Thursday 11.11.2010
Spain Light
Our good weather is back. It is cold again this morning but the skies are bright blue with the winds of the last few days gone. We are determined to use this time productively in Ronda before we leave this especially scenic area. Today is the fifth of six short drives between stays so we have plenty of time.
We opt for the walking tour of our previously Moorish neighborhood that gets us into every corner. We start with a relatively easy walk through some alley-like streets with frequent historic buildings on our way to the gorge. Right next to the hotel is the former home of the last of the Aztec Kings who decided to live out his days here and the street is still named Avenida Moctezuma.
When we get to the gorge there are nice views of the new bridge and a stairway that goes down a couple hundred feet to one of the old town gates. We get about halfway down for some dramatic photo ops and decide that will be enough of a climb going back uphill. The tour takes us through back streets and squares that were one thing in the 700 years ending in 1485 and something else since. An interesting and yet obvious fact that we acquire along the way is that the Muslim inhabitants of this area were not interlopers, but had been here for seven centuries before being thrown out by the Christians from the north. That seems profound considering the diapers that our country is still wearing.
There are churches that used to be mosques and you can still see the bases of minarets with replacement tops that are now bell towers. There is also a former Moor palace that is perched atop the gorge with steps all the way down to the river so the Christian slaves could haul the water back up to the top. The square that used to be the Muslim marketplace is now where our car is parked.
Speaking of which, Mary goes back to finish packing up (all the dirty laundry in one suitcase), and John gets the car squeezing into the little spot in front of our hotel. We leave our very lovely staff and promise to come back another time, a promise we might very well keep. Monique gets us on the road to Malaga down on the coast and then we will turn east to our stop for tonight, Nerja. About halfway to Malaga she tells us to turn left (east) through a little town even though the highway signs suggest otherwise. We blindly follow her directions and find ourselves driving though multiple mountain ranges on minimum maintenance roads. We have ignored her advice in the past in order to follow rural country roads and she has apparently picked up on the theme. It is slow but exciting with breathtaking views and breathtaking gasps.
Once we get to Malaga it is smooth sailing along the Med coast to Nerja (Nair-Ha). There is free parking at a big lot a block from our little Hostal in the middle of town and smooth sailing through check-in. We have been emailing our host Jane about the possibility of getting our laundry done somewhere nearby and she takes control immediately. It is a little after 2:00 so she thinks there is plenty of time to wash and hang a couple loads out to dry and tells us to go have fun while she gets washing. OK.
It is a fifteen-minute downhill walk to the biggest of the Nerja beaches where we find “Ayo” the “famous” seaside restaurant where they cook Paella over open fires. We have beers and plates of Paella served from a 3-foot-across skillet, toast Jane the Laundress and watch the few brave sun worshippers on the beach. It is now in the mid-seventies but the water is cold and the sun is low in the sky. We consider a second beer before deciding that we should get back up the hill before we have more. One quick walk on the beach gets us back to the walkway up and more heavy exercise.
Nerja is called the “Balcony of Europe” because of the high promontory that extends into the sea where you can see for many miles in either direction. The “Balcony” is a couple blocks from our Hostal so when we get back to the top huffing and puffing we go that way for a sunset and that second beer. Mission accomplished as we get both things done. Jane should be hanging out our laundry about now.
After a short break, we (accomplished tapas travelers) do a half hour tour of the small downtown area and then head for a targeted tapas spot, “The Round Bar.” The place is packed, and with the tapas displayed around the bar, they are hard to pick out. There is also a guitar-playing singer shouting out the moving songs of Spain. We get a couple red wines and two tapas (free here with a drink) and watch the show.
Here’s the big deal about Nerha. Jane and Ian, our hosts, are Brit transplants. Everyone seated near us at Ayo was a Brit. Everyone we heard talking at the Balcony was a Brit or a German. Everybody we see in this bar is a Brit or German except the bartenders and the guitar player. Around the bar are 70-year-old guys playing bongos on the bar, 60-year-old bottle-blondes shimmying to the tunes and everyone watching everyone else and shouting “ole” at the end of every song. This is Crosslake, Minnesota in the summer, Puerta Vallarta in the winter, but it is certainly not Spain. There is plenty of sun here which makes it a lovely holiday or retirement spot, and we are in no position to be critical. These folks are all having fun, and obviously in their comfort zone, but nothing we see has any resemblance to anything we have seen over the last two months in Europe. It’s interesting for a night but we’re glad we’re moving on tomorrow.
At a break in the music we move down to the square near the Balcony and Bar Lizzaron. Here you pick out your own Tapas, keep the toothpicks and pay for the number of toothpicks on your plate at the end of the night. Very civilized. We can’t resist stopping at an English Pub for a final beer on our way back to the hotel. We chat with a couple of Brits from near Bath (we’ve been to the baths in Bath—they haven’t) before calling it a night. We check the clothesline on the terrace and some things are still damp. It’s not our problem.
Today's Picture: Paella and cold beer on the beach in Nerja.
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Travelers--
ReplyDeleteNerja sounded a little like Arizona in the winter. In AZ European winter tourists who come to see the cowboys and Indians only find Winnebago's with Minnesota and Iowa license plates and folks running around in burmuda shorts and polo shirts (snowbirds).
Costa del Sol is vacation central for all of Europe. Just like Florida and Arizona is for the US sunseekers.
It sounds like your hosts are just incredible. They all seem to go over the top to treat their customers well and go the extra mile. Nice to see (other than getting a timely check) that service is alive in well in European cities.
Looking foward to getting your reaction to the home stretch. You should have a full moon for the last few days of your time in Spain. Enjoy, Jose