04 August 2019

Spain (Part 2)

Well, if there was anything to top the Alcazar or the Church of San Salvador in Seville,  as described in my last post, it would have to be blimmin out of this world. And it was! 

Midway through the week in the late afternoon, Kay and I caught the national bus from Seville bus station and made the three-hour journey to Granada. I had originally intended to go by train, but apparently the line was closed in part and would have meant a coach trip part of the way anyway, so I decided it would be less complicated to go by coach all the way and see some lovely scenery en route.  Thankfully the bus was air-conditioned, as outside the temperatures were 38C plus. We dozed fitfully as we passed miles and miles of olive groves stretching into the horizon, broken up by the occasional field of sunflowers. So much for concentrating on the scenery! We were ejected in Granada bus station and took a taxi to our hotel, as we did not fancy experimenting with local buses, as it was already quite late.

Granada had a different feel to Seville. It was more bustling, touristy, slightly on the shabby side, big, loud, in your face, demanding attention. It took a while to acclimatise from the chic quaintness of Seville. We checked into our hotel -a sort of Spanish equivalent of Travelodge - and went out to explore. It turned out we were a mere 30 seconds from the Plaza Nueva, the hub of nightlife, where a large American group of seemingly professional dancers were dancing the jive to a mesmerised crowd. (Another night on that same square, we saw a Chinese girl dancing a perfect flamenco with all the expertise of a genuine Spanish girl.)  Crowds milled, African tradesmen sold their wares of bumbags and cheap Spanish fans, tourists devoured copious amounts of ice cream to quench their thirst. Did I mention it was 38 degrees Celsius? Even at midnight, the temperature rarely dropped below 30C. 

Our initial thoughts on Granada somewhat mellowed as the days went on. Brash as the city was, it also had a good feel to it and of course the number one reason for that was The Alhambra palace. You could not escape it. Wherever you were, it would suddenly peep from behind a building and remind you it was up there looking down on everything, keeping guard as it had been built to do eight centuries ago. It was imposing enough viewed from the city and breathtaking once up there. Just when you felt you couldn't see anything better, something else even more amazing would grab your attention. I must have taken more than two hundred photos of the Alhambra alone. Here is but a sample of them........believe me there are hundreds more.





















On  that day we walked for hours around the Alhambra site, soaking up its beauty, or would find shade for a welcome drink before we carried on. Much later we wandered way downhill to the town centre below then climbed uphill again in another direction into the Albaicin area - a quaint labyrinth of cobbled streets and whitewashed houses that afford a much sought-after distant view of the Alhambra. That evening, Kay announced that, according to her i-phone,  we had walked over 20,000 steps that day or 13.5 kilometres.  My feet and legs certainly vouched for that! All in 38C. Did I mention that?

View of the Alhambra from the Albaicin district

Too hot to bark

Arguably the best sangria in Spain

The cathedral - in our opinion - was much better than the one in Seville. It was bathed in light both inside and out and very colourful. The nearby Royal Chapel houses the tombs of past Kings and Queens, notably Ferdinand and Isabel, as well as Philip and Joanna.










The very heart of Granada has a North African style medina or bazaar - a rabbit warren of lanes that contain souvenir shops selling fridge magnets,  ceramics, brass, spanish fans and clothes (although we discovered the clothes were made in Thailand and can be bought anywhere in the tourist world).



One day we visited the Arabian public baths, built a thousand years ago.  There weren't many tourists there and no security officials to watch your every move, so it felt just like the last bather had popped home again and left the baths just for us.




