Saturday, March 29, 2008

More Pictures!

I've posted about 15 pictures of what we were eating and drinking while in Morocco at http://www.flickr.com/photos/deab 

Go have a look, or a drool, as the case may be. 

Tomorrow I aim to write about our last days in Spain... I will finish it. I will. [power of positive thinking!]. For the time being I can report 300+ emails in my work inbox have been read and filed, and that I am over the jet lag. Nice. 

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Snaps





Quickly (as I have to go work (*sob*) this morning):

I am home. I did actually opt to get on the plane, and 10 hours on a flight with kiddies behind me kicking my seat didn't result in any kind of manslaughter charge.

I will write about the last couple of days in Spain soon, but I wanted to tell you that I would love for you to turn your attention from this blog to my flickr photosharing page in the next weeks. I took about 600 photosover the course of the trip, and I will slowly start to publish them over at http://www.flickr.com/photos/deab

Here are a couple of Marrakech as teasers.






Thursday, March 20, 2008

"Up the Ante on the Frizzy"

what does the title mean, you wonder? well, it is Joanna´s response to the torrential rain that is coming down in Granada today, and the effect that is is having on our hair. What I am also saying is that we have gotten high and dry in our hotel room to wait for the sun to come out, as neither of us thought to pack anything that looks like a rain coat or an umbrella.... come on, do you blame us? it is SOUTHERN SPAIN!

So, since the last post, we have had a busy couple of days. On tuesday night we left our little apartment in search of Tapas. Instead what we found was another Semena Santa parade just coming down the road towards us. we decided to stop and ultimately took in the whole parade passing.. something that took at least three hours. I feel really lucky to have seen it though. First came a brass band playing sort of sad flamenco music, the front row all young men with shining brass silver helmets on sprouting purple crests of feathers. the crowd applauded thier music, and called bravo. Then came all the fellows in thier hoods, and the float carrying Jesus. There were two highlights-- one was just watching all of the families and people in the street. There are people of all ages just mingling and wandering the streets, and lots of people calling out greetings to one another. everyone is eating and passing beer and food, and there is just this lovely energy.

the second highlight was the passing of the float carrying Mary. we were standing in this very small alley, where you could only be one person deep on the "sidewalk" (more of a curb, really) so when the Mary float came by, which is huge (bigger than a king sized bed) there wasn´t more than 12 inches between us and the float. People on the balconies above showered the float with flowers, and luckily, the men carrying this massive thing had to rest right in front of us, so we got an up close look at how they move the float through the street. The statue was beautiful and sad, and everyone was reaching out to her. the float was covered in roses and candles, and you could smell the flowers and wax burning. Mary´s float was also followed by a band, so you also hear these really powerful drums and the float lurches into movement again. it is very moving.

after Seville, we hopped a train (leaving EXACTLY on time, the swiss don´t have the monopoly on that!) and ended up in Granada after watching the olive groves roll by for 4 hours. We are staying at a swish little hotel on the edge of the old town, directly across from the Alhambra, and just next to the gypsy quarter. Our hotel let us know that it was one of the biggest nights of the year for the largish gypsy community in Granada, as it was thier evening to bring thier Semena Santa flaot through thier community, and since they like a good party, the singing and drinking and flamenco go on all night after the float passes by. hearing this, J and I tried to nap so that we could stay up late, but mostly failed as we kept excitedly whispering "gypsies!!" to each other.

At 8:00ish, we climbed the big hill into this area of Granada. Gypsies have been living here for centuries, and they carved houses out of the rock of the mountain--they look like normal houses on the outside, but are caves going back in to the rock. We were kind of early, but lucked into a tour of a cave complex with a lovely man named Anthony, who tried to tell us about gypsy/romany culture through our cobbled together french, english and spanish. we then headed down the road to kill some time at a flamenco bar (also a cave). while there was a show going on, we opted to sit at the bar and people watch. It was fantastic. There were all these beautiful women dressed in flamenco outfits going in and out. I was surprised to see that despite the long time they have been in Spain, the community has not altogether lost the look of thier ancestors from India--some of the women there you would have thought came directly from India in thier looks and complexion. The music was great, people were clapping along, and things got busier and louder as the night went on.

