April 20, 2015: From Cádiz to Cáñar

We were all pretty tired this morning.  We had to be up and moving around nine thirty because we had to be checked out of the apartment at eleven.  “Checked out” might be the wrong term.  It just means leaving the keys by the door and heading out locking the place up behind ourselves.

It took a bit to get everything packed up and everyone ready to go.  We were kind of tired even before getting onto the road.

I would guess that it was eleven thirty and we were underway.  The drive out of town was not bad, especially as the hardest part of town I knew my way around by this point.  As we left town we got to see a new, very large bridge being constructed.  Very neat.

For the first portion of the drive we are covering new highway territory.  We drove out of Cádiz and went immediately east which gave us about two hours of driving over new ground and seeing a new area, which was nice.  We keep criss-crossing the country and getting a better and better feel for it.  We are going to know Spain very well by the time that we are done with this year.

We have no stops today, just driving right back to our village.  Once we were to San Roque, the village just above the peninsula on which Gibraltar stands, we were back on the highway through the Costa del Sol which we had taken two days ago and covering ground that we already know.  So the trip got a lot less interesting both because it was repeat driving and because we were back in the overly developed, Florida-looking stretches.

It was evening when we got back to Cáñar.  The drive was fine and uneventful.  The girls got a lot of rest in the car.  We were home in time for me to work today.  Everyone was quite tired after our busy weekend and ready for a rest – which is going to be short lived this week and we are only home for tomorrow before traveling again!

April 19, 2015: Cádiz

I was actually the first one up this morning, waking up on my own at nine thirty, nearly an hour before anyone else in the house was awake.  Only six hours of sleep for me, much more “normal” from my pre-España sleeping schedule.  I’ve been much more of an eight or more hours, typically, crossing the pond.

Dominica got up after ten.  The girls were still very much fast asleep.

We managed to get a start at around eleven this morning.  It is a bright and sunny day, but not too hot, partially because of the nice, continuous breeze coming in off of the ocean.  Being on a point, much like San Francisco, has its advantages.  Cádiz is much smaller and much flatter than San Francisco, though.

We walked to the parking garage and retrieved the stroller, probably a mistake, and set out walking down the pedestrian way to the east side of the city.  We stopped at a panaria very early and have coffee and sandwiches.  The girls did not manage to find any food that they wanted to eat there.  They were both asking for noodles or soup (in Liesl’s case.)

We found a gelato place and got some ice cream, which everyone really liked.  This gave the girls at least a little sugar to run on and a tiny bit of protein.

From there it was south to the Central Market, which was open today unlike last night, which we were able to walk through.  It is the oldest covered market in all of Spain dating from 1837.  It was full of vendors with the most interesting and broad food selection.  We were sad that we had already eaten as the food here looked amazing.

Luciana was having a very hard time dealing with the fact that she could not be in the stroller the entire day and was having a bit of a meltdown which did not go over well.  It is going to be a long day with Luciana.

From the market we headed south the same way that I walked last night on my post midnight walk and we got to the ocean barrier wall.  We sat there for a while giving the girls a chance to see the ocean and us time to get our barrings.

We headed east along the ocean front until we got to the Cádiz Cathedral, which we just looked at from the outside.  It is one of the few “things to see” in Cádiz.  Just east of it is the ruins of the Teatro Romano, the Roman Theater that was built here around 70-60 B.C.  That makes it the oldest Roman amphitheater on the Iberian peninsula.  There was not much to see, sadly.  Most of it was cordoned off although we were able to walk around the outside of it and get a feel for just how old it is.

While we were there I ran into a little corner market to stock us up on water for our walk.  One and a half litres of water is just forty cents, or fifty sense for the high end Lanjarón brand.  I splurged to support our local water supply.

We followed Liesl’s lead and she led us to the “main plaza” of town.  A huge, lively plaza with tons of tourists, the big city hall, lots of restaurants, a large monument, fountains and more.   She seems to have a great sense of direction in old European cities.

