• Roland Routier
  • Roland Routier

Roland Routier

Una aventura abierta de Roland Routier Leer más
  • Just ribbing you

    24 de junio de 2018, Portugal ⋅ ☀️ 23 °C

    Romans called the town Ossonoba, and the monks called this place Capela dos Ossos.
    Make no bones about it, all the members of this Igreja de Nossa Senhora do Carmo ended up in chapel.
    Spot any teeth?

  • In a Faro way town ...

    24 de junio de 2018, Portugal ⋅ ☀️ 23 °C

    Faro is like every other fishing village on the West coast of Europe and around the Med.
    Small terraced houses on cobbled 3m wide streets and loads of whitewash.
    Cathedral is pretty ordinary.
    ⦁ The Arco da Vila - the 19th-century gateway with Moorish portico.
    ⦁ Toffs house
    ⦁ Another typical gateway
    ⦁ Lying on the coast, overlooking the shallow lagoons of the protected Ria Formosa Natural Park
    What more can I say? Oh yes, it was full of restaurants with wide-screen TV's offering pizza + pint + England vs Belgium in the Soccer World Cup. A steady procession of red skinned, bare chested English blokes trickled in from the beach to fill them.
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  • Travelling faster than light.

    24 de junio de 2018, España ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    Move over Superman.
    Step aside Einstein.
    Not wanting to boast or anything but I have travelled faster than light: it really can be done.
    I started at 1810 hrs and arrived at my destination at 17:08hrs. And here is photographic proof.

    ============================================================
    I borrowed David Jarman's 800m steel cable connecting Sanlucar de Guadiana, in Andalucia, Spain, to Alcoutim, in Algarve, Portugal. The drop was about 90m and crossed the Guadiana River.
    For the record, you will be astonished to find that there is no evidence of neolithic ferrys; no Visigothic river crossing; no Almohar mosque ruins and no overlaying churches.

    Dr. Who? Just another timelord.
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  • A revolution of Castro

    23 de junio de 2018, Portugal ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C

    The earliest traces of human settlement are Neolithic period, about 7,000 years ago, when the area was an island surrounded by shallow waters. For thousands of years Castro Marim was a port that offered shelter to the ships that sailed up the Guadiana river to collect the metals mined to the north in Alcoutim and Mértola.
    Most of the town, the churches and castle's are poor or abandoned whose glory days were at the beginning of the last century. One gets the impression of a town carefully resurecting its past to attract the tourist Euro.

    ⦁ a Portugese windmill
    ⦁ the castle of Castro Marin originating in the 14thC
    ⦁ the gatehouse of the castle
    ⦁ the flagpole
    ⦁ looking across the castle interior towards Huelva
    ⦁ the 18thC church rebuilt after a fire was originally a hermitage and the 17thC Fort of São Sebastião was part of a set of ramparts that surrounded the town
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  • Nautical knowledge

    22 de junio de 2018, España ⋅ ☁️ 25 °C

    OK I won't relate the differences between a ship and a caravel and all sorts of fascinating facts about 15thC sailing vessels even though you would be riveted by the knowledge. I was most impressed by how small they were - the Nina was only 50% longer than my boat!
    ⦁ And I hadn't realised that they could change their rigging from what you see to square-rig for crossing the ocean. This lateen rig is very useful for inshore work, making the caravels more manoevrable than the ship. This may be the main reason that after landing in America on 12/10/1492, the Santa María foundered but the other two ships returned to Palos on 15/03/1493.
    ⦁ Captain Juan de la Costa: Santa Maria (30m / 60Tonnes)
    ⦁ Captain Martin Alonso Pinzon: Pinta Pinta (15m / 60T) and
    ⦁ Vincente Yaniz Pinzon: Nina (13m/45T).
    Here is another piece of trivia to thrill you. The first hydroplane to cross the Atlantic, the Plus Ultra flying boat, took off from Palos on 22/06/1922. The journey, done in six stages, ended at Buenos Aires, Argentina.
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  • Fresco

    22 de junio de 2018, España ⋅ ☁️ 24 °C

    ⦁ The entrance and
    ⦁ visitors cloister have been decorated by Daniel Vázquez Diaz (1882-1969) in the 1930's. Obviously, he painted Columbus and his expedition in what apparently is a 'pre-cubist' style which he had just picked up in Paris.
    ⦁ The Almohar style frieze is original. Tiles would have been too ostentatious for Franciscans, so they painted the walls in a way the peasants could if they wanted to.
    ⦁ Who knows what St.George is doing here.
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  • Our Lady of Miracles

    22 de junio de 2018, España ⋅ ☁️ 23 °C

    Archaeologists aren't sure when this church was built. It has a nice snug feeling to it though and we can be sure of one thing: this is where CC spent much of his time asking for success and the cash to achieve it. The crew would have all been in here a few hours before departure.
    ⦁ Presiding over the main altar is a sculpture of a Christ which replaces an older statue destroyed during the Spanish Civil War.
    ⦁ In the south wall there is a small chapel alcove dedicated to the patron of the friary, Our Lady of Miracles.
    ⦁ Gothic arches in proportion to Moorish door
    ⦁ The alabaster statue of St. Mary, is in the 14thC Andalucian art style. According to legend, whilst the Moors were still in charge, a sailor form Los Palos brought this image back and hid it in the sea near Huelva. When the coast was clear, they fished it up in their nets and put it in the church.
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  • Working chambers

