Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Goodbye and farewell

Times are a-changing and ScrabbleAddict has moved on to bigger and better things. You should be automatically redirected to my new wordpressery blog. If not, click here.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Greek Island Odyssey Part II: Naxos

At the port in Naxos we were met by George, a friend of a friend who owned a guest house that we'd arranged to stay at. George - who has the world's greatest and most permanent smile - was holding a large sign saying "Vasco Astro" on it. George's guest house, P&G Resorts, is located 10 meters away from the town beach, Ayios Yeoryios, at the southern end of the town, away from the mayhem of the port and the Paralia.

Naxos is the largest of the Cyclades islands and is easily able to sustain itself without the tourist euros which made it very appealing. However, tourism is still big business and the place was packed with holidaying Greeks, Italians and, bizarrely, Fins. Almost immediately, though, you could tell the place was much less frenetic than Santorini and there was a nice air of calm hanging over the place.

Once I'd brought the body temperature back to normal levels by hanging about under the air-conditioning unit for twenty minutes, ignoring Vee's chattering teeth and the fact that he was perched on the bed in his winter coat, I was ready to hit the streets. We ate dinner at a packed restaurant called Maros, which I highly recommend.

Just as we were tucking into our massive yoghurty dessert, a middle-aged couple walked in and made their way to the empty table next to us.



Both had carrot orange skin and both were dressed from head to toe in white, her in a floor length floaty skirt and him in white linen pants and white shirt and white leather shoes. Mr Carrot had a silver chain around his neck. It was so big and heavy, it clanked when he walked. Mrs Carrot had purple spiky hair, too much gold jewelery and had overdosed on the perfume.

"I bet you 14 bowls of Greek yoghurt that they are Dutch!" I whispered through clenched teeth. Only Dutch men think that they can get away with looking like they just walked off the set of a squeaky clean boy band photo-shoot when they are pushing sixty. Only the Dutch think that being orange all year round and having skin like a cheap leather handbag is healthy and that having a loyalty card to the local tanning salon is normal.

Mr and Mrs Carrot sat down and proceeded to talk about us and the other diners in Dutch, which is something that the Dutch do because they think that no one can understand them. Then they offered to take a photo of me and Vee and proceeded to laugh about the photo they'd taken. When we left, I said goodbye to them and bid them a nice evening in Dutch. Mr Carrot responded in Dutch and only realised that he was not speaking English anymore when he got to the end of his sentence. Mrs Carrot just stared, open mouthed.

Me one. Nederlanders nil.

By about 23:00, the burn on my leg was beginning to throb. The area around it was swelling up and oozing yellow stuff so I decided to go to the hospital and get it checked out. Once I'd got past the security guard, I walked straight into the Accident and Emergency room where the doctor took one look at my leg, winced, muttered the words "Motorbike" and then ordered me to lie down. In the next bed, an old lady was having a bloodied, broken nose attended to. I hope the mean-looking old man sitting at the bedside was not responsible. The doctor lathered my leg in something cold, creamy and soothing and then bandaged me up. I'd drunk half a litre of wine and was chuckling away with Vee that I was going to have a stupid tan line and hadn't moved from the bed.

"What is so funny?" demanded the doctor.

"Er nothing." He was sitting at a huge old desk with a giant ledger open. I'd like to say he was holding a feather quill because it would describe the scene perfectly but it was just a pen.

"Is there a problem?" he asked. I shook my head.

Then he asked me my name, nationality and my father's first name, which I thought was very, very strange and I had to resist the temptation to get into an existential conversation about the percentage of people who he'd asked that didn't actually know their father's name. Then, as I was searching about in my bag for my credit card to pay what I thought was going to be an extortionate bill that I was going to be unable to reclaim from my health insurer, he said goodbye and waved me out of the room. All this had taken less than five minutes. I showed no ID, no medical insurance card, nothing. When I went to the pharmacy to get the antibacterial cream he'd prescribed me, I specifically asked for a receipt and the prescription paper back for claiming purposes until I realised that the cream had cost me EUR 1.13. Wasn't worth the bother.

Greece one. Nederland nil.

After that day, I decided I needed to have a purely medicinal cocktail. We found a great bar on the beach within stumbling distance from George's, where we lounged in deck chairs, two meters from the sea, listening to the waves gently roll.



I chose to try the Naxos Kitron, which is a lemony flavoured local spirit. The waiter seemed highly amused by my choice and I was worried I'd ordered something very, very potent. My Kitron was served in a tall cosmopolitan glass and, upon first sip, tasted like the moist towelette they give you on planes. The second sip tastes more like mild toilet cleaner. By the third sip, you're drinking a rather nice lemony brew.

