Thursday 30 August 2012

Lending a Devastating Hand.............


............When an 80-year-old churchgoer took it upon herself to restore a 19th century fresco of Jesus Christ, she no doubt thought that it was a good idea, the end result, however, has half of Spain howling, either in indignation or in laughter.




........... The plaster portrait in the Sanctuary of Mercy Church in Zaragoza, Spain, is entitled ‘Ecce Homo’ and was painted by Elias Garcia Martinez 120 years ago.

Time had taken its toll and the portrait had begun to crumble owing to damp. No cause for alarm because it was set to be repaired by professionals, thanks to a donation from the artist’s granddaughter.

However, Cecilia Giménez decided to restore the masterpiece herself, even though she is not an artist, and much less an expert at restoration work. So, alarmingly armed with paintbrushes and oil paints she set about ‘restoring’ the portrait. She says that the parish priest knew about it, but both he and the church authorities deny this.

Before the good lady set about turning an image of Christ into the Incredible Hulk, a local Catholic cultural foundation had received a donation from the granddaughter of the artist and motors were revving to returning the fresco to its former glory… and then,  Sra Giménez announced that there was no need as she had already done it…

Now,  this complete and utter disaster,  the fruit of good intentions,  probably would not have reverberated through the International press if the Centro de Estudios Borjanos hadn’t had the bright idea of putting up several photos of the catastrophe on their webpage, with the intention of emphasising the vulnerability of works of art to the passage of time… and 80-year-old ladies with tragic initiative.

The Councillor for Culture for the town, Juan María de Ojeda, said, “The woman, who carried out the restoration work off her own back, has had a difficult life and looks after a 60-year-old handicapped son.”

 That having been said, the Town Hall is considering suing her….
 
 

Wednesday 29 August 2012

'New Hampshire' arrives in Gibraltar........





............A United States nuclear submarine from the American Navy, USS ‘New Hampshire’, with a crew of 160  arrived in Gibraltar last Saturday, causing a further increase in tension between Spain and the Rock.

Officials said the scheduled port stop is to allow the personnel to have some rest and relaxation for a few days.

Monday 27 August 2012

€5m Walkway of Death renovation is grounded



The walkway over the gorge


PLANS to start work on a €5 million reovation of the ‘Caminito del Rey’  have been delayed.
Malaga Provincial Government has withdrawn the €980,000 it planned to provide towards the cost of renovating the world-famous attraction, tagged by many as the ‘Walkway of Death’.

This happened after it became apparant that the Junta de Andalucia, which was supposed to provide an additional €4 million towards the renovations, had not included work on the walkway in the Alora Lake District in its 2012 budget.

The Vice-President of Malaga Provincial Government, Francisca Caracuel, said: “With the current need to boost the economy and send money to Malaga’s towns, I can’t let €980,000 stay in a drawer and lose it next year.” She claimed that this is what happened last year, when the Junta also failed to provide money.

She said it was important to invest the money in projects which can be carried out rather than lose it. Caracuel said that the Caminito del Rey is an ‘emblematic’ project which will benefit Alora and Ardales and that the provincial government will ask the Junta for further funds.

Not only that, Caracuel commented, but the area is dangerous, and four people have died there climbing in the past three years.
The Caminito del Rey has become known throughout the world for its extreme danger, and although it has been closed to the public for years, many climbers continue to risk their lives on the walkway.

Construction of the Caminito finished in 1905 and it was inaugurated by King Alfonso XIII but is now in serious disrepair.


Friday 24 August 2012

The best comic shop in the world is in Madrid, according to Comic Con.....


The Madrid shop, Arika Comics, has won the Oscar equivalent for the comic, the Eisner Prizer, and will be given the award for best shop at the International Comics Convention in San Diego on September 15.




It’s the first time that a Spanish shop has won the award.

The shop is 360mm2 over two floors, and the prize jury said this was more than a large space but had been used to develop new visitors interest in comics.

