European Odyssey

Şubat 2017 - Ekim 2018
Joel tarafından 610 günlük bir macera Okumaya devam et
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  • Gün 41

    Day 41: Coa Valley

    28 Mart 2017, Portekiz ⋅ ⛅ 28 °C

    Up early today for an exciting destination - another UNESCO World Heritage site! This time we were visiting the paleolithic rock art sites of the Coa Valley in eastern Portugal. It was about 90 minutes drive away, and we were booked on a 10:15am tour, so it was our earliest start for quite some time.

    Got away with no problems, though delayed a bit in the village waiting for a bobcat to come up a narrow lane the wrong direction. It looked like we were going to be a bit late, but some sensible driving meant that we arrived one minute ahead of schedule.

    Since it's only a small operation, our tour was a single 4x4 with us and our guide, plus two French tourists and a French-speaking guide. They didn't speak any English, so after a polite "je m'appelle Joel" and a smile we kept to ourselves.

    Thankfully the site was only 15 minutes drive away. It's in a fairly steep canyon on a tributary of the Douro river, and there are thousands of rock engravings spread along scores of boulders at various points along the river. These date from between 8000-25,000 years old, and were only discovered in the 1990s when the Portuguese government started construction of a dam across the river. During the environmental studies, the engravings were inadvertently brought up from underneath sediment where they'd been preserved, and their significance was quickly realised.

    Thankfully the dam was abandoned and the whole area was declared World Heritage, as it's the oldest known rock art in Europe. It pre-dates the cave paintings at Lascaux in France, but isn't as detailed.

    Interestingly, the engravings were entirely of animals. Bulls, goats, aurochs, deer, fish, sheep, horses with flowing manes. Some of the animals had had their heads carved twice, giving the illusion of movement which was nice. There were two difference techniques on display as well - the oldest style which was essentially hammer & chisel style, and then newer styles using very fine pointed blades. Ironically, the older style was preserved much better since the larger marks were far more visible.

    We spent about 90 minutes out at the site, learning about the history and so on. It's not known why the engravings are there, but archaeologists believe the full bellies drawn on the animals suggest fertility rituals, or perhaps hopes for bountiful hunting.

    Then back to the main building where we spent some time looking through the excellent museum, though we had to hurry as a large group of noisy teenage schoolkids was following up behind us and making a ridiculous racket. Had a quick bite to eat in the cafeteria where we were surprised to find it was 2pm!

    Back into the car for the long 2 hour drive back to the Douro valley, where we wanted to check out a few more things. Partway back we suddenly gained an hour - turns out my phone had picked up a signal from Vodafone Spain and set its clock to Spanish time, then on driving away from the border it'd set itself back to Portuguese time! Third time in 10 days we've been caught out by time, as we'd missed the daylight savings change as well!

    Stopped at some various lookout points on the way back to get some good footage, as today was a beautiful day. Spring had suddenly arrived in what felt like a single morning, as it was now warm and sunny, with flowers blooming everywhere. Lots of nice colours too - yellows, purples, whites and reds along with the usual oranges. Even the grapevines seemed to have grown a foot overnight!

    Back into Pinhao which is the other main town along the Douro, and we parked up to have a look around. Lots of old folk on their Antiki cruises taking photos on iPads and clutching walking sticks. Had a glass of local wine on a bar at the riverfront and watched the sun sink behind the hills before returning to the car and heading for home. Made the funniest quip of the journey so far, when I drove slowly through a crowd of pensioners blocking a narrow road and said that I felt like Moses parting the Grey Sea.

    Relaxed at home for a while before heading back into Regua for dinner. Decided to splash out a bit on a nice dinner, so we headed for an upstairs waterfront restaurant with Portuguese cuisine. I had a goat's cheese gratin for entree and veal medallions with roquefort sauce and mushroom risotto for main; while Shandos had an onion soup for entree and deer medallions for main. Shared a pumpkin fondant for dessert which was excellent. One of the best meals of the trip, though comfortably the most expensive too.

