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[17 Aug 2009 | No Comment | ]
The Alcazar of Seville

Seville.  A wonderful city. I’ve been here before, and hope to be back.  Modern and historical.  Full of energy and life, and yet calm at the same time.  I think it’s the influence of spots like this Alcazar. Originally the site of a Roman fort, then a Moorish fort, then an Almohadar palace, and in its current incarnation, rebuit in 1364 after the reconquest by the Catholic King, Pedro The Cruel.
The owners of this place lived well, as you can see.  And overall, the Alcazar of Seville (from the Arabic  …

Andalusia, Spain »

[16 Aug 2009 | No Comment | ]

Flamenco sure is intense. Passionate. Powerful. Explosive.   All these things sourced and steeped in the Gypsy tradition.  Singers who sound like Muezzim.  Dancers strutting, twirling, stomping.  Clapping, tapping, pounding.  And the guitar.  Fingers flying.  Loved it.  In Sevilla we had choices: the Flamenco bars, the formal shows, and the one we chose, which was at the Memories of Andalusia Cultural Center.  What a wonderful show.  Only an hour, it was so strong that you really couldn’t take much more.  First a guitarist and a singer. Then another singer and a …

Andalusia, Spain »

[15 Aug 2009 | No Comment | ]
Chain versus Small

We’ve stayed in a mix of lodgings: apartments, chain hotels, and small hotels.  In Sevilla, we’re at the Vincci La Rabida, a luxury chain.  Vincci Hotels are certainly nice, this one was over-refrigerated, and impersonal.  The people were helpful, mildly charming, but definitely not a resource.  They pushed their JV partners, but not necessarily what was in our interests.
And then, there’s the ever-present issue of the wireless. We are traveling with four computers. I’ve got a small bit of work to do, plus my blogging and for kids on the …

Andalusia, Spain »

[14 Aug 2009 | One Comment | ]
Hot and Slow in Andalusia

Visited Spain’s unique-in-all-the-world Andalusian horse show at the Real Escuela Andaluza del Arte Ecuestre; Jerez’s other cultural attraction. (The main one is the “bodegas” where they make and sell Sherry.)
Now, I’ve never been to a horse show of any kind before, but my wife thinks these are the most beautiful horses in the world, and here they are doing, well – horse ballet.
To use the word “trained” would be a gross understatement and these caballos and their caballeros could give us all a lesson in focus.  There are a finite …

Andalusia, Spain »

[14 Aug 2009 | No Comment | ]
Dinner in Jerez at La Cruz Blanca

Our host in Jerez was David, the owner of La Fonda de Barranco.  10 charming rooms in an ancient house in the most ancient part of Jerez, a town dating back more than 1,000 years.  David’s house is built on layers of house upon house upon house; renovated in the late 1800′s, it’s actually pretty new.  Our two rooms were quite comfortable; firm beds, showers that don’t flood, and air-conditioning-forte to beat back the intense heat.  But more than that, David knows the town and gives you eating and entertainment …

Andalusia, Spain »

[14 Aug 2009 | No Comment | ]
Light at the End of the Tunnel

My wife took this picture as we were driving a beautiful back-country route from Granada to Jerez getting the full Andalusia experience.  It’s pretty amazing that so much grows here even though the land is so hot and so dry.  Later she named it “the light at the end of the tunnel. ”
Not sure I liked the name if it is supposed to be a metaphor for our trip, but I really like the picture.  Maybe it fits.  When we travel it generally takes a day or so to get …

Andalusia, Featured, Spain »

[12 Aug 2009 | 3 Comments | ]
La Flamenco Authentico in Jerez

Just came home from Tio Parrilla, a small bar in Jerez where they do flamenco almost every night. Flamenco comes from Andalusia, and Jerez de la Frontera is its very birthplace. I’ve only before seen it on TV and the experience is fantastic. I still don’t know much, if anything else about it, but we loved it. One guitarist, one man who sang and stomped, one woman who mostly sang, and danced, another man who danced and acted as master of ceremonies, and made sure we knew when …

Andalusia, Spain »

[12 Aug 2009 | No Comment | ]
Midnight at the Alhambra

Tonight we visited the Alhambra in Granada, one of Andalusia’s two most famous “monuments.”  Built sometime from 1350 to 1390, towards the end of Muslim rule in Spain, Alhambra means “red fortress.” The Alhambra is a place of incredible serenity and celebrates context over content.  It is a palace and fortress composed of dozens of rooms, each one decorated with texture, tracery and stone carvings, and not a single discernible image. I saw it years ago, as do most tourists, in the heat of the day.  This time, we visited …