At about 1:00, we finally heard the drums of the Semena Santa troup. We rushed outside, and in the street below us, were both floats (sadly covered in tarps as it had started to rain). They were being serenaded from a balcony by a flamenco singer--singing solo--with a sad sad sounding song. the huge crowd was hushed for the tribute. After another song, the floats were picked up again and run up the hill, the crowd racing after them in the narrow street. Very memorable.

eventually at 2 am joanna and I wandered home. on the way we caught glimpses of big parties full of flamenco music in houses along the road. sadly the rain had driven people inside, so the street party we had been promised was not to be.

we got up at 8 this morning, and took a tour of the Alhambra, a moorish city on the top of a mountain in the centre of Granada. I am not going to write about all of what we saw, but i will say that i was very taken with the grace and beauty of the sultan´s palace... everything is ornamented, everything is proportional, everything is done with an eye for beauty and symmetry and balance. Gorgeous. We were fortunate to have a guide who was an art historian who really loved the art and architecture of the palace, and so he really brought it to life for us. J has concluded that being a wife or concubine there in 1100AD would have been a pretty good gig. :-)

And then the skies opened up and the rain came down, and we have been nesting in our hotel room for most of the afteroon. I have to say, while I would like it to be warm and sunny, a little enforced down time is OK too. I am on the last 50 pages of "The Other Boleyn Girl".

The countdown is also on, and I am starting to turn my mind back to Victoria. Only three more sleeps now. This trip has gone by in the blink of an eye.

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Semena Santa and a Shift Change

First: all my love and affection to W, who is at this moment somewhere over ireland, winging her way home to canada. We´ve had a shift change here. we successfully retrieved Joanna from the train station on Sunday night (meeting her with beer, as requested). Wendy left monday night, after an afternoon of shoe shopping and chasing the Semena Santa parades.

So this is my 3rd full day in Seville. this is a really wonderful city--well at least the parts that are in walking distance of our apartment. We are lucky to be in the old city centre, so I will admit that we don´t tend to get farther than a rambling walking distance. But that´s fine, as everything is only a 15 minute walk away, if you can only figure out the twisty narrow streets. But even if you do get lost, there is always a little tapas bar or bodega in the square you pop out into to help you with supplies and directions!

Semena Santa is in full swing here. I can´t really do it justice in a short blog post, but essentially what happens is that each parish in the city sends out a troup of people to carry two floats ( one depicting Jesus in a tableau of some part of the easter story and another with a Mary statue) to the cathedral and back. The floats are huge, they take 40 -50 men to carry each one. there are a couple of marching bands to sent the rhythm of the marching of the troup. The strangest thing though for a north american, is that they dress in long tunics, capes and pointy hats--essentially the KKK outfit that is burned in our minds. it is kind of creepy! While I intellectually understand that the hoods are meant to hide the identity of the pious person so that they are known only to god, the hoods just give me the creeps. have a look:

http://z.about.com/d/gospain/1/0/U/C/-/-/semsanmal2_jari.JPG

So the procession of these troups (which i should add have up to 2500 people in each troup) takes up to 12 hours to do the trip from their church to the city centre cathedral and back. Which means that there are troups moving around the city literally day and night, all week. Traffic stops, and these massive crowns rush from one point in the city to another to see their favourite troups. it is madness. But fun madness!

An now i must go, as it is sunny out, and Jo and I are planning a picnic in the gardens of the Alcazar, a moorish buildt pleasure palace.... bring on the cheese, wine, tinkling fountains, orange blossoms and a nap in the grass...

