• Roland Routier
sep. 2017 – sep. 2025

Roland Routier

Ett äventyr utan slut av Roland Routier Läs mer
  • Modernista

    1 januari 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

    There are remnants of old architecture throughout the town, the Roman theatre, bull ring and this house, but the citizens are most proud of buildings like Palacio Consistorial (Town Hall) and Casa Cervantes in the "Modernista" (sic) style.Läs mer

  • Living the dream

    2 januari 2018, Spanien ⋅ 🌙 16 °C

    Living the dream until the Guardia move you along in case you are tempted to camp overnight.
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    Whilst reading the end-of-year newspaper analysis that journos love I was unsurprised to discover that the government and Junta de Andalucia have been reluctant to spend money this year, and the councils delayed the approval of budgets owing to a lack of resources combined with minority governments or coalitions with multiple parties.

    The government had allocated 138 million Euro to the region, which is the lowest amount so far this century and a poor contrast to the 2008 budget of 1.2 billion Euro. There has been so little progress that for example, Malaga lost the 1.3 million Euro grant awarded it by the provincial government in 2015! So do not wonder why Nerja is the only town in Spain still not treating its sewage before allowing the Guadalhorce river to drain the waste of about 100,000 people. Or that the popular tourist resort of Marbella does not have rail access.
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  • Puerto de Mazarron

    3 januari 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 21 °C

    Mazarrón is set in a wide bay that opens up into the Mediterranean and has a coastline of 35 km. Since its origins, it has been linked to the mining wealth of its mountain ranges, which are rich in lead, zinc, silver, iron, alum and red ochre. In Phoenician, Punic and Roman times, great work was carried out in the mines, leaving behind an abundance of archaeological remains. The Arabs also settled in the area, attracted by its mineral wealth.

    When the town was officially made a "villa" in 1572 they still suffered attacks by Berber pirates. Cementing the place of the Catholic religion, the Virgin Mary herself turned up on Nov 17th 1585 to repel succesfully a landing of the Moorish heathens. This was witnessed by a number of bystanders who left testimonies to the effect: so it must be true.
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  • Old boat

    3 januari 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 21 °C

    This area is rich in minerals and has attracted settlers from prehistoric times, the oldest finds have been dated to the mid to late Paleolthic era.
    Two VII C BCE boats, one still carrying its cargo of iron ingots, recently found buried in the sands of Playa de la Isla establishes the town as a major Phoenician trading centre.
    The boats were made using a technique known as "al casco" in which the keel was laid down forst to which the strakes were joined by tabs of wood, ( a box and dowel method now called biscuit joinery.) The frame was then attached to this structure using beams to fix the hull. Structures were then added to the keel; forming the bow and stern, with the keelson in the centre to hold the cockpit and mast. Appropriate woods were used for each part, in the case of one this was cypress for the keel, fig for the frame, pine for the strakes and olive for the tabs. All was then sealed with a generous coating of pine resin.
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  • Saucy story

    4 januari 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 22 °C

    When the Romans arrived they constructed an extensive fish salting factory by the harbour. Its most notable recipe however was for a special fish sauce. It was both highly praised for its nutritional value, and widely criticized as an extravagance of excessive living.

    "Another liquid, too, of a very exquisite nature, is that known as "garum:" it is prepared from the intestines of fish and various parts which would otherwise be thrown away, macerated in salt; so that it is, in fact, the result of their putrefaction. Garum was formerly prepared from a fish, called "garos" by the Greeks; who assert, also, that a fumigation made with its head has the effect of bringing away the afterbirth. At the present day, however, the most esteemed kind of garum is that prepared from the scomber, in the fisheries of Carthago Spartaria: it is known as "garum of the allies," and for a couple of congii we have to pay but little less than one thousand sesterces. Indeed, there is no liquid hardly, with the exception of the unguents, that has sold at higher prices of late; so much so, that the nations which produce it have become quite ennobled thereby. There are fisheries, too, of the scomber on the coasts of Mauretania and at Carteia in Bætica, near the Straits which lie at the entrance to the Ocean; this being the only use that is made of the fish. For the production of garum, Clazomenæ is also famed, Pompeii, too, and Leptis; while for their muria, Antipolis, Thurii, and of late, Dalmatia, enjoy a high reputation."
    " [Pliny. GARUM: FIFTEEN REMEDIES]