The girls ended up just wanting to play on the main monument in town for a while, an odd thing to want to do by my reckoning but they seem to love this.  So Dominica and I went to a restaurant on the plaza close enough that we could just watch the girls from there and got café con leche to keep ourselves entertained while they played.  We did end up getting some patatas bravas, as Dominica can never resist them, that we split and some fig mousse too.

The girls did a good job of making friends with other kids on the plaza but when some of them had to leave Liesl ended up being very sad and crying alone on the monument for a while.

We met some Americans from Florida who were wandering the plaza when they stopped to give beads to the girls.  We never figured out why they had beads in the first place.  The were retirees traveling the Mediterranean on the Holland America ship the Amsterdam which was moored in the harbour.

Once we were done on the plaza we went north to the ocean and found a neat garden that had a historical board that explained these coloured lines running around the city and how to use them to follow different historical paths.  What a neat idea and well done.  We loved the idea and so decided to take the orange path, the one that takes you to the city defenses.  This was a great idea because Liesl could find the orange line on the sidewalk and lead us all along the path.  She thought that this was great fun.

This was a nice walk and led us to the big constitution monument of 1812 that I had discovered last night.  We spent a little time here so that Dominica could see the monument.  We looked at the available historical walking paths from here and then had Liesl take us farther on the orange route which ended up going along, in the opposite direction, much of what I had walked last night on my post-midnight walk.

We walked along the old defensive wall and to the Alemeda (mall) near our apartment which was very nice.  The girls were having a rough day by this point.  They were tired and ready for a break.  Luciana had been begging to be in the stroller all day which was causing no end of problems and Liesl had been requesting food but never got any.

We started exploring looking for somewhere to get food for Liesl who really just wanted simple pasta.  We explored the north end of the city, which is one of the less interesting sections of the city mostly less interesting, old residential, but Liesl, always with a strong sense of direction, managed to lead us to a plaza with several restaurants that would have been perfect – had only we not arrived right at five thirty when everything shuts down and the kitchens all close.  Had we just wanted coffee we would have been fine but wanting food meant that we were out of options.

We gave up and returned to our apartment so that the girls could play with their new toys from yesterday.  It was probably six once we really settled in.

I nearly immediately went out to do some more walking and exploring in the hopes of figuring out the food situation for later.  I did a nice walk for a while, heading east, and checking out several plazas to see what food options might exist.  I found a few, eventually, that looked like they would be interesting and might meet our needs.  It was around seven thirty when I crossed through the biggest of the plazas and the whole place was really packed with people having dinner.

I found a pastry shop and got a few different things to bring back for the family.  I got some muffins for the girls and a cornetta, plus some tuna pockets and spinach things for Dominica and me.

It was probably eight when I got back to the apartment.  We snacked on the pastries, discussed what we might want to do for dinner, decided on a place and I got pictures uploading to Flickr while I was sitting for a while.

At nine thirty I finally got everyone moving for another walk to find dinner. Dominica had decided on a low key place called Boulevard that was on a small side street between two plazas.  This ended up being an excellent choice.  They were not busy at all, no one was for some reason, and we pretty much had the front room to ourselves which was nearly all glass so it seemed a bit like sitting out on the street yet was warm and inside.

Dominica got paella.  She is addicted to all of the rice that they have in Spain.  Liesl got pasta with tomato sauce. Luciana got pasta with butter.  I got potato salad with octopus, which was very spicy, and some French fries that everyone shared.  It was all very good.

After dinner, which was pushing eleven at night, we just walked back to the apartment.  Everyone was tired and now there was no more complaining about being hungry.  So time to get everyone to bed.

Dominica and the girls all went to bed right away.  Dominica did not like the bed that she slept in last night so stole the one that I had slept in in the girls’ room.  So Luciana and Liesl moved themselves to the big bed so that they could snuggle with me later.  I set them up with iPads, as it was early, and went out for a late walk on my own again.