Next: Motorcycle madness and the rest of Naxos.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Greek Island Odyssey Part 1: Santorini

When I was twelve I went to Greece on a family holiday. My older brother bought me an ouzo which made me feel invincible. On the way to the toilet I stumbled into a large, mean-looking cactus and spent the next half hour pulling cactus spines out of my thighs. Then a group of us went for a midnight dip in the sea. I got stung by a jellyfish. It didn't hurt until I woke up the next morning, after stumbling to bed in an ouzo induced fuzz. That searing pain, coupled with the large red holes in my thighs and the aftermath of ouzo, is my only memory of Greece. So, I was pretty much going there with an open mind and a mental note to avoid jellyfish, cacti and ouzo.

Flying to the Greek islands means you are limited to arriving and departing from a few of the most touristic lumps of rock on the planet as most islands do not have international airports. We flew to Santorini, which on first sight is made up of 95% Australian, American and Spanish cruise ship passengers and 5% rock. On second sight it really is made up of 95% Australian, American and Spanish cruise ship passengers and 5% rock. Room prices sky rocket in August and being last minute people, our choices were pretty limited. We opted to stay in Perissa, which is significantly shabbier - and therefore cheaper - than the capital Thira. And, since the island is tiny, we figured that with a set of scooter wheels, it wouldn't take us long to get around.

We tried to bargain with a leather-faced and ancient taxi driver at the airport but he wouldn't budge on the price. He chucked our bags in the back and screamed "You get in!" at us. He drove off screaming at the woman in the passenger seat who screamed back even louder and more animatedly for about five minutes, then they both fell into a stoney silence. We arrived at Athanasia Apartments at midnight. Although the place was nice and the owners friendly, we got the only room left and it was very basic, tiny, stank of cigarettes and had a window that faced a brick wall. There was a safe bolted to the wall right above the bed. I spent all night worrying that the safe would fall off the wall and drop straight onto Vee's head. Naturally, I'd secured the non-lethal side of the bed for myself.

On Sunday we rented a scooter for 15 euros and zoomed around the island. Then we zoomed around the island again because it was too hot and the breeze when zooming made the unbearable heat just about bearable. When we could zoom no more, we decided to check out Thira, which consists of a bunch of very expensive white boutique hotels, restaurants, jewelry shops, churches and narrow alleyways perched precariously on the edge of a massive caldera.





Within about three seconds of arriving in Thira, I'd managed to severely burn the back of my leg on the exhaust pipe of a motorbike while trying to park our scooter. It's really quite something to see your skin literally melting in front of your eyes. I stared down in horror as the layers of skin bubbled up and peeled back and my leg swelled up. Soon the novelty of seeing the under layers of my body that were never supposed to see daylight wore off and the pain started to become unbearable. Hobbling up and down cobbled streets with half your leg hanging off is no fun, let me tell you that.

Santorini is basically what remains of one of the biggest volcanic eruptions in living history. The island was once a large round landmass until most of it was blown to bits, leaving a couple of bits of rock jutting out of the sea. Today, it's one of the most visited Greek islands and I'm not entirely sure why. Sure, I can see that it might be a geologist's wet dream but the land is barren and parched. The beaches are nothing special. The caldera is impressive, but really not that spectacular. The streets are thronged with the worst kind of tourists and packed with one indistinguishable shop-selling-crap after another. And, without wheels or the poor little donkeys that cart the fat cruise ship passengers up the near vertical inclines it's impossible to get around.



I'd read that Oia, on the north western tip of the island, is one of the best places in the world to watch the sunset as there's nothing between you and the horizon. Against our better judgement, we zoomed off to grunt in unison with all the other tourists and see what the fuss was about. Oh. My. God. From around 19:00, Oia's population swells from its modest number of about 700 to thousands and thousands. I counted at least 15 coaches in the car park. Every available space was taken up. People had scrambled up onto roofs, perched themselves on walls or hung themselves precariously over bits of rock with sheer drops on the other side, wielding cameras.



I love a good sunset but really, once you've seen one you've seen them all in my opinion and it really wasn't that special. Ok, it might have been special if I had been there alone with my dear Portugeezer but it's impossible to be absorbed by anything, however spectacular, when there are 37 people within a square meter of you, sweating, breathing down your neck and bothering you every four seconds to ask you to take a picture of them in front of a giant ball of fire. My eyeballs have still not recovered.