    22 de junio de 2018, España ⋅ ☁️ 22 °C

    ⦁ The friars met Chris in this comfortably sized room to debate and speculate on navigation and cartography. He and the Bish also entertained prospective investors and potential plaintiffs for the case, no doubt at at minimalist (because of the vow of poverty,) but exquisitely prepared banquets. They jointly worked out a plan to present to the Spanish Queen, including crucially much evidence from previous visitors. And so it came to pass that they received a Royal charter , some money and various promises for the distribution of the future wealth to be appropriated en route.
    In 1992, in celebration of the 500th anniversary of Christopher Columbus's voyage of discovery, there was a meeting of the Spanish council of ministers (cabinet), presided over by King Juan Carlos I, in this room.
    ⦁ The courtyard was for the private use of the Brothers,
    ⦁ the white cloister is in the guests courtyard.
    ⦁ The refectory is more than adequate for 12 + guest. The size of the beer tankard reminds us that low alcohol beer was drunk all day not to become intoxicated but to avoid pollution from the local water.
    ⦁ As for the bedroom! This cell is larger than my van and equally comfortable.
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  • I saw 3 ships come sailing by .. .. ...

    22 de junio de 2018, España ⋅ ☁️ 21 °C

    Actually, there was only one ship, the Santa Maria and 2 caravels, the Pinta and the Nina.
    No doubt you have guessed from this that I am at Los Palos de la Fronteras visiting the Monestario de Santa Maria de la Rabida from which Christopher Colombus sailed to the Americas.
    How he got here is interesting. Genovese sailor loses ship off the Portugese coast but manages to swim ashore. Ends up in Madeira with a bit of a squeeze for a local lass and soon they have a son. Now dad-in-law is a money lender and often accepts sailor's documents and personal affects as collateral - not unusual at the time. From these our Chris becomes convinced that there is land to the West, that it is India and quicker to get to. So he asks the Portugese king for some cash and warrants to sail over for a bit of a gander.
    "Don't be daft'" quoth the Royal Personage, "everyone knows the earth is flat and I don't have any spare lolly for an Atlantic cruise." End of dream.
    Or maybe not for meanwhilst, in a small, almost forgotten part of a foreign land, sailors had been heading West for many years, and had a good notion of prevailing winds, currents and so on across the Atlantic. They may well have even landed, but being simple fishermen on the whole they were ignorant of the import of their landing and fearful of the boogeymen.
    They came from Los Palos. The Phoenicians had built an altar on a nearby headland known since ancient times as Saturn's Rock. It was dedicated to their god, Melqart, the patron of Tyre, also called the Baal or lord of Tyre, (a deity often confounded with Hercules). In turn, the Romans venerated their goddess, Proserpina here and then Arabs built a mosque on the same spot: a site dominating the confluence of 2 rivers, the infamous Rio Tinto and the Rio Odiel, so a fisherman's paradise. Being Genovese, Chris knew this of course, but there was even more here to attract a mariner on the make.
    The Arabs had built religious barracks here to train mounted monk-warriors like those of the Christian Orders, (hence 'rábida' or 'rápita', watchtower in Arabic,) overlooking the harbour of Los Palos. In this environment, Muslim ascetics sought to become perfected spiritually to battle the 'crusaders'.
    In the twelfth century, the site passed to the Knights Templar under the protection of Our Lady of Miracles. Pope Eugene IV granted indulgences to all who rendered aid to travelers seeking refuge at this site: a prize for not being taken by pirates.
    In 1261 Pope Benedict XIII issued a papal bull authorising Friar Juan Rodríguez and his Franciscan companions to establish a community on the coast of Andalucia. The the Order of Friars Minor Conventual naturally claimed the local holy spot. Despite this written evidence, as is so often the case with believers, tradition holds that St. Francis of Assisi himself visited here, in the company of twelve disciples, to found a community. In any event, little remains of the early friary; most of the existing buildings date from the 14thC and 15thC.
    Our Chris knew of one more very salient support for his project.
    Like many Franciscan houses at the time there were only 12 monks in permanent residence keeping open house for those in distress or need. However, there was more to the top man, Perez, than you might think, (what they call a Deep Frier,) having served at Isabella's court as the Queen's Treasurer and chums with the Queen's confessor. He was a player.
    Now it so happened that CC was a lay Franciscan, or at least was seen dressed in the short frock favoured by Franciscans. I don't know he signed up before or after he got his Great Idea, so am not in a position to judge whether this was for real, as a disguise or just sucking up. Anyway, he hacked over with his son for a meeting with Perez, entering through the door in the photo.
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  • Don't look in the mirror