It’s been in operation for 19 years.

Thursday 23 August 2012

Taking a walk on the wild side through the Sierra Nevada......


High up on the southern slopes of the Sierra Nevada, within easy reach of Granada and the Mediterranean, the landlocked mountainous region offers something for everyone.

It is made up of a cluster of pretty white villages surrounded by forest and open moorland, with some of the best walking in Andalucia.
 So it is little wonder it has become a regular stopping off point for tourists and hikers from around the world.

Lots of the local shops now have guided walk leaflets available, graded by length of time and difficulty.
For those who prefer not to go it alone and to benefit from someone with experience and knowledge of the area, there are several companies that offer guided walks and walking holidays.

Why not try something with a twist, enjoying a painting or herbal walk.
British expat Sue Rodgers, 57, who lives in Lanjaron, has been running herb walks for three years. And English walking guide Martin Riley, – one of Spain’s only official British guides – lives just around the corner.

And with its rich and varied flora – over 2,000 plant species – Andalucia is the ideal place to enjoy a stroll and take a look at the plant life.

The Alpujarras is situated on the GR7, one of the top long distance paths running right across Europe, through Spain and on to Greece. The walk offers an unrivalled landscape of wild flowers, ibex, golden orioles and bee-eaters from a height of between 700 and 1400 metres, while the lesser known GR142 navigates the Alpujarras at a lower level.



Meanwhile for the more ambitious among you, the Sierra Nevada also boasts the highest peak of mainland Spain, Mulhacen, which stands at a towering 3,482m.
According to legend it is the final resting place of a Muslim king and while it is a steep climb, when you reach the top the view makes it all worthwhile.
It offers a spectacular 360 degree vista taking in half of Andalucia and on a clear day, right across to Morocco.

The Sierra Nevada ski centre will open a main Gondola and the Veleta II chair for access to the mountains again this summer from June 26th until August 29th.

These days, of course, as more and more people flock to find the setting of Driving Over Lemons, the western end of the Alpujarras has become increasingly touristy.

So for those who really want to get away from it all it is worth driving further east towards Trevelez where you can enjoy secluded walks over the high sierra to Berchules.




A superb base for a walking holiday is the stunning Hotel Alcazaba de Buquistar, the only four-star hotel in the region.
It lies four kilometres outside of Trevelez, incidentally the highest town in Spain, at a height of 1,700m with stunning views of the surrounding countryside, particular from the vantage point of the summer veranda.
 It boasts traditional Andalucia decor and a wide range of luxury amenities and facilities including a spa and fitness centre with two swimming pools to unwind after a day’s hiking.

Former pilot Tomas Cano, who took over the running of the hotel a year ago, explains: “We get all types of people coming to the hotel, the majority of who have been recommended by word of mouth, but by far the main activity around here is hiking.
“There are several different paths to choose from right from the door and whether you go on horse back, on bike or walking it is a lot of fun.
 “I have fallen in love with the area,” added Cano, who founded Air Europa.
“We are right in the mountains; the nearest town is four kilometres away so you are completely alone.
“It is an amazing spot, I am really happy here.”

www.hotelalcazaba.com


Mostly by Wendy Williams - The Olive Press   7th August 2012


 

Monday 20 August 2012

Just a normal day then.....



For this time of year that is.........




.22 D.I.Y. Rifle.........




The Guardia Civil at the Puerto de Motril arrested a man for being in possession of an illegal weapon.

It was during a routine embarking search on vehicles waiting to board the Volcán de Tejada ferry that the police found the homemade firearm inside a luxury car with a French number plate.

The weapon was a .22-calibre barrel coupled to a homemade breach block… and little else. Apparently the barrel still had a serial number on it, which allowed the Guardia Civil to discover that it been stolen in Germany.
Accordingly, the police want to put it through a ballistics check to see if it has been used in any criminal shooting incidents.