We ate dinner at a great restaurant in Katerados, a few kilometers outside of Thira, where I discovered that Greek yoghurt with honey is possibly the most divine thing I've ever tasted. I cannot believe I've lived on this planet for 32 years and never tasted it. If I had to choose between a large lump of crumbling parmigiano and a bowl of Greek yoghurt and honey, I'd probably choose the latter. Now that's serious.

Back in Perissa, we found the bar with the fewest Australian backpackers in it and the cheapest cocktails and drank bad margaritas. The waitress was Canadian and was euphoric that it was her last night of work after a three month stint. I'd been led to believe that Santorini would be heaving in August. Although it was busy, it was nowhere near as bad as I had expected and I was guessing that most of the people on the streets in Thira and Oia got back on their cruise ship a couple of hours later and sailed off into the dark en route to Mykonos. Only the loudest, thumpiest bar on Perissa's beachfront was busy and most of the others were empty or had a few tables of burnt and tired tourists in them. The girl told us that, since she arrived in May, everyone kept telling her that "It will get busy next week" but it never did.

On the way home, I saw a very drunk and roasted English woman who was holding up her even more drunken friend and swaying down the street. Following them, looking remarkably like vultures, were two sniggering Greek men. The less drunk woman turned and said, "I'm taking her home, and I'll meet you in the bar in five minutes. What was your name again?"

We were taking the ferry to Naxos on Monday afternoon and so had spent a good chunk of Sunday trying to find out what time the bus left Perissa for the port. Rule number one of traveling: as soon as you arrive somewhere, find out how and when you can get out.

"14:30," said the man in the scooter shop.

"Erm," said the lady in the cafe.

"14:00," said the man in the bar.

"Bus?" asked the owners of our hotel.

The timetable in the bus stop had been ripped off the wall.

"There is no bus to the port," said the woman in the official travel agent's office. "But I've just seen a bus go past with a big sign on the front saying 'Port'!" I said. "No. No bus to the port. The Internet is wrong." Hrrrm. Did I mention the Internet?

"14.30," said a girl standing at the bus stop.

Bingo. Two answers the same!

On Monday, we made the bus with seconds to spare for two reasons. The first being that as we approached the shop to return the scooter, I realised we were missing one of our 'optionally compulsory' helmets. Rather than be charged 100 euros for a piece of crap that would offer you about as much protection as bubble wrap if you were unfortunate enough to have an accident and land on your head, we decided to rush back to where we'd left it, even though it was already 14:10 and the petrol indicator was flapping about below the red line.

The second reason being that I insisted on stopping at the supermarket to buy food for the poor stray dog hanging around the bus shelter. I hastily grabbed a can of luncheon meat because the dog food didn't have ring pulls on and, as the bus was approaching, I slopped the contents in front of the skinny dog who was patiently waiting for me to feed him. Luncheon meat is so disgusting, it seems, that even a starving dog doesn't appreciate it. He looked at me with an expression that I can only describe as "Is this really the best you could do?".



At the port, we had to pay two old men that looked like they'd just come out if a taverna 56 cents each in port tax. I reckon that it was really 56 cents towards their ouzo fund. We got on a massive ferry and churned off to our next stop, Naxos.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

A few days in NYC

Armageddon
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Cheap flights always seem like a good idea when you book them. When you've not slept for 24 hours, and spent hours contorted into positions that a 12 year old Ukrainian gymnast would find hard to maintain, you realise why people often re-mortgage their house to fly business class.

We made it to Iceland a couple of hours late and hung around for a while, marveling at what bankruptcy will do to a country – I bought the cheapest bottle of water from an airport EVER – and trying to work out whether the small cluster of houses we just flew over was actually Reykjavik or not. Flying over Iceland, I was reminded of a scene from the end of the world, what with its completely barren and crater-filled moonscape.

The cute little red-roofed airport seems to serve as a hub for people too cheap to pay for a direct flight, and American cruise ship passengers. Although the crispy white hair, bright white trainers and money belts gave it away somewhat, I confirmed that they were indeed cruise ship passengers when I nosily read over the shoulder of a little old man who was slowly typing out his 'European Cruise' diary on a mini laptop, while his wife stared over his shoulder pointing out mistakes every three words.