I walked pretty slowly this time out as my right foot was pretty badly blistered.  I did enough to hit nearly 35,000 steps and over 14.5 miles just since last midnight when my health app on my iPhone resets for the day!  That’s pretty impressive.  I didn’t stop walking and did about another hour.

I did some wandering just around different streets in the middle of the city to see what I might have missed.  There is so much hidden around every little corner.  These ancient cities are so interesting.

Andy called me at one in the morning.  Fortunately I was out on the street and not in the apartment so it did not wake anyone up.

Got into bed around one thirty. Luciana had already fallen fast asleep.  Liesl was up and watching her iPad.

April 18, 2015: Gibraltar

We had talked about trying to make it to Gibraltar yesterday but decided that that was an unreasonable thing to attempt.  So instead we targeted getting up this morning and getting straight out of the door and onto the road.  It is only just over a three hour drive to Gibraltar so not a horrible way to kick off the day.

The family was all packed and ready to go this morning and we were able to get up fairly early and get onto the road.  It was a bright and clear morning, good for a long day of driving.

From Cáñar the drive is west to the A44 then south to Motri and along the coast to Malaga.  This is our first time going this full route since we came into Malaga on the AVE from Madrid almost a month ago.  Our first time seeing this section of highway in the daylight!

We drove the entire Costa del Sol, Spain’s most famous stretch of water front.  Also the infamously overdeveloped and Anglicized section, which we were to discover.  The drive was fine, some light traffic.

What we found is that the section from Malaga, closer to Marbella, and on down to Gibraltar is ridiculously overdeveloped and everything is in English.  Nothing looks like Spain at all.  It was horrible.  It looks more like Florida.  It is clearly a trashy retirement community.  So sad that such wonderfully gorgeous Spanish coastline is effectively ruined.  It isn’t just a small stretch, it was a really large area.  Very depressing.  It doesn’t just ruin the area, it even ruins just driving through.  Everything that was special about Spain has been ruined there and it is just an imitation of the worst parts of the U.S.

We got to La Linea, just north of Gibraltar without too much effort.  As you near the peninsula there you suddenly see this mountain in the distance and realize that it is the Rock of Gibraltar with clouds around it. So cool.  It really is an isolated “rock” just stuck in the ground.  It truly looks like a giant rock.

It actually takes quite a long time, from once you have seen the “rock” until you are actually at Gibraltar and traffic there, caused by the delay of people entering the enclave, is pretty intense.  The Spanish traffic around La Linea was not bad at all except for the confusing disruption of the massive, non-moving line of cars going through immigration services.

Gibraltar is a British Crown Colony, so effectively it is its own country, but not exactly.  It is tough to know if Gibraltar should count as a new country that we have visited or not.  It is not a part of the UK, but not exactly its own country either.  But I think that it counts.  It issues its own passports.

We parked the car in La Linea and walked over to Gibraltar going through the customs line on foot.  This is well documented as the easiest way to deal with the colony, which has been a British possession since an Anglo-Dutch force took the port in the War of Spanish Succession on the behalf of the Hapsburg pretender in 1704.  So Gibraltar, as a British possession, significantly predates the existence of the United States as an entity by seventy two years! On our walk to Gibraltar we passed a large playground and, of course, that was all that the girls could think about all day long.

Getting into Gibraltar was super easy.  Coming in from the EU and carrying American passports meant that customs was as simple as having the passports ready and showing them.  They basically waved us right in.  The fastest entrance system that I have ever seen.  So much easier than the US into Canada or vice versa.  Of course, the only reason that the UK and Gibraltar by extension are not a part of the Schengen is a logical concern due to the English Channel and not because of a desire not to participate together.  So they appear to do their best to work together here.

