marksabout

Travelling around

Instalado

I’m just about settled in: I have my room in a cool apartment in the middle of the city. I’ve been in Barcelona just over a week, but have been ‘alive’ for only a couple of days… Speaking Spanish is a daily challenge, and I have middling days, and really bad days! Yesterday I managed a sentence or two… I think I will do some study today. I have the radio on in the background (but it could be in Catalan? I’m not really listening. Current track is English).

Things I’ve come to accept today: fresh milk (with an expiry date close to now, my current carton expires in July) is fairly scarce, at least in the myriad supermercados I have been to. This translates into an interesting tasting flat white. But the food is phenomenal! I’m loving the replacement of butter with rubbed-on tomato and (sometimes) olive oil. This wonderful (Catalan) change makes the ham and cheese sandwich a thing to look forward too. I’m not being fair. The ham and cheese is out of this world too. Even the supermarket stuff. I filled a whole Country Road canvas tote with groceries for only €16. Despite not knowing what to choose, I managed to have an awesome breaky! Mmmmm.

Mi casa for the time being is located in the middle of  the Eixample (extension), which is in the middle of everything…

Arrival

I can’t say I’ve actually arrived yet… bags were late – a day, and my forex hasn’t yet been authorised by the bank. It seems that they are happy to sit on my money for a while. I won’t name it just jet, but it’s a bank with a TLA.

So the flight was nothing special, although notably, the drinks are bigger on a BA flight, ask for a wine, you get two wines; ask for a beer, two beers. This is to stay in line with the oversized drink portions served in the UK in general. Or it’s just lazy air hosting. We did arrive 1.5 hours late into Heathrow, and I did think to myself ‘I hope they manage to get my bags onto the connecting flight to Barcelona’. Ok not those exact words, it was more a feeling. Without words…

Fears were realised as I slowly became the last one standing at the conveyor belt.

I’ve also been struggling a lot with jetlag. Today I walked for about 7 hours before realising I was so beyond tired that I finally went home to have a nap. Couldn’t sleep so decided to explore again. I’m absolutely positively here for the spanish cultural experience, but in my depleted jetlag state these two small reminders of home were comforting:

 

Catalan Adventure

It has been almost a year since I arrived home in Australia, well 9 months… And I write this as I make final preparations to board my flight to Barcelona for  another adventure (in truth, I’m still in bed, lethargic after a bad night’s sleep). Not sure what I’m doing, really… I don’t have many concrete plans for April, but from May I am enrolled in an instensivo Spanish course for 3 months.

It’ s not totally confirmed, but I think I have an room in the centre of town, as a base for my Catalan-tinged Spanish adventure.

Bon Voyage

Packed.

I think this will be more interesting when I have something to report!

See you on the other side!

Have no Fira!

As planned, I took off on a solo beach mission to Santorini. I had booked accommodation cheaply on Lastminute.com and thought I could commence a period of economising (word of Greek origin, not of Greek practice). Note to self: Cheap accommodation = car necessary. Well not quite a car, I hired an ATV for two days to do a bit of a beach-crawl. The quote was 35 euro, so I arranged a pick up and was driven speedily on the back of a moped with no helmet (though I was later told that if I didn’t wear one, the fine would be 300 euro). The driver must of sensed my nerves as he said “have no Fira.*” Well not quite. If I’m honest, he ACTUALLY said “don’t scared” before speedily undertaking a queue of traffic and ducking just in time to miss a low eucalypt branch. I was looking at the cars which my knees were close to grazing and missed the ducking cue to be promptly smacked in the face by gum leaves. Smells like home!

Oh yeah. 35 euro became 55 after I was asked if I wanted insurance.
Um, ok.
And do I want fuel?
Do I need it?
Yes.
Then I want fuel…

According to Stavros, fuel was cheaper if I bought it from him (10E), I complied, only to fill up today for (5E). I’m sure he siphons off the remaining petrol – as all bikes/cars seems to be hired empty (?) – and then marks up the collected by 100 percent to sell to an unquestioning Aussie such as moi.

Quad

Best self portrait I could get on the ATV...