    Back to the apartment feeling very full and satisfied after a long day. Last night in Portugal!
    Okumaya devam et

  • Gün 42

    Day 42: NW to Santiago de Compostela

    29 Mart 2017, Ispanya ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    Long day of driving today, perhaps the biggest day in our road trip. We weren't in a rush to leave though, so we got up around 9, had a lazy breakfast and headed off around 11am. Spent a couple of hours driving north-west on winding roads, before eventually joining the freeway again and crossing back into Spain.

    Stopped briefly at a town called Ourense to grab a McDonalds lunch - I know we shouldn't, but it's an easy option, you can order with touchscreens in English, the special menus aren't too bad and there's always outdoor seating for Schnitzel and clean toilets as well.

    Sated, we headed on. Weather quite changeable at the moment, it goes from sunny blue skies to gloomy and overcast, squally rain within minutes. Very close to the Atlantic here I guess, and quite exposed to the variable weather patterns coming across from the ocean.

    We arrived in Santiago de Compostela around 4pm and just headed straight to our apartment. It's small though fairly modern, but the biggest problem was that the wifi wasn't working! The 4G SIM card in the modem was locked, and after getting in touch with the owner he said the telco would fix it in the next 24-48 hours. Someone else on Airbnb had mentioned the wifi not working in their review from February, so I suspect it was an ongoing problem that wasn't likely to be fixed.

    As it was late in the day, cold and with intermittent rain, we decided to just stay in and save our exploration for the morning. Shandos ventured out to the supermarket a couple of blocks away and returned with dinner - just some simple spaghetti with pesto. With no internet distractions, I got stuck into editing videos and Shandos wrote some blog posts.
    Okumaya devam et

  • Gün 43

    Day 43: Santiago de Compostela

    30 Mart 2017, Ispanya ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    Time to get out and explore the area. The old town here is a UNESCO World Heritage site, and the cathedral is both famous and important - it's traditionally believed to house the tomb of St James, one of the 12 apostles. It's also the endpoint for the Camino del Santiago (the Way of St James), a Christian pilgrimage that follows the entire coastline of northern Spain, all the way from the French border to Santiago. I'm not exactly sure why people do the pilgrimage (other than it being a nice long hike); it's a world heritage site as well but since we weren't doing the hike I didn't read up much on it.

    We walked the 20 minutes from our apartment into the main old town and had a look around. First impressions of the cathedral were disappointing, as the entire facade was covered with scaffolding for restoration work and you hardly see anything. The square is nice though, with some other impressive buildings fronting it, and slow trickle of pilgrims constantly arriving.

    Got some footage and then ventured inside the cathedral for a look. A bit of scaffolding in here too, but not too bad. Again though, we weren't super taken with it. We've been in larger cathedrals, and we've been in more ornate and impressively decorated ones too. St James's bones are kept in the crypt under the altar, so we shuffled past with everyone else (thankfully not too crowded though). Not much to see though, just a large silver box about 10 metres away down a barred tunnel.

    And I hate to be a cynic, but I'm a little sceptical about the whole thing. His relics and remains were "discovered" in the 8th century, so around 750 years after he actually lived. And with a little reading, there's not a lot of evidence to suggest he had been to or was taken to Spain, particularly since he was martyred in Jerusalem. It's also interesting that the discovery was made while the Iberian peninsula was under heavy attack from the Moors (ie Muslims from north Africa). Defending a saint's remains might get people interested in fighting who wouldn't otherwise?

    Anyway. We paid our respects, hugged the large statue as you're supposed to do (though I passed on kissing his brooch like pilgrims are meant to!) and moved on. Explored some more of the old town and it was nice, but again we've seen nicer old towns. Maybe I was in a bad mood or something, but I really just wasn't feeling it. Had a nice lunch of a local delicacy - barbecued octopus tentacles with boiled potatoes and paprika.