We got in and realized that it was very warm.  We had planned to walk from La Linea to the city of Gibraltar but once we felt the warmth as we approached the airport we saw a bus that would take us to the city center and we just hopped on that instead.  Once it drove us all of the way in we realized that it was farther than we had anticipated and we were very happy for having chosen the public transportation.

We got off at the city center and headed up the steps and through the first plaza to “main street”.  It was pretty crowded and we were hungry.  Dominica was on the hunt for a good fish and chips.  We walked a few blocks, not wanting to stop at the very first place that we came too and pretty quickly found a nice looking place with outdoor seats open on a not so busy side street.  We ducked in there and got fish and chips for both Dominica and me and an order of fish fingers for the girls to split.

They had brown sauce (made by Heinz for the Americans who are not “in the know.”)  Dominica wanted to know what it was and when to use it.  I looked at the ingredients and determined that it was something akin to barbecue sauce except based on apple puree instead of on a tomato base.  Dominica asked our waitress and the waitress said it was awful, but popular, and that Dominica should just try some on chips and see what she thought.  So she did and I was right, it is a slight alteration on American barbecue sauce.  Dominica loved it.  Great, now she is addicted to another food we can rarely find.  At least there is a bottle of it in the house.

After lunch we made our way to main street and started walking in the direction that everything seemed to be.  We quickly came upon a very friendly little toy shop and stopped in.  They had tons of Playmobile and Lego stuff and the girls loved checking out the selection. Dominica has been wanting to get a few new things for the girls anyway, so this worked out well.

While the three girls checked out the toy store, I walked ahead a little while and scoped out the “how to get a tour to the top of the rock” situation.  I did not have to go far before I came across the minivan tours that take you up to the top.  Not going to be cheap, though. Gibraltar is a very expensive destination.

We did some toy shopping and ended up with one toy for each of the girls and one toy for them to share.  We talked to the girls running the shop and determined that it would be better if we took the cable car up to the top of the rock rather than taking the minivan thing.  Cheaper to take the cable car by a lot and just a bit more walking.

So we walked all of the way through town, which was a nice walk.  We got to go through the old city arch and past Trafalgar Cemetery which was small but very attractive.  It was a bit of a walk and very warm and we had to climb uphill for a bit at the end but we finally got to the cable cars taking people up the mountain.

As it turned out, the pricing had completely changed and not the cable cars were run by the minivan company and were exactly the same price.  Argh.  But since we were there we decided to do the cable car anyway.  Less chance of getting car sick for sure.

And, of course, the bulk of what there is to do up on the rock was closed and very expensive anyway and required tons and tons of walking.  So we decided to bail on all of that.  The ticket lady was nice and let Liesl go in for free even though she technically was just over the “free” age limit.  So that saves us a bit of money.  Luciana was already free.  They would not have been free in the minivan.  Skipping stuff meant that we would not be up there for very long and would spend less, which was good.

The line was not too long and the ride up in the cable car was nice and all of the staff was very nice and tried to help Luciana get a view as we climbed the rock, although Luciana got scared and could not look out the window for very long.  The views as you ascend were very cool.  On the way up we could already make out the hazy mountains in Morocco! This is our first time definitely looking at Africa itself.  So cool.

Getting off of the cable car we were immediately greeted by one of the Gibraltar apes.  The cable car operator told us to put the toys that we had bought, which were in a plastic bag, under a coat as the apes are very aggressive and assume that anything in a plastic bag is food and will take it from you.  In general they are safe but they will take your stuff and are quite aggressive about that.  So we had to put Dominica’s jacket over it and carry it very awkwardly for a while.

The first ape was just hanging out on a low wall and we were able to walk right by it and lots of people were posing with it for pictures.  The whole apes on the rock of Gibraltar thing is very strange.

We went up and checked out the north viewing area first, which had great views of La Linea where we had just come from and of Gibraltar itself.  The rock was very high and the views were really clear.  We could also see the Costa del Sol for a very long way, which was neat as we had just driven down the section that we could see from there.  And we had a descent view across the bay to where we were planning to head in just a little while.