The 23-year-old man arrested in possession of the weapon is from Morocco but lives in France.

Sunday 19 August 2012

Humans may not be decended from Neanderthals after all........


We may not, as previously thought, have a little bit of Neanderthal in us, scientists have revealed.
Similarities between the DNA of modern people and Neanderthals are more likely to have arisen from shared ancestry than interbreeding, a new study has found.

The team from the University of Cambridge published their new theory this week in PNAS journal.

Previously, it had been suggested that interbreeding was common, explaining our shared genome.
However, the newly published research proposes a different explanation.

Cambridge evolutionary biologists Dr Anders Eriksson and Dr Andrea Manica, found that the amount of DNA shared between modern Eurasian humans and Neanderthals - estimated at between 1-4% - actually comes from a common ancestor.






How can this be?

I know someone who has an enormous amount of Neanderthal in him!

Living in a village not too far away from us is the living proof that there are people with Neanderthal genes.
If you knew this person, you would surely agree.



Wednesday 15 August 2012

Queen Sofía and the Prince and Princess of Asturias expelled from the Mixed Zone in the London Olympics.....






The Queen of Spain, and Prince Felipe and Princess Letizia have been expelled from the Mixed Zone at the London Olympics.

They had travelled to London to give their support to Nico García in his attempt for gold en taekwondo.

He managed the Silver and the Royal Family wanted to congratulate him, and some 20 people arrived in the Mixed Zone, where the journalists were waiting, and where the Queen and Prince and Princess wanted to go.

But a volunteer stopped them entering. After several minutes of confusion the volunteer said.....


‘Who is the future King of Spain, Well I did not know!

 .........but you aren’t carrying the accreditation needed for this zone, you are not going in. He then turned his back on the Prince of Asturias and told him to go.

Felipe, Letizia and the Queen then waited for five minutes for Nico García to come out, but he did not arrive. Letizia did not stop taking photos, and we can expect the volunteer to be on the front pages in both the UK and Spain.

The President of the COE, Alejandro Blanco, and the Spanish Ambassador in London, Federico Trillo, arrived at the scene, and Blanco has quite a reputation for Judo, they say by force.

Finally, a little later, out came Nico García, and then another volunteer said they could go inside.


Article from  typicallyspanish.com  
Comments  

Ron  11-8-2012 17:40
Haha - I can't stop laughing. Brilliant.
Ani  11-8-2012 17:42
And is every volunteer expected to know what every King, Queen, plus families and heads of state looks like. If they didn't have the correct accreditation for that zone then good on that volunteer.He is doing his job properly.
Bob  11-8-2012 17:58
He is not a volunteer. Not everyone that works at the games is. Stop calling everyone volunteers!
Mick Costa Blanca  11-8-2012 17:58
Stay out of the Mixed Zone AND Gibraltar!
How embarrassing!
shak  11-8-2012 18:30  If you employ cheap labour.Do you really expected him or her to have the general or be winner of master mind.
If there was such a situation the staff should have made effort to find out with out turning his/her back and not a caring a s..t.
There would be a big scandel if this has happened to Queen Elizabeth or her family.
I remember when an Austrailan primister had held the queen hands or suppoorted her from the waist there was uproar. Simliary the late King of Morocco turned up twenty minutes late to meet the Queen there was a similar reaction.
I am no fan of Royalty. However while they are there they must be bestowed the protocal.

shak  11-8-2012 18:35
Instead of asking accreditation. The staff should have asked them for the first licence of occupation. That way the King & his folks would have never entered.
Gary  11-8-2012 19:08
Maybe if they'd turned up for the Diamond Wedding someone would have recognised them. Anyway as they say in Spain if you aintt got the right papers.Adios
Gary  11-8-2012 19:10
Where was the king anyway off shooting elephants or with the girlfriend?
shak  11-8-2012 22:27
The King was tripping over footpaths.
Angela  12-8-2012 0:07
Lighten up it's funny. @Mick costa blanca. Tell it to the people of Gibralter it's up to them.12VQMP


UPDATE

Today, a much truncated story has been published by the 'Olive Press' instead of the original story, without the picture of the so called 'volunteer'  and without any of the original comments!
15th August 2012




Tuesday 14 August 2012

The Pleasant Hells.......