    "Alex, which is the refuse of garum, properly consists of the dregs of it, when imperfectly strained: but of late they have begun to prepare it separately, from a small fish that is otherwise good for nothing, the apua of the Latins, or aphua of the Greeks, so called from the fact of its being engendered from rain. The people of Forum Julii make their garum from a fish to which they give the name of "lupus." In process of time, alex has become quite an object of luxury, and the various kinds that are now made are infinite in number. The same, too, with garum, which is now prepared in imitation of the color of old honied wine, and so pleasantly flavored as to admit of being taken as a drink. Another kind, again, is dedicated to those superstitious observances which enjoin strict chastity, and that prepared from fish without scales, to the sacred rites of the Jews. In the same way, too, alex has come to be manufactured from oysters, sea-urchins, sea-nettles, cammari, and the liver of the sur-mullet; and a thousand different methods have been devised of late for ensuring the putrefaction of salt in such a way as to secure the flavors most relished by the palate. Thus much, by the way, with reference to the tastes of the present day; though at the same time, it must be remembered, these substances are by no means without their uses in medicine. Alex, for instance, is curative of scab in sheep, incisions being made in the skin, and the liquor poured therein. It is useful, also, for the cure of wounds inflicted by dogs or by the sea-dragon, the application being made with lint. Recent burns, too, are healed by the agency of garum, due care being taken to apply it without mentioning it by name. It is useful, too, for bites inflicted by dogs, and for that of the crocodile in particular; as also for the treatment of serpiginous or sordid ulcers. For ulcerations, and painful affections of the mouth and ears, it is a marvelously useful remedy. Muria, also, as well as the salsugo which we have mentioned, has certain astringent, mordent, and discussive properties, and is highly useful for the cure of dysentery, even when ulceration has attacked the intestines. Injections are also made of it for sciatica, and for celiac fluxes of an inveterate nature. In spots which lie at a distance in the interior, it is used as a fomentation, by way of substitute for sea-water. (Pliny ALEX: EIGHT REMEDIES.)

    So there you have it. A sauce made by pounding fish intestines, blood, and other organs (innards) mixed with salt and left to ferment, causing “hydrolysis primarily through endogenous enzymic proteolysis.” If your mouth is watering, the nearest surviving version, sold in Amalfi, is 'colatura di alici'.
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  • Loads of lollies

    6 januari 2018, Spanien ⋅ ⛅ 8 °C

    Dia de los Reyes (3 Kings Day) when Spanish children leave their shoes out by their doors in the hope that the 3 Kings will fill them with presents. The day is also celebrated by eating Roscon de los Reyes (rice cake of kings,) which is made to resemble a king.s crown. It is decorated with icing and sprinkles, often including glazed fruit. Finding a toy buried inside is believed to bring good luck to the finder.

    I arrived at my next workaway yesterday in time to sortie out with the family to the local town hoping to score some lollies from old Gaspar, Balthasar, and Melchior.
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  • Los Dioses

    7 januari 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 7 °C

    Lubrin is a white-washed village set within the Sierra Filabres Mountains in the Almeria region of southern Spain. Since the 16th century it survives on its agricultural products, in particular olives and almonds on irrigated terraces and the rearing of goat herds for their popular soft cheese (queso de cabra). On the outskirts of the municipality, about 2 kms as the crow flies but 45 minutes by car, lies Los Dioses the nearst hamlet to my next workaway location, 2 kms further on. The name means "the Gods" as the place is at the dizzying altitude of 400m asl. Tradesmen quail at the name and refuse to make the ascent unless for vertigenous profits.

    I came mainly to fix the roof but this will not be possible now thanks to the convoluted laws in Spain.
    One needs permission from the Mayor before undertaking any repairs or additions to one's property and in order to verify the plan one has to produce a quote for the job and a copy of a mandatory document describing the house in detail, delivered by a proprietor to the person buying his house. The former is used to calculate the minicipality's "tax" and the latter to ensure that no additions are slipped in as remodelling or maintenance.
    The problem arises with most of the old cottages which never had the document but, being ancient and rural have a protected status. So it is in this case, although the old pile of stones has been tastefully turned into a comfortable home it is not possible to fix the roof without reams of official paper. The estimate is for paperwork is £4,000 which is more than the cost of repairs.
    Dry and stony as it is, the ground must have produced enough wheat to merit the house having its own threshing circle. The Lopez family who originally owned the property must have been pretty well off.
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  • Fleedom in Andalucia

    12 januari 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 10 °C

    In the interests of greater efficiency and to empower the heads of schools the British government has authorised local schools to decide how they spend their budget. In order to protect the rights of disadvantaged children, they mandated the provision of special needs teachers should the school have such youths in their care. Of course, being efficient results in funding available for normal school operations but insufficient for situations out of the norm. Efficient school principals who work within their budgets therefore ensure that difficult children are not enrolled.

