Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Ancient Cordoba

This Sunday we went for a little drive to Cordoba which takes about 1 hour or so, it has one of the more famous Cathedrals in this part of Spain as it is a converted Mosque, The drive to get there is amongst the Olive groves which are pretty boring, in fact the insane agricultural policies of the EU are evident here as they are destroying the whole natural environment to plant the rotten stinking olives everywhere, it is a monoculture no better than the grain prairies in the USA, at least in the mountains where I live they cannot plant on the mountain tops.

Anyway Cordoba was probably built on the site of the river crossing in Roman times, the bridge still stands to this day and is very impressive. The mosque is huge and the columns inside were mostly stolen from old roman buildings, which is a shame. It just goes to show how big a Roman city this was. The area around the mosque is nice but as in all cities there are ugly apartments all long the route into town. we had a nice meal in a tapas bar which my buddy Zac will really enjoy as you take them with a beer.

we wandered about and saw all the Japanese tourists that you get everywhere in the world, is it the same group eternally wandering around, They were all camp guards during WWII and were sentenced to eternal touristing. Anyway, when the Christians took over the south of spain they converted part of the mosque into a cathedral, a very intersting mix, well worth the visit along with the Alhambra in Grenada.

The Roman Bridge with the Cathemosque in the background




Bridge Gatehouse




The Cathemosque




The Arches inside the mosque part




Christian Belltower




Moorish Arab Doorways


The Roof is Coming off The House

I am having a roof terrace put on the house, to be able to enjoy the sun more, but this means they have to remove the roof from the house to do the conversion, it is a scary moment in my life, not having any water protection on my house, but if you think about it, I live in the driest part of Europe, and it is unseasonally warm just now, perfect building weather. I have a schedule of 10 weeks to completion, meaning it will not be finished for Christmas, ah well I will at least get it for the next summer season, I will have some pot plants and a table and chairs and a canopy to sit under, just my visions for the next year, i will keep posting the pictures as it develops.

Partially knocked down




What is left of the fake chimney stack.




8 more weeks to completion

Sunday, November 08, 2009

HD TV, WOW!!!!!!!

When I came back from the UK, I brought with me a HDMI cable to connect my new laptop to the brand new 40" HD TV, I didn't know how good it really was until you sit at home with one, I have had to get all my favourite movies in Blue Ray format, I am overwhelmed with the wonderfulness of the images, but to prove I am such a miserable cheap guy, I actually waited until my trip to the UK to get the cable as from amazon it was only €4 and in Carrefour it was €32, so now I am watching all my movies in HD, I cannot be dragged away. Life is pretty simple eh!

Saturday, November 07, 2009

The Last two weeks in Spain

Here the weather has turned from roasting summer to cool blasting winds from the north, I have even had to put on long trousers. When I got back we have been preparing things for the building work on the third floor extension, talking to the builders and trying to decide how to do the stairs up to it, we have decided to make a spiral staircase as it takes up much less room and looks prettier, but is more expensive. We have been travelling about to enjoy what was left of the summer weather. We decided to walk up the old hermitage site in a local town called Archidona, the views are fantastic from up there and the weather was brilliant, you can probably see for about 50 Kms, and with the clear blue skies it is so nice, we even took a small Picnic to make an event of it with the little girl, they get so easily bored, also even at the end of October the butterflies were playing around on the top of this hill, I think the altitude is about 5-6,000 feet, so when the night draws in you can feel the night air coming in fresh, little did we know the weather was about to turn,

The surrounding Olive groves




More Olive Groves, there are a lot in spain




Looking along the mountains




Great Views from up Here




The King of the Castle




We had to wait until the next weekend to go out for another event, being away for so much of the time, I had forgotten how hard it is to do anything with the little girl at school, I am the proxy English teacher, she can talk perfect North Derbyshire English but she cannot read it very well, but surprisingly after three weeks of intensive work she is connecting the written word to what she already knows, she will be reading Harry Potter within a few weeks I hope.

So this last weekend we went out for a drive through the Sierra Nevadas Mountains along the southern coastal region: We live about 100 miles from Grenada which is ancient capitol of the Moorish Arab Empire than ruled this part of Spain for 800 years. So the area is dotted with old fortified towns, all the houses are clustered together, this mentality still continues today, even my little town all the houses are side by side, pretty but no gardens, not that you can grow much here in this semi desert.

The town we went to was called Alhama De Grenada, it had a lovely town square and a fortified walled house by the square, it was teetering on the top of a cliff overlooking a large river, the houses were mainly very ugly and there were even some falling down ones, which is unusual for these little towns, perhaps it was the fact they were overhanging the river gorge, I wouldn't have lived on that cliff, we walked down into the river valley and looked around all the derelict water mills in the river bottom, we walked along the river and across a bridge to the old fortifications where water was taken from the river via a hidden tunnel, we climbed the cliffs and up to the old part of town and found some old dungeons, I felt no spirits hiding in them,

sitting on the cliff wall overlooking the river




Me looking in the ruined water mills




The local horse watering hole




The old dungeons




The immense reservoir




The end of the day trip out, very successful




we then drove along some back roads to a large reservoir, it was impressive for this part fo the world having very little rain, it was old and pretty for such a structure, probably built by General Franco as a job creation exercise. The name of the place is Arenas Del Rey, the Kings Sands, a little bit pretentious isn't it, it was a nice place, would have been nice for camping but quite remote, sometimes that is a benefit.

Dont forget it was halloween here, the little girl had a great time walking about in the nice warm evening air with some local kids, that was here in the Green Face