    By mid-afternoon we'd gotten enough footage and felt like we'd seen enough of the town, so headed back to the apartment where we discovered Schnitzel had peed on a rug. Thankfully it was washable so we washed it and hung it out - not a lot of sun today but it stays up until 9pm so it managed to dry OK. He hasn't seemed very settled in this apartment, maybe there are other dog scents in here from previous guests.

    Still with no internet, we ventured to a cafe up the street in a heavy rainstorm to use their free wifi over a couple of hot drinks. I managed to get a video uploaded for tomorrow morning's scheduled post, so that was a weight off my mind. Connection was very slow so it took a while, but alas.

    Back to the apartment where we finished off our spaghetti and pesto and headed for bed. Long day tomorrow - a World Heritage double feature! A shame neither of us felt that taken with Santiago, as it's a fairly well-known tourist town. It's definitely in the top 10 Spanish destinations. Maybe if we'd come here earlier in the trip we would've felt differently? The weather makes a big difference too I guess.
    Okumaya devam et

  • Gün 44

    Day 44: A Coruña and Lugo

    31 Mart 2017, Ispanya ⋅ ☀️ 11 °C

    Busy day today, a UNESCO double header! Today we were heading north to check out the Roman-era lighthouse in the town of A Coruña, then the Roman walls of Lugo. So we had a fair bit of driving to do, and were up and out fairly early by Spanish standards.

    First up was an hour-long drive northwards to A Coruña, where we drove through the city to the Tower of Hercules. It's a Roman-era lighthouse on a rocky outcrop facing the Atlantic, and is the oldest still-operating lighthouse in the world. It was built in around 250 AD to a height of around 50 metres, of which about 35 still remains. There was an extension done in the 16th century which rebuilt the height and shored up the stone, and its been standing ever since.

    It's very impressive, considering its age! Very dramatic placement as well, with large rocks and waves crashing in off the ocean. Unfortunately for us though, we weren't able to climb to the top as they close it during high winds, and it was howling a gale. Given the location I'd guess it's closed more often than not! But at least the rain had stopped - clear blue skies down here.

    Did some video and then headed back down into the town where I found a Vodafone store to top up my Spanish SIM card. It's quite annoying in that you can top-up online, but obviously you can't top-up when you don't have a valid SIM to access the internet! You can call them, but when you don't speak Spanish that's not real easy. I'm sure there are stores where you can buy pre-paid cards, but I don't know where to find them!

    Back into the car where I discovered I'd parked in a loading zone, whoops. We then drove another hour-ish south-east to the town of Lugo. The big attraction here are the Roman-era walls that completely surround the town. They're 2.1 kilometres long, 10-12 metres high and about 4 metres thick, so a very impressive stone construction! Apparently the longest Roman walls in existence that still completely surround a town.

    Drove into town through an archway in the walls and stopped in a parking lot in heavy rain. Waited a little while for the rain to slacken a bit before heading up on to the walls. These days they're used mainly as a walking and running loop for the locals since there's no lights or other obstacles to get in the way. Unless some crazy Australians bring a dachshund of course! He chased a few runners which was annoying but comical.

    We walked a lap of the walls ourselves and enjoyed the loop, though the constant on-off drizzle put a dampener on things. Still very impressive though, I really love seeing old Roman ruins. Once we'd finished with the walls we felt like a hot drink to warm up, but with Schnitzel in tow we only really had outdoor seating options that we weren't keen on. So we just went back to the car and headed for our accommodation.

    We'd booked to stay the night in Serria, a small town about 30 minutes drive south of Lugo. There is very little here, though it's mildly notable for being about 102 kilometres from Santiago de Compostela. Pilgrims have to complete at least 100 km of the walk to be officially considered "pilgrims", so many of them set off from here to end up in Santiago a week or so later. But otherwise, not much to see.