    Harry is the oldest child here and is quite far along the autistic spectrum. He was expelled from a couple of British schools for bad behaviour.
    He is a happy boy usually and when not at a special needs school down the road, where the Spanish teachers are fond of him, wanders around the garden talking random phrases to himself. The family moved here precisely so they could have enough land for him to do this.

    Angelina has just turned 10 and goes to the local Spanish school which is 45 minutes bus ride away. Charlie is 8 and also suffers from autism. He is a smart boy who can easily manage at the same school as his sister. Unfortunately he has some syndrome which makes him unable or unwilling to speak out loud. He can whisper to his sister or mother though so maybe he will grow out of it.
    Their mother Sandra explained that there is a strong genetic component to autism and that she herself exhibits some characteristics of it. However, she is convinced that particularly in Harry's case the condition was aggravated by the first and second measles vaccinations.

    Sandra spent many years working cruise ships as a fancy hairdresser and then onboard salon manager. When she isn't rushing round ferrying children or doing housework she still practices hairdressing for the local English community. She doesn't like to be photographed.
    Her husband Steve Howlett-Neale is a conservation stonemason who works on contract near Bath. At first glance you would think him a long haired musician but his strong Wiltshire burr soon sets you straight.

    The family is completed by Grace, the Staffordshire bull terrier / Labrador cross with a warm heart but black, so abandoned by the Spanish owners. Also, Otto, another rescue dog this time suspected of being a Beagle / Greyhound cross. Both dogs are just over a year old and very boisterous, jumping up for affection to great anyone who looks like a sucker.
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  • No worries

    18 januari 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    Steve's mother died unexpectedly so he has returned to the UK and I have moved on.

    Life's hard ...

  • Indalo

    18 januari 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 14 °C

    About 4000 years ago Mojacar ancestors arrived on top of the hill by parachute, a fact recorded in a cave drawing found near Vélez Blanco.
    Since then the symbol, known as the "Indalo", has been a lucky totem, found over the doorways of homes to protect against the evil eye and storms.

    Some say that Jose Guirado Zamora, born in Mojacar in 1901, went on to become the internationally esteemed film producer known as Walt Disney.
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  • Mojacar pueblo

    19 januari 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 15 °C

    The town population grew over the last 4000 years to over 10,000 by the mid 18 th century and then declined to 1000 in the 1960's.
    The region (technically Europe’s only desert) began to suffer severely from droughts and many residents began to leave as the mines had closed and there wasn't any work anyway.
    An enthusiastic mayor, Mr Jacinto, began offering free plots of land to people who would restore the ruined houses. The call was heard in London and the Shires and soon new residents began to appear and the town soon became a thriving artists’ colony. Village houses were renovated and whitewashed, in keeping with the past. Mojacar still has one of the highest expatriate populations in all of Spain.
    This growing popularity was all the developers needed, and the resort of Mojacar Playa was born. Britannia Airways and others did the rest with cheap flights and English is the language of choice now - well a sort of English.
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  • Legends of the past

    19 januari 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 14 °C

    This is the cave of little Maria, the married.
    Once upon a time, the good citizens of Mojacar were assailed by a deadly plague that carried off scores of them.
    The village beauty Maria, a nubile girl of incalculable charm, agreed to marry the old alchemist and sorcerer in return for his magical aid in saving the townsfolk.
    Despite his dark powers, the wizard still had self-esteem problems and not only because he lived in this cave and drank blood. So he worried that his matrimonial bliss would finish as soon he had banished the plague and therefore dragged his heels in its execution.
    So the young bride decided to accelerate the process herself with the aid of one of the magic potions kept in jars behind the pantry. After a evening of conjugal delights the tired old sorcerer fell soundly asleep. Maria grabbed the opportunity and the elixir, hastily distributing doses around town.
    On her return, the smart lass disguised her theft by replenishing the container with liquid from other jars. Nervous of discovery, her hand trembled and spilt some drops onto herself, burning a hole in her hand and triggering a spell.
    Since then, neither has been seen by mortal eyes. But everybody knows that they remain trapped in the cave under the spell, so as they pass the burghers cry out:
    "Sal, sal Mariquita la Posa, la que tiene la mano agijerea, si no la tuveira, todo el pueblo pereciera"
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  • Coastal defences