A few hours later we were en route to New York, after a two hour wait on the runway and a moment of panic when the pilot announced that the levels of ash in the air were too high to fly. In the end, they offloaded the cargo of frozen fish so they would not run out of fuel and we flew almost up to the arctic circle in order to escape the billowing brown mushroom cloud. I have to say I was most disappointed not to have seen huge balls of lava spitting out of the volcano into the air. Vee said that I had obviously been watching too many cartoons. I protested that I had seen it on National Geographic but he was adamant that it must have been a cartoon.

Pizza Etiquette
----------------
Getting into the country was surprisingly easy, although Vee had some trouble with the fingerprint scanner on account of his gammy and bent little finger. We got a taxi to Naomi's place in Greenpoint and, woozy and delirious from lack of sleep and food, we walked to Williamsburg and saw a sign for pizza slice for $1.25.

“What's this one?” I asked, pointing my sticky fingers at a pizza smothered with something that looked like a colony of white fungus.

The boy looked at me, slack-jawed with shock.

“White Cheese,” he said.

But the look on his face told me that he wished he had said “What do you think you are doing, moronita, breathing the same air as me? Even an amoeba knows that this is a white cheese pizza slice and that it costs $4.20. Now be off with you, filthy uneducated foreigner!”

We ordered four slices and were quite shocked when we were asked to pay $18. Only plain cheese is $1.25. Everyone knows this even though it doesn't say anything about it anywhere. Everyone knows what the pizzas are and how much they cost too, without there being any signs or labels or prices listed anywhere. Looking at a menu for more than 3.2 seconds and asking what a 'full hero' is means that people think you have just arrived on a boat from the world's most underdeveloped nation, or the Netherlands, in our case. And no, I still don't know what a bloody full hero is.

Wardrobe Malfunction
---------------------
Williamsburg is Brooklyn's coolest, hippest, artsy neighbourhood and, on Saturday night, it was ram-jam packed with the uber cool, those trying very hard to look uber cool and those trying very, very hard to look uber cool and failing miserably. And everyone is young, verrrry young.

Fashion du jour for the gals is pudding bowl haircuts with giant fringes swept to one side a la 1980s Diana and skirts that start under their boobs and end about two cm from their crotch or 1950s housewife dresses and head scarves. The boys seem less conformed but if you haven't got facial hair of some description, either a jesus-on-a-bad-day beard or a Colonialist-era curled, twisted and cultivated-with-love mustache then you don't dare show your face on the street. Flimsy canvas deck shoes seem to be all the rage too, and the more ripped and worn out they are, the better. In fact, the more homeless you look, the better. There were also loads and loads of people with full body tattoos and strangely, lots of people with tattoos of footprints behind their ears.

In the short time it took for two starving people to stuff down two slices of fat, puffy pizza each, I saw the following characters and started to think that maybe we'd stumbled upon a film set: a morbidly obese goth couple, each wearing a floor length leather jacket, three people with full facial tattoos, a bra-less girl whose t-shirt was so artistically ripped you could actually see her nipples poking out of the slashes – it was highly amusing watching the two boys she was with trying not to stare at her chest, a fat boy in a pork pie hat and shoes a homeless person would have chucked away a long time ago bellowing on the phone to his confidante about his new boyfriend and a boy with a mustache that stuck out at least 3 inches on each side. Suitably stuffed and culture shocked, we wandered home and wondered if we'd slipped into a time-warp as three hours had passed since we arrived.

Polish (as in the country, not as in making something shiny)
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I woke up the next morning at jet-lag o'clock and was stunned by the absolute silence. I could not believe that I was in the middle of Brooklyn, which, if it was a city in it's own right rather than part of NYC, would be the country's sixth largest city. Not one thump of someone's bad music, not a single dog barking, no children playing, no cars. Nothing. It was kind of weird. My stomach was giving me its usual 'feed me lots and very quickly' message because my body thought it was dinner time rather than breakfast time. After I'd bounced on Vees head a few times and manged to drag him out of bed, we headed off in search of sustenance to quiet my growling stomach and incessant whinging. Greenpoint is Polish town; all the people are Polish, the shops and bars and restaurants are Polish, and people speak Polish to you by default. We soon discovered that Polish people make great donuts and even better bagels – it's not all wodka you know. After we'd overdosed on saturated fat and sugar in the Peter Pan Cafe on Manhattan Ave, we took the subway to Manhattan.

Use the F%$^&^%^% microphone
---------------------------
There seems to be something wrong with the subway attendants who sit in the little 24 hour booth. How can it be that every single one of them refuses to actually use the little microphone that is conveniently placed there to allow them to talk to you through the bulletproof glass, forcing you to lipread as they scream an answer at you? And another thing I realised is that Americans in general do not like to be asked questions they don't know the answer to. It really freaks them out. It's my new favourite hobby...