Close to the town of Loja, which is the capital of the Poniente de Granada, or western Granada,  the Río Genil runs through a 20m-deep canyon after flowing over a waterfall called Cola de Caballo, Horse Tail.

 It’s here,  where the waters of Manzanil, Terciado and Frontil, generated by the run off from the Sierras de Loja/Hacho, flow into to the Genil.
The canyon is known as Los Infiernos, which doesn’t need much translating.

It’s worth a trip up there from the Costa Tropical before the end of Autumn because it is a relaxing and very green spot, with its willows, boxwood, elms and brambles.

The Town Hall has decided to promote this corner a bit and is planning to install a rope or hanging bridge across the gorge, which will join the mirador, look-out point, to the Barriada de La Esperanza; the edge of town.

For the intrepid,  they are thinking of installing a ‘death slide’ or Tyrolean traverse/zip line from the mirador to the bottomof the gorge. 
Could be fun!


Sunday 12 August 2012

A six month ban on dogs leaving Ceuta is imposed as a Rabies outbreak has broken out in the city.....



Spain’s North African enclave of Ceuta has announced an outbreak of rabies, and has imposed a six month ban on dogs leaving the town.

Health Councillor for the Cueta Government, the PP’s Abdelhakim Abdeselam, made the announcement official today in an extraordinary edition of the Official Bulletin for the Autonomous City. The announcement says the Rabies outbreak means that dog owners will have to walk the animals on the lead, and with a muzzle when in the street.

If the dog owners want to take their animals to Spain, they will have to obtain ‘previous authorisation’ from the Veterinary Services.

The City Hall has started a publicity campaign, and highlights the need to vaccinate dogs, cats, ferrets, primates and horses. Border controls on animals are to be increased at the Morocco border and in the port, and there will be more documental controls on dogs.

Any lost dogs that are captured will be tested for the corresponding microchip, and will sacrificed after 21 days under observation.


By h.b. - Aug 8, 2012 - 4:03 PM




Friday 10 August 2012

Keeping the heart healthy with Andalucian seafood......



LIVING in Andalucia certainly opens up a tasty range of seafood options, and the good news is that the health benefits of eating it are well proven.

Studies show that including one portion of seafood in your weekly diet can reduce the chances of having a heart attack by half.

And while oily fish like salmon and cod is known for its high content of omega-3, seafood options such as prawns, crabs, squid and octopus also contain high levels of this essential fatty acid which is key to a healthy heart.
When consumed in seafood, omega-3 has also been shown to help reduce the risk of dementia and memory problems late in life.
Moreover omega-3 is not the only benefit – seafood also contains many other important vitamins and minerals.

And while seafood does contain cholesterol, it is unlikely to affect your blood cholesterol level because it is low in saturated fats.


Shrimps (camarones), crayfish (langostos) and prawns (gambas)


Healthy because…they are high in B12 and selenium. Many Britons are lacking in B12, which can only be found naturally in animal-based foods. Selenium is important for the immune system and thyroid.

Avoid if…you start itching. You might be having an allergic reaction to the tropomyosin protein, which can lead to full throat swelling and even death.






Mussels (mejillones)




  Healthy because… they have high levels of iodine which is good for a healthy thyroid, along with folic acid and B12. Mussels are also the shellfish with the highest levels of omega-3.

 Avoid if…you are pregnant. Although they are officially safe, there is always a risk toxins will remain.









 Squid (calamares) 



Healthy because…it contains high levels of B2, which can help fight migraines, bone-strengthening phosphorus and also minerals zinc and copper. Copper is vital for absorbing iron.

