Showing posts with label RCI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RCI. Show all posts

Saturday, 29 September 2012

Wondrous Espana

I am the first to admit that over the last ten years I have been rather spoilt with my holiday destinations. I may not have been sun-baking in the Seychelles or Maldives, or hitting the shops in New York, but what with living on a Caribbean Island, being only hours away from white sand beaches in Thailand, New Year in Sydney and honeymooning in the Red Centre, camping our way across Southern Africa, these all add up to a rather impressive passport full of stamps and a whole lot of memories. It is for this reason that for many years I have looked down on what some of the UK's closest sun spots have had to offer. Although being blessed with a climate of near constant blue sky and sunshine, I have long been put off places Spain and Portugal due to thoughts of them being too 'tame'. At only 3 hours flight from the UK, I have always visualised it as the place of big noisy resorts and large family groups with lots of demanding children... a childless teachering couple's worst nightmare.

In the last year I have had to temper this view, particularly when it comes to Spain. Living in Morocco it has become our haven, an opportunity to return to reality and live a little. Having two Spanish enclaves tucked away on the northern coast of Morocco has helped us keep our sanity. Living in Morocco is nice but the social scene is more than somewhat lacking in spark. Five minutes after crossing the border into Spain and you are surrounded by people enjoying life and setting the world to rights over a glass of wine or chilled beer in the sun. 
 
 

















While these visits to 'Moroccan Spain' have opened my eyes to many of the wonders the culture has to offer, I have still been unsure as to how reflective this is of Spanish culture as a whole. Are the Spaniards living across the water in Africa trying to be more Spanish just to prove a point? Even the locals there don't consider themselves to be living in Spain, when they go over to the mainland they are travelling to Spain, when you question this logic by pointing out that they are in fact in Spain, they are adamant they are not. Saying that, Spanish spirit is there in spades, flags are flying on every corner and the traditional tapas lifestyle is more evident here than anywhere else I have visited.

Watching the Euros semi final between Spain and Portugal in Ceuta was an unprecedented experience for me. 95% of the customers in the bar we were in had not only the football strip on, but the hats, flags, face-paint and scarves too. Musical instruments were played, a traditional Bota bag was passed round the bar; a goat skin bag filled with strong fermented wine, 50 Euro strips of ham were brought out of pockets and shared amongst friends. At the end of the evening, after the tension of the penalty shoot out had brought the whole place to their feet, we watched the entire bar, in fact most of the city, turn itself inside out with celebration. Anyone would think they had just won the World Cup for the first time. People emptied out into the streets, took to their bikes and cars and circled the city waving their arms in the air, honking horns and trailing flags in their wake. This went on for a few hours afterwards. I wasn't about to tell anyone that it had in fact been quite a boring game, not unlike the one we watched between Spain and Portugal in Cape Town for the World Cup two years ago.

After our complete immersion into Spanish culture for three days in Ceuta, we caught the ferry across the Med to Algeciras where we picked up a car and headed north. Now I am sure that I have made this journey quite a few times as a child. Obviously I had never paid much attention. There is little that is 'boring' or 'tame' about the Andalucian countryside. Yes you may be driving on a busy highway to avoid cramped coastal towns, but the road winds its way up through majestic craggy peaks that thrust dramatically up into the blue sky. Here you have that beautiful combination of mountains, sun and sea, a combination not too dissimilar to that which we went all that way to South Africa to see. And while the Med might be dirty and cold, it is blue enough to make a stunning backdrop when you do get a break in the stretches of property development.

 
 Sadly, the Costa Del Sol has been very developed. There are complexes everywhere and most of the empty space is development waiting to happen. Saying that, much of it still retains a traditional Spanish feel. There are pretty whitewashed towns dotted in the folds of the foothills. Narrow cobbled streets lead to pretty terraces where you can stop for a beer and snack and enjoy the view. Many of these little towns have become a little too touristy, but for others life still goes on same as always.



For our stay in Spain we had been lucky enough to get an apartment for free about five kilometres away from Fuengirola. This vastly developed stretch of coastline is a British home from home. British pubs and cafés selling meat pies and fish and chips line the seafront. But even here, if you're willing to look hard enough, it is possible to find the Spanish bars and local café culture enjoyed by locals and foreigners alike. For us we spent our days exploring the coast and inland and eating plates of fried fish and calamari before retreating to our spacious apartment. We couldn't believe our luck getting two terraces, one a roof terrace the size of two bedrooms which we bought a paddling pool for so we could sunbake without ever having to go down to the pool. From here we had a view of both mountains and sea. I only went in the pool three times, twice out of guilt for not using it, and once to sit on the bottom of it in an aim to shake of the effects of the night before. 
 




















To sum it up, after seven days of incredible food, cheap wine, great culture and a whole lot of sun, I am sold, Spain is obviously the place to be.