We got out of the subway at Union Square and the first thing I saw was “Shoe Mania”, the biggest shoe shop I have ever seen. I almost fell over backwards at the sheer volume of shoes contained within those four walls. Then I ducked into a shop called “Bed, Bath and Beyond” and it made me feel like I'd been living on La Isla de la Juventud – one of the most remote and 'stuff-less' places I've ever been to - for my entire life. I could not believe the amount of stuff in there, stuff that I didn't even know what it should be used for, piled high from floor to ceiling, stuffed in, layer upon layer, every colour, shape and size. If you needed a new shower curtain, you could choose from at least 300 different colours and patterns and I've never seen so many bins in one place in my life. And why does anyone need to choose between 47 varieties of coat hanger? I had to leave in the end as the sheer volume of stuff was making me feel sick. I'd not yet acclimatised, having come in from semi-communist, choice-less Holland.

We wandered around for hours, through Soho and Washington Square, paid $10 for a frozen cherry margarita, and finally met up with Laura and Ana at Dos Caminos for a beer, where we all squeezed onto a tiny bench and sat in a jet lagged stupor and sporadically commented on how expensive booze was.

Why does it always rain on us?
-------------------------------
On Tuesday it rained. All day. From the moment we woke up to the moment we went to bed. Not just little sprinkely, farty, piffy rain, but big fat soak-you-through-to-the-bone-within-fifteen-seconds rain, the kind of ran that makes you wish you were amphibious. Within about five minutes of walking, my jeans were soaked up to the knees and my socks were squelching in a very unpleasant manner. I'm not surprised about the rain, as it's to be expected what with our reputation as rainmakers, but I was shocked about the length of the storm. We chose this day to toddle off to the promenade in Brooklyn Heights to see the spectacular view of Manhattan island it offers. The good thing was that our view was not obscured by an other people because no one but us was stupid enough to venture out in such abysmal weather, except the obese woman squatted on a park bench under a giant golf umbrella screaming into her mobile phone. The bad news was that we couldn't see much of Manhattan island because it was pretty much shrouded in a grey haze.

Great Sharona, Man
-------------------
Every 35 shoe shop entries, Vee gets to to go into a guitar shop. Right next to the Chelsea Hotel, where Sid did away with Nancy, is a tiny guitar shop, with a very verbose owner and five or six random employees who lounge on amps, look bored or generally do nothing.

“Where are y'all from?” asked the owner as we perused the stringed beasts.

Recital along the lines of “England and Portugal but we live in Amsterdam...”

“Terrible steak in England. Worst steak I've ever tasted.”

Er. Ok.

A bearded weirdo pops up and says “Why is it so bad?”

“Well, it was so small and tasteless. And don't get me started on the coffee. Here, have a cherry.”

Bearded weirdo thinks for a moment and then says, “Yeah, I suppose they don't have big enough farms there. Texas is 20 times the size of England so it's understandable that the steak there is so bad.”

Facial Piercings suddenly appears and says “I loved the food in Amsterdam, man. Really good Sharona.”

“You mean shwarma?”

“No. Sharona, that fried-up meat stuff.”

After that exchange, it was seriously time to find some cheap booze. The only way that your bank account can survive in NYC is to voraciously exploit happy hour which most bars have from about 5 to 7 each weekday evening. We found a Mexican restaurant that offered $3 margaritas all night and sat at a little table outside. As soon as Jaunita found out we only wanted to booze the night away we were herded away from the respectable diners and shoved in the bar area along with everyone else who had discovered that $3 margaritas were the only way not to bankrupt yourself in the process of alcohol consumption. $3 frozen margaritas come ready made out of a slushy machine. $3 margaritas are made with the cheapest and most potent form of tequila you can imagine and, once you've burned off your taste buds with the first few mouth-fulls, they taste great. So great, in fact, that you keep on buying more and more $3 margaritas until you have several half thawed brews in front of you and you are continuously repeating how marvelously clever you are at having found such wonderfully cheap cocktails. $3 margaritas are not very nice when they begin to eject themselves violently from your throat at 3am, as Vee found out. That was the end of the $3 margarita story.

Monday, May 03, 2010

Prague, 2010: Pass me my SPAK!
--------------------------

Wow. It's been a very, very long time since I blogged. And boy, does it feel good to be back in the saddle, er keyboard, tapping away in the dead of night in some annoymous hotel room, surrounded by stale air and shades of beige.