    21 de junio de 2018, España ⋅ ☀️ 31 °C

    Couldn't visit, but these were the first largescale solar power towers in Spain. PS10 is reflected in 624 heliostats or mirrors and PS20 1,255 giving around 30MW of steam generated electricity, (enough for about 180,000 homes so they say.)
    They're pretty impressive - hot stuff. Why the mirrors appear to be focussed in front of the tower I couldn't discover.
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  • Fun

    21 de junio de 2018, España ⋅ ⛅ 27 °C

    Lest you think there is no down time:
    ⦁ Its not always camping in carparks. This was the view from the back window one peaceful morning.
    ⦁ Another photo from Jane, down at the beach with the family. Typical English picnic: freezing cold wind and everyone huddled up.
    ⦁ At someone's house, Loui, Alex and I tell what we have been talking about.
    ⦁ Here is a view from the front window where I parked on some vacant land for the night.
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  • Work

    21 de junio de 2018, España ⋅ ⛅ 28 °C

    In case you were wondering what I did when not seeking out fascinating and photogenic sights of interest for you, Jane (from my last workaway) sent me these photos.
    ⦁ You see me loading a skip with rocks and wrestling two stray dogs that had wandered onto the land and were chasing the chickens and frightening the donkey.
    ⦁ Before and after shots of the cooker / rangetop made 'campo' style. (No, the design was not mine.)
    ⦁ Sitting on the outhouse after making brickwork to support and fitting the wooden seat.
    ⦁ Fixing the tiles which had been lifted and cracked by soil expansion / contraction. Not pretty, but I bet you can't tell which ones are untouched.
    ⦁ Of course there was more but I dont want to bore you.
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  • Less than 5 Rings left

    20 de junio de 2018, España ⋅ ⛅ 31 °C

    The Olympic village is crumbling away and the trains don't run by any more. The wooden tiles on the "Pavilion of Living Energy" are dropping off and the cooling towers have no water.
    Where centrally placed sites fall apart, global IT companies like Accenture move in and polish the glass walls of renovated buildings, but I haven't photographed them.Leer más

  • Odd

    20 de junio de 2018, España ⋅ ⛅ 33 °C

    Copy of "The Bearded Woman" by Jusepe Ribera (lo Spagnoletto).
    This is a portrait of Magdalena Ventura aged 52 with her husband Felici de Amici who not surprisingly doesn't look too Felice. At 37 she grew a long, thick beard. Obviously Mr Gillette was not around then, but she still had 3 children.
    The Duke of Medinaceli, who owns this house, inherited the painting from the Duke of Alcala, Fernando Afan de Ribera y Enriquez who had commissioned it when Viceroy of Naples.

    The tiles look remarkably modern.

    I include a sculpture of the man who was told to wash all the tiles in the house.
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  • Casa Pilatus

    20 de junio de 2018, España ⋅ ☀️ 32 °C

    Started in 1483 but mostly built by the Fabrique Enriquez after a trip to Palestine, where he seems to have got the idea of building a version of the Pontius Pilate prison. (Sorry, my Spanish & their translations are not up to proper descriptions here.)
    At any rate, there is a mixture of Mudejar, Renaissance and Baroque styles which attracts sightseers and works very well.
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  • Admiral restraint

    20 de junio de 2018, España ⋅ ☀️ 31 °C

    What does Admiral Gonzales Alvarez Ossario hide under his frock coat?
    Clue: there are 3 small ones.

    (Sorry, thats all you get. Some things have to remain secret - I'm sure you will check if you visit Seville!)
    (And yes, there really is a secret.)
    (And no, the answer 'Nothing' is incorrect.)
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  • Plaza Espagna

    20 de junio de 2018, España ⋅ ☀️ 29 °C

    Most towns seem to have one, but this is special. Built for the 1929 Ibero-American Exposition World's Fair, the shape - I am told - represents the embrace of Spain facing the Guadalquiver river as a path to America.
    The four bridges over the 515m long canal stand for the 4 ancient kingdoms, (Castile, Leon, Aragon and Navarra,)
    2 baroque towers named North and South. People winged cos they were only 23.5m shorter than the Giralda tower which was considered too close.
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  • Bulldust

    20 de junio de 2018, España ⋅ ☀️ 28 °C

    This is the Seville bullring, famous in the tourist literature though it doesn't claim association with Hemingway.

    Front door, back door, picadors trough.

    And last but by no means least, the matador himself. Without casting doubts on his prowess in the ring, I have a suspicion that his virility has been exaggerated a little. Maybe he had an inflated sense of his own masculinity or maybe its just bull.Leer más

  • Waterworks

    18 de junio de 2018, España ⋅ ⛅ 37 °C

    The 'Fountain of Fame' is one of four surviving 17thC musical fountains left in the world. It is completely operated by water and produces a very pleasant sound every hour. Must be some sort of organ, compressing air hydraulically.
    The inside looks a bit rough. Apparently there is only one craftsman capable of fixing these things, a pom Rodney Briscoe!
    The original channels carrying water into the gardens are being restored.
    In the park I found a different water fountain - with a different organ involved by the look of it.
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