We saved the best bit till last. We had seen a professional flamenco show in Seville, danced by the teachers at a flamenco school, but wanted to see another and our hotel recommended one to us. It was based in Sacromonte, a suburb further uphill from the Albaicin area we had visited earlier. High on a hill opposite the Alhambra, it has become the area where gypsies live. The facades of the house from a distance look like houses, but they are just that - a facade. Behind them, the living quarters are carved into the rock as caves. For centuries, the gypsies have lived like that, as pariahs of the community. There's even a cave museum up there. The gypsies are the origin of flamenco, which came over first from India and then Egypt, as they sought better lives. Their dance and song is their history of their struggles and triumphs.  The ticket we paid included collection from the town centre in a minibus, the ride uphill to Sacromonte, the show, a free drink of Sangria or beer and the return ride back to the town centre. Once through the front door, we found ourselves in a small narrow cave. The walls were lined with old photos of previous visitors and VIPs. The ceilings covered with brass and copper pots and pans. There was a row of chair down one side of the very narrow cave and a row opposite down the other side. The gap between the two rows was just enough for two people to pass or dance.... for the show was to take place between those two rows! It was amazing. It looked as if the whole family had turned up. There was the young guitarist (who had a passing resemblance to Jesus Christ), his cousin (maybe) was the singer, and sisters or cousins who danced. Then there was the grandmother, who introduced the show in Spanish only (no translations which somehow made the whole thing more authentic) and she then set off with a very slow doddery flamenco to open the proceedings, which attracted rapturous applause. The younger girls and men were amazing. Skirts twirled past our noses, castanets clicked in our ears and we were so part of it, it was hard not to be caught up in the emotion of the tapping and clapping and stamping, as well as the plaintive singing. How their legs and feet can physically tap so fast defies anatomy. Like a swan - graceful on top and stamping furiously beneath. [Apologies for the videos on their sides. If anyone knows how to correct this, let me know. I can usually upright photos but it would seem the same process cannot be done for videos.]












I'm back home again now, but it certainly was a week to remember.


30 July 2019

Spain (Part 1)

I don't get away to foreign fields as much as I would like these days. It doesn't really appeal travelling alone and friends have busy schedules (or other friends they go away with), so I don't get much opportunity. Kay quite rightly goes away a lot with her long-term boyfriend. I keep plucking up courage to travel solo. Maybe one day. Meanwhile, when Kay suggested she had a spare week in July during which we could do something together, I leapt at the opportunity. 

I've never been to mainland Spain before. Greg and I visited a few of the Balearic islands in the past, but never ventured onto the mainland. I guess all those horrible visions of Torremelinos and Benidorm put me off and those who did venture there came back with squiffy tummies. However, a recent read of Victoria Hislop's The Return made me curious to see Granada and Seville and to learn more of the history. I knew very little about the Spanish Civil War and had been quite alarmed at what I had gleaned. So with laptop before me and ideas whizzing in my head, I booked Kay and me onto a flight to Seville, a hotel in Seville for three nights, a bus to Granada and hotel for four nights in Granada, as well as the fight back to London City Airport (a first as I had never flown in or out of there). The weather forecast was for very hot temperatures every day and I did question the wisdom of a July holiday sightseeing in a furnace, but your intrepid blogger decided to cast all concerns to one side and go for it.

Seville did not disappoint. I found it easy to manage all the sights within a  10 minute walk of our hotel (I had deliberately opted for a hotel slap bang in the centre of the Old Town traffic-free streets). The shops were sophisticated, the local women immaculately dressed, despite the heat, the tourists more shabbily dressed in comparison. The ice cream parlours and tapas bars provided welcome shade in the 35C - 38C heat, as did the churches and palaces. Here is a mere small fraction of the photos  I took whilst there. More to come on Granada in another post...


