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Madrid

Madrid is a 625 kilometer drive from Barcelona and the trip can be faster than that sounds, especially if you do not anticipate receiving multiple (3) speeding tickets a few weeks later from Hertz, due to clandestine radar technology (no living/breathing highway patrol).  Still, the trip was worthwhile in our manual transmission Opel sedan, and I moved down to single digits during the 3-day weekend, in terms of number of stalls at stoplights.

Through our new favorite website, sleeps5.com, Evelyn had quite a find.  The Petit Palace Art Gallery on Calle de Jorge Juan is a nice hotel with a great breakfast buffet and an amazing room for 5, with a queen and 3 single beds, a fine bathroom and a large hot tub actually in the room.  I can understand that a single room for the whole family is not suitable for many, but it still works well for us, particularly at the price we were offered.

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As for sightseeing, we toured the old city, visited the Royal Palace, the Prado, and the Reina Sofia Museum (only to see Guernica). In Plaza Mayor, the historic center of Madrid dating back to early 17th century (for bull fights, executions—see above relief, celebrations), our guide explained the interesting history of the statue of Felipe III on a horse, placed in the center of the square in 1848.  For decades, a smell pervaded the square, and was strongest closer to the statue.  In 1936, at the beginning of Franco’s reign, many statues, including this one, were smashed.  Apparently, when it was damaged (eventually repaired to its current state), hundreds of little bones fell out and were identified as being bird skeletons.  A small hole was found at the mouth of the horse, where birds flew in but not out for years, due to darkness and the location of the hole, thus explaining the lingering smell.

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A restaurant recommendation:  Saturday lunch was at Pandelujo, right across the street from our hotel on Jorge Juan, with delicious food and a fairly roomy space, modern décor and well lit.  Particularly delicious were the meatballs, chicken wings, croquettes, linguini with clam sauce, and varieties of bread, as well as the sangria.

On Saturday afternoon, we joined our friends from San Francisco, the Headricks, who are living in Madrid, on a walk/scooter around beautiful Retiro Park.  Bringing scooters (“patinetas”) on the roadtrip was a solid move, and someone should offer scooter tours for kids/families in Europe, or at least in Madrid.  Scootering does take some amount of physical effort, yet it is certainly easier than a long walk and fun for them at the same time.  We all know that exploring European cities or any city requires extensive walking, and you may say, “Will, your kids are lazy, make them walk.”  But when you are demanding museums, palaces and other sightseeing, it makes for a much better experience when kids arrive fresh and not in need of a break before the first Velazquez. DSC_0680

Speaking of Spanish art, they rode their scooters to the Prado on Sunday, and had no trouble checking them there along with more normal items.  I would definitely recommend our guide, Pablo (Pablosas@live.com  667 423 370), who gave us the perfect one hour tour at a reasonable price, focusing on only about 10 paintings, including Tintoretto’s “Christ Washing the Disciples’ Feet” and Velazquez’s “Las Meninas”.  Pablo told interesting stories and showed us unique vantage points for each (look at Las Meninas through a tube of rolled up brochure to enhance painting/light); yawns and complaints were truly maintained at a minimum.

The Headricks introduced us to the Mercado de San Miguel, where we tested sliders, oysters, paella, and beer.  While it is nice to sample restaurants when visiting a grand city, San Miguel should not be missed for the atmosphere and the tasty tapas.

And, we visited Evelyn’s friend Fiona Maharg, her husband Luis and family at their house, just outside the city.  First I fouled up on the attire.  Americans learn fairly quickly that Spanish men do not wear shorts, particularly at dinner.  It was a nice warm evening and of course I wanted to wear shorts; I longed for that comfort but knew the right call was pants, and my nicer jeans would do.  So what happened?  I didn’t take into account that this family had spent the past year in Marin County; so, they knew how we Americans dressed for a casual dinner on a warm night.  Yes, I wore jeans, and Luis sported shorts, perhaps kindly dressing down with the expectation that I would do the same, knowing our customs.  In retrospect, after receiving additional information (see below), I certainly would not have altered my apparel or that of Max, whom we forced to wear a collared shirt (their children wore t-shirts).  Why not?  Check out Fiona’s article (she is a journalist) about life in Madrid, which I did not read until after our dinner:  “Spanish children are as impeccably dressed as their parents.”  Fiona and Luis were superb hosts, and they and their children spoke perfect English to us all night.  And, of course the meal was certainly tasty, an American barbecue, which was pleasant as we had yet to enjoy a really good burger in Spain; these were wonderful.

Barça!

