Spain - September/October 2010
Introduction
This is the diary of a 6-day trip to Spain which
started on 30 September 2010 and
ended on 6 October 2010.
It should have started a day earlier but there was a general strike in Spain
and a lot of other European countries but not the UK.
Flybe informed us of the change of flights by a voice message on
Jane's mobile and the home phone and by email - excellent customer service.
We were to be the guests of Tom and Jenny in their villa in Sotogrande.
Click here for the itinerary and interactive maps.
If you just want to see all the photos as a slide show click
here. Instructions are
here.
To hide these instructions put your mouse here.
Be aware that most links are to photographs which may take
time to load. A link from a day's date is to a full set of photographs
while a link within a day is to a single photograph. You should enable
window pop ups as moving the mouse over a link within a day will produce
a small version of the photograph. Click on the text for the link and
you will be shown a larger version of the photograph.
If you click on a 'more...' link you will go to some other web site for more information.
If you click on a pop up picture you will be taken to a page containing all the
pictures and their locations.
Jane has now got a camera with GPS in it so we are making the most of it.
If you have any comments please let us have them
by clicking
)
We are picked up by Craig at 6am and driven carefully through the fog to Southampton airport.
Jane has packed our luggage so it can be taken on the plane but it is just too large and has to be put in the hold.
We take off at 7:40am and land in Malaga at 11am and adjust our telephones.
We go to the car hire place but Espacar is not there. We walk out of the airport and find an Escapar rep.
We take charge of grey diesel Renault Clio with just
5231 km
on the clock.
We take the E15 toll motorway south to Sotogrande and are greeted by Tom at the security gates to the estate.
We arrive at
Rincon de Luna.
We unpack and have a leisurely lunch outside.
The temperature is
25C
and the sky is clear blue.
Tom shows us around his territory including his
citrus grove
of six trees,
one pomelo, one lime, one tangerine, one possible orange and one mango, nearly all of which have borne fruit.
The
palm trees
are much taller than they were when we last visited here twelve years ago.
We drive with Jenny up to the Almenara golf club and have a drink on the
balcony.
The
views
are wonderful.
We return to pick Tom up via the un-gated entrance to the estate and drive
up the narrow roads to the
castle
at Castellar de la Frontera.
We wander around the
streets
inside the castle admiring the
views
and then return to the
villa.
After an excellent tagine and Tom's first
mango
we retire to bed.
After breakfast we drive south on the E15 Autovia, going through the centre of Algeciras, a large industrial port close to Gibraltar.
We drive up mountains and past lots of windmills. The terrain reminds us of New Mexico.
We reach the southern most tip of Spain at Tarifa.
We park close to the port under the shadow of the
castle
of Garmun and walk across the
causeway
to the Isla de Tarifa, intending to walk around it. There are sandy
beaches
on either side
As we approach it signs on the path announce that the
Atlantic
is on one side and the
Mediterranean
is on the other.
The island is
shut
and is owned by the Ministry of the Interior.
We
return to
the car and drive north west towards Cadiz. Just outside Tarifa we stop to admire a mass of
vultures.
We turn off the main round and drive up a windy narrow road to the hill top town of
Vejer de
la Frontera where we park in the
Plaza del Espana
after asking a policeman if it is OK to do so. He was booking other cars.
We walked up the
narrow streets
to the castle and walked around the ramparts.
The
views are
magnificent.
We walk back down to the plaza and have lunch in the Trafalgar cafe, sat on the street under an umbrella. Jane has battered calamari and Graham has battered shark fish (cazon).
We end with an ice cream.
We drive to another part of the town looking for free wifi but cannot find it.
We leave the town and make our way north to
Medina Sidonia
where we climb up the narrow road to the town on the hill. The streets are cobbled and narrow.
We find a car park and walk up to the town centre, a large marble slabbed rectangular area surrounded by palm trees. We walk across the marble and have a drink at a
café opposite the
town hall.
We return to the car and make our way to to the A318 Autovia which takes us back to Algiceras and the E15 north to San Roque.
We return to villa via the un-gated entrance.
Jenny tells us that none of their guests have ever reached Cadiz.
Graham has a siesta.
At 8pm we are driven to
the El Gaucho restaurant,
styled in an Argentine fashion, and eat huge beef steaks.
We return replete and retire.
After breakfast, the two ladies and Graham
walk the
4 km
to the Almenara golf club where we
have a drink and admire the views again.
Tom picks us up and drives the four of us north to the hilltop village of Casares.
We park the car on the outskirts and walk to the centre where we have a drink in a bar.
We climb up to the remains of a
castle
perched on a rock overlooking the village.
We walk around the ramparts where Julius Caesar once strode. There's a
church
at the top and more
magnificent
views.
Jane takes
photos of
some Griffon Vultures flying high above us.
We walk back down the narrow streets.
Tom takes
a different route.
When we reach the
car. Tom
is not there.