A guy saw me reading the Guardian on the beach today and wanted to practice his English. His teacher told him that Guardian readers are worth talking to… Ha! Anyway, anyway, anyway. His name was Konstantinos. I said ‘Ah, Con’ to his dismay: ‘But ‘Con’ is a bad word in English.’ I said that not when it was a name. He asked me to explain how it was bad in any event. I told him the story about Stavros and his fuel.

Vlichada

Vlichada Beach Santorini

But don’t get me wrong, this didn’t mar (spelling?) my adventures in the slightest, just gave me some material to write with. Seem to be better when sarcastic. I mean I’d love to gush about the awesome volcano crater I climbed. They say it’s dormant, but the steam chimneys to me say otherwise. I’d also like to rave about the AMAZING way our captain organised for a tall-ship to be just between the two Islands at sunset, but that’s all I can say about it…

Sunset in Santorini

Have no Fira!

*Fira is the capital of Santorini

This is Europe calling…

I started this email in my head a couple of days ago and I really wanted to say Kefalotyri (a type of HARD CHEESE) to all who couldn’t find the spare cash/time to pop over to Europe for the humble week-long Celebration of Mark. But I had such a great time you’re all forgiven… (Just in case it’s not obvious, I AM joking…) (Not about having a great time).

In the end, we were a party of 10. The big day started on a small boat – we needed two – that took us around to the other side of Kastelorizo for a swim in the Blue Cave or Grotto, arguable better than that on the Isle of Capri, though none of us had been there so could not vouch. Having said that, the Capri grotto had want to be pretty good. Our small craft, not much bigger than a tinnie entered the cave with 5 passengers laying flat and the captain ducking at the last minute to enter. The cave was breathtaking – the light shone through the caves mostly submerged entrance providing the most intense sapphire light you could possibly imagine. We swam in the cave, and were tinged by the amazing light. Again, photos can describe this better than I can, but my camera’s battery was dead on arrival. Fortunately there were about  7 other cameras in our tour. That half hour would have been a sufficient celebration, but after an hour’s pause for a swim at a nearby island, we’d returned to the main island by midday.  I can’t remember what we did before dinner? Probably more swimming, lunch, a siesta?

For dinner, I had tried to organise a local goat to be cooked on the spit, but Komninos, my restaurant friend couldn’t find one small enough on the island for our group. He instead made a greek meat feast on the BBQ, accompanied by scrumptious mezedes. We polished of a bottle of ouzo, which happens to be so much more tasty when eaten with tzatziki, olives, melanzansalata (eggplant dip), feta, etc… Dad had been hanging out for a traditional Kastelorizian dessert my yia yia used to make, and so ‘Gatomari’ (lit. ‘cat gut’) was ordered the day before so that someone else’s yia yia could spend the day making my ‘birthday cake:’ a thin pastry rolled extremely flat, covering a whole kitchen table, that is rolled length ways then twisted around on itself (like a snail, or cat gut, apparently) and boiled, then baked, then covered with clovey, cinnamony, sugary goodness and torn apart and scoffed with one’s hands. That is a rule.

Life on Kastelorizo was a combination of eating, swimming, and sleeping, punctuated by cappuccino freddos and the difficult decision of what to eat next. With the help of Dad, we also managed to meet a few long lost relatives, one of whom is able to assist me in obtaining a Greek passport! Wahooooo! And it gets better: we Greeks born in Oz are now exempt from military service. I may need to be baptised in the Greek church, however which has a few traditions that could be a hurdle. Like the full body dunking – I’ll need a few priests to dip me in the holy water 3 times. Also, a child’s first haircut must be done by the priest – I can’t think of a hair on my body that has been in tact for the last 30 years. And there’s the small thing that the chief god parent has to pay for the whole thing, and Greek christenings are substantial affair. So this is a call out for a god parent with deep pockets: I want to have the christening on Kastelorizo! 😉

I don’t know. Maybe that part can be skipped?

I am now alone as the final party guests have departed from Rhodes. I’m sitting in a dingy internet cafe just outside the old town and sipping on my favourite (non-alcoholic) beverage, a freddo cappuccino* and writing to you, dear readers. The plan for today is to book some sort of onward journey that looks something like this: Mark laying on the beach. I will be doing the old island hopping thing, as my work in Greece is not yet done. It may never be…

Pending ticketing and accommodation, I should be en route to Santorini tonight.