 Avoid if…you are sensitive to other seafood, or if you suspect it is not completely fresh. Fried and battered squid is also very high in fat.






Oysters (ostras)
 


Healthy because…they are high in zinc, which is important for sexual function, and vitamins A, C and B12 which promote energy.
Their high content of tyrosine, an amino acid, also helps improve the mood and regulate stress.

Avoid if…you have had an allergic reaction before. Also, be wary of unfarmed oysters as they can contain high levels of poisonous mercury.







  Lobster (langosta)


Healthy because…it is lean, and contains lots of vitamin E – which is good for the skin – plus vitamin B.

Avoid if…you are trying to lose weight. Traditional lobster dishes such as Thermidor contain cognac, cream and cheese and therefore have extremely high calorie contents.





Scallops (vieiras)        


Healthy because…they are low in calories and contain practically no saturated fat. They are a great source of vitamin B plus minerals magnesium and potassium.

Avoid if…you are sensitive to shellfish. Gout and kidney stones sufferers should also avoid them because of their high purines levels.







Crab (cangrejo)    


Healthy because…it is high in protein but very low in calories and contains high levels of and omega-3. It also contains the trace mineral selenium which is a powerful antioxidant.

Avoid if…you suffer from gout or kidney stones. Crab contains a high amount of purines which make symptoms worse.





 Octopus (pulpo)


Healthy because…it contains iron, potassium, selenium and lots of B vitamins. It can also have a calming effect on the nervous system, and is high in taurine, an amino acid which can help prevent heart disease.

Avoid if…you are a child. Seafood should be avoided by the under-ones, and after that children should only eat it cooked.









Thursday 9 August 2012

Around 60,000 people have used the port of Motril (Granada)......




 

About 60,000 people have used the port of Motril (Granada) as a reference point to enter or leave the peninsula since the start of Operation passage of the Strait (OPE) last June 15.

According to data released by the central government delegation, the harbor has been used as Granada output since the beginning of the PEO for more than 42,000 people to go to Melilla and Alhucemas, with 12,219 vehicles shipped.


Passengers who have entered the peninsula through the port of Motril from the two previous destinations have been 16,944, with 4,425 vehicles.


In the last week have entered more people than those who have left, with a balance of 8,762 by 5,350, respectively.




Ideal.es     1st August 2012

Tuesday 7 August 2012

Motril - August Fiestas - 2012



Friday The 10th
12:00h. Inauguration of the Feria de Día (12:00 to 18:00h), held in Plaza Gaspar Esteva (Pza. Las Palmeras), Plaza De La Aurora, Plaza Bustamante, Plaza Cruz Verde, Plaza de Ciprés & Plaza del Tranvía.  
19:30h: Competition to choose Miss & Mister Motril 2012 and Reina Infantil Fiestas Patronales at the Teatro Calderón/Free admission
21:30h: Official lighting up of the fairground at the Recinto Ferial del Cortijo del Conde.
22:00h: Senior Citizens’ Day. Copla dance music with Sandra Cabrera at the Municipal Caseta. Free admission.

Saturday The 11th
11:00h: Fiesta Infantil in the Plaza de España
12:00h: Foam fiesta (bathing costumes advisable.) Plaza de España.
12:00 to 18:00h: Feria de Día held in: Plaza de La Aurora, Plaza Bustamante, Plaza Cruz Verde, Plaza de Ciprés & Plaza del Tranvía.
13:00h: Gigantes & Giant Heads parade, leaving from La Plaza de España, running through the centre of Motril.
22:00h: Zarzuela (knees up) Asociación Musical Orfeón Motrileño, Voces del Mar at the Teatro Calderón/5€ entrance fee.
23:00h: 80/90′s Spanish pop group, Danza Invisible at the Caseta Municipal/free admission.

