Doteyboaty

July 2021 - July 2025
  • Margaret Meade
  • Ronan O'Driscoll
  • Ruby O'Driscoll
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Family sailing around Europe Read more
  • Margaret Meade
  • Ronan O'Driscoll
  • Ruby O'Driscoll
Currently traveling

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  • Taberas desert
    The desertSobrasPoor living conditions in LorcaHaulout

    Home for Haul out

    February 23, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ☁️ 15 °C

    We spend two more nights in Plym’s house after Tom’s departure and reconnect with the lovely neighbours Hilary and Graham.
    On our way back to Cartagena we take a different route in order to travel through the Tabernas desert. The landscape is evocative of the Wild West and there are tourist parks built around abandoned movie sets. The good the bad and the Ugly’ was filmed here or as it translates in spanish - ‘The good, the ugly and the bad’. We find the theme tune on Spotify and listen to it as we drive through the arid terrain. When we stop for a picnic it is dusty everywhere so we eat out of the back of the car. Every time a car drives past us, it throws up a tail of dust. We conclude that this landscape is best enjoyed indoors preferably on a TV screen.
    We stop for coffee in a pretty little town called Sobras, which is built on a height overlooking a dry but verdant river bed. After a wander around we still have an appetite for more sightseeing and decide to drive on to Lorca. It is a city we have driven by several times on our way to and from Anadalusia and we want to explore it, especially the picturesque hilltop fort we have seen from the car so many times. We park downtown which has some lovely old buildings and a pretty square complete with Irish pub. The Castle looks very impressive high on the hill overlooking the city and we start our steep climb through the narrow streets. The steps towards the castle becomes progressively dirtier and more broken up. We find we are a kind of a slum where children play between rubbish and rubble right outside their crumbling houses. We are surprised to find such poor living conditions in Spain. Our enthusiasm for the hike to the castle has waned and so we turn on our heel and return to the car and head home to Cartagena.
    The following day we queue at the abandoned Eroski shopping centre, now a mass vaccination centre and receive our final Covid jabs.

    Our next job is to Haul out the boat so her bottom can be cleaned and anti-fouled. All on board, we motor over to the boatyard to be lifted. The crane raises Regal out of the water just enough for the four of us to step ashore at the bow. We watch as she is lifted out entirely and then parked in the boatyard. She will remain here for a few days and though we are allowed stay onboard three of the four of us opt not to. Ronan volunteers to stay behind and get a push on with some boat jobs. The conditions onboard are borderline grim. It’s cold and dusty with an unsteady climb up and down to the boat, sometimes while carrying the ‘sink’ bucket or the ‘jacks’ bucket. There are a few other hardy bucks who are staying onboard boats in the yard and their good company is a pleasant diversion from the unpleasant living conditions.
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  • Almond trees

    Tom continued

    February 9, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 9 °C

    The local area in Lecrin is such a pleasure to walk around because its so quiet and has lots of orange, lemon, olive and almond trees.
    The almond trees are in full bloom with beautiful pink flowers and many still have nuts hanging from them. After any walk, little pockets are always full of fruit and nuts that have been picked along the way.
    Inspired by a book called ‘Driving over Lemons’ the two families drive to Orgiva. This town features in the book written by an English man who bought a farm here. We wind our way up into the mountains and stop off at a fantastic ruined fort in Lanjaron overlooking the valley.
    We have a gorgeous lunch in Orgiva and stroll around the town. There is an unusual mixture of locals and ex-pat hippies in the town. One young British hippie, complete with dreadlocks, backpack and a dog on a string asks us for money. We think this might be West Cork of Spain.
    On another day the two cars travel together to the Science Museum in Granada. It is so big that even though the crew of Regal have been here before, we see completely different things this time. The Robot exhibition, The butterfly house, The human body exhibition, The puzzles in the garden, the Bird of Prey display and the Health and Safety room. The last room is the kids absolute favourite and I have a hard time getting them out of there. They climb scaffolding with their hard hats on, experience a simulated earthquake and write ‘Margaret is a poo’ on several different ergonomic keyboards - there is nothing funnier.

    It is great to have such a lovely house to return to after our outings. We enjoy meals together around the big kitchen table and Ronan always has a gorgeous fire lighting in the evening in the sitting room.
    The piano in the sitting room is beautifully played by my brother Tom and he inspires Ruby and Colm to play. They want to ditch the Ukulele and start to learn the Piano. It’s is so much easier, they tell me - I remind them that I after nearly 10 years of lessons, I still can’t play!
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  • Tom and Co

    February 6, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ☁️ 14 °C

    Tom, Orla, Tom, Fionn and Lena fly out to see us and we spend their first two nights in Cartagena. The kids all have a go sleeping on the boat while Tom and Orla stay in an apartment nearby. We all do the highlights tour of Cartagena which we have discovered can be covered in a day.
    The next day we drive to Andalusia to Plym’s house in the valley of Lecrin where the four us had spent a week in November. The house, which is over three floors is perfect for the two families. The kids sleep on the basement floor which has access to the garden. They set up their playroom there and build camps and make lots of paper airplanes.
    A major attraction is all ripe oranges and lemons in the garden and surrounding countryside. A juicing station is set up in the kitchen and there is a flow of children from the orange trees to the juicer. They make it, drink it and spill it and make some more. In the five days they consume their annual recommended dose of vitamin C.
    Although the young cousins are very happy just hanging around and playing together, we have an outing most days. One day Tom and Orla go into Granada city and later I drive the boys in the other car and we meet up in the Sierra Nevada ski resort for tobogganing. We bring our own shovel sledges and also rent better quality two person sledges from the enterprising African street vendors at the bottom of the ski run. We have a great time and after a meal drive down the mountain and are back in Plym’s house in just over an hour.
    …more of Tom’s trip on the next footprint…
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  • View of the AlhambraAuroraView from our bedroomMalagaA plastic landscape we pass on our journey

