Technically still traveling!
Wow, I have not written as much as I wanted to. But as Brandon & I are sitting in the A Terminal of IAD, waiting for our last flight, I figured it technically still counted as travel and that I could do a little updating.
As Brandon said, Meknes was a breath of fresh air compared to Fes. I really, really wish we could have stayed there longer. We both wanted to take in the Roman ruins at Volubilis, but I had to admit that I was just too tired at that point to try to make it happen. Nevertheless, we enjoyed the Meknes medina and a few little sights around the town. We had a unique dining experience (basically in someone’s house), and our riad there was pretty impressive.
The journey back into Spain was a very lengthy one that begin with leaving our Meknes riad at about 1am. We did not arrive in Granada til 8 in the evening. Along the way, a few interesting (enough) things happened:
- At one of the train stations in Morocco, a railway employee carried my bag up a flight of stairs for me. I had a coin out ready to tip him, and he refused to take it. I was shocked and very impressed by his kindness.
- After landing in Tarifa, I asked one of the ferry ticket agents where to catch a bus to Algeciras (no train station in Tarifa). In a strange mix of Spanish and English, it was revealed that there is a free shuttle bus from the ferry terminal to Algeciras. Jackpot!
- Upon arrival in Algeciras, we were desperately looking for signs to the train station. Following the crowd of people pulling roll-y suitcases behind them, we found ourselves at an intersection where the route wasn’t entirely clear. A friendly Spanish guy on the street starting pointing us in the direction of the station, and we ALMOST ignored him completely and walked the other way, still gun-shy from the conning touts in Morocco! The guy was right, and we got there without any problems.
- At the Algeciras train station, I recognized a backpacking guy from the bus ride from a distance (I actually recognized the instrument case he was carrying, truth be told) and made a nonchalant comment to Brandon about it. After musical guy bought his tickets, he virtually bee-lined to Brandon and me and enthusiastically proclaimed, “Bus buddies!” And thus began our chat with the Canadian Riley, who’d been making his way through Spain and Morocco for two months with no intentions of going home in the near future. If you’ve every met anyone from British Columbia, you’ll have an idea of what our new friend was like: super-friendly, pot-friendly, and eager to describe his favorite “sick” experiences. It was a fun change of pace for us to have someone to talk to.
- Inspired by Riley, we left the train station (the next train to Granada was four hours after our arrival in Algeciras) and walked about a block away for a kebab. Heaven.
Brandon has already talked about our tapas crawl: Granada is a GREAT place to do it, since most places give you a free tapa at the bar when you order a drink. We ate a lot of ham and olives, but I have never had such olives! Wow!
I enjoyed Granada on the whole: we failed to look at the weather forecast and were mostly underdressed for the chilly day, but we walked a lot and weren’t terribly bothered by it. The Alhambra complex was pretty interesting, though we both agreed that other palaces we saw impressed us more. I really liked touring the Sacromonte area of town, where the Roma (gypsies) and hardcore hippies live in caves and earth-sheltered cave-like houses. There was a particularly memorable moment when we were wandering the rustic streets and heard a cellist and guitarist just out on their patio practicing together; I think they were trying to put together a version of Satie’s “Gymnopedie No. 1.” Anyway, after touring the neighborhood, we ventured back into town to see the Royal Chapel (burial place of Ferdinand and Isabel), then up into the Albayzin, the Muslim neighborhood of Granada. That felt like going back in time, especially because so many of the shops and restaurants closed down completely at about 7pm; unheard of in Spain. We managed to find one open and enjoyed a tasty final Spain meal before walking all over town to catch our 1am bus to Madrid.
The rest, pretty much, is history…
So, do I have any closing thoughts, while things are winding down? Perhaps. I loved Sevilla. Actually, I really enjoyed all of the south of Spain, where the Moorish influence is so strong and evident. Nevertheless, I liked the very unique taste of the nation of Spain you get in Barcelona and Madrid; the country’s pride in itself is very evident in the art and national sites (like the Royal Palace). I think my two major highlights of the trip were flamenco in Sevilla and seeing Picasso’s “Guernica.” Honorable mention highlights include…
- Hearing the imam calling people to prayer in Fes (as stressful as the city was, I DID like that).
- Experiencing Moroccan riad hospitality (including breakfast and tea).
- Our “Dali Day,” during which I felt like we truly ventured into the mind of Dali.
- Jamon. Chorizo. Rioja.
- Fado Night with our hostel in Lisbon.
- The great variety of drinks we tried in Lisbon.
- The Pena Palace next to the Moorish Castle ruins in Sintra (Portugal).
- The restaurant we ate at on our very first night in Barcelona. It felt like an old tavern or something.
- Being able to communicate in Spanish with Spanish people (though admittedly, sometimes POORLY).
- Brandon buying me an ice cream cone one afternoon in Madrid.
- Rick Steeves’s guided walks that usually involved a stop for a pastry. I especially liked the custard tarts in Lisbon and the Segovian specialty pastry.
- Roast suckling pig dinner in Segovia.
- Celebrating New Year’s Eve in Barcelona by eating 12 grapes on each of the twelve strokes of midnight.
- Seeing a concert at the Palau de Musica Catalan.
I think we’ll be boarding soon, so I’ll leave it at that. Wonderful trip and wonderful memories!