Spain
Facultad derecho

Discover travel destinations of travelers writing a travel journal on FindPenguins.
Travelers at this place
    • Day 66

      Granada

      June 5, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C

      Früh am Morgen ging es los zu einem schönen, vor allem aber langen Tagesausflug nach Granada in Andalusien ... die Alhambra muss aber noch ein paar Jahre auf uns warten.
      Wir haben uns stattdessen von zwei handlesenden Damen Geld abzocken lassen (voll aggressiv die Mädels), ich habe mir eine Hippi-Büx gekauft und dann geht's wieder nach Santa Pola 😀Read more

    • Day 197

      Granada

      February 10 in Spain ⋅ ☁️ 8 °C

      🇩🇪
      Nun ist meine erste Reise alleine gestartet. Ich war schon ein bisschen aufgeregt am Anfang, aber mein erstes Hostel war super cool und ich habe gleich am ersten Abend beim Familiendinner sehr nette Leute kennengelernt! Die Alhambra war absolut atemberaubend und es war sehr schön meine Kindheitserinnerungen an dieses Ort aufzufrischen. Leider hat es die anderen Tage sehr viel geregnet, aber Naomi und ich haben es uns gut gehen lassen in einer Teteria. Abends waren wir lecker Tapas essen mit ein paar Leuten aus dem Hostel.
      🇺🇲
      Now I started my first trip alone. I was a bit nervous at the beginning, but my first hostel was super social and I met very nice people at the family dinner on the first evening! The Alhambra was absolutely breathtaking and it was lovely to refresh my childhood memories of this place. Unfortunately it rained a lot the other days, but Naomi and I had a good time in a Teteria. In the evening we had a delicious tapas meal with a few people from the hostel.
      Read more

    • Day 6

      Travel Day to Granada

      June 21, 2021 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 21 °C

      A short two hour train ride through olive groves. Oh, the nostalgia, I always love walking through olive groves when on camino. Some people find them boring, but I just love them. Riding on a train through olive groves just isn’t the same. I couldn’t even do my normal loud camino rendition of Andaluces de Jaén, a song by Paco Ibañez of a slightly subversive poem by Miguel Hernández. I love it and sing it every time I walk in an olive grove!

      It was a nice walk down promenades from the train station to our hotel, which is on the Gran Vía. It’s in the Renaissance monastery of Santa Paula. Great location, very comfortable. Good fitness center. :-) The reception guy was very nice and put us in a room in the old part overlooking the courtyard. When I told him it was great except for the step up to the bathroom (night-time fall alert went off), he put us in an even nicer little suite with a similar view. No complaints.

      Joe decided to nap on arrival, since he hadn’t been able to sleep in till his normal decadent wake-up time. And his stomach was a bit off. So I went to exercise and walk around a bit. I thought that Fanta de Limón would be just the thing for an upset stomach, and once again I was transported back to the camino. It’s my favorite post-walking refreshment, nowhere near as sweet as US soft drinks.

      After a quick lunch, we walked up to the Mirador San Nicolás, the iconic viewing spot in the Albaicin (moorish quarter) back over the Alhambra. Dinner in the hotel, nothing great, but it’s convenient. Temps are still ridiculously low, and the sun is brilliant. So lucky.
      Read more

    • Day 8

      La Etapa Reina

      June 23, 2021 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

      On every camino, there is the Etapa Reina, the jewel stage of the route. Though I’m not walking, there’s no doubt that the Alhambra is just that.

      We took a little bus up at about 9, and got right in. Six and a half hours later we were on our way out, walking back to town on the shady pedestrian path with babbling water never far away. I had brought some fruit and yoghurt in my bag, but as we were eating breakfast in a cafe, the grandma brought out some freshly made empanadas. Tuna with sun-dried tomatoes. I brought two along and we found a beautiful (if not totally legal) picnic spot in the gardens.

      There are four separate sections and to enter each one you have to show your passport. At the entrance to the Generalife (summer palace), I witnessed Spanish bureaucracy at its finest. Two young people, from Hungary I think, got up to the gate. Each one has a passport and a ticket in hand. But oh no, the bureaucrat says— both tickets say “Ella Blabla” but only one of the passports has that name. Ella spoke up —I guess I put my name on both tickets when I bought them online, but you can see that the passport numbers correspond to the two of us. Oh but I’m sorry, says the guard, this is impossible. So after a few minutes back and forth, finally the guard calls his superior and explains the whole thing two or three times with much emotion and consternation. The line gets longer and longer. Finally, just as we always knew would happen, the guard waves his arm in a huge arc and says—pasen Uds. I love Spain!

      Rather than describe the many incredibly beautiful rooms, patios, and gardens, I’ll just add some pictures. And a popular refrain — Give alms to the beggar, sir, for there is no pain worse than being blind in Granada.
      Read more

    • Day 9

      Last Day in Granada

      June 24, 2021 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

      We took a local bus up to the Cartuja Monastery, with its overabundant, over-the-top roccoco church and chapel. One Spanish architecture professor is reputed to have described it as a “motionless architectural earthquake.” Pretty good. The information I read suggests that perhaps the order wanted to outdo the Alhambra. I don’t know anything about the Carthusian order, but I do know that the Camino Francés also has a Monasterio Cartujo - de Miraflores in Burgos.

      The monastery used to be on the outskirts of town, but now the University of Granada has a whole modern campus up there. It was fun to walk around. Back downtown in early afternoon, we decided to go to the Capilla Real to see where Fernando and Isabel are buried. I hadn’t remembered the anecdote about the very elaborate statuary showing them lying in state up on the floor above the alleged tombs. Her head sinks more deeply into the pillow than his, perhaps a nod to her superior intellect and “heavier brain.” Who knows.

      We won’t leave Granada without one more trip up to the Albaicín (moorish quarter) to see the Alhambra from afar in the late afternoon sun. And one more dinner in one more lovely little plaza somewhere. The food has not been great, but totally fine. I would take mediocre food in such a gorgeous setting anyday!

      Bus to Málaga tomorrow!

      Note to self: Make sure husband’s cap is affixed to his head. But hey, he walked 7 miles today!
      Read more

    • Day 160

      Granada

      March 5, 2019 in Spain ⋅ ⛅ 15 °C

      V Granadě jsme strávili velmi intenzivní týden, měli jsme skvělé zázemí u Honzi s Mončou v úchvatným domku v Monachillu, trénovali jsme hike & fly pod Sierra Nevadou, zažili perfektní letecké podmínky, vypili kávu v nejvíc hipsterske kavárně ve Španělsku a obdivovali Alhambru se zasněženými kopci v pozadí alespoň z vyhlídky nad městem. Připravujeme se na letní sezónu: koupili jsme si nové plavky a doplnili naši domácnost o venkovní stůl.Read more

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Facultad derecho, Юридический факультет

    Join us:

    FindPenguins for iOSFindPenguins for Android