After several minutes he turns up with lunch - a bag of
churros.
This is typical Spanish food - long sausages of batter.
We drive across the hillside down a valley and up the other side to Gaucin.
The temperature has now reached
36C.
Gaucin
is another hilltop white village. We stop at a
Kodak spot
and then drive to the first open "venta" we can find.
We sit under the shade of an awning and share a large
Spanish omelette.
We drive back to the villa without stopping at Jemina, another white village.
The temperature has dropped to
24C.
While Graham has a siesta, Jane has a
swim.
Tom
barbecues
a large piece of
pork and
we have large rum and cokes.
We eat and
retire after
watching the summary of the day's Ryder Cup.
After breakfast the two ladies and Graham march up to Almenara Golf Club, have a drink and it starts to rain.
Tom is called and we are driven back to Rincon de Luna and change.
We are driven to the new
port of
Sotogrande where we walk by the
market.
Unusually Tom buys a belt. Jane buys some toys and Jenny unusually keeps her hands in her pockets.
We drive to where we
moored eleven
years ago and then go to Tom's
golf club
where we have a
buffet
lunch.
Some of us retire to the lounge and
watch
the Ryder Cup.
In the evening we eat the tastey left overs, watch Antiques Roadshow and George Gently and then go to bed.
It's cloudy and during the night it rained heavily for a short while. Jane and Jenny walk to the Almanera golf club. Tom goes off to play golf at his club.
Graham volunteers to stay at the villa so he can pick the ladies up.
An hour later he does and we return to the villa.
Graham is dropped off at Tom's
golf club and
the ladies go shopping.
Tom hasn't played golf but has watched the Ryder Cup instead.
Graham joins him and they both watch it to the exciting end - Europe 14.5,
USA 13.5.
After such a strenuous day it is decided to have a firkle at
bridge.
Following the black bean chicken stew and roasted vegetable meal we have a few hands of bridge, watch the news and retire to bed, almost exhausted.
After
breakfast the
ladies and Graham drive south on the E15 and turn off to La Linea. Tom prefers to stay at home. He has an aversion to Gibraltar. We drive around
La Linea and
park inside a blue line and pay for the privilege. We are near the border post which we walk to. We show our passports to get into Gibraltar and
walk across
the airport runway and through a short tunnel in the city wall. We have arrived in Casement Square. We walk down the crowded Main Street and stop for a drink. We stroll to the end of Main Street, spot a
Barbary ape
,
and visit the Trafalgar
cemetery where
many of the injured from the southern Spanish sea battles have been buried. We retrace our steps to the place opposite 177 Main Street to await our rendezvous and quench our thirsts. On the way we buy Tom a bottle of gin at �3.50. They use Sterling in Gib.
We discover via a phone call that the rendezvous will not take place till 1pm and it will be in Casement Square. Jane leaves us and buys a bigger suitcase than the ones we have taken to Spain.
We make our way to Casement Square and there in the middle of the square we meet Bryan, Caroline and Sarah who have arrived by boat, the
Oceana.
They are on a Mediterranean cruise. The rendezvous is a surprise for Bryan. The cruise was also a surprise for Bryan who is close to the end of his seventh decade.
We
quench
our thirsts again and are joined by the Fribbance's neighbours, Trevor and Marjorie.
We say good bye to all and walk back to the car. An Easyjet plane is taking off so we wait a short while to cross the runway.
We drive back to the villa but stop on the way at a
mirador
to take a photo of the rock.
At the villa we have lunch and a short siesta. Jane starts packing our belongings.
Tom drives us to the nearby town of Pueblo Nuevo where the ladies shop at Lidl and the men look for a light fitting similar to one which has to be dismantled at the villa to replace a bulb.
The men are unsuccessful so make there way to Tom's favourite watering hole, the Moncayo. It sits on a street corner. The ladies join us and we quench our thirsts again.
We return to the villa via a short diversion to La Cañada municipal Golf Club.
After a short rest we go out to the XXXX fish restaurant and have a wonderful meal, mussels, squid, turbot.
We return to the villa and have a short firkle at bridge, then retire.
Wednesday 6th October - Home
We say goodbye to Tom and Jenny at 8:40am and head north on the E15. We stop to put 10 litres of diesel in the car so that we can leave it at the airport with a quarter full tank.
We arrive at the airport at 9:50am but get lost in the cargo area.
Eventually we find our way to level 3 of the car park and leave the car with one window slightly open.
We take our belongings out of the car and drop the car keys through the window. This is how one returns a rental car to Espacar. Bravo Espacar.
It takes us nearly an hour to check in and get through security.
The plane is about an hour late taking off.
We land at 2pm in fine weather but have to stay on the plane as there has been a
security alert so we have to stay on board till the police arrive.
We get off the plane within half an hour.
Derek meets us and whisks us home where we arrive at 3pm.
Click
here
for more holidays.