Then we went to the south viewing area where the girls were able to run around as there was open space and they just did not care about the views at all.  Dominica and I were able to check out the views of Africa quite clearly from there.  So cool.  We cannot wait to be in Morocco!

That was it, nothing else to actually do on the Rock of Gibraltar.  I guess I am glad that we did it, but it is really a let down.  There was a gift shop there with insanely high priced items.  But Dominica really wanted to get stuff from there for some reason so each of the girls picked out a stuffed monkey toy (yes, stuffed moneys but the apes of Gibraltar, I know) and got a few random things like a colouring book and some pins.  It was about fifty or sixty dollars!

On the way back to the cable car we got to see the ape from earlier and one of the baby apes playing with each other and grooming.  That was cute. I have never gotten to be able to be so close to real apes before.  So at least that was something unique.

Down again via cable car and then walking back the way that we had come.  Gibraltar is long and skinny so there is little opportunity to vary the walking path.  On the way back we stopped in Gibraltar Cemetery and explored that, which was ten minutes at most.  Such a quaint cemetery, though.  Very cool.  Nearly all of the graves were from right around 1800.  Beautifully kept.

Nothing else to do in Gibraltar.  We did not even have phone service all day as phone and data agreements do not exist with the rest of Europe so you have to pay a fortune to make calls or get data while there which makes it pretty awful to try to spend time there as you lack the normal resources you would have anywhere else or need to just shell out money like mad.

We got back on the bus, having purchased a round trip ticket when we first arrived, and went back to the north side of the airport and walked ourselves back over the border into Spain.  Going through customs north bound was really silly.  We just held up our passports and the Spanish customs officials maybe looked to see that we had passports or maybe they didn’t, but they just waved us through without us even stopping walking.  So that was that!

So there we have it.  We have been to Gibraltar.  As a Crown Colony I guess we can say that we have been to yet another country now.  It was a pretty minor item on my list of things to do, but I did have some desire to see the rock but it was a major issue on Dominica’s bucket list and now it is checked off and thankfully we will have no need to ever do it again.  The entire colony feels like nothing more than a tourist trap and while it is a generally nice place around the city, it is wall to wall tourists and the trappings that go with them and not at all interesting other than some history and views.  And, in reality, the only view that really matters is the view of the rock rather than the view from it, as we would learn in about two hours.

The girls had wanted to do none of that today and all that they cared about was getting to the playground that we had seen.  It was a huge playground with easily more than a hundred kids on it!  We must have put in a good hour there, but the girls really needed it and it was a free, healthy activity that would wear them out for more car travel today.  Not really a bad combination.  This playground had a lot of cool stuff for them to climb and spin on.  Although they had a bit of a problem being so little and not speaking Spanish in a playground loaded with so many non-English speaking, mostly bigger kids.  The girls would get stuck on things that they had climbed or find the weight of bigger kids making things swing in scary ways that they were not able to handle.

We coaxed the girls off of the playground with the promise of ice cream which we were only able to fulfill by going to the McDonald’s across from the playground.  For some reason no one else wanted to sell ice cream in this hot, ice cream craving location.

We got back to the car and I drove us out of La Linea and north till we got to the Dia Maxi (supermarket) that we had seen no our way in.  It is so hard for us to get to a large grocery store that even when we are far away across the country we take the chance to do some shopping if we see one.

Dominica ran in and shopped while I sat in the car with the girls.  It was half an hour at least and maybe closer to an hour.  Dominica came out at one point but realized that she had forgotten things and so went back in because it would be so awful to need to make another run to find a grocery store at some point.