    Our apartment was nice enough - newly renovated and with a roaring fire going already. I made a quick trip out to the nearby Mercadona for supplies (tortilla espanola con chorizo and salad) before we settled in for the evening. Good wifi connection here so I uploaded my next couple of videos and relaxed for the evening. Moving on tomorrow!
    Okumaya devam et

  • Gün 45

    Day 45: Las Médulas

    1 Nisan 2017, Ispanya ⋅ ⛅ 8 °C

    Another day of travel and World Heritage! Departed our apartment at the usual time, around 10:30am, and headed south-east for today's destination: the ancient Roman gold mines of Las Médulas. The drive was about an hour or so, and we arrived around midday after a couple of stops.

    Las Médulas was founded in the first century AD, and was the largest and most productive gold mine in the entire Roman empire. Over the 250 years it operated, they extracted around 1.6 million kilograms of gold, an absolutely staggering amount. They used a method they called "wrecking of mountains", where they'd dig tunnels and shafts downwards behind cliff faces, flood them with water and let the extra weight collapse the mountain. Then all they needed to do was walk into the valley and pick up the gold.

    But what really gives the site a unique look is that when the empire collapsed, nobody really had the manpower or the know-how to keep the mines operating, so whole area just returned to nature. These days it's a really strange landscape of jagged orange cliffs and pinnacles jutting out of lush green vegetation, and it's bizarre to think that the site is almost entirely man-made.

    First stop was the mirador (viewpoint) which gives a great view across the whole area, then we headed down into the valley for a walk around amongst the rocks. Had a bite of lunch in the carpark (we'd brought baguettes, jamon y queso from the supermarket), then set off for a four kilometre loop through the park. Was great to see the rocks jutting up above, as well as large caves set into the cliffs.

    One of our main primary sources of knowledge about the operation comes from a famous Roman called Pliny the Younger, who was a procurator (essentially a mayor) of the area at the time. One of his writings mentioned how the workers in the mines don't see sunlight for weeks, which is a bit harrowing! There's one tunnel you can go inside, so we doubled-over and scrambled through. Interesting to see, and makes you very glad it's not your lot in life!

    After our decent walk we stopped in a cafe near the car park hoping for a relaxing drink, but a lot of screaming toddlers and noisy families meant it was fairly unpleasant. So back to the car, where we headed for our accommodation, this time staying the spare room of a family's large farmhouse outside the town of Cacabelos. It was a little odd staying with a family (mum, dad and one of their two daughters - the other was on a school excursion in London), particularly since they didn't speak much English and we don't speak much Spanish.

    But they did give us a good tip for a restaurant in town where we went for dinner. Very rustic style building, with a huge fire, large stone walls and wooden beams on the ceiling. Lots of hearty, earthy food traditional to the area, Galicia. Shandos had a dish of ribs and oxtail, while I had a fried goat's cheese and an empanada of mince and potato (normally these are deep-fried sort of like pasties, but this was more like a pie!). Very delicious.

    Back to our house where we had some stilted conversation with the family before going to bed.
    Okumaya devam et

  • Gün 46

    Day 46: Monuments of Oviedo

    2 Nisan 2017, Ispanya ⋅ ⛅ 11 °C

    Had breakfast with our host family, then headed out onto the road again, heading northwards this time. Long drive first up, as our destination for the day was the city of Oviedo, where there are some early Christian monuments that are quite significant (and World Heritage listed, of course).

    We drove for about 2 1/2 hours to the first spot south of Oviedo. Very beautiful drive through mountains, with rugged peaks, snow caps, cloud tops and alpine lakes. Here we found a tiny little church perched on a hillside in a dramatic location surrounded by mountains. The history here is interesting, because starting in the 8th century the Iberian peninsula (Spain and Portugal) was almost completely conquered by Muslims, and although Christians were allowed to continue practicing, they were heavily taxed and had inferior treatment to Muslims.

    The only area to resist conquest was a mountainous area along the northern coastline, the kingdom of Asturias where the city of Oviedo is located. So the monuments here are quite significant, as it's the only place in Iberia where Christians could freely practice for several hundred years.