Schiphol was chaos. There was the biggest queue of people I've ever seen queuing up to check in at KLM-incompetence. I'd already printed my boarding pass but the royal blue clad clipboard monkeys tried to make me me walk miles to get round to the baggage drop off so I ducked under the barrier and was almost executed by a greasy haired KLM-er with delusions of power.

"Do you want to miss your flight ma'am?" sneered greasy haired KLM-er, blocking my way.

"No, that's why I just ducked under the barrier," I snarled back.

"What you did wasn't very nice," he continued.

"Pah!" I said.

"I can make you miss your flight you know..."

And when he said that, I barged past him dismissing him with my hand. Fortunately, he got a VERY IMPORTANT message on his walkie talkie and he didn't come after me.

Fortunately, I was not actually flying with KLM-incompetence but with Czech Air, which is a much nicer flying experience all round, right down to the leathery pastry they give you in place of KLM-incompetence's packet of Tuc biscuits.

I caused much confusion at the hotel by insisting on a double bed rather than twin beds as I have a tendency to dream about falling off cliffs when forced to sleep in beds that are less wide than I am long and this, as you can imagine, leads to me falling out of bed on a regular basis during aforementioned dreams of cliff falls.

But the girl checking me in thought I meant that I wanted twin beds, spent ten minutes trying to find a clean room with two beds in it and then asked me how many keys I wanted. When I said just one, thanks, she looked at me like I'd swallowed the large flowery decorations adorning the reception and then regurgitated them upon her shiny leather signature mat. Anyway, we soon sorted out that I wanted one bed and off I trotted to my room.

Unfortunately, that room had the hotel's entire heating system running through its walls, and there was a constant roar of a furnace growling and rattling throughout the bowels of the building. So off I trotted back down to the reception and now I am in a room that doesn't growl and - bonus - has a bed that's definitely wider than I am long and six pillows. I think I'm going to wedge myself in the centre of the bed with them, just incase I start dreaming about BASE jumping or something.

So from my miniscule afternoon tour of Prague I can tell you that it's quite stunning - amazing architecture, little cobbled streets as well as wide avenues and squares - but is absolutely packed with mobs of Poles, Spanish and Italians in giant gangs masquerading as 'walking tours'.



Lunch was eaten at the least touristy place we could find in the short amount of time we had. I had a rather tasty spinach and cheese pancake. This bottle of ketchup's name made me laugh:




But not as much as the name of this shop did:




And actually, nowhere near as much as this sandwich that I spotted in the airport did:

Sunday, September 27, 2009

The rain dance
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Every time I go to Spain I like it more and more.

I like the fact that you can sleep the entire day away and still be able to go shopping when you drag yourself out of bed at 19:00. I like the fact that you get a tasty little schnack with your beer. I like the fact that no one bats an eyelid when it's midnight and the woman sitting next to you in the bar is bouncing a tiny baby on her knee. And I especially like the fact that the further south you go, the less likely it is to rain.

This is how I happen to be back in Spain, only a few weeks after spending a soggy couple of weeks in the north of the country. As we watched yet another dark cloud roll in over the Catabrian mountains and the fat drops hit the windscreen, we realised that no matter where we go in the world, or when, it rains.

Yes, my friends, we are the people who made it rain in the Sahara desert, one of the world's driest and most hostile regions. The UN should seriously employ us as drought relievers. Other examples include having our Cuban beach idyll marred by hurricane-like weather, a weekend in Budapest almost resulting in trench foot and a visit to Venice almost causing a humanitarian disaster. Venice is not a place that needs any more water than it already has.

My personal favourite, however, is when we arrived on the Croatian island of Dugi Otok one a hot July day. Twenty minutes after we landed, in rolled the clouds and down rolled the rain, torrentially, for a good five hours. "The locals are overjoyed," exclaimed an old man, who'd moved to the US when he was a teenager and recently moved back to the island. He'd taken pity on us as we sat shivering under the parasol at the island's only open restaurant watching the panicked yacht owners leaping onto the dock from their expensive, lolling, flimsy boats as the water got more and more violent. He invited us to his house for cheese and homemade raki and continued,"it's not rained for 52 days and people were really starting to get worried."

Almería
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So, with the obligatory cheap flight booked, we trundled off to the "driest place in Europe" and dared it to rain.