Sunday The 12th
Feria de Día (12:00 to 18:00h), held in Plaza Gaspar Esteva (Pza. Las Palmeras), Plaza De La Aurora, Plaza Bustamante, Plaza Cruz Verde, Plaza de Ciprés & Plaza del Tranvía.

12:00h: Concierto Banda de Música de Motril in the Plaza Gaspar Esteva (Pza. de las Palmeras)
23:00h: Disco music with DJ’s and Go-Go dancers: Alex Medina Violin Live, Susana Villegar Vocal Live Pablo Rodríguez, Gamero Brown, Frank Cherryman, Jonathan Maltaya & Alvaro Ferrer at the municipal caseta at the fairground. Free admission.

Monday the 13th
19:00h: Tradicional Ofrenda Floral (religious procession) in honour of Ntra. Señora La Santísima Virgen de La Cabeza, accompanied by the Coro Rociero at the main park (de las Américas).
22:00h: Finals of the rock competition Quiskilla Rock with a performance by Lujuria & Leo Jiménez accompanied by the finalists of the competition, at the Municipal Caseta (Fairground) Free admission.

Tuesday The 14th: Día del Niño at the fairground.
22:30h: concert Raya Real at Caseta Municipa/fairground, free admission.

Wednesday the 15th:
Religious process of the Ntra. Sra. La Santísima Virgen de la Cabeza, leaving El Santuario and running along Avda. de Andalucía, Nueva, Seíjas Lozano, Milanesa, Marques de Vistabella, Plaza Burgos, Catalanes, Muralla, Avda. de Salobreña and then back to the Sanctuario.

Thursday the 16th
23:00h: Firework display and end of fiestas.




Sunday 5 August 2012

Mariano Rajoy says Spain is more than 900 billion € in debt, and next year faces 8 billion in interest payments.....


The Spanish Prime Minister, Mariano Rajoy, speaking after the cabinet meeting today

Aug 3, 2012 - 2:37 PM
The Prime Minister said he had not decided on a rescue as yet.

The Risk Premium has relaxed slightly after Thursday’s speech by Mario Monti disappointed the markets. It’s now back below 600 points. The interest on a ten year bond is 7.15% and the Stock Market opened down but then rose, and at 3pm it was back up 3.70% at 6,609.3.

Mariano Rajoy made statement after the regular Friday cabinet meeting, and said ‘We have been living with too much credit’ and he admitted, ‘I have not taken a decision.’ (on the rescue). The Prime Minister described a bleak landscape with more than 900 billion € in debt and where 8 billion of interest payments have to be met next year.
‘I ask that they help me in the European battle’, he said and he had no intention to reduce pensions next year. That is last thing to be touched’.

Rajoy also said his main concern is for what the unemployed are going through with their families.
‘We take uncomfortable and unpleasant measures to improve’, he said.

The President of Castilla-La Mancha and General Secretary of the PP, Maria Dolores de Cospedal, has denied that Spain needs a rescue, and she called on the ECB buy debt from countries like Spain and Italy, as the money it is costing them to finance themselves ‘does not respond to reality’.


Comment:  
 
John
4-8-2012 19:26
That last sentence isn't quite what Rajoy said: "CON LOS DATOS QUE YO TENGO NO TENGO LA INTENCIÓN DE bajar las pensiones". He has to cover his back for when he does lower them!

                               


Friday 3 August 2012

The restored Patio de los Leones reopens to the public at the Alhambra.........




The Patio de los Leones, perhaps the most famous part of the Alhambra in Granada, has reopened to the public after ten years of restoration work. Once again the fountain is a scene of running water.

The patio has 250 pieces of white marble of different sizes, and is back to the splendour of its historical past.

The Patio de los Leones was conceived in the XIV century by Sultan Muhammad V as a Nazari Royal House.



The ten year restoration followed the original from the 14th century. The white marble used came from Macael, Almería.

Visitors will no longer be kept to a restricted perimeter and can now mix with the 12 lions, a pleasure which has not been available since 1987.