Once we were all in the car it was time to leave the Costa del Sol and switch to the Costa de la Luz and begin the drive to Cádiz.  In theory the fastest way to get over to Cádiz was to cut across the peninsula but I was much more interested in going along the coast and Dominica looked on her GPS on her phone and determined that it would only take an extra fifteen minutes or something similar and so thought that it would be okay to do that.

So we hugged the coast starting at Algeciras, the big Spain city in the area, and working our way down to Tarifa, the southern most tip of Spain.  We actually went right to Tarifa.  On the way down to that point the views of Africa were mind blowing.  It was right there, so much bigger and so much clearer than on Gibraltar.  This is where the view is.  We could see the entire northern Moroccan coast and even make out the Spanish enclave in Africa.  So cool.  We could not take our eyes off of “Mount Moses” as we drove.  It was probably an hour that it was visible to us!  One of the most amazing things that I have ever seen.

We worked our way up the coast which was truly amazing as it was so empty, but the wind surfers really were everywhere which we had heard about.  The wind farms too, were mind boggling.  They just went and went.  I have never seen anything like it.  There are a lot of wind farms back home in New York and all over Spain but this might have been more wind mills than I have seen in my entire life combined!

The countryside and coast leading up to Cádiz were very neat and completely different from what we have seen in other parts of Spain.  It was extremely interesting getting to explore this part of the country too.

We got into Cádiz, which is a fairly large city that is very similar to San Francisco in how it lies to the west of the country on a peninsula with the city at the tip.  And there is even an “Oakland equivalent” across the bay!

I had to drive through the old city which was pretty hectic.  Our parking was in the Plaza de San Antonio which is the heart of the old city and crazy to be driving around.  We got in and around okay, though, and got the car parked and set out to look for our apartment.

The Apple Maps sent us the wrong direction and we wound up walking thrice or more as far as necessary.  The apartment was right off of the plaza but we ended up going all over the place before finding it.

The apartment ended up being in the most ideal of locations.  Really awesome.  Dominica’s streak of finding great places continues unabated.  Dan was there to show us around the quirky, old city apartment.  This was super interesting to see what a “modern” apartment built into one of these ancient buildings was like.  It was all strangely shaped.  You had to go up two flights of ancient marble stairs that were all uneven and heavily worn.  Then the door was impossible to work.  Once inside nearly all of the light came from these frosted glass windows all over the place that opened into tiny interior courtyards just there to let light down.  The living room was the first room and a good size.  It had a tiny terrace that looked down onto the street that we had just come from.  Then there was the “girl’s room” which had a tiny window looking into the living room, but with curtains up, and two twin beds so perfect for the girls.  Then the next room was a boy’s room and completely loaded with toys!  Then a very long hallway and the master bedroom at the end of it.  Across from the girls’ room was the kitchen which had no oven, no microwave, no toaster oven and instead of a dish washer it had a washing machine, but no dryer!  So weird.  And then beyond the kitchen was a bathroom that only had a bizarre and only marginally functional plastic accordion door.  The shower seemed like it would be good (but proved to be marginal as well as the wall piece that was supposed to hold the shower head was broken so getting the shower to spray you instead of the wall was a bit of a challenge.)

We got in and got set up.  Then, nearly right away, I was sent to the car to get our stuff.  Then sent out again pretty much right away to scout out food.  I did and the family decided that pizza was the way to go.  There was a Telepizza, which I believe that we had in Madrid in 2012 when we were in our hotel there, on the plaza where we were parked so I just went there and ordered two large pizzas, one cheese and one spinach, to bring back and eat in the apartment.

After we ate Dominica and the girls got ready for bed.  I set off with my phone to explore the city.  My late night walks are amount my absolute favourite things and I would hate to miss an opportunity to explore the city.  It is also very important that I do these things because this is how I find where things are around the city so that tomorrow, when we have the girls, we can actually get to things rather than attempting to figure out where things are when we have the girls in tow.