Our hotel in Seville - Moorish style
Alcazar Palace


Alcazar Palace- beautiful ceilings

Alcazar interior -  intricate patterns

Alcazar interior - stunning walls and ceilings

Alcazar interior - stunning walls and ceilings

Alcazar interior - beautiful with every turn

Alcazar interior - stunning courtyards

Alcazar interior - even the doors are not plain

Alcazar interior - it gets better

Alcazar inmate


Alcazar  grounds

Alcazar  grounds


Shops with a difference

Public transport

Cathedral

Cathedral

Cathedral

Cathedral -tomb of Christopher Colombus

Cathedral

Cathedral

Plaza de Espana

Plaza de Espana

Plaza de Espana


San Salvador

San Salvador

Santa Ana, Triana

Statue of Juan Belmonte - famous bullfighter


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14 July 2019

Reunion

It's fifty years since I left school after taking A-Levels. It seems like yesterday, so how can it be fifty years? My school, at the time I was there, was an Inner London grammar school. It has changed over the years since - first to a Comprehensive, then a Technology College and currently is an Academy. I struggle to understand what this means in real terms, but am comforted to see the history of the place and the ethos is basically the same. A few buildings have been added on, but the Old Victorian ediface I knew is still the hub. One of our "Old Girls" is the newsreader and TV presenter Fiona Bruce.

Every summer, there are Old Girls reunions. I have only ever been to one. That was about 25 years ago when I dragged a 3-year-old Kay along with me for moral support. The date chosen for the reunions (always the middle Saturday in July) usually clashes with Kay's birthday, so I am never able to go. Not that I probably would anyway, as I am half frightened to meet up with old rivals and maybe see they are more successful in their lives. A lot of my very close friends live in other countries or at vast distances in this one, so I would not really meet up with anyone I wanted to spend time with, assuming anyone from my year group was even there. 

But this year seemed different. Kay was celebrating her birthday on the next day for a start and this year was the fiftieth anniversary of leaving school so I thought an immense effort on my part was needed. I couldn't let fifty years go by without celebrating.  So go I must. But what to wear?  First impressions are so important, particularly after fifty years.  I tried on dozens of outfits from my wardrobe until I was a fraction happy with what I chose. I have never wanted to have a flash car, but suddenly my 20-year-old Micra wouldn't fit the bill, so I decided to take the bus there - in London that is sensible anyway, as parking and traffic can be a nightmare and I wanted to arrive as cool as a cucumber.

With dry mouth and pounding heart I approached the oh so familiar building I had spent seven teenage years in remembering like yesterday the sweat of exams, the hatred of hockey and the heartache of teenage boyfriends. Within two minutes of arriving, I was approached by someone who looked vaguely familiar and, staring at my name badge, she announced who she was. Yes, indeed, someone from my old class. Amazingly, we got on like a house on fire and chatted non-stop for a couple of hours reliving the past fifty years and what we had each done with our lives.  It was like we had never been apart, we got on so well, we swapped emails and promised to stay in touch.  If only we'd had the internet and facebook in our day, it would have been easier to stay in touch!

Having had a rather difficult tooth extracted a week ago and still in some degree of pain, I managed to negotiate my first true solid food in the form of crustless sandwiches, scones, cream and jam and a fruit meringue with lashings of tea in china cups and saucers, all without it dribbling down my face. I wandered corridors and peeped into classrooms, retracing my steps as an 11-year-old entering the school and as an 18-year-old saying goodbye to our much coveted sixth form attic rooms, the "cool" place to be.  All in all a very satisfying visit to my old school and to quote a line from the cartoon Chicken Run "All my life flashed before my eyes". But it was most definitely not "very boring".

08 July 2019

Under arrest

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If you don't hear from me for a while, it is because I've been locked up in Holloway Prison. No joking! 

I've just had yet another one of those phone calls supposedly from Her Majesty's Tax Office, informing me that I am being charged with fraud for non-payment of taxes. I was then told by a very posh voice to press 1 to speak to an adviser. If I didn't, the voice told me in no pleasant tone that I shall be arrested shortly. To which I shouted down the phone "Oh good, I look forward to seeing you".

Over the last year or so, I have had quite a few of these scam calls on the main landline phone, but today was a first, because the call came into my mobile/cell/handy phone and had the additional threat of arrest. I wonder how many people fall into the trap or how many little old men or women have a heart attack with the shock.  It must pay off. I suppose if one in a thousand hand over their money, the scammer gets a result. 

