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2014 - a winter in Spain

11/25/2013

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Part five – arrival in Caceres under some sun

So first, what we now call campfall – the arrival on a new site and new pitch. The journey was easy – a mere 200 k – and the weather had improved steadily as we dropped off the alta plana. But you have to go up in Spain to go down – in this case up to 1200 metres amid much adjacent snow. Now down to 380 metres.

But Camping Caceres is a bit of a shock really. It is clearly a 'municipal' meaning it was the council run site and is now – probably - an arm's length private business (that Thatcher – her recipes went everywhere!). It contains 80 pitches in uniform rows of ten either side of four roadways (and you asked why I thought it was municipal!). Each pitch, which is a generous 9 metres on a side has its own small building – a bungalow. Each contains a wet room shower, loo and wash basin with a gas powered water heater an outside veg prep cold water basin. Brilliant really and all for 16 euros a night – less even since there is a “get four; buy three” offer!

The set up saves us gas and water and makes it easy to use the site loos instead of our own. But we would hate to be here in summer when it would look more like a caravan sales area than a camp site. And it is not big enough since they have added three rows of 10 more similar pitches at the top of the site. There is also a bar and restaurant – open all the time; menu del dia 15euros along with all the other usual stuff.

But we wanted to see ancient Caceres and so drove confidently into the city expecting to get signs to the Centro Historico or similar. An hour later we gave up and tried our sat nav. It worked fine right up to the moment she said turn right and the signs said no right turn; no entry! But we knew then where we were and were, at that point, close. Problem was the road went for a kilometre in the wrong direction and with NO turnings.

All we wanted was the Plaza Mayor but the sat nav resolutely said No Matches Found (sic) for that! So we resorted to RAPW's technique: spot one vaguely promising indicator and drive to it. We ended up in Parking Don Miguel. We exited the car park and found no signs to anything. After a few aggravated minutes we plunged up Calle San Domingo and in 150 metres felt utterly lost until a Spanish gent said “Plaza mayor?” we said Gracias with a lot of the AS bit and he said in Spanish but we got it: “50 metres, turn right, straight on”. And he was correcto! Muchas gracias!

To a degree some explanation for our difficulty now revealed itself. The magnificent Plaza mayor was outside the city walls; that is outside the old city. Odd but surprising for one flank of the long rectangular square was composed of the old city walls, towers and grand palacios. The other three were flanked by a fabulous array of white four storey 18th and 19th century buildings of grace and quality. The result is quite lovely.

After cafe cortado at a splendid cafe bar we crossed the square to the wide and graceful steps which led up to the main entrance; impassable to motor traffic. And that explained more of the difficult access – they simply do not want nor cannot get tourist traffic into the old city. But it is still inexplicable that they provide almost no guidance as to what or how we should reach I, even on foot! For reach it you must if you can.

Inside the full enclosing walls and towers are what is missing at Aviles -the palacios and churches and other edifices that would have graced such a medieval city. They are all linked by splendid cobbled street which are almost empty of wheeled traffic. What is around is of the approved variety – fire vehicles, police, some delivery vans and a very few cars, mostly it seemed associated with the many municipal museums, galleries and other offices that fill the space. There are a few, a very few, cafes and little else that is commercial. Thus and unlike Carcassone for example this is a place of refinement and tranquillity. Close to the inner walls are some less buildings and a little activity but for the most part the impressions is of a splendidly preserved museum, looking right but lacking the smell, mess and chaos that would have characterised its actual days.

The buildings are superb,some from the early 15th century, many of the 16th and 17th. All are in the same soft apricot sandstone that characterised Salamanca but here the inclusion of mica are greater, resulting in a white shine, more silver than gold.

And yet, just a few yards from this city of the past is a city of this day which is so busy, so chaotic and so poorly traffic managed that driving it is, unlike Salamanca a total nightmare. We shall return but it may be on Sunday for in this country Sunday is still, well Sunday and hooray for that.

We did return and we walked the rest of the walls round the poorer quarters – notably the Jewish Sector! But if the houses were meaner and the doors lower they still sported impressive stonework! We end back among the palacios and Janet stopped me spending 26 Euros on a Spanish plate – now that is a first.