    The first church dated from around 850 AD, and was very different to the typical Roman Catholic crucifix floor plan we're used to. This was rectangular, small, and very bare with just a few carvings for decoration. Took some video then got back into the car, crossed through the city and visited the next two sites on the northern side. These were similar but different in interesting ways, such as one being a converted "palace" (very small), and the other being in the crucifix shape despite dating from the same era, approx 850 AD. Also had a spot of lunch at a restaurant here with a great view, on a high hill overlooking the whole city.

    Afterwards we went down into town for a look at the Cathedral, which isn't actually listed but is built on the site of an earlier temple that is listed, as part of the original building still remains. Unfortunately it was closed on Sundays for worship, so we might come back tomorrow.

    Headed to our apartment which turned out to be a gem - on the eighth/top floor of the building, very sunny and with nice views in two directions. Only 500 metres walk from the cathedral, and with a parking space downstairs that we didn't need as we got a perfect park directly out front. Schnitzel quite likes elevators too so he was happy going up and down.

    Although we didn't feel like it, we ended up going out for dinner as all the supermarkets here close on Sundays and we had no supplies for dinner. Found a highly rated place nearby where I had a burger with blue cheese and bacon, while Shandos had a tostada, which is exactly what you think it is. Hers was topped with prawns, garlic and cheese - both delicious.

    The local speciality here is cider, and although we haven't seen any orchards particularly, it's all grown locally. We ordered a bottle and did things the local way - you have to leave the fluid in the bottle until you're ready to drink, so you pour a couple of mouthfuls into your glass (from as high up as you can safely manage), drink them and then put the bottle back on the table. Interesting cultural experience! It certainly explained the odd drinking behaviour we'd seen at lunchtime!!

    Glad that we've got a great apartment here, as tomorrow is a day off from touring and filming, we'll just be settled in doing blog posts, journal entries and video editing.
    Okumaya devam et

  • Gün 47

    Day 47: Time Out in Oviedo

    3 Nisan 2017, Ispanya ⋅ ⛅ 12 °C

    A day off from travelling today, though not a day for relaxing! Spent most of the morning on Skype with family, but then spent the rest of the afternoon writing and editing video. One of the downsides of travelling fairly quickly to all these World Heritage places is that I suddenly develop a very large backlog of places that need video!

    But I managed to get four done over the course of the day, so I caught up a bit. Just in time to visit a couple more tomorrow!

    Otherwise very little to report. Had a supermarket pizza for dinner which I accidentally burned the crap out of while waiting for the timer to go off. Thankfully a supermarket with replacement pizzas was only a few minutes walk away!
    Okumaya devam et

  • Gün 48

    Day 48: Across to Bilbao

    4 Nisan 2017, Ispanya ⋅ ⛅ 14 °C

    Time to move on again, and another busy day - a double UNESCO day. Lots of sites in a fairly small area here up on Spain's northern coastline, so it was proving to be a busy couple of weeks.

    We left the apartment around 10:30am and started our 2 hour drive eastwards to the first stop - the Altamira Caves. This is a large cave complex where paleolithic paintings were discovered in the late 19th century. Most of the paintings are between 15,000 and 35,000 years old and they're absolutely incredible! Vivid colours, excellent representations (mostly of animals like deer, horses, cows and the now-extinct bison), and the artists had even used the contours of the rocks in the ceiling to create depth effects on their paintings.

    Unfortunately for us though, the visit wasn't so great. You aren't allowed into the actual cave any more (it's been shut for tourists since the 1980s for obvious conservation reasons), but they've created a big museum and a supposedly perfect replica of the caves right next door. That was cool enough, but for some reason you aren't allowed to film or photograph inside the cave replica either! So it's going to be a pretty crappy video for my channel.

    Neither of us were particularly impressed either that the entire museum was packed with hundreds of misbehaving schoolkids - young children being young children, ten year olds mucking around and screaming, and noisy teenagers being typical shits. It was really awful. Probably the most disappointed we've been in a UNESCO site so far I think. I get that it's important cultural heritage and that it's important for kids to see it, but they needed to be kept in line more, and maybe not bring hundreds through at the same time?

