Monfragüe National Park – Extremadura

Griffin vulture

We’ve discovered a whole area of Spain we’ve never been to before, and it’s fantastic ! We’re staying in a campsite just by the National Park – walking, cycling and guided tours in a 4×4 to see the birdlife.

Young griffin vulture with parent
Black stork sitting on eggs in her nest on the cliff face
Group of vultures
River Tejo

The griffin vulture  has a wing span of almost 2 metres – they are huge. When you stop at viewpoints you can see dozens of vultures circling overhead.

Gum rock-rose
Wild lavender

 

 

 

 

 

 

Black stork sitting on her eggs

This is definitely a place we’re going to visit again … many times

 

 

 

Orgiva – the Alpujarras

Hurrah, back in Orgiva in the Alpujarras after an absence of several years.

Lovely walks around the beautiful hills and villages. Four walks in six days is pretty good for us! On one walk we decided to try to walk back on the GR-7 path but kept losing the waymarks  finally realised there was far too far to go and we needed to catch the last bus down the mountain  this involved us climbing over a barbed wire fence and sliding down a steep bank to get to the road where we were able to wave down the bus!

 

Also went to a yoga class in Orgiva

And now off to Extremadura where we’ve not been before but has been recommended to us by people we’ve met on the campsite.

Almerimar

This is a strange place that some people on a campsite told us about. It’s a commercial Aire situated at the port of the town Almerimar which was created some decades ago specifically as a tourist town. We met several  people there in their vans who’d been there for months! calling it ‘velcro city’. We just stayed one night but it has a certain attraction. The weather is about 18C in the winter; there are cycle lanes everywhere – for miles along the coast; a nature reserve; loads of restaurants; lots of water sports (if you’re into that),  and a swimming pool 10 minutes away in the main town. It could possibly be a place to spend some time over the winter!!!

Cabo de Gata

Cabo de Gata is Europe’s only desert. It’s a Nature Reserve and people say that this is what the coast of Spain used to be like. Of course it’s a little sanctuary in the corner of the ‘garden’ of Spain, so you have to drive through wall-to-wall ‘plasticos’ before you reach it. But once there, wow it’s beautiful.

We visited a few years ago but it was in late June and it was much too hot, but early May is a good time. Lots of walking routes, temperature low to mid 20s with a lovely breeze. 12 miles the first day, 7 the second and another 12 miles the third.  The campsites there are all fairly large but at this time of the year there are not many people and the facilities are good.

Water wheel
Windmill
The morning’s catch
View from the restaurant

 

 

 

 

 

 

Plenty of windmills as it’s a pretty windy place

 

 

 

 

For our last night we stayed on a camperstop – the car park by the beach of a fishing village, intending to buy some fish in the morning. But they were all much too big for us!!!

 

Córdoba

The last time we visited Córdoba we discovered it was the day of their White Night when the squares all over Córdoba have flamenco all night. We wandered around all night and it was fantastic.

This time we’d discovered that for the first two weeks of May there is a ‘best patio’ competition, and all over the city people’s private patios are opened up to the public. So of course we had to go.

 

 

 

Typical Cordoba street

And then we re-visited the Mezquita – a beautiful mosque dating from 784 AD which has had a cathedral plonked in the middle. But the beauty and magnificence of the building still remains.

Mezquita

 

 

 

 

Mezquita
Mezquita

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Just a quick visit and then off to Cabo de Gata for some walking

Toledo

View of Toledo

Toledo is a fascinating place to visit. A completely walled hill top city with windy narrow streets, beautiful stone houses and architecture from various influences. Before the expulsion of 1492 there was a large Jewish population here with ten synagogues. After the Jews departed these were taken over and made into churches. Two have been restored. One is now a museum for Sephardic Jewry and the other is an exquisitely beautiful building with rows of arches. Apart from just wandering around the streets we visited the two old synagogues, the El Greco museum, a tapestry museum and the cathedral. Here are some photos (click on a photo for an enlarged image)

Synagogue

Toledo Synagogue
Toledo Synagogue
Toledo Synagogue
Toledo Synagogue
Toledo Synagogue
Toledo synagogue
Toledo synagogue

Museum of Sephardic Jewry

Toledo Large Synagogue now a museum

El Greco museum

The museum was thought to have been El Greco’s house and some of the rooms have been furnished with furniture from that period in addition there is a large collection of El Greco’s paintings

Greco museum
Toledo El Greco
Toledo El Greco

Tapestry museum

This museum is connected to the cathedral and contains wall coverings and also garments worn by the priests.

Toledo detail from a medieval tapestry
Toledo detail from a medieval tapestry
Toledo view from Tapestry museum

Toledo Cathedral

Toledo Cathedral
Toledo Cathedral detail from choir seat

Toledo Cathedral

Madrid

We stayed three nights in Madrid mainly to visit the museums.

We re-visited the Reina Sophia to see Picasso’s Guernica and a multitude of other modern artists including Salvador Dali, Georges Braque and Madrid-born Juan Gris. The Prado gave us the Spanish painters – Goya, Velazquez, Ribera and El Greco gets included), and then  we went to the Thyssen-Bornemisza museum for the first time. What a collection! Here are a few  photos.

Kandinsky – Delicate Tension No. 85
Picasso – Bullfight
Lichtenstein- Woman in Bath
Georgia O’Keeffe – White Iris No.7
Dali- Dream caused by the flight of a Bee around a Pomegranate a Second before Waking up
Chagall – The Grey House
Picasso – Harlequin with a Mirror
Hopper – Hotel Room
Van Gogh – The Stevedores in Arles

If you are going to visit these galleries and you’re over 65 take your passport as you’ll get in half price.

We stayed in the Osuna campsite which had mixed reviews but we found it absolutely fine and positively leafy.

We got the metro into town very easily.

And of course not to forget the Sunday morning market

Fortunately for us it continued until 3pm .

Segovia

 

Stayed a couple a nights in Segovia which I definitely recommend for a visit. It has a Roman aquaduct 900m in length built in 50AD. It also has an Alcuzar which looks like a fairy castle (it was rebuilt after a fire) and evidently Walt Disney used as the basis for his castle in Sleeping Beauty.

 

But apart from all that it’s a lovely place to walk around. Small enough to manage and at this time of the year not crowded with loads of tourists (only a select few).

We wandered around the old Jewish quarter (the Jews were expelled from Spain in 1492 by Ferdinand and Isabella) Where they have a permanent  exhibition in a Jewish centre.

Stayed overnight on an Aire at the bullring- very pleasant and just a 10 minute walk to the centre

 

First night in Spain

We arrived in Santander and decided that the one Camperstop in the town would be full up, so drove for 30 minutes to a delightful medieval village called Santillana del Mar. This had a great big Aire on the edge of the village with a few other vans

The village was just five minutes walk and we found a most acceptable restaurant up a little cobbled street, especially for Valerie’s birthday. A €16 menu 3-course meal including a bottle of Rioja ticked all the boxes.

I would definitely recommend it for a night’s stop when coming off the ferry