Part six – to Merida, 2000 years passed in a dream

For the fourth successive day there is not a cloud in the sky. The sun beats down but the wind whips the temperature down. Out of it a comfortable 15-16 can be had; in nit its is more like 6-7. But it is Sunday, November 24 and today we head for Merida, exchanging medieval and baroque for Roman antiquities. And we are not disappointed.

This is not Rome or Pompeii of course but when the Romans chose this site for their major city in the Iberian peninsular they built pretty impressively. And amazingly a vast amount remains and, to the benefit of the city, it is all fairly close together. For a change I missed the best parking spot and with Janet driving there ensued a battle between me, the city traffic managers and Dot. Janet won and we re-found the spot at which I said “No, we can get closer than this”.

Wrong – the splendid remains of the amphitheatre and the even more impressive four storey high teatro were right alongside us. At first entry to the park it seemed impossible that so much remained but the reality was that the ground level had risen in 2,000 years by about 30 feet. Once that was dug out in 1915 all was revealed. The ring is a pretty large one, with about six metres of wall still standing and plenty of seating.T he arena is also more complete than many since it shows the sunken area over which the boarded fighting area was placed. Grimly this must have allowed the blood to drain away freely.

Mostly this arena was used for gladiatorial contests in which the carefully armed and trained combatants were matched to achieve maximum excitement and test of skill with in fact minimal injury. Fighters won 15-20 times for winning as a centurion in the legion did in a year. And survive five years and they won their freedom.

But if this macho arena of potential brutality tells us one thing about Roman society the teatro next door, right next door, tells an entirely other story. Although to be fair we learned to some surprise that most of the plays were performed in Greek for which the audience had zero ability. Horace reports it mattered little since the din made the words inaudible.

Neither of these remains is much compared with Rome or Pompeii for example but in our (humble) experience Spain has not been kind to its ancient past – major Roman remains and Visigoth are few and while there is much that is Moorish a lot is interwoven with later and mostly Catholic additions. But one exception are aqueducts and in Merida, about half a kilometre from the teatro is a superb stretch of aqueduct arching out over a river valley for at least a kilometre and up to about 15 or even 20 metres high. And across the road is a more impressive Circus than even Rome can offer, where little but grass can be seen. Here there are stone bankings, some pavement and much foundation work for the grandstands and ancillary stuff. Sadly we missed the boat slightly – best place to see it is from a raised platform above the visitor centre. It closed while we parked the car and had lunch! Being Sunday it was not due to re-open that day.

So after a super day we headed back to the van to begin a slow pack ready for the run to Cadiz on Tuesday. And the sun shines on.




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2014 - A winter in Spain

11/19/2013

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Log of the 2014 trip

November – Santander to Salamanca

The usual excellent crossing from Portsmouth to Santander on the Pont Aven. Britanny Ferries may not be quite as good as they were 15-20 years ago; but then what is?

Our luck with the weather held - frankly a near-flat calm most of the way with the newish shortcut inside Uishant the one short spell of chop. On time arrival with Santander ferry dock in upheaval due to a smart new art museum under construction. But the diverted exit from the city was actually easier than normal. The new route is a bit rough in places but for a long way the ferry traffic is all there is!

The mountains were essentially in cloud so it was wet and miserable until we came off the high ground onto the (relatively) lower Alta Plana. Then it was sunshine all the way to Salamanca.

Campsite (at Villamayor) is good, easy to find - A62 junction with N630 Zamora road and then a short drive following the signs (hooray!). We are high (800 metres again) so much sun but a biting wind. It says 14C but feels like about 5! Easy access to Salamanca and 2k to a very large Carefour.

Van continues to be a Coachman - ie nice but a bit flakey! Design is rather silly - wrong size cupboards over the sink, right size over the beds. That sort of thing .But no real probs bar the water pump which chose this arrival to suddenly pack up. Oh and the sat nav which will not turn back on - DO NOT buy a Garmin, otherwise known as the Garbage! Annoying since the only thing it is actually any use for is finding local things like shops, restos, tourist sites. I plan to open it (!) and/or hit it very hard with something.

