether almost 2 hours to get home.

Whipped up some hamburgers and a salad for dinner.  Very hot today and very humid tonight.  Looking forward to market day in Sartene tomorrow.

Week 2……to come!

 

I welcome any feed back! Is one week at a time too much?  Not enough?  I’m trying not to change the content as they are my journals and records of what I was thinking at the time I was on that holiday writing them.  Some of my journals are in great details others not so much so it might depend on which journal I’m working on.  Some holidays were only 2 weeks whereas others were 4+ weeks….so maybe I’ll just play it by ear!