Saturday, March 15, 2008

small factoids about Seville

Wendy and I are into reading small factoids to each other from our various guidebooks, and so in that spirit i present some to you:
- Seville in the spring smells gloriously of orange blossoms.
- the Macerena (a statue of Mary) is smaller than you think
- the whipped cream filled pastries are very very fresh
- no business is ever open. We are completely puzzled by when things open and close here...to say`"hours may vary" is an understatement.
-i have a bit of a rumbly tummy. boo.
- wendy´s spanish is improving. :-)

Friday, March 14, 2008

warming up to Cordoba

Hello dear readers.

wendy and I have been doing the road warrior bit. yesterday AM we left Madrid for Cordoba, and are already in Seville. But here we shall stay for 5 nights, while we soak up a little of the easter festivities and put out feet up, awaiting Joanna´s arrival.

So, Cordoba. We didn´t love it when we got there. I´ll be honest. The problem with seeing some of these old cities with the moorish influences is that after morocco, where they are still living and breathing that life and art and architecture, is that the remnants here don´t seem all that.. .well, special. so we stayed in a guesthouse called the Hostal Baghdad(!) in the old jewish quarter, but weren´t in love with the place. In the evening, we were tired and elected to stay-in and eat in. That´s a first for us. (though I must say you can get a tasty hamberguisa in cordoba for 3euro!)

However, our negativity was gone with the morning sun. We got up early to beat the crowds to this amazing mosque/cathedral called the Mezquita. It was built as a mosque but the moors, and then when they were driving out of spain, the spanish decided to plop a catherdral in the middle of it. Honestly, I fell in love with the old mosque, and the way it was destroyed to build the church broke my heart. the mosque was desinged to evoke a oasis in the desert, complete with a spring and an orange grove in the forecourt and striped arches in the inside which mirror the light through palm fronds. Beautiful. And huge- like the size of a city block.

We then went to the Alcazar, the palace of the christian kings. The palace itself wasn´t much (seen one fortification, see them all), but the palace has the most amazing formal gardens full of flowers and fuit trees and fountains all over the place. The luxury that these gardens must have been in thier time makes my mind twist. I took dozens of pictures.

then we hopped a bus, and find ourselves in Seville. Semena Santa, which is the weeklong easter celebration begins today and goes all week. I´m really looking forward to seeing the processions.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Palace, Prado, and Ham

Two days in Madrid, and I feel like I have only been able to see the smallest slices of it. We are fortunate to be right right RIGHT in the centre of the oldest part of the city. Half way bewteen the Prado museum and the royal palace.

yesterday W and I did a little self guided walking tour of the area around the palace and the cathedral. As we didn´t plan on spending any time in Madrid originally, we don´t have a book or guide. So while I enjoy walking around and looking at the architecure, I do feel that it was a bit of a waste, as I wish I knew more about what I was looking at. The cathedral was my favorite- while baroque in style on the outside (to keep it in harmony with the palace) it was actually buildt in the early 1990´s, so it has this wonderful modern stained glass and painted wood panelling.

the highlight of yesterday for me was W and I going out for a tour of the tapas bars of our nieghbourhood- which are astoundingly thick on the ground. There are 3-6 on every block. So with one drink and one tapa in each, you can happily bar hop all night and never get farther than a few blocks from the appartment. Last night we had calamaris, a great fresh salad (veggies were seriously lacking in Morocco), THE BEST HAM EVER (janelle, if I could mail you some I would) and these massive head-on shrip just sauteed up. Yum.

Today we had a really nice tour that we booked for only a couple of bucks via the madrid tourism office. We were the only people who had signed up, so it was great to be able to stroll and chat with this woman around some of the sights of the old city. we talked about the roll of the church in Spain, and about how inbreeding made the spanish (austrian) kings crazy, and how madrid went from a morrish signal post to the capital in only a hundred years or so.

Then we headed off to the Prado and spent all afternoon looking at art. Great glorious famous paintings to be exact. While I liked the Goya very much (and they have a lot of it) and the El Greco, my favorite was seeing this:

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/80/GardenED.jpg

And now my feet are very tired and it is time for my daily afternoon siesta. :-)