Friday, January 1, 2010

Ever Westward Along The Coast

We continued our drive west, past Ferrol, to near La Coruna, an aire called, 
I think, St. Piedre del Vismar; more construction; we were impressed








More infrastructure; the weather was such that we actually saw little of the 
famous Picos de Europe, the Peaks of Europe, but what we did see was 
impressive








More beautiful coastline









Lunch by the cove/bay at Ferrol








Overlooking Ferrol








At the aire near La Coruna








Pretty typical aire for this area








Still snacking well...

Santillana West

Tourist attraction we skipped; we spent a couple days in
Santillana del Mar, visiting Altamira, awaiting the DHL
delivery, exploring; Jean-Paul Sartre wrote that Santillana
del Mar was the most beautiful village in Spain; I'd disagree,
but then I have not seen them all







Part of the Colegium in Santillana, 12th century











Our first bull...these billboard things are all over Spain,
originally part of an advertising campaign ("Eat Beef or Die"),
but now part of the countryside and national identity







The DHL package, with my new improved international
drivers license (thank you, Rebecca), finally arrived at 2PM
Friday, so we decamped and headed west along the coast,
getting as far as an aire at Playa de Santa Maria del Mar;
this was part of the view









The beach itself, typical of the coastline along here

Backtracking...San Sebastian to Santillana del Mar

Things got a bit out of order...here are some pix from the road between San 
Sebastian and Santillana del Mar, via Guernica. The problem we had getting 
LPG--with an emptying tank and freezing weather--distracted us from 
stopping at the Guggenheim in Bilbao. Oh well, next time; above, the north
coast, utterly spectacular, snowy mountains on the left, beautiful cliffs and 
beaches on the right








Approaching the small town of Llanes (I think)









As I said, snowy mountains on the left; by this time, we had scrapped our 
notions of driving to Madrid (across these mountains), but rather to await 
our DHL package in Santillana and then cling to the warmer coast, all the 
way west to Santiago de Compostuela













The Basque north coast is Spain's heavy industry belt, and 
here we saw gigantic plants, warehouses, infrastructure
construction rivaling what we saw in China a year ago; this 
is the beginning of what I think is the largest (by acreage)
building I have ever seen
















Other end of the same building, a mile or so down the road







Bridges and other infrastructure going up everywhere








Largest quarry I have ever seen (well except maybe Carrara)








When the driving gets too unnerving, Vicki occasionally picks up the camera 
to distract herself; most of the pix are unusable blurs, but I think this one has 
artistic merit

We Interrupt This Blog...

The last few weeks we have been in wifi-challenged Portugal and now back in similarly-challenged Spain. There's simply been no place or time or connection to blog. We spent Christmas in Lisbon and then New Year's in Madrid, where we are presently. Hopefully, today, at a McDonald's near the Royal Palace, I'll be able to begin catching up on the last few weeks. They have been eventful. Stay tuned.

Oh, and Happy New Year to all!

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Altamira


While waiting for our package to arrive from DHL in
Santillana del Mar, we visited the nearby Altamira cave
paintings and museum. Altamira is absolutely in the
same league with Lascaux and Pech Merle (both closed
this time of year), late Paleolithic, definitely Cro Magnons.
The cave was naturally closed around 13,000 BC, and most
of the paintings are now reckoned to have been done c.
18,000BC. Picasso visited the caves and exclaimed that
"after Altamira, all art is decadence." He had similar things
to say about Lascaux. We figure he was angling for a free
lifetime pass. Above, Vicki outside the museo.








 
The museum itself is one of the very best pre-history
museums we have seen








Like Lascaux, Altamira is really a replica, for reasons of
preservation, but a very convincing one








Mostly animals, mostly what they appear to have been
interested in








Another
My favorite, nearly a Picasso















Another still











Two of the three hands in negative; the really famous one is
at Pech Merle







The actual cave entrance

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Guernica

Central square and fountain in Guernica











Street scene












The International Peace Museum







Guernica church








Museum of Basque Culture








The Basque parliament building; Guernica has been their
gathering place for centuries











Trunk of the old oak tree under which Basque
leaders gathered to elect their leader












The new oak tree







































































































Wednesday morning we departed beautiful San Sebastian and headed west along the coast, but up into the hills briefly to see Guernica, both the capital of Basque country and also the site of the infamous 1937 terror bombing that killed and injured thousands, the subject of Picasso's famous painting. At the time, it was as bad as warfare could be imagined--relentless bombing of civilians on market day--Hitler's first experiment in terror bombing. Ironically, it was so successful that the Germans (Franco's supporters) suspended work on a heavy bomber and decided to rely strictly on the twin-engined medium types. The Battle of Britain would have turned out differently had the Germans long-range heavy-payload bombers in their arsenal.

From Guernica we headed back to the coast, intending to see the Guggenheim Museum at Bilbao, but we got totally distracted by the fact that our fittings were not compatible with Spanish LPG nozzles (despite assurances otherwise from various authorities).  This plus the fact that we were down to 1/3 tank and historically-cold weather was predicted. So we drove on to the campground at Santillana del Mar, where our new drivers license was to be delivered by DHL. At the campground there we at least had electricity to heat with. It was our first night in a campground in 28 days.

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Final San Sebastian

How to find the aire/caravan park










Obligatory cathedral shot











The main beach, in the harbor, some of the newer city
beyond







View of newer buildings, from other side of old town








Real Spanish tapas bar








All set up for lunch

San Sebastian Out-Takes

Best sight we saw Friday, the DHL office that shipped our
new international drivers license application back to America;
allow 5-7 days...







In the aire where we parked, at the Unibersitarea, a Class A
British motorhome












Monday night snow-storm--a real surprise, and not just to us








Snow accumulating on our windshield; we're not getting south
fast enough...











The Spanish are doing some very interesting
condom ads; it took us a few minutes to figure
them out...

San Sebastian Markets

In the fish market, the pescadaria







Ditto (not pictured: octopi, of which I am not fond, but which
are everywhere)








Ditto again








One of dozens of carneceria; jambon is the national favorite,
and pig legs are dangling from the ceilings of every store, bar,
etc; all those poor Spanish pigs hopping around on crutches....












A whole pallet full of pig legs, boxed and ready
for Xmas sale, at the local supermarket