24 June 2019

Summer at last

The hunt for the perfect television goes on, but meanwhile it was the last choir choir session of the term and an informal choir appearance at a local church fete on Saturday. Many of the choir couldn't make the time or venue, but there were still enough of us to make it sound good. Children were briefly disappointed, as their bouncy castle was deflated, so we could put on a 45-minute performance, which went down well with the adults thankfully.  We sang tunes from the Beach Boys,  Abba, Adele and too many more to mention. The weather, after weeks of unpredictability, was sunny and hot. Beefburgers and sausages sizzled on a nearby BBQ.  Summer is here. Fingers crossed.

This is just a handful of us

Rehearsing last minute at home

05 June 2019

Hectic

The last few weeks have been hectic, so my attempts to follow blogs and write my own has been somewhat lacking. Many apologies.

First I have been trying to arrange a few escapes over the summer. One to celebrate fifty years of friendship with my two closest friends, having met them on university campus as nervous 18-year-olds leaving home for the first time. We plan to have a few days together back in the town where we studied and revisit old haunts, though fifty years on, it might be more sedate!  Another break is to Spain with Kay. Having read The Return by Victoria Hislop, we are both keen to visit Granada and learn more of the history. I have booked flights, hotels and connections all by myself, so research has taken a while and made me go bog-eyed in the process.

I have, in the attempt to do something for the local community, also volunteered to help out at the local food bank. That takes up a whole afternoon once a week and has been a sad insight into the shortcomings of the government towards people with financial or mental difficulties.  Nobody should be begging for food in this day and age.

The main reason for my preoccupations has been the demise of my television. In the last six years, it has failed on three occasions, each time being the backlight giving up the ghost. Twice I have paid for someone to replace a new backlight at the cost of £99 each, but when it went a third time a couple of weeks ago, I decided it was not cost-effective to buy yet another backlight, when I could get a new TV for  three times that cost. Buying a TV should be a simple thing, I thought. Easy peasy. Hmmmm. Not so in reality.

Since I last bought a TV, things have moved on. There's 4k, Smart, HDMI, USB, HD, LED, QLED, sound bars, TVs as big as your house. Having established what size you want, the rest requires a sit down in a cold room with a beer. I decided I wanted a modest 43 inch (remember the days when you were told not to let a TV dominate a room - not these days -  a 43 inch is apparently classified as small). The size was the easy part. I then decided on a Samsung Smart 4k all-singing, all-dancing model. I'd had a Samsung before and the reviews  for the one I chose were fantastic. So far so good. Next step was to order one from Argos. I've set up TVs  many times before for both me and my mother, so didn't need one delivered or set up for me. I lugged said TV home, only to discover, when I had switched it on and entered my wifi password and other details, that  it wouldn't load up any channels other than the four in-built demo ones. I tried various things to load them up but to no avail. I rang Samsung and they talked me through back to factory settings and then forwards again to load channels with the same result - no channels found. "The TV", they said, "must be faulty, so you need to exchange it".

Back I went to Argos to exchange it and lugged the replacement home. When it got to loading the channels, the same thing happened. Yet again I rang Samsung. I could hear them scratching their heads. I ventured that maybe plugging the BT set-top box (which records programmes or pauses/rewinds live ones)  into the TV might be the problem, so, having disconnected that, the channels loaded. Samsung was glad to get that tip off me!  However the picture was so dark and grainy, it looked like all the action was down the bottom of a coal mine. I fiddled with the personal settings until the backlight and brightness settings were off the end of the scale, but still the picture was extremely dark. Samsung was speechless and didn't know what to advise. Needless to say, I put everything back to factory settings, lugged that back to Argos too and got a refund.

Since then I have been out and about grilling TV salesmen, researching Which? reports and other sites online and am more confused than ever which is the best one to get. I am slightly nervous that connecting an HD box set to a 4K TV is part of the problem although the experts tell me it should not be a problem at all. Meanwhile I am watching a tiny 18 inch TV  (which I resurrected from the bedroom) from my armchair across the vast distance in my lounge and my eyes are going in separate directions, so much so that I got a terrible migraine one day last week and took to my bed! The search continues...........


Image result for watching tv carton
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