The reopening was carried out by the President of the Junta de Andalucía, José Antonio Griñán, at 11am Friday morning July 27, 2012.



Thursday 2 August 2012

Chris Stewart: Why I am still in love with Spain



By Chris Stewart

I WAS just 21 when I first arrived in Spain, hitchhiking over the Pyrenees into this strange, seemingly African land.

In the company of a washing-machine repairman, I took my first tentative steps in the language, as his little van bucketed down the narrow road to Lérida.

I had come to Spain to learn the guitar. As we crossed the river bridge into the town of Lérida, I looked down to where there were women washing clothes in the slow-moving water.

I had recently learnt a piece by Gaspar Sanz, the “Dance of the Washerwomen”, and there was a part of me that wondered if they might not stop what they were doing and dance, if I were to play that piece. Fortunately, I did not put this half-witted notion to the test.

It was autumn and the olives were hard green berries on the silvery trees. The next day, as I walked west through olive groves towards Tarragona, I picked one from the tree. It was bitter and dry and I wondered what on earth it was, and why anyone would want to cultivate such a thing. That night I stayed in a commercial hotel in Tárrega – 50 pesetas for supper and a bed in a room with three others.

Francisco Tárrega was a great composer and teacher of guitar. Among other things, he wrote Lágrimas, a pretty piece that I played in a fast and jolly fashion in the mistaken belief that lágrimas meant “happiness”. It doesn’t; it means “tears”. I searched the little town for signs of the master, but there were none, as he had never actually been there.

By the time I got to Valencia, the oranges were ripe and I found work on the harvest. It was not as easy as you’d think; it takes a particular twist of the wrist to free the orange from the tree.

At the end of a week it was made clear to me that I was not an asset in the orange fields. I remember the scent of oranges, and that the ground was carpeted, unaccountably, with spring onions, as if they were grass. I would pick handfuls to add to my lunchtime chorizo bocadillo.

Finally, I arrived in Sevilla, the self-proclaimed Queen of Andalucia, and the only place for a romantically inclined young man to learn the guitar. There, in Triana and the Barrio Santa Cruz, the spell was finally cast, and yet another Englishman was caught by the enchantment of Spain.

Twenty years later, I finally made it back, having bought a farm with its own olives and oranges, and now that my wife and I have lived here for 20 years and more, well, there’s no turning back.

Our daughter was born in the Clinica Inmaculada in Granada, and as she passed through the school system and lived and played with the families of her friends in the village, she brought us deeper into the world that surrounds us.

We were unmistakably different, though. One day she took us to task over this. “Why can’t you be like everybody else?” she asked. “Well, we do what we can…” we replied.

“But what about these clothes pegs? None of my friends’ families have clothes pegs like ours.”
It was true: whereas everybody else had colourful plastic clothes-pegs, we had wooden ones, one piece only and traditionally made by gipsies. The reason behind this was that we had a parrot, and the parrot would destroy plastic clothes-pegs in no time flat. But that was neither here nor there; the wooden pegs marked us as ineluctably different. We spoke good Spanish, though, but with funny accents, and our child, who was obviously fluent in the local dialect, felt humiliated yet more by our differentness.

Chloé has left home now, passed through the school system and on to university in Granada, where she’s studying languages. I cannot think of anywhere in the world where I would have rather seen her grow up than in this little Spanish town. It gave her, among other things, confidence, ease and social mobility.

George Borrow, the 19th-century author, wrote in The Bible in Spain: “I will say for the Spaniards, that in their social intercourse no people in the world exhibit a juster feeling of what is due to the dignity of human nature, or better understand the behaviour which it behoves a man to adopt towards his fellow human beings. It is one of the few countries in Europe where poverty is not treated with contempt, and, I may add, where the wealthy are not blindly idolised.”