    Back to the car, where we drove further eastwards to the city of Bilbao, the capital of Basque country. It's very different here to the rest of Spain, as most of the signs are in Basque first and then Spanish second, lots of Basque flags around and the countryside is different as well. Pine trees and green farmlands, rather than hot and dry olive groves you'd usually associate with Spain.

    Our second site for the day was the Vizcaya Bridge, a huge gondola bridge spanning the river just north of Bilbao. It's a marvel of industrial age engineering, 50 metres high and a couple of hundred metres long. In the late 19th century the locals needed a bridge to cross the river, but they couldn't build a low bridge because of all the maritime traffic coming in and out of Bilbao. They couldn't build a high bridge because it would require ramps and a lot of money, plus the space needed would mean knocking down huge swathes of the towns on either bank.

    So they came up with a gondola bridge! It's essentially a tall suspension bridge, except instead of a road deck, it has a gondola suspended from high steel cables that slides back and forth between either bank. These days it only fits six cars, a few motorbikes and a bunch of pedestrians, but in the horse & cart days it must've been very useful!

    We spent a couple of hours here admiring and crossing - walked across the top catwalk and then came back on the gondola. I think it's the newest heritage site we've been to so far, and very impressive. Interesting to see it on the same day as one of the oldest we've been to! And the first one in the category of "industrial sites" - very different to the usual medieval, religious and Roman sites we've seen.

    Late afternoon we drove down to Bilbao and our accommodation. In a good spot right in the centre of town, sixth floor apartment with district views I guess. Only downside was no grass or trees nearby for Schnitzel to relieve himself on!

    We headed straight out into the city for a walk around, exploring the old town (mostly 17th century) and following the river around to the city's main attraction these days, the Guggenheim Art Museum. It had just closed, but we were planning on visiting tomorrow.

    For dinner we headed back to one of the main squares to check out the big culinary attraction - pintxos (pronounced pinch-os). These are basically fancy little bar snacks that you order with a drink, the idea being you just order a few of these with a drink, enjoy them and then head to another bar. Sort of like tapas but these are straight off the bar, rather than ad-hoc from the kitchen.

    We visited one of the highly rated ones and had some great stuff - chicken yakitori skewer, baguette with sausage, a few different types of croquettes and bacalod (codfish) of course. Very tasty! Good that Schnitzel was welcome to join us inside as well, he sat on the floor and was very well behaved. Last stop was around the corner from our apartment where we had a slice of cake and a coffee/hot chocolate.

    Back to the apartment very tired but looking forward to exploring more of the city!
    Okumaya devam et

  • Gün 49

    Day 49: Guggenheim Museum

    5 Nisan 2017, Ispanya ⋅ ⛅ 12 °C

    No UNESCO for today! Only thing we had planned was to visit the Guggenheim museum, one of the city's key attractions. We headed there fairly early, about 10:15am and just after it opened. Quite a few different things to see! It's entirely modern art, from about 1910 onwards. Lots of works by well-known modern artists including Picasso, Warhol, Basquiat, Pollock and others.

    Stopped briefly for a spot of lunch in the museum cafe around lunchtime, fairly expensive for what it was but not too bad I guess. Kept going after lunch through the Abstract Expressionism gallery which was quite interesting, but unfortunately I had to leave around 2pm as our Mercedes finally needed to go back to the depot. We'd tried to extend the rental further but Avis have a maximum 30 day duration, making us out of luck.

    So off to the airport I went! Thankfully only a 30 minute drive, and relatively painless to get in and out of the rental office. But the best part was that when I mentioned to the car return girl that I was picking up another car, she asked if I wanted to keep the Mercedes! Uhh, yes! So after about 15 minutes of paperwork and signatures I drove back out of the same car park in the same car! Funny how these things work out sometimes. Lucky too, since I'd forgotten I needed to fill it with fuel before returning it.

