Number of steps:
over 20,000
Number of drinks
consumed: 1 cava, 24oz of sangria, one fanta, water
Number of tapas
consumed: 1- burger
On a scale of 1-10
how great was it? 10+
After what, I swear,
was the longest flight ever, we touched down in Barcelona at 6:30 am. Now what?
I thought our plane had us landing way later and therefore I thought we had less time to waste
before we could check in. Nope…now we had extra time.
We cabbed it to the
hotel and left our luggage. It was grey and dreary outside, but it wouldn't
rain on us, no way. Turns out…we were wrong. We stepped out into the alley way
- that they call a street - and walked to the Columbus monument. In that time, we
were drenched. And we didn't bring any coats - I mean what's a little rain to
us Seattle-lites.
Back to the
hotel…the desk guy was laughing at us…back to get our coats and then we were
off. Not very many people on La Rambla at that time of the morning. It was
peaceful and wet.
What's La Rambla?
La Rambla is this
walking avenue lined with restaurants and vendors selling their stuff…lots of
souveniers and what not. It’s a beautiful walk and starts at Placa Catalunya -
the center of Catalonia - they say - and travels all the way down to the water front.
Probably a good half of a mile walk. We ended up making that walk a number of
times during the week.
It eventually got
very crowded (especially on Saturday - but more on that later). The maddening
crowd consisted of so many different types of people speaking a plethora of
languages. It seemed extremely clean for as many people as there were. Turned
out that every night a crew in bright green would clear the street of debris.
In fact, I found
Barcelona quite clean all the way around. There was graffiti everywhere, like
Rome, but you kinda begin to look past it - as if it's not even there or it
blends into the building.
We walked up the way
quite a bit and found La Boqueria. La Boqueria is an open air market. The
moment you step inside you are met with so many smells, not all good I might
add. The senses are overloaded with all there is to see and witness. It's clear
it's actually a working market where the locals all buy their fresh fish,
veggies and meats. In fact you could see them get a bit irritated with the
tourists in their way. One old lady exclaimed, "Que Horror!" as we
were all pressed together and she couldn't pass. It appears Spaniards eat
anything and everything. Some of the things I saw there I wish I hadn't seen.
And doubt I'll ever get out of my mind.
Anyhow, it's the
kind of place that's a photographer's dream. So many textures. So many little
goodies to shoot. It was hard to not
just keep the shutter button engaged non-stop.
Janet and I wandered
through and experienced as much as we could. I'm thrilled we went in today as
we discovered when we went back on Saturday just how busy and crazy that place
could become.
As we walked through
experiencing the sights and smells, we decided we should stop for a bite. It
was getting near 10am and we were hungry.
After all we hadn't eaten in like 3 hours. We plopped ourselves on two
rickety corner stools at a bar and ordered two cavas and a ham and cheese to
split.
Cava is as Barcelona
as it gets. It's basically a sparkling white wine…that they drink at breakfast.
I mean, what's not to like? Wine at breakfast? Yes please! The old guy sitting
down from us had a glass of red wine with his tortilla…so we felt like we were
"fitting in".
After the snack at
La Boqueria bar we decided we'd better get on our way to La Sagrada Familia. We
had a tour scheduled and had about 2 hours. Instead of hopping in a cab, we
decided (I'll reserve my opinion about whether this was smart or not.) to walk from
where we were to the church. It looked like it was a bit of a ways, but we'd
see a lot of the city and, what the heck? We were somewhat fresh off the plane,
so we did. Later the hotel staff would laugh and look at us in amazement when
we told them we walked there.
Turns out, as we
should have known, the church was farther than we thought. I was pooped.
Speaking of
pooped…once there we were now early, so Janet and I found a park bench and sat
for a moment. We hadn't been seated for 10 seconds when we heard this
splat. All on the front of Janet was a
massive, and I mean massive, amount of bird poop. A pigeon seated directly
above us had let loose. He had nothing left in him I'm sure.
I, naturally,
giggled a bit, but did the best I could to help her clean up. Which really
meant just handing her kleenex to wipe up with. It was everywhere. Gross.
Deciding that we had
had enough of nature, we walked back to where our tour would begin. The
wonderful Carlos was our tour guide. He had so much knowledge that it amazed me
how he could answer just about any question about the basilica. He clearly had
a passion for art history and loved his job. I love when we get lucky and get
tour guides that I'll never forget.
La Sagrada Familia
is the brain child of Antonio Gaudi. It started being built in 1882 and is
still under construction. When we were there last year they said it would be
done in 2021…now they were saying it is scheduled to be done for the 100 year
celebration of Gaudi's death in 2026. I'll believe it when I see it. Gaudi
realized that he'd not likely see the church finished - though I bet he meant
living a natural life and not one ending tragically by being hit by a trolley.
The church is
amazing. It sits in a none assuming neighborhood and is the symbol of
Barcelona. The church is staggeringly beautiful. The Nativity façade - which is
where we entered, looks a lot like melting sand to me. Carlos explained each
scene to us and its significance. Then, just like last year, entering the
church is jaw dropping.
Gaudi designed the
inside to look like a forest, and it sure does. The gentle curves are all what
you'd see in nature. There just aren't enough words to describe just how
beautiful this place is.
After the church
tour, we hopped in a cab back to la Rambla. No way in hell I was going to walk
back. It was time to check in, so we found our room and took a little rest.
But before we did
that we stopped off at a little tapas bar for some beer and a tapa or two.
Luigi came out of hiding and had some beer too. The two bar tenders thought
Luigi was funny and one even took a photo of him. We had a small burger tapa
that was delicious, some yummy olives…and a huge glass of beer.
Feeling better, we
walked down to our hotel.
Hotel Gaudi is where
we stayed and it was quite the nice place. Just a couple yards off la Rambla
and very centralized. In fact we commented a number of times just how perfect
of a location it was. And we had a fantastic view of the Palau Guell - another
Gaudi structure. The roof top had all sorts of fascinating arrow topped
sculptures.
We then decided that
we should go check out the rooftop terrace. Beautiful up there. We sat for a
minute and just looked at the skyline. A waitress eventually came by and asked
if we wanted any Sangria. Sure. Why not? So we drank the first of many pitchers
of Sangria.
After a little rest,
and well into the evening, because it turns out Spaniards eat really late, we
walked down to a restaurant recommended by the hotel called 7 Portas. Once
there they had an hour wait and we were just too hungry. On our way there,
however, we had passed several restaurants. So we picked one called Sailor
restaurant. I ordered chicken paella and Janet got adventurous and ordered
Valencia Paella - which had chicken, rabbit and snails…though the waiter called
them fish.
Both plates were
delicious and we were glad, in a weird way, that the other restaurant was full.
Back to the hotel
and we crashed. We'd been up for a very long time and we were pooped. We walked
over 20,000 steps that day and even Janet -the energizer bunny - said we may
have over did it.
1 comments:
Beautiful Jenn! I love your new watermark on your photos. You'll have to show me how to do that when you get back.
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