[To see the pictures of the events, click on the picture above]
This year has been quite poor for snow in Spain. Did you know that?! Despite the minus temperatures that hit Eastern Europe this winter, Spain seems to have avoided most of this, but the downside has been that there was no snow in the Pyrenees.
A friend of mine and I went snowboarding 2 weekends ago to FORMIGAL, a large Spanish ski resort. When we got there, we were wondering if they invented a new dirt skiing sport or maybe there were some runs hidden on the other side of the mountain. Having paid almost 50 Euros for the ski lift pass for one day, I was feeling a bit nervous about the potential disappointment. In addition, it was -12 with additional windchill. The good news: very few people were there.
Once we got to the top of the mountains, it was better. They have made snow and, despite some icy patches, the runs were open and quite wide. It was very sunny and the shredding was ON!
We ended up having a grand time (my friend Nacho was not pleased with my perpetual smile as he was freezing his little body off) and closed down the mountain, utilizing the ski lift very efficiently to the very last minute. I didn't even stop for lunch....
If you look at the pictures, you wouldn't even be able to tell that there was not much snow. Regardless, any day on the mountain is better than a day in the (you pick)!
Anatolijus
Saturday, February 25, 2012
Saturday, February 4, 2012
Valencia & Cullera: opening 2012 travel season!
[To see the pictures of the events, click on the picture above]
The last weekend of January we had a three day weekend and friends of ours
invited us to visit them in Cullera which is on the Mediterranean and is 30
mins from Valencia. It is a three hour drive from Zaragoza to Valencia
but the climate and temperature change is huge. It was so nice to be at
the Sea, being near water is something we miss a lot from our island life.
Anatolijus did his morning walks with Katia on the very long promenade and
took some nice early morning pictures. The
other big attraction is the Aquarium in Valencia (largest in Europe) which is
wonderful and a part of a new, very modern development by City of Art and Science by famous Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava. The main highlights were the dolphin show where
the trainers go into the water with the dolphins and get propelled through the
water and placed back on the side of the pool. The shark tank was huge
and had a glass tunnel through it so we were face to face with a sand shark -
very cool. And for lunch we had Valenciano paella in the fancy restaurant
that is surrounded by an aquarium wall.
We also got to see a walrus, beluga whale, penguins, turtles and
tropical fish. It is a very good aquarium
that kept us engaged and interested for hours.
After finishing at the
Aquarium we walked across the street to the City of Arts and Sciences (Ciutat
de les Arts i les Ciencies). The complex
is made up of 4 main buildings including an Opera House, Science World, Imax
Pavillion and Tennis Arena and the futuristic
style is amazing. Anatolijus took some
amazing photos to capture the feeling; one would not be surprised to see a
space ship from Star Trek landing in this area or the Intergalactic Federation
housing its headquarters there..
Sunday
was a lovely sunny day and after breakfast we visited the castle of Cullera
which is high in the hills behind the town providing fabulous views of the
water, beach and landscape behind.
Interestingly, in addition to oranges, rice is the other main crop from
this region. It is surprising to see
acres of rice paddies having never been to a rice growing area and apparently
this area produces 100 million kilos of rice per year. We left the coast and drove towards Valencia
to a nature reserve called Albufera. It is a very large “lake” with lots of grass
and ducks and other birds living here.
It is fresh water and we had a tour around it in a boat that then
returned us to a beautiful restaurant where we had another special lunch with
Seafood rice and Marques De Riscal Verdejo to match. One of the great things about Spain is that
there is always a playground for children so we were able to have a very
leisurely time having a pre-lunch cervezita as the girls were all playing
outside – fabulous.
On
Monday we visited the center of Valencia to see their old town, cathedral and
market. Valencia has a lovely feel to it
with all the palm trees and southern climate and its architecture and plazas
are less grand than what we have seen in Madrid or Barcelona, but provide a
cozy and very livable feeling. We did
find a Subway for lunch (don’t tell anyone!) so after a ‘footlong’ we drove
back through the mountains up to the plain where Zaragoza is and after
experiencing 14-16C we are now having clear cold and windy weather with the
outside temperature, with windchill, feeling
like -10C today.
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