In my opinion, the tapas are definitely better in the north. But what makes them almost as good in Adalucía is that they come free with every drink. This is great if you like to eat octopus, which seems to be what you get a giant scoop of, sometimes slathered with mayonnaise, sometimes pickled in vinegar, whenever you order a drink. It's not so great if, like me, you think that octopus tastes like murky sea water and has the texture of old car tyre or like Portugeezer who practically vomits at the mere whiff of the stuff.

Spain is full of old people and Almería city is no exception. I don't know whether they live longer, or whether all the young people move to London as soon as they finish school to work in a bar giving the impression of a greying nation, or whether they are just dragged out more by over-zealous daughters-in-law. Every evening, without fail, in every town, little old men with their pants up to their nipples shuffle up and down and little old ladies totter along in their sensible heels.

Away from the zimmer frames and blue rinses of the main square, we found ourselves a bustling bar off one of the tiny medina-esque alleyways, where I hastily ordered 'cheese fondue' sin jamón for my tapa to accompany my new found most favourite drink - Tinto de Verano. I was very disappointed when cheese fodue turned out to be a finger sized slice of bread with melted cheese on it. I think the cook decided to teach me about the importance of being a carnivore in Spain by hiding a lump of ham a centemetre below the cheese. Grrrr.

The next day, we made it out of bed just before the shops shut at 14:00 for siesta. Within about five minutes of leaving our hostal, I had to duck into a shoe shop to cool down in its frosty air-conditioned lovelines because it was 31 degrees in the shade and I was panting like an over-exercised donkey. While I was in there cooling down, I happened to peruse the shelves and realised that almost everything was on sale. The prices were so cheap, I actually wondered whether the price was per shoe and Portugeezer went to ask the girl behind the counter who stared at him like he was on the run from a mental hospital.

When we were in the north, we'd seen several shoe shops that had signs in the window saying 'we sell single shoes' and we had assumed that it was quite normal for the Spanish to buy one shoe at a time, although we couldn't quite work out why. Lots of one legged-people in remote villages because of too much inbreeding perhaps? Buy one this week, buy the other next week when you get paid? Some sort of strange fashion fad?

Once we'd established that the price was per pair, all hell broke loose and I am surprised I only left with two pairs...



Baza
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I'm quite obsessed with sleeping in unusual places and had found us a troglodyte cave house in the middle of nowhere to go and be troggy in. We drove a couple of hours north across the mountains, past the place where they filmed the spaghetti westerns (and I learned that they are not called spaghetti westerns because they were filmed in Italy as I had thought for my entire life) and numerous other crap films like Zorro and arrived at our trog cave in the middle of nowhere. There was nothing but dust and a huge orange rock-mountain that made me feel like I was in Arizona.



The owner of the cave house was a perpetually happy, rubber-faced Belgian called Sam, with a barrel-shaped labrador called Red Bull. Sam looked at the gathering clouds in the sky and said, in the weird mix of Dutch, French and English we were conversing in, "It's been sunny since April, not a cloud in the sky until today. What have you done?"

The cave house was amazing - painted bright white and full of lumps and bumps and curves. There was a huge double bed, built into the far wall with two separate pillows. I was happy to see two pillows because one night with the ubiquitous 'divorce pillows' that they are very fond of in Spain was already enough. I named them that because expecting two people to share one long, thin pillow is a recipe for trouble, especially when my penchant for sheet and pillow stealing and general bed-hogging is thrown into the equation. I wonder how many times 'pillow issues' have been cited in divorce cases.



Because there are no windows and only one door and they are buried under tons of rock, cave houses have a constant temperature and are cool in the summer and toasty in the winter. They are dark and cosy and once the door is shut, there's no natural light whatsoever; even the most hardened of insomniacs would find it difficult not to get some shut eye in there. Being in the middle of nowhere and having walls several meters thick meant absolute silence. I had fantasies about moving there for winter to hibernate and suggested it to Portugeezer but he was already half-hibernated and only grunted his approval.

Our little cave house had a little swimming pool too and we swung about in the hammocks drinking my homemade and improvised Tinto de Verano (red wine, ice cubes and sprite) and chomping on lumps of manchego and wolfing down olives, while Red Bull sat patently underneath our hammocks ready to hoover up any stray crumbs that might come his way. By early evening, it was starting to get cold and I feared that I might be about to catch pneumonia, so we gave up on the pool and warmed up in our cave.



Later that night, we drove to the nearest town, Baza, which wasn't very near at all. Baza was supposed to be having its fiesta, but the only thing we could find were the remnants of a children's puppet show on the town's main square complete with hyperactive children buzzing about while grumpy looking men dismantled the stage and adoring abuelas sat in huge gangs on white plastic chairs keeping an eye on the beloved niños.