I walked for several hours and really got a great bit of exploration it.  It was awesome.  This was one of my better city walks.  I immediately set out to do a big loop of the city.  I started by going to the Alemeda right by our apartment.  We could see the ocean through the alley when we got to the apartment and it was, indeed, just two blocks away.  The park or mall running along the ocean there was gorgeous.  So I turned right and headed through the park which eventually turned into the old fortress wall with the canon still intact.  I took the wall as far as I could and then descended down into the old city.

All through the mall and along the wall I was shocked to find, even very late at night, tons of teens and twenty somethings hanging out on benches, in shadows and or just walking around.  Clearly many were on dates and had nowhere else to go.  Many were just hanging out.  It was a busy place.

Once down in the old city I immediately found the Plaza de España with the massive monument to the 1812 constitution.  That was really neat and a great plaza.   And from there I went to the ocean on the other side and then along it for a way, then back into the city again and wound my way through ancient streets and plazas and stumbled upon the giant market there which was super cool.  But it was closed so I had to walk around it rather than getting to explore it.  But noted as something to check out tomorrow.

From the market straight through some truly ancient streets and back out to the ocean.  There were clouds tonight with no moon and no stars.  The ocean was pitch black.  I could see nothing at all.

I continued the walk around the city perimeter and even took the long walk out into the ocean to the castle that sits in the harbour.  That was long and lonely but pretty cool.  There were people fishing here and there.

I came back and continued the entire rest of the way around the outside of the city. It was a great walk.  Several miles and about two hours and gave me a really good overview of the city.  I am ready for tomorrow.  I really enjoyed this walk.  I got to see several important monuments, plazas, city defenses and historical sights plus some modern stuff that the city has done as well.  I really like this city.

When I got home Liesl was still awake and waiting for me by the door.  She informed me that Luciana had stolen my spot in the master bed.  So I moved my CPAP from that room into Liesl’s room and I slept on the one twin bed and Liesl slept on the one that she had been sitting on to watch shows on her iPad all evening.  Dominica and Luciana had been fast asleep for some time.  I was asleep long before Liesl turned in.  I have no idea how late our Liesl stayed up using her iPad.

Some blisters on my right foot from all of the walking, but otherwise feel very good.

 

April 17, 2015: Scheduling Our First Cruise

Dominica was up at eleven this morning.  I was awake earlier but Liesl sneaked downstairs and climbed into bed and snuggled for a while.  So I stayed in bed until she got up too.

The sun is actually out today, first time we have seen it since we were in Sevilla and we only saw it some of the time while we were there.  It has been a rather cold and cloudy week (with us in the clouds much of the time.)  This meant that it was finally time to do the laundry because there is a real chance that it will actually dry now.

Liesl’s school went alright today.  Not as good as yesterday but overall, pretty well.  We have learned that some of the stuff that she does, like the word testing, she and Dominica can just not handle doing together.  But Liesl likes doing it with me and she likes doing it outside in the sun which I am willing to do.  So we started school today by the two of us going up to the terraza and laying out on the sun chairs and going through her word tests together which she did a great job on, did not get frustrated and actually had some fun doing.

I worked in the lower level again today.  It keeps me out of the way.  It was still either too bright or, later, too chilly, to be outside.

This evening, Dominica and I worked out the details of taking our first cruise together and my first cruise ever.  We have been planning on using a cruise in 2016 as part of our travel itinerary to do our relocation between countries but getting it scheduled and paid for is something that we have to do now in order to have it all set.  Otherwise the cost will go up and the ability to take the cruise at the right time will be tough.  So we worked out the details for our winter and spring locations (roughly) and now our plans are firm.  It is rather amazing that we are making our relocation plans a full year in advance now.  But to deal with the visas and travel arrangements we really have to, which is crazy.

So we are now confirmed that we are heading to Argentina immediately after Christmas.  Whether we will be in Buenos Aires or Cordoba or some combination of the two has yet to be determined.  Almost certainly we will be in Buenos Aires at least some of the time.  But we are considering splitting our time in half and doing half of it in the capital and half of it in Cordoba.  But we might just do a weekend trip to Cordoba.  Cost will be a big factor, I am sure.