Well that’s what our daughter got from the village school. It didn’t cost a lot, but we figured it was the right stuff. However, you may say, things are not what they might be in Spain at the moment… And you wouldn’t be far from the mark. “Nobody would want to be like Spain,” said Robert Boucher, the US ambassador to the EU, recently. “It’s good for nothing but flamenco and red wine.”

The king has just been caught red-handed killing elephants, and his son-in-law, the Duke of Palma, has allegedly been caught with his fingers in the public pot. He denies it. The judiciary has wrecked its credibility by imposing a witch-hunt against Baltasar Garzón, who inspired the admiration of the world by bringing to justice dictators, drug-runners and terrorists, and investigating, as well as the morass of corruption in the country, the crimes against humanity perpetrated during the Civil War and dictatorship. And the jobless figures are by far the worst in Europe, not helped by a national debt to make your eyes water. The chips in Spain are good and down.

So, is it time to get out? Not likely. It’s just too good here, and after 20 years, I cannot imagine living anywhere else. I still love my native Britain, but, as somebody remarked, it’s a nice place to get a letter from… you wouldn’t want to live there.

Here we have space, solitary wilderness to walk the dogs; we have our own oranges and olive oil; we pick lemons, almonds and apricots from our trees. To keep us warm in winter the rivers bring us driftwood, and there are prunings of olive and almond that burn hot as coal. The sunshine provides our electricity; we have spring water piped into the house.

True, we don’t have the benefits of rubbish collection, postal delivery or street-lighting… but you can’t have everything.

Admittedly, it’s country life that brings us all these delights. Other more urban expatriates might see things differently. It’s in the nature of the expat to grumble and criticise the host country, and lord knows there’s enough to moan about… as there is in whatever land you choose to make your stand. If you don’t like it, you can always leave… but I can’t imagine how bad things would have to be to get us to leave.

For even after all these years, I still have a crazy romantic illusion about Spain. As I speed home along the motorway, I cannot suppress a frisson of delight as I pass the sign that says Seville, Cordoba, Granada.

Everywhere there remain the traces of Spain’s richly textured history, the caliphate of Cordoba that, when the rest of Europe was still in the Dark Ages, was “the Ornament of the World”. The kingdom of Granada, with its incomparable palace, the Alhambra. Beautiful riverside Sevilla, where all the gold and silver stolen from the Americas was landed and swiftly squandered by Church, monarchy and nobility.

The magic of Spain is there in the language, with its copious admixture of Arabic, which for 800 years was spoken by everybody in the peninsula. It’s in the fruit and the trees – the pomegranate from Persia, the oranges from China, and almonds, saffron and aubergines.

The place is an inspiration, and had I not come to live in this Arcadian valley within this extraordinary country, I never would have found myself, nor the words to describe it.

Ay, Spain and your Spaniards… you’ve been through hard times before, but you’ve come through right side up in the end. Let’s just keep our fingers crossed and hope that the forces of reaction and stagnation – the Church and the fascism even now creeping out of the woodwork – will be confronted and subjugated, before things reach the pretty pass they got to last time.



Driving Over Lemons by Chris Stewart, and his El Valero titles are available on Kindle, and in bookshops. Visit www.drivingoverlemons.co.uk for more information.

 

Wednesday 1 August 2012

Echo on the Rock.......





HMS ECHO, the Royal Navy hydrographic survey vessel,  arrives at the Gibraltar Naval Base today to take on board stores before going to the East coast of Gibraltar to calibrate survey equipment.  Following an overnight stay she will be working west of the Strait of Gibraltar.

ECHO was launched at Appledore in Devon in 2002, and was designed to carry out a wide range of survey work, including support to submarine and amphibious operations, through the collection of oceanographic and bathymetric (analysis of the ocean, its salinity and sound profile) data.

Her survey motor boat, Pathfinder, is capable of operating independently, supporting a small group of surveyors who can live and work ashore to carry out surveys.


Gibraltar Chronicle   01-08-12