Portugal
Jardim do Ultramar

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    • Day 5

      Day 4 in Lisbon

      April 22, 2017 in Portugal ⋅ ☀️ 70 °F

      So, each day gets tougher to get out of bed, but by God we did it! Hiked up a few small hills to a Farmer's Market, where we bought some bread and cheese and then ate at a small restaurant in this pretty little park next to the market. Afterwards, we headed out for a 10 minute walk to a metro stop, where we jumped the metro for two stops to a train station where we were going to catch a bus to the Tile Museum (Tiles are definitely a big time Portgugese thing). After waiting around for a bit, it suddenly dawned on me that perhaps we were on the wrong side of the station! Sure enough, whipping out Google Maps and studying that little arrow which shows which direction.the Tile Museum lies revealed our error! So we went to the other side and after about a 20 minute wait , the bus showed up and we jumped on it for the mile ride to the museum.

      Got off, explored - = actually petty good! Had some ham and cheese sandwiches and then the plan was to head towards Belem where the Jerónimos Monastery
      https://goo.gl/maps/6fc5g56vcYS2 lies along with those world famous custard pastries (ok, so you haven't heard of them, but you should - scrumptious - we had already had a few, but these were warm and served with powdered sugar and cinammon! But I digress! First of all we decided we didn't want to wait for an hour for a bus to come by, so I whipped out my Uber app, requested a driver and within 2 minutes he pulled up. 10 minutes later we were at our destination. Great guy - nice Mercedes. We then jumped on the 15E tram using our Zap cards which we had just refilled (refillable Metro cards). Note - zap cards can't be refilled in the Metro in Lisbon with Visa cards - won't take them. We kept using cards and wondering what the hell was going wrong - well, had it confirmed later by a shop clerk.

      Waited on the tram for Belem - the sign said it would show up in 25 minutes - everybody is standing in the sun. It gets down to 4 minutes and then suddenly it jumps back up to 23 minutes. People were getting a bit crazy by then. It finally shows up and we pack on like little sardines (a Portuguese thing) . Totally smashed for the 30 minute ride. Fiinally make it to the monastery - impressive! Sprawls over about 3 blocks. Interior is amazing as is the church. Definitely a must see in Lisbon. Headed over afterwards to see the monument "Age of Discoveries" (built in 1960) on the water dedicated to Vasco de Gama and his explorers - Awesome memorial - starting to wear out, backtrack to the pastry shop we had heard so much about - world famous custard tarts - oh boy , were they good - warm - slightly crunchy crust - dang - consumed 4 between us and took 6 to go. (for a video by Rick Steves on Portugal and how these are made , see this https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KYh4SiuFvsc Back to the tram, we caught one of the old fashioned ones - again packed - nice thing about this one was that it didn't stop at any of the 14 stops on the way back to Lisbon - too full. So we got back fairly quickly. Spent a 1/2 hour in a Lisbon souvenir shop, then took a 10 minute stroll north towards our apt with a sidetrack to a Rick Steves recommended little hole in the wall where I had a Bifana sandwich (marinated pork - another Portuguese speciality) and Janet had Monkfish stew with rice. Oh , did I say I had a half bottle of Portugal red wine? Do you know how hard it is to type this at 10:45 after a half bottle?

      So tomorrow - we're heading to the airport on the metro bright and early where we are going to pick up our little ECAR to head south to the southern coast of Portugal and 2 nights in Lagos. Should be interesting adventure.!
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    • Day 128

      Lissabon

      November 2, 2021 in Portugal ⋅ ⛅ 16 °C

      Um 7.00 Uhr machen wir unsere Wäsche (beim Aufhängen müssen wir erfinderisch sein🙈). Danach erkundet Martina den Stadtteil Belém joggend, während Müggi im Zimmer trainiert.
      Den Morgen nehmen wir etwas ruhig, denn Erschöpfung macht sich bei beiden bemerkbar. 😏😬

      Am Mittag laufen wir dann zu der Tramstation in der Nähe unseres Hostels.
      Dort fahren wir mit der Nummer 15E direkt ins Stadtzentrum von Lissabon.
      Leider beginnt es zu regnen, als wir aussteigen. 🥲 Dieses Wetter hält unglücklicherweise den ganzen Tag an.
      Wir erkunden die ganze Stadt zu Fuss. Auf eine Fahrt mit dem berühmten Tram Nr. 28 verzichten wir, denn dieses ist gestossen voll. Wir schlendern durch das härzige Alfama-Viertel. Dieses Quartier wurde ursprünglich von der Unterschicht besiedelt. Es wurde 1755 kaum durch das Erdbeben in Mitleidenschaft gezogen. So ist das Gewirr der engen Gassen und Treppenstufen bis heute erhalten. Typisch für diesen Stadtteil sind die portugiesischen Restaurants mit der berühmten Fado-Musik.
      Auch der Elevador de Santa Justa ist imposant.
      Dieser verbindet seit über 100 Jahren die beiden Stadtteile Baixo und Chiado, die eine Höhendifferenz von 8m haben. Früher wurde dieser Lift mit Dampfmaschinen, heute durch einen Elektromotor angetrieben. Auch besuchen wir das Panteão Nacional sowie die Kathedrale der Stadt. Zudem marschieren wir zum Castelo de São Jorge. Und von dort hinunter zur Rua Augusta (die ,Bahnhofstrasse' von Lissabon) und durch das gleichnamige imposante Arco (Tor).
      Wir entscheiden uns, den Rückweg zu Fuss in Angriff zu nehmen, denn wir möchten das auf dem Weg liegende Industrieviertel LXFactory anschauen. Nach 55 Minuten erreichen wir dieses und sind froh, unseren Beinen dort eine Pause in einem cozy Café zu gönnen.
      Von dort aus gehts wieder etwa 35 Minuten nach Belém zurück. Wir werden auf jenem letzten Abschnitt so richtig verschifft und von Autos bespritzt. 💧☔🌧
      Als Belohnung für die 22'500 Schritte holt sich Müggi das bekannte Dessert von hier, das Pastéis de Belém (5 Minuten von unserer Unterkunft). 🍮
      Scheinbar ist diese Bäckerei die älteste, die dieses Gebäck herstellt, das heute in ganz Portugal zum Kaffee serviert wird. Lediglich 4 Leute kennen das Rezept.