    Aurora in Granada

    January 21, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 7 °C

    We are in the 9 seater van with the McDonnell’s negotiating the narrow one way streets in the old town of Granada. We finally arrive to the car park at the central Mercado just near the Cathedral and find our amazing top floor apartment which has a big terrace with a view of the Cathedral, the Alhambra the the mountains we have just come down from.
    Tara, Tony and Joanne are so excited because Aurora is here - the au pair they had for the first 7 years of their life. It is lovely to see what a special relationship she has with the McDonnells.
    We have two great days exploring Granada ; highlights included strolling around the Albaicin, going to a trad session in an Irish pub and eating freshly cooked seafood paella from the market on the sunny roof terrace of our apartment.
    We drop the Longfordians to the airport in Malaga and have a wander around the old town before we drive back to Cartagena. One by one we start to feel unwell and after positive antigen tests we are confined to the boat for the following week.
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  • A visit from Longford

    January 17, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 11 °C

    We are delighted to welcome our Longford cousins to Cartagena. Tara, Joanne and Tony bunk in with Ruby and Colm while Jane and Donagh stay a hotel 5 minutes away. We do a highlights tour of the city over a day and a half and then pack up the 9 seater rental van and head for the ski slopes in Sierra Nevada.
    We arrive at dusk and have a quick go zooming down the ski slope on our little shovel sledges. The kids are all exhausted when we are out at dinner so they go home a bit earlier. When we get back to the apartment they have a surprise party ready to celebrate Donagh’s birthday.
    First thing the next morning everyone is up and ready, this is Tara, Tony and Joanne’s first time skiing and they have lesson at 10am. I am not skiing because I twisted my ankle rollerblading down a hill the day before our visitors arrived. I am limping around with crutches so the only thing for me is to be the chalet girl. I cook and clean and bring picnics up the mountain for all the athletes
    They are all really enjoying the skiing and with such a big group different people pair up at different times. Donagh and Colm make a perfect pair and the two of them fly down numerous slopes together. Ruby decides to try out snowboarding, so she hangs out with her cousins on the green slopes.
    At least I get to join in for the apres ski while the kids happily expend their last bit of energy sledging before the sun goes down.
    We have 3 wonderful days in the mountains with the McDonnells.
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  • Collecting the children's letters to the 3 kingsRoscon de Reyes - Epiphany cake

    The 3 Kings Parade

    January 5, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

    I was excited about celebrating my birthday in Spain this year when I learned that it falls on the same day as the 3 kings arrive to Spain. The Epiphany on the 6th of January is nearly or as important in Spain as Christmas Day. The three Kings come on the eve of the Epiphany and deliver presents to all the children. On the coast the three kings usually arrive by boat and then parade through the city before leaving the presents for the children later that night. I have a feeling the parade in Barcelona will be good. It is incredible. I want to come back every year for my birthday parade.Read more

  • Montserrat

    January 2, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ⛅ 13 °C

    We take the train and then the cable car up to the monastery of Montserrat. We spend a little time in the Basilica admiring its interior and watching the long queue of tourists file past the black Madonna above the alter.
    After lighting some candles we leave and Ruby and Colm find a lucky walnut. When they break it open instead of finding a walnut, there is a euro coin inside. They are delighted with this turn of events and suspect a famous YouTubing prankster has set them up. We don’t see anyone matching that description.
    We travel further up the mountain by funicular and spend the afternoon on a trail that brings us through spectacular scenery and wobble-inducing heights to see where different ancient holy hermits had lived. It’s easy to see why they chose to live there - so much serenity.
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  • Drinks and new years resolutions at a posh hotel

    Spanish New Year’s

    December 31, 2021 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 14 °C

    All official fireworks and new year celebrations have been cancelled but we feel if there is anything going on we will see it from the Palacio Nacional de Montjuïc. Thousands of other people have the same idea and we join them on the steps over-looking the city. The magic fountain below us is switched off but the atmosphere around us is magical. It’s obvious nothing much is going to happen but people are in great spirits and as we wait for midnight singing breaks out in different corners. At midnight amateur fireworks are set off and the crowd cheers and whoops as if we are watching the most spectacular show.
    We join in the Spanish tradition of eating grapes for good luck. One grape must be eaten for each stroke of midnight- we are simultaneously watching and cheering for the fireworks - it is an impossible but its very funny.
    This is the first time Ruby and Colm stay up to ring in the new year. I think we might have inadvertently set them up for disappointment in the coming years. Barcelona has set the bar very high.
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  • The Spanish like to have fun
    We hire bikes for a few hours and cycle along the beach promenade

    Barcelona

    December 30, 2021 in Spain ⋅ ⛅ 15 °C

    We travel to Barcelona by train, which takes nearly 9 hours.
    We have 8 nights booked in a gorgeous apartment in the great neighbour of Poble Sec, a the foot of Montjuic. We are here to soak up the city, see the sights, ring in the new year and celebrate my birthday.
    Barcelona is busy and vibrant and there is so much to see and do. The Christmas decorations are still up so the city is looking even prettier than usual.
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