We attended our first Barça game last night, and it was even better than expected.  Camp Nou (Barça stadium) is not too far from our home, a short walk and tram (streetcar) ride, about 20 minutes in total, and we could walk the whole way in 30 minutes.  Sevilla was in town for a La Liga game; this is Round 4 of 38 rounds in the season (40 teams, 2 games against all 19 opponents), ending in May 2014.

The atmosphere was vibrant, with 77,000 in the stadium, which actually has a capacity of 100,000. We had purchased tickets on the club website in the afternoon, and it is quite an investment for a family of five, close to $100 for any decent seat.

As with many U.S. sporting events, backpacks were allowed but searched, with the tops of our water bottles taken by security.  For a stadium this size, food offerings seemed very limited and no alcohol is served.  It is really all about the game.  With chips and other snacks, you are given small trash bags, so we were careful  not to leave a mess on the ground, a difficult task with sunflower seeds and peanuts; still, fans seem to observe this rule of litter.

While cheering could be loud at times, it was for the most part polite applause after a good stop on defense and accelerating noise when Barça’s offense was approaching the Sevilla goal.  Even so, it was nothing like a U.S. football game or a U.K. premier league match (from what I am told), in terms of sheer volume, chaos, and we did not see a fight.  And you cannot help but enjoy “El Cant del Barça”, the team song, played at the beginning and end of the game.

As for scoring, Dani Alves struck first and then Neymar set up a Messi goal, to put Barça up 2-0 after 74 minutes, what seemed to be a certain win.  But then Sevilla scored two minutes later and again in the last minute to tie the game and completely quiet the stadium.  Three minutes of injury time commenced and just when you thought the final result would be a tie, Messi did some creative dribbling to the side of the Sevilla goal near the line and fired back to Alexis who scored, with the game ending less than a minute later.  Messi was certainly impressive, as expected, but my novice spectating ability tells me Neymar stood out just as much, with his ball handling, speed and passing skills.

 

Mi Escuela

My Spanish classes have begun at the Don Quijote School, 2 kilometers from home, a 10-15 minute bike ride (many stoplights) or 20-25 minute walk. Almost 20 years have passed since I last sat in the classroom. I don’t miss the nightmares, which seemed to last until recently—showing up completely unprepared for a test or having one hour left to write a 10 page essay (some of this not a dream but reality in college). Well, now it is different, with no pressure (some self-applied though, I need to learn this language), no mid-terms, no nightmares…yet. I signed up for 6 weeks, 9:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. 5 days/week; here we go.

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There are 5 other students in my class, with 2 from Germany, and the others from Switzerland, Brazil, and Romania, all here on vacation, and all signed up for 1-2 weeks. On average, my five classmates speak 3 languages, with Spanish the planned fourth. During our coffee break, the German female, age mid-20s, told me, “I have wanted to live in a U.S. suburb since I was 10, even before I started watching Desperate Housewives…and the German suburbs are just not the same.”

I have no familiarity with this language but am excited to learn. As I walked up to the school on day one, the feeling was exhilarating with my backpack, shorts, flip flops. I felt young, if only for a few minutes before meeting my younger classmates; maybe I sort of fit in, even though I didn’t join my new friends at the club at midnight? Seriously, I’m cool (muy chulo), reading glasses aside.

Struggle with Nature?

We visited Park Güell with the Nelson family (also here for a year).  Not your typical park, of course, it was designed by Antoni Gaudí (1852-1926) and built in 1900-1914.  Our guidebook notes that the developer, Eusebi Güell, intended it to be a suburban “garden city”, similar to those in England, with 60 houses planned around Gaudí’s landscape (only 5 houses were completed).  Gaudí moved into one of the houses in Park Güell, and lived there from 1906 until his death in 1926.

The Park Güell website states that there is “a religious sense at the same time as organic and urban,” with the mountain locale “projecting a path of spiritual elevation” (a chapel intended for the top was never built).  Gaudí apparently was focused on the struggle between man and nature and I was certainly aware of my own children’s struggle with nature on this hot September day; it seemed as if nothing could spawn interest in this famous setting.

Then we found the viaduct!  This one is called “Carob’s Viaduct” and is one of several around the park.  The younger generation spent close to an hour climbing the walls; they could not have been more content. 

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According to the Park Güell website, Carob’s viaduct  “is considered baroque in style with a shaped wave…many architects have made further studies of this viaduct considering that it has a perfect shape, all the weight is perfectly shared in the column due to the structure that was made.”  We could do no harm…I guess.DSC_0589 

 

They also enjoyed seeing the lizard, normally confused with a dragon we are told.

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ESCUELA

School started today.  If MEM were nervous, they didn’t show it.  A new adventure that they may appreciate someday.  The first responses by all to “how was the first day?” were, “the food was terrible.”  They were on the meal plan, but looks as if we are switching to bag lunches.  It could be worse.

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