Posts Tagged ‘holiday’

Victoria, BC

August 31st, 2009

bearWe’ve arrived the day before yesterday, after what felt like the longest day of my life – probably was, too, with 24 consecutive hours of day. After our flight, we took the Pacific Coach bus to Victoria. First sightings of awe-inspiring nature on our ferry ride over to Vancouver Island.

The first impression of this place: a land of plenty. Large sky, large trees, lots of nature, wide streets, the portions on our plate are enormous and surprisingly tasty, with lots of fresh produce. People, surprisingly, are not that large – they seem to compensate for the food bonanza with a more outdoorsy lifestyle.

Weather, so far, is excellent: 20 degrees, sunny and breezy. Tomorrow An and I leave for the West Coast Trail. Friends who did it in july had 3 solid days of rain (the sheets of water kind), so we pray the rain god will keep his truck well away.

We bought everything we thought we needed. We are pretty inexperienced in this kind of large treks, so we might have missed something – I expect we’ll have to learn some things the hard way. I’m about to google ‘how to hang your food up a tree’.

OK, well, wish me luck … update in 7 days or so.

Algarve the end

January 16th, 2009

Last night I ended up going out for a few drinks with Sébastien the french surfer, after all. Turns out there are quite a few surfers at the hostel: seems like the wind makes for more interesting waves in the winter.

They drive out to the atlantic coast – though i must say that there seem to be more waves and tides out here than on your average mediterranean beach.

Anyhow, the drinks and one too many of those dynamite coffees they serve here made for a restless night.

This morning I decided to walk west along the coast to join Luz. Coincidentally, Luz is also the luxury beach resort where a little english girl, Madeline, disappeared last year (or so a guy from Leeds, an avid tabloid reader apparently, said).

After a few Indiana Jones type sequences (wading through red clay, and then climbing up narrow stairs up a cliff – no security – with muddy shoes – DON’T look down) I decided that I was on holiday, and took the bus back to Lagos.

There I had a walk on the exceedingly flat and unadventurous beach of white sand called Meia Praia. This beach must be hell in summer, but today there was no sign of human presence.

Tomorrow I go back home through Faro. It’s been a bit of a short one, but enough to be a nice break.

Next: visiting a ski station in the height of summer. But wait, I’ve done that already.

Laag’sh

January 15th, 2009

Lagos cliffs(Lagos) I took the train to Lagos – which afforded me a look on the Algarve countryside. The deep red earth, vegetation dusty green at this time of year. Almond trees blossoming, orange trees, some palm trees, lots of bushes.

Lagos itself is a tidy little tourist town, which manages to retain a low concentration of tourists even at this time of year. I think there must be a high proportion of british, based on the number of indian restaurants, and the fact that the first person who spoke to me had a Geordie accent.

I checked into the local youth hostel, and then left for a long walk around the coast.

Sunny day, deserted cliffs and beaches, a pastel de nata in my bag – enough to have me happy as a clam. I walked along the cliffs for a few hours.

Today it started raining. I pursued my first plan, which was to go to the Cabo de Sao Vicente. I was alone in the bus. The Cabo is a rocky cliff topped by a lighthouse, pretty scenic. But well, the weather was bad, and i didn’t see any obvious walking paths, so i went back to the bus after exchanging some words with local fishermen.

But instead of going back to Laag’sh, i got on with plan B, which was to walk from Salema to Burgau – several people had told me it was a very scenic walk.

Do you sometimes come up with a plan, that you realize is not such a bright idea, but you push on anyway, because fuck it (or other such rational explanations) ? Well, this was one of those.

So i got off at Salema. It was raining. I started the walk with no other walking equipment than good walking shoes and a bag of honey-flavoured cakes (thank god for those).

It turned out to be quite a trek along the cliffs. The red earth has a good proportion of clay, which makes it slippery when wet. Sometimes i mistook a small dried-up stream for a path.