Wednesday, 28 July 2010

How to burn through money as fast as you can

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30/06/10

Welcome to Africa, where nothing ever goes to plan. Our much boasted about and greatly anticipated 'luxury treat' in a resort courtesy of my mother's time share hasn't really been what we were expecting. The resort is stunning, set 70 km from the nearest other tumbleweed hamlet, in beautiful stark boulderous mountains (I know I’m abusing the English dictionary with the word 'boulderous', but humour me, it fits). The chalet is huge, an 8 bed cottage with 2 storey thatched lounge and a vast stone fireplace. We have 2 outside barbecues or 'braais', one of which is set in a little sandstone cave. There are strange ornate natural rock features with splashes of rich orange across them, towering in piles all around us, vast odd shaped rocks balancing on top of each other precariously as they have done for thousands of years. You feel completely isolated here to the world outside the resort, 35 km of dirt road between you and the nearest tarmac. So isolated in fact that I gave myself the heeby jeebies the other night and had to go round looking in all the rooms and under the beds to stop me from jumping at my own shadow. We don't have TV so the idea was to read, relax, and catch up on planning the next part of the trip.
















Our isolation became really apparent when I fell ill in the middle of the second night. I’d had tunnel vision and the start of a migraine all that day, and I woke in real pain at about 1.00 am. Having also had a reoccurring problem in my left eye for about 3 months, I had gone to bed the night before vowing to finally get it checked out next time we went through town. When I woke in the night I thought I was going to throw up or my brain was going to implode. Double dosing painkillers didn't dent it and we were on our way out the door to start a 300 km drive to Cape Town when I realized the pain was bearable when standing up. We decided to stay there and try and ask the resort manager in the morning if there were any nearer clinics open on a Sunday. Next morning we drove 3 hours to Worcester Medi Clinic. Expecting to be told in polite terms that I was overreacting and to go home, and for Nick to then kill me because he would have missed the England Germany match as well as had to do a six hour round trip, I was stunned when they admitted me, put a drip in my arm and gave me blood tests. To cut a painful story short; 6 drip packs, 2 jabs, one blood test, 7 blood pressure and temperature tests, 2 different doctors and a $500 bill that made me cry, and I was allowed to go home the next day. I had suffered from a cluster migraine that keeps tripping one after another. It needs steroids to break the chain. While the treatment in the hospital was really good, I can't recommend South African health care to anyone. Apart from the expense, you get discharged feeling woozy and hospitalfied and then have to trail halfway round the city going to different branches of doctors and clinics paying for all the different parts of the treatment. All you pay the hospital for is the bed.

Nick had checked into a B+B outside the hospital gates so was fresh and ready for the return 3 hour journey. As well as the squeaking steering wheel, the drivers chair has started to move alarmingly around the car. We have driven up and down the dirt track more than planned. And to make matters worse, we had to go back down it the next day to go and stay in Cape Town for a night to watch Spain Portugal, the only match in the World Cup that we had tickets for.
We arrived in Cape Town to heavy grey skies and rain. This was to be our first night camping in our shiny new and very thin tent. Thinking ourselves cunning, we set the tent up on the covered concrete veranda outside the dining room door. This way we avoided the rain and got some of the heat of the busy dining room. It was noisy but we figured it'd have to get quieter around midnight when we got back from the game.
Going to the stadium in Cape Town made me a little sorry we had not gone to more games. The whole of the city centre is lit up with an incredible buzz from all the fans and huge array of street performers. There were old lady drumming teams, junior body poppers, people on stilts following marching bands, and a random guy wandering around in a 5 ft orange hat. Nearly everyone was waving a Spain or Portugal flag, couples often opting for one of each. You could hear every accent or language dressed up in the colours of the evenings match.
The coming together of some many different people from all over the globe to support whichever game and teams they have tickets for makes the World Cup a completely different experience to any you get at a local team match. People are there for a laugh, not just to throw abuse at the opposing team. Being in a stadium where 95% of the 3 tiers participate in Mexican wave, and every 5th person has a vuvuzela is an onslaught of every sense. 
 
We managed to get back from the football and into the hostel within 30 minutes, which is pretty good going for leaving a stadium during the World Cup. We settled down in our dry and surprisingly warm tent. Within an hour there were 20 people watching the TV full blast, chatting across the garden, smoking cigarettes around us and playing noisy board games. When they quieted down the security guard stood next to our tent holding the door open to watch the TV, still on full vol. At 3.00 am we gave up and moved our tent to a damp grassy spot further away. At 6.45 I got up, giving up on the tent because of the cold. The moral of the story is; if it looks to good to be true, then it is, and the only warm dry spot in the garden is empty for a very good reason.


Point of interest... in all our discussions with people about S. Africa there was one reacurring concern that got voiced... security. We have tried always to be sensible and be on our guard while not being too afraid. The other day we squished all our belongings ou of sight and into the boot of the car and then left it for 3 hours in a carpark. It was only as we unpacked the car later that we realized the boot isn't on central locking and had been open the whole time. A week later we worked out that one of the doors of the car doesn't lock either and we'd had an unlocked car for a week. After the hospital farce we returned and couldn't find the door keys to the chalet. When I tried the door I found it open and the keys inside in a place we didn't leave them. Dread to think how many other occasions we may have been careless and not noticed it.