Our diet continue to inspire - I am under 100kilos for the first timke by deign since I gave up smoking in 1993! Target 1 achieved - the next is to stablise at 95k which will be what I was in about 1990. It means all new trousers (down from 44 to 42 (got both) and now going lower) and some new shirts since I seem to have dropped back to na sub 18 collar. Janet also doing well but mildly annoyed as her rings are now loose!


Part 2 - First visit to the Golden City of Salamanca, named for the apricot stone which came from under our very feet here in Villamayor!

And indeed it is a golden city. And its city fathers have ensured that, even if not all the modern architects have quite got the ability to meld or modernise they are at leat required to use some apricot stone.

The result is city of golden light. And of architecture that frankly redeems the reyes catholica aggrandisement. For from the Playa Mayior, along the Rua Mayir to the amazing duoploy of cathedra one is constantly confronted by baroque and or platerist adornments.

The Playa is thework is architect Cherringueta and it has to be said that while restraint was unknown to him his aggrandisement is of a very specia order. The square is huge - about 150s metre on a side - slightly off square and is surrounded by a unified array of four storey plateresque and golden stoned magnificences. On one side the unity is deliberately broken by the ayuntamiento, town hall – and five storey grandiose exposition shows how to use the stone to best effect. Amazingly it was crowned in the 19th century with a bell tower that is, frankly, right. How do you do that? And the light is amazing and emphasised by a simple trick - on the corner of each balcony ironwork is a golden ball that catches the sun.

A half kilometre towards to Rio Tormes and we reach the cathedra – yes, two. The first dates from the 12th to 14th century. At which point the hugely successful city of Salamanca led its city father to decide they needed a newer, bigger and more modern Cathedral;. But at that point they did something unique and special - they decided NOT to rebuild the old one but to leave it and build a new one alongside.

That decision means today we can visit a cathedral of the 12th centuiry, virtually untouched by later architectiural and religious whims. And alongside a baroque and plateresque mass that rides like a cruise liner in goloden stone above the city below. And then they crown their decision by connecting the two - so today you step through a portal, descend a few steps and arrive, two centuries earlier in a mediceval basilica. Genius.

Of course for us scientific atheists it is all a bit much – only our Catholic cousins really know how to do OTT! But it is impressive and magnificent and it is the work of committed, dedicated and skilled artisans. Many will have died on the scaffolding nof their creation. You have to respct thje commitment even if their theory is out of our realm of reality.

Part three – the weather!

And so it is very cold and pretty wet. Was that what we expected? Not at all and local opinion bears us out. On our day of arrival it was sunny and, if not warm, very nice. But we know now that it had been really warm until that day. Weather charts show November in the mid teens here and mild, so wettish. But we are on the alta plana again and three thousand feet (800s metres) means wer are on a Munro in Scottish terms. All that saves us from freezing and snow and ice is a mere 100 miles south.

Part four -Avila, city of the longest surving medieval wall in the world; fact!

And wow is it impressive. Judge by this: we drove up to it in the foulest weather imaginable. Rain followed by low cloud followed by the site of the snow ploughs in their standby bays, lights already flashing.And the temperature guage dropped to zero.  Avila stands at 1180 metres, the highest city in all of very high Spain. And were all set to turn back but 60 miels is 60 miles of fuel each way. So let us at least see what we could.

You arrive in such conditions suddenly. Avila stands on a promontory surrounded on three sides by river valleys and mountains - bar the only gap to the north and hence the weather. Through the mist we saw and gasped – for this is a city as we have not seen before. Carcassonne is a pale imitation. These golden walls extend for a kilometre to left and right. Too many towers to count. And all in virtually pristine condition, fully crenellated and mortar pointed tight.

Words do not work and the pictures are poor – but even in this weather exciting. Access is amazing. Too cold and wet to get out we were able to circuit the entire city – about four kilometres and even venture inside and see a fair bit of the walls from there too.

If history left this fortified city untouched modern developers (Spanish) and architects (Spanish) and town planners (Spanish or absent) have done it less well. For the interieor is as nasty a collection of 20th century kitsch building as you will find anywhere. What was here we cannot know since getting out to visit the museums and visitot centres was not a sensible option. But it is such a place that we may be back in better weather one day. Astonishing.

Part four will take us off to Caceres and better weather - we hope!



























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