    Met Shandos back at our apartment where we relaxed for the next few hours before heading out for dinner later on. People eat a bit earlier here than in other parts of Spain, the whole idea of heading out at 11pm doesn't seem to happen as much. Maybe because of the colder weather? Kitchens still often don't open until 8pm, but there's always pintxos a la barre (at the bar) to snack on before you can have pintxos calientes (hot).

    We visited 3 different spots and had a couple at each, along with a drink. Afterwards we were hoping for dessert at the same bar as last night, but alas they weren't doing coffee and we didn't feel like having another alcoholic beverage, so we found a gelato place that sold cakes and coffee and perched up. Schnitzel is very welcome everywhere here too, unlike other parts of Spain. Portugal just seemed to have a blanket ban on dogs in indoor dining areas, but unless it's a nice restaurant here nobody seems bothered. People are less uptight about it as well, if he barks he startles people but you don't get the endless filthy glances like in Australia.

    Back home to bed before another travel day tomorrow, our days in Bilbao are at an end!
    Okumaya devam et

  • Gün 50

    Day 50: San Sebastian

    6 Nisan 2017, Ispanya ⋅ ☀️ 14 °C

    Another UNESCO free day today! Not that I'm looking forward to them particularly, but they do tend to take up a lot of time! We hung around in Bilbao for a while at the apartment before setting off around 11am. Today we were heading eastwards towards the French border, and the famous seaside resort town of San Sebastian. First stop was a lookout over an island called San Juan de Gaztelugatxe.

    Beautiful little spot, overlooking a tiny with a monastery and a dramatic man-made bridge across to it. Considered walking down and across to it, but the cliffs were quite steep and neither Schnitzel nor I felt super up for it. Settled for the viewpoint instead and a couple of pintxos at the nearby restaurant.

    Back on the road for the 90 minutes across to San Sebastian, which for the last hundred or so years has been a hot-spot for rich European vacationers and fancy restaurants. Apparently it has more Michelin stars per capita than anywhere else in Europe! All very expensive places though, so we'd be passing on that but hoping the cuisine has trickled down to more affordable places!

    Checked into our apartment with no problems, and we've got a great spot high on the cliff above the bay. Since the beach view apartment was unoccupied for tonight, they let us upgrade for a tiny charge which was nice. Enjoyed the view briefly before heading out to meet our local guide at 4pm.

    Shandos had arranged for a "locals on tap" tour around the city through Intrepid, and after about a 25 minute walk around the bay we met our guide Tomas. Although not a native here, his wife was from a nearby town and they'd lived here for a few years. We walked around for an hour, him explaining the history of the town and the culture of Basque country, as well as showing us some great places to eat.

    After he departed we crossed the river to the ocean beach where quite a few people were out surfing! Hard to believe, as the water must've been very cold. Air temperatures are around 15 degrees, though it feels quite nice in the sunshine. Lucky for us, Thursday is "pintxo poté" night; essentially happy hour where you get a drink and a pintxo from the bar for 2 euros at most venues. So we cruised around and visited a whole bunch of places picking and choosing!

    The most common thing here seems to be creamy mashed seafood (crab, codfish, octopus etc) on a slice of baguette bread, but you can get plenty of other things too. The most unusual things we had were octopus stewed in squid ink (delicious, and surprisingly sweet), and I had the "first ever" pintxo created, known as the Hilda after a Rita Hayworth character. It's a skewer with an olive, an anchovy, and a pickled chilli pepper. Tomas had recommended it even though I don't like olives, don't like anchovies and don't particularly enjoy pickled chillies either, but it was actually really good! The anchovy was totally different to what I expected, crunchy rather than the stale crap from a can I've had in the past.

    Last stop for the night was a place where they bake giant cheesecakes on the tables in front of you, so we had a portion (three large slices) along with coffees before staggering back home very full. Just in time to discover how high on the cliff our apartment was - 241 stairs up, I counted! Then up a short shallow hill, another 15 stairs into the building, plus of course another 20 stairs inside to our room. Feel the burn!
    Okumaya devam et