I had to cross a small river (boots off and hoping nobody had chucked in any beer bottles). I met with a sheep and goat herd, and matching herder – energetic business, a lot of shouting and whistling (i tried to record the soundscape with my iPhone, the herder, the bells, the sheep bleating). I passed an abandoned shack with noises inside, and didn’t stop to investigate.

The rain kept on going. I was soaked through but kept warm by moving. Nobody else on the trail at all, which was fine, but if I’d slipped, it would have taken a long time for anyone to find me (well, except if my danish roommate had worried).

I ended up in Burgau, finally, and had to wait 20 minutes for the bus, while chatting with a local road worker – amazing how far you can get with some spanish, place names and gestures.

Anyhow, i was frozen by the time i got back to the hostel. Now it’s a hhhhot shower and dry clothes later, but i can’t imagine I’ll be doing much more today.

Great, this quiet, the waves, the birds, the smell of juniper, herbs and the sea. I could get used to this, although a little sunshine wouldn’t go amiss.

Faro

January 14th, 2009

Faro, capital of Algarve, Portugal, is of the dirty-pretty-poor kind. Think Cuba with newer cars. I did escape winter, as planned: it’s not exactly warm, but there’s a certain mildness in the air I associate with April. Bringing my bathing suit and sandals might have been a tad optimistic. Orange trees – with oranges – in the town square.

Whereas in Belgium most people are small (relatively speaking), here everyone is tiny. I get the blond giant feeling I usually experience when traveling in Asian countries.

So far the traveling alone has worked out: striking up interesting conversations with people I’ll never meet again – the retired couple coming to spend the rest of the winter here, people from Minesota escaping their harsh winter (-15C), the french party girl, the South Corean loner.

Portuguese people are really warm and friendly so far – refreshing after the strenuous belgian attitude to service. Almost a shame Portuguese men are so small (height-wise, before anyone says something smart).

They also seem to be living outside (the men) – group of older men talking on benches, playing at what looks to be a card game. Groups of young men looking bored.

I indulged in my favourite passtime when on holiday: getting lost. This is something I have a natural talent for – but proved to be pretty hard in this small coastal town. I pretty much criss-crossed the whole place in 3 or 4 hours.

There are no tourists, the town is dead. The old city (vila adentro) is cute and well-kept, bright colors and azulejo’s, but the rest of the town is on the wrong side of dingy. Discussions with fellow hostel guest revealed that Faro is really a place where people land, but don’t stay in. The hostel itself is half-empty, and the receptionist laughed when I asked if i could book friday night.

So tomorrow (today at the time of posting) i take the train to Lagos (“Lagosh”). Lagos has lots of beaches, and is close to Cabo Sao Vicente, the west-southernmost point of Europe.

Reset

July 5th, 2008

My week on the Isle of Oleron: great weather, blue skies, sea breezes keeping the temperatures to loveably warm. The aromatic smells of mediterranean vegetation competing with brine and sea weed from the coast. Long trips around the island on rented bikes, swimming in the sea, eating fresh foods in the garden.

It’s still possible to be sad there, but it’s much harder to sustain for any lenght of time. Lots of light is good for the soul (even with factor 50 sun block twice a day).
Isle of Oleron

The Age of the Guitar Builder is over for me. Seven years of perpetual storm ended up in us both concluding that we might be happier apart. To our credit, the ending was very civilized – no cheating, no entangled property, no children. Almost as if we knew deep down that it would come to this.

I expected to fall apart, but in fact i’m mostly stunned. There’s a whole area of my brain that needs reconfigured: the part wondering what he would like for dinner, worrying about him or asking him where i’d left my keys.

On the bright side, now nobody will complain if i install FreeBSD on a spare computer, if i hoard old pieces of hardware, or if i prepare dishes containing olives, anchovies, chicories, rabbit, corn, sweet and savoury combinations. See ? there’s always a bright side to everything.


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