Saturday, April 4, 2009

Spain

(I really suck at putting photos up, and have little time in this internet cafe in Mojacar, so please forgive the simple arrangement of photos and brief text.)

Above I am with fellow hostelers in the worst restaurant in Granada ... the NewZealander (my hostel roommate) and I ordered salads and couldn't eat them. (Though the olive oil is superb, made with locally grown olives.)
Very typical street in Granada.
A riverside road one can take toward the Alhambra.
Love the arhcitecture.
The living room at Makuto Backpackers Hostel in Granada.

Landscapes taken from the bus between Granada and Almeria. I love the bus.


The Alhmabra.

Moorish windows.
A view of Granada from the Alhambra.
The gardens are stunning.



Typical market, Granada.

Examples of cave houses in the Sacromonte area of Granada.

Tile art in the Alhambra.

View of the Alhmabra while walking toward it. It's huge.

Typical square in Granada. The dark and light stones are taken from the two different rivers.

Spain ... I kinda like the music, and pretty much everything else, too, though I was slow to warm to Granada.

Granada

After arriving in Malaga via Brussels, I arrived in the city of the Alhambra, and with the help of several strangers (I meet the greatest people on buses, like Jo LaCrosse, the former Belgian contemporary dancer who has toured worldwide) I miraculously found Makuto Backpackers Hostel, in the Albaycin. Wow. This party of the city climbs a mountain, and it's so easy to get lost in the zigzagging streets. Only minibuses and drivers of small cars dare traverse the cobblestoned lanes.

Think whitewashed buildings. People still living in caves in the Sacromonte area. Great cathedrals and plazas. There are loads of rasta kids in this university city. I met one at the hostel who told me he WAS Bob Marley.

After my first night of (non)sleep at the hostel, I went on a walking tour of the city, then continued walking on my own. I hooked up with other hostelers and we ate at what was very likely the worst restaurant in the city -- !que suerte! -- then went out for tapas in a standing-room-only bar. (The tapas are free with each drink ordered, and they don't skimp on them).


The Alhambra. This is why I wanted to visit Granada, as I'd learned about the Moorish palace in Art History classes, and knew it to be one of the top attractions in all of Europe. Well ... I may be the only person in history who had more fun buying a bag of salt and vinegar chips and leaving the Alhambra than I had exploring it.

Totally confusing, from the purchase of tickets to the line-ups, to ... well, you name it. And what I didn't know, is that if you accidentally take a wrong turn and leave the Palace of the Nazaries (the big draw), you can't get back in! I paid over 30 euros for the Alhambra, and spent 5 minutes in the palace. @#^*)

However, I did love the other Alhambra sites, including the gardens, the fortress, the very coliseum-ish George V palace.

By the third night I was really getting into Granada. I met some great people at the hostel, including a young Mexican and Puerto Rican married couple, and a group of us went to see a traditional flamenco show in an aqueduct, where there was only room for about 15 people. Fabulous singing, Spanish guitar, and, of course, dancing.

The absolute highlight for me, however, was the Arabian Bath, or Hammam. So glad I decided to splurge (19 euros). If low lighting; candles; a hot, medium and cold pool; a steam room; soft Arabic music; and an endless supply of exotic tea than can be enjoyed in quiet little tiled nooks throughout the Hammam appeal to you, I highly recommend this. So relaxing. Time could have stopped there and then.

I left Granada on March 31st and arrived, via bus (and pleasant conversation with Alejandro, a Spanish traveller and owner of a meat-packing company) in Almeria. Then I caught another bus and travelled north 1.5 hours to Mojacar.

!Hasta luego!

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Paris: ooh la la.

"The Mona Lisa" ... "The Kiss" ... "The Thinker" ... etc. (Pinch me.)


We spent a fair bit of time on the Metro, thus I'm including a photo. Musicians playing violins, accordians, guitars, etc. in the Metro, on the bridges, in lanes. Loved that.
Bet you can guess.


Napolean's coronotation took place here.



Wow ... only 7 prisoners were freed when their mates stormed the Bastille.

In a secret garden during the cycling tour.

Louvre-ing.

Montmarte.

Small place, big hospitality.

Statue park in Paris.

Sacre Couer (The White Church) in Montmarte.

Liz, Ron and Shell with Eiffel.

First things first: shopping at a market in Belleview.
Ron and Liz at the Louvre.




Moulin Rouge. Note the queue to get in.





The Eiffel Tower is stunning. The Rodin Museum superb. Montmartre, Le Marais, The Latin Quarter, St. Germaine de Pris ... all exceptional. Sacre Couer, The Louvre, Champ Elysses, Notre Dame, the Seine (so many bridges) ... fantastique. One runs out of adjectives in Paris ...

Venus de Milo.


People: My brother Ron Meetoos, his fiancee Elisabeth, et moi. Famous sites speak for themselves; art's from the Rodin Museum and the Louvre. I walked and cycled all over, so there are also many street shots.

Only thing I didn't like about Paris: the temperature. Same thing with Montreal, and, come to think of it, Granada, where I am now ... sitting in a hostel in the Albaicin. I've been shivering since I left Canada ...

Liz, below, is from Riga, Latvia. She's fluent in four languages, and uses them all in Paris.


Oh! The photo of Ron and I wearing strange\dirty clothes in his tiny apartment (located on the island, spitting distance from Notre Dame and the Seine) is post-catacombs. That was a story ... we went down illegally (through a sewer grate) and got lost beneath the city ... long, scary,
certain I would die down there. Tell you more if\when I see you.

Oh again! Saw Jesus's Crown of Thorns (and got in line with the Catholics to kiss it) in Notre Dame. They only exhibit it one day a year, and we were there.

Montreal, March 2009.









No time to write while travelling, but here are a few of the important people and places: Johnny and Olga, Angela and Jacob (in Montreal).

Friday, March 13, 2009

Another Friday night watching the sun set and drinking wine.

A little crimson fire above the treeline.

The wine is compliments of Felix, in Pilger. It's Sea Buckthorn, also known as Haskap berry, which is being researched by U of S Plant Sciences guy Bob Bors, whom I was in touch with not long ago. (Someone I know well told me that Haskap berries taste like "a more interesting blueberry".)

It's strong wine; I'm getting a buzz. And for this I am thankful.

Friday night. My dog's foot is mending. I am mending.

It melts, it melts.

And what about "ER"! I've been a fan over the last several years, wish I could catch the final episode but shucks ... I'll be in Spain.

Hey, don't you love being the only vehicle on a country road in the dead of winter on one of the
coldest nights of the year? I do. The photo was taken south of Maple Creek. I loved the effect of the headlights.


Today I wrestled with a gate that had fallen off its hinges and the eavestroughing that's to blame.
(Thanks for helping me, Jerry).

Three days ago I painted a wall "Smartie brown." (It was either paint or cut off my long hair).

My house is very quiet.

I am very quiet.

Big hugs to my friend Mark Krasko, whom I dearly love. Kiddo, you've made my day.

Monday, March 2, 2009

No longer a virgin.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20090227.wbkhawley28/BNStory/globebooks/home/

This appeared in the Feb. 27th, 2009 Globe and Mail.

(yippee)