On February 27th, we are embarking from Buenos Aires, Argentina on Norwegian Cruise Lines for a two week trip around the entirety of South America.  This is the huge, epic cruise that we have been talking about doing for a couple of years now.  It is one of the rare cruises that goes to places that we cannot get to in any other way and serves as a very useful transfer between countries so it is very useful in ways that normal cruises are not.  It is not taking to sea jut for the sake of sitting on a boat but it is actually using a boat for travel.

We will stop in Montevideo, Uruguay which has been one of my top “must see” cities since I was in high school.  I have always felt that Montevideo seemed like one of the best places to live and Dominica and I even looked into renting an apartment there about a decade ago.  We don’t know if we will have a chance to visit Uruguay prior to the cruise but this guarantees that we will have a chance to go there on our trip to South America so I am very happy about that.  I anticipate that at some point we will do a three month tour in Uruguay but in case that does not work out at least we will get to see the country and the city briefly in March.

The cruise hits some more sites in Argentina along the coast and then heads out to sea and goes to the Falkland Islands, which is super cool.  That is a place that there is really no other reasonable way to visit and you would not likely want to make a point of visiting but it very interesting and special.  That is a major “win” of this particular cruise.

Then through the Straights of Magellan and up the Chilean coast which includes the fjords there which will be very cool.  And finally up to Valparaiso and Santiago where we will be getting off and staying for three months!  So the cruise is a very important part of our scheduling as we are using it as our “home” for a fortnight and it replaces our flights between Argentina and Chile.

Had kind of a stressful day with work.  Did not get to bed until very late.

April 16, 2015: Wrapping Up Our “Down” Week

It is another dreary day with clouds and a little rain here and there up in the mountains in our little village.  We are really surprised by the lack of sunshine in southern Spain.  We had really been expecting a lot of it and there have been way more cloudy and foggy days than there have been sunny ones.  I like the clouds and would like some nice rain but there is something to be said about having the view, too, and for having it be warm enough to spend the days up on the terraza rather than inside of the house.  But it has been cold enough that I have been indoors and bundled in my fleece jacket nearly every day.  I like wearing a fleece, but it is chilly enough that I rarely sit outside, which I had been hoping to have been doing far more.

Liesl had a good school day today.  We did several more of the history videos from the Khan Academy.  Those are fun to do together.  It is great that we have educational material that we both enjoy going through!  Liesl was excited about school today and had to run to tell me about fun things that she was doing and how well it was going a couple of different times.  When things are going well, they go really well, with her schooling.  But when we hit a problem, it is very tough.

Today was a quiet day for us.  We need quite a few of those. It is really easy for Spain to become a bit overwhelming as there is just so much to do and to see.  We want to spend all of our available time going here and there and seeing things and if we are not careful we are going to make the same mistakes that we made when we did our “Grand Tour of Europe” in 2012 and completely exhaust ourselves.  We can’t do that now.  This has to be a sustainable lifestyle because it only gets more hectic as we look at our summer travels (New York, possibly Ontario, California, Texas and Panama and we really need to figure out when we can squeeze in Puerto Rico!!) and then it is right back to Spain but in a different region to the desire to run around and see everything in the area every free moment will be there again too.  With so much history and beauty and culture and food around every corner it is really, really hard to resist trying to see and do as much as you can with every minute of every day.  But so much of the point of this was to settle into a little village, relax, spend time together as a family and learn what it is like to actually be Spanish – and the locals do not hop in the car every Friday night and run across the country to some other city and make it back just in time for work on Monday!!

Today was purely laid back and utilitarian.  No travel.  Just work and school.  No laundry because of the weather (still.)  Tomorrow we are still at home but have to get ready for a busy travel weekend.