    20 januari 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    Macenas Tower, (Castillo de Macenas,) was built in the second half of the 18th century, during the reign of Charles III of Spain. It is an horseshoe-type artillery tower for coastal defense, armed in 1803 with two 24-pounder cannons. Originally entrance to the tower was gained through a doorway on first floor level, accessed by a rope ladder. The lowest level held gunpowder and storage; first floor level kitchen and living quarters; cannons on the roof.
    In 1830 Macenas Tower was reported to be in disrepair, it's security was assured by the presence of one guard and three bull fighters.
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  • Almeria

    21 januari 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

    Although, (as usual,) there are sites that trace their origins to prehistoric times, the first reliable news about the Almeria date back to 955 AD , when Calipha Abd-al-Rahmin III (pictured) entrusted a group of Yemenis with monitoring the coast in order to prevent the landing of the Normans.
    He had built a watchtower on top of the hill named the town Al-Mari’yah; meaning watchtower in Arabic. The photo shows the Arab houses still used today.
    The Christian's forgot about the Norman invaders luckily, for today the prosperity of the area relies on their descendants flying over to bask in the sun. Almeria is famous for having the driest climate in Europe and the WHO (World Health Organisation) recommend it as the healthiest: an average of 320 sunny days annually, 3,000 hours of sunshine, 26 days’ rain. Uniquely in Europe, Almeria has never registered a sub-zero temperature, with the lowest ever recorded at 0.2 degrees C in Feb 1935.
    Agriculture is also of huge economic importance, thanks to huge plastic greenhouses.
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  • Thrift

    21 januari 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

    Social housing is accomplished on the cheap by using cliffs as walls and ceilings.
    Leaving seats off public benches.
    Doubling street lighting with decoration and language lessons.

  • Alcazaba

    22 januari 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    After the Alhambra in Granada; the Alcazaba of Almería is the largest defensive structure built by the Arabs in the peninsula Iberia (and the second of all Muslim buildings after the Alhambra Palace).
    The Alcazaba was built on the ruins of an earlier fort, probably dating back to 840 at the top of the Cerro de la Alcazaba, which had been occupied in prehistoric times, possibly Bronze Age, as well as during Phoenician and Roman periods.
    You enter the fortress through an Albarran tower and from there wall up a zigzagging ramp guarded by the Torre de los Espejos to the Torre de la Justicia, which has a strategically placed bend before you reach the entrance.
    There are three walled enclosures.
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  • Alcazaba 1st court

    22 januari 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    The first compound, the largest, was originally designed as a military camp and a place for refuge for the public when the city came under siege. Today it is a lush garden In Islamic times, there was an entire structure of streets and houses, and a complex water supply network of wells with waterwheels, cisterns and channels, utilising the water from a 70 metres deep well.Läs mer

  • Alcazaba 2nd court

    22 januari 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    The second compound was once the royal enclave containing public baths, a mosque, homes and a palace. Strong evidence that this was The Water Gardens palace, the seat of Prince Oberyn Martell, (the Red Viper) and his consort Ellaria Sand in Lanza del Sol, the capital of Dorne.
    It was on these stairs that she murdered him, assuming the crown for her and her lovely Sand Snakes.
    OTOH the garden was designed and built in the 1920's so I am not sure about the stories.
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  • Alcazaba 3rd court

    22 januari 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    The third and highest compound was adapted after the reconquista by the Catholic monarchs. It’s built on a triangular ground plan and is guarded by three semi-circular towers, including the Tower of Homage.
    Once there was a market here, frequented by Harrison Ford, (for evidence see "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade")
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  • The Jayran Wall

    22 januari 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    The Jayran Walls head North to the "Cerro de San Cristobal", built during the Kingdom of Jairán (1012-1028) in the 11th century .
    The Muslims built 3 square towers on this hill, known by them as Laham hill, and the Knights Templar added four semicircular ones after the Christian conquest of the city ​​by Alfonso VII in 1147. They are all ruins.
    The statue shown through the wall was erected around 1930 to represent the Sacred Heart of Jesus blessing the city and the Mediterranean Sea. It is carved out of marble from the nearby village Macael .
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  • Load of balls

    22 januari 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    One of the well known problems with warfare is troop boredom. To combat this, officers spend much time devising amusing training exercises.
    The Arabs had such an exercise for their artillery soldiers, who had to remain strong and dexterous to roll and load cannon balls during the heat of battle. They called this exercise al Bok'har.
    It apparently was very popular with the lads, so much so that they and foreign forces adapted it to play at home. Over time it evolved and the balls became more civilian friendly, until today it remains and is nown as "bocce".
    Not a lot of people know this.
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