      Müde kochen wir das Znacht und lassen den Abend mit einer Netflix Serie ausklingen.

      Ps: Übrigens werden wir oft von zwielichten Männern angesprochen, die Marihuana verticken wollen. 😡
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    • Day 5

      Jardiim Botanico Tropical -Belam

      June 10, 2018 in Portugal ⋅ ⛅ 17 °C

      Left the cloister at 5 and had a quick bite to eat. Nice little cafe/coffee shop next to the botanical garden where we had a Toastee (grilled sandwich) and wrap, apple desert and 2 espressos. It started to mist while she were outside so we moved in as did everyone else that was out on the patio.

      The botanical garden was just kitty corner to the monastery. It was a bit run down, not quite as bad as the cuban botanical garden, but in some ways similar.

      Lots of Palms, some that were dying unfortunately.

      There was a section on Macao as that was a Portuguese colony. so many familiar asian species, Viburnum, Honeysuckle, Mahonia,

      There was a grevillia tree that was over 100 feet tall.......I have a grevillia in a 1 gal pot in the green house.

      Parts of the garden were no longer open to the public, the old nursery.

      The old glass house had plants in it, but many many broken panes, and It looked like the lost gardens of Heligan.....

      There was the old palace too and an interesting hard instillation of hammocks. probably around 12 hammocks and lots of people resting in them. It was a Brazilian, portugal joint instillation.
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    • Day 16

      Al Fama district

      November 4, 2016 in Portugal ⋅ ⛅ 68 °F

      The rain stopped just when we had to get off the bus again.

      The Al Fama district is the old Moorish and Jewish quarter. It was built outside the city walls, on the bank of the river. As the city walls expanded, the district got squeezed smaller and smaller to the point where the buildings are so small, the second (and higher) stories extend out a little bit to grab every square inch of space that they can.Read more

    • Day 104

      Belém

      December 27, 2017 in Portugal ⋅ ⛅ 15 °C

      Für heute haben wir uns das Örtchen Belém, einem Vorort Lissabons ausgesucht.

      Wir schlendern entlang des Ufers des Rio Téjo und schauen uns das Jéronimo-Kloster, sowie den Torre de Belém und das Padrão dos Descombrimentos an.Read more

    • Day 74

      Tributes and Treats in Belem

      March 14, 2018 in Portugal ⋅ 🌧 13 °C

      When we finished touring the Monastery, we carried on with our sightseeing despite the light rainfall. We walked about 15 minutes to the riverfront where there is a 170 foot tall stone monument called “the Monument to the Discoveries”. The ships departed from here in the 15th and 16th centuries so this was to commemorate the “Age of Discovery” and the 500th anniversary of the death of Henry the Navigator. Down the river we could faintly see through the mist to the National Sanctuary of Christ the King, a monument rising 240 feet to overlook the city. It was erected in gratitude because the Portuguese people were spared any effects of World War II.

      It was time for a break. Another short walk away was the restaurant, Pasteis de Belém, which is known for originating the Portuguese egg tart pastry. Since 1837 they have been making these tarts by hand using an ancient, secret recipe from the Monastery. This tasty pastry is sold everywhere in Portugal and John has tried many variations, surely raising his cholesterol with each bite. Lunch was good as was the tart that is served warm at the end of your meal.

      I wanted to take the trolley back to central Lisbon but John wasn’t feeling adventurous and was sure we would get lost. He’s generally been getting better at trusting my knowledge of the public transit systems wherever we have gone, but on this day he wasn’t taking any chances, so we returned by the same bus that brought us here.
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    • Day 16

      pastry and church

      November 4, 2016 in Portugal ⋅ ⛅ 64 °F

      Then we went and got a special pastry made only at this one shop in Lisbon. There is a very similar version sold everywhere else, but this one shop has the original recipe they bought from the monks who created it. They sell tens of thousands of these every day.

      Then we stopped at this giant church built to care for the sailors coming in and out of the port of Lisbon.
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    • Day 5

      Pastéis de Belém

      September 9, 2021 in Portugal ⋅ ⛅ 26 °C

      Wenn man Belem besucht, darf auch nicht das berühmte Cafe Pastéis der Belém fehlen. Hier wird das originale Rezept des Pastel de Belém (eine Art Strudeltörtchen mit süßer Ei-Creme-Füllung) gebacken. ( Man findet in ganz Lissabon Unmengen an Nachahmungen, besonders in der Altstadt) das Café ist riesig und die Törtchen halten was sie versprechen.Read more

    • Day 5

      Mosteiro dos Jerónimos

      March 5, 2023 in Portugal ⋅ 🌧 14 °C

      Erbaut mit den erlösen aus dem Gewürzhandel und der Sklaverei.
      Sehr stabil gebaut, denn es hat das katrophale Erdbeben von 1755 in Lissabon schadenfrei überstanden

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Jardim do Ultramar

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