Around the town square, I noticed about eight photography shops, which I thought must make for very healthy competition. In every window, alongside the usual cheesy, forced, soft-focus wedding pictures, each shop had very bizarre pictures of babies dressed like adults and performing tasks like policeman, secretary, fireman. Very freaky.



We walked around for ages trying to find somewhere to eat and ended up in a small bar at the top end of the town. I ordered a half ración of deep fried shrimps. I like a shrimp or two, but more than about five is way too much. My eyes almost popped out of my head when they delivered me a gigantic heap of shrimps. Let's just say that the scruffy stray kittens cowering in a doorway nearby probably thought they'd died and gone to kitty heaven when I started chucking the shrimps, one by one, in their direction.

>> Next: drugged up Flamenco in Granada and hippies, nakedness and the worst wine ever in Las Negras. Stay tuned to find out whether it rained or not >>

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Amsterdam > Weeze > Santander

Some things in life are just not fair. Like going to Spain in July to get some sun, for instance, and spending nine days dodging torrential downpours, shivering in shorts and wondering why you did not bring a coat with you.

The Portugeezer and I do not tend to do much research about our random travel destinations. In fact, the usual way we decide where to go and when generally goes like this:

"Look! [insert sheep transporting company/ budget airline name] is having a sale. Tickets for FIVE euros to [insert destination] if we book within the next four seconds!"

A few clicks later and we're usually booked on a cheap flight somewhere faster than you can say "Carbon Footprint" or "Deep Vein Thrombosis", usually departing from some random airport in Germany and returning to another random airport in Belgium.

This is how we happen to be in Santander, which turns out to be the cheapest way to get to Asturias. This lack of planning is also why we happen to be going to a place about which the most impressive thing is the fact that it's incredibly lush and green. Incredibly lush and green in Spain means that it rains. Almost constantly.

"Asturians are always ready for the rain," boasts the travel guide I've bought, as I sit in the nasty blue and yellow sardine-can that is Ryanair. I glance longingly at the burning sun and the freak 30 degree heat as it leaves itself firmly in Germany. Yes, that's right. Germany.

"Asturias is not a wine growing region," mocks the book. Panic! No wine? No wine means no grapes. No grapes mean no sun. More importantly, no wine means me not drinking any wine.

"Cider is the chosen drink here," rubs in the book, which I am now considering giving to the irritating child in front of me to rip up. Cider means apples. Apples like to grow in cold, wet climates. I grew up in one of those. I know the misery it causes, especially in summer.

So, when we arrive in Santander, which is in Cantabria and not Asturias, but that doesn't matter because the weather is the same in both places, it is not altogether surprising that it is raining.

Er, have you got anything smaller?
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We go to pick up our rental car and discover they've run out of normal-people sized cars and the only thing they have left for us is a massive, ugly, beige seven-seater Citroen Picasso. I guess the only people who own Citroen Picasso's are people with very big families or people without big families and certain small body parts. And, who the hell buys a beige car? It's seriously huge.

The back seats and floor are covered with crushed up crisps. The lady explains, "We are eh so ebusy, we did enot have etime to eclean it!"

"No problem," I say, neglecting to add that it's going to look a hell of a lot worse than that once we explode inside it.

I 'drive' a six year-old 50cc scooter with the incongruous name of "Alfie". I do not have the necessary skills to reverse park a 2 litre engine bus into a tiny space on a busy road. I also have a rather nervous disposition when it comes to reversing large vehicles after a rather embarrassing reversing 'incident' when I knocked over a very old and important historic monument in front of a pub full of drunken people. I've never quite gotten over it. Nope. That car has to be changed.

We whinge for half an hour and are subsequently offered a "Berlingo" which is basically a delivery van with seats in the back. It's also beige and even more ugly than the bus. In the end, we take the bus with the promise from the car rental company that we can change it tomorrow at the city centre branch and a promise from the Portugeezer that I will not have to do any reversing in it.

We arrive at our "pension", which randomly and rather coincidently happens to be two steps away from the car rental company's other office. The old woman running the pension is wearing a shapeless flowered dress that all Spanish old ladies wear. She shows us our room, which has two beds in it and we ask if she has a room with just one bed. She says, "No. If you don't want this room, you can leave now, but you have to pay me anyway, so I don't care." Nice. Verrrrry nice.

Next > Lost in Basque Country