Wednesday, November 21, 2012

El Alto de Matasanos

Question: What's better than meeting up with a random stranger for a language exchange? (I did this the day of the general strike, November 14th, and it went alright).
Answer: Meeting up with a group of 27 strangers for an all day hike in la Sierra de Guadarrama! I did this at the recommendation of one of the teachers I work with. He sent me links to three different Madrid-based hiking groups, all of which lead trips Saturdays and Sundays of all weekends of the year. I gave it a go this past Sunday and have since determined that these trips are very worth the money. The price to go almost breaks even with what it costs to travel to visit another city from Madrid and the bus ride is more direct, not stopping at intermediary points to pick up passengers, but taking you straight to the hike. Having a guide, you don't have to navigate your way through unfamiliar territory or concern yourself with making it back to the bus station at a certain hour. Plus, you get a group of Spanish people to socialize with for the day. Many of the Spanish people who attended the hike frequent such excursions because they prefer to be taken for loop-hikes or on hikes that go from one place where the bus drops you to a different place where the bus picks you up. For example, we started up from the village, Miraflores and we ended in the village, Soto del Real...18 kilometers of trail between start and finish.


We left a beautiful sunny day in Madrid and headed to la Sierra de Guadarrama, where we experienced
un poco de todo: niebla, lluvia, nieve, sol (a bit of everything: fog, rain, snow and sunshine). In this photo
you can see donde los robles hacen transicion a ser pinos (where oak trees tranistion to pine). This is where our
18 kilometer trek began...near Rascafria, where I went mushroom hunting a few weeks ago with my roommate's family.

La hoya de San Blas and in the distance we could see Madrid; unfortunately, it doesn't show in the photo. Don't let the small village fool you! That is most definitely not Madrid!

La sierra de Guadarrama, mainly granite and quartz. Esa planta tan dominante se llama piorno. Cuando nieve, no entra por dentro de la planta y se convierte en horno calientando un poco la tierra por debajo de la planta y luego pueden meterse varios animales e incluso insectos para evitar el frio que hace el invierno. The plant you see is called piorno. When it snows, snow doesn't enter the base of the plant. A warm, microclimate is created and animals depend on this to make it through the harsh winter season.

Walking through fog...

Tantas cabras del monte como nosotros!!! Mountain goats!

La subida final...y ya bajamos! The final accent before descending.

Just browsing around in the fog...

los machos

La unica no espanola...I was the only foreigner.

Marvelous light...

This is where we took our lunch break. By this time, I had already eaten all of my food and I was too embarassed to admit that I hadn't brought enough food for the day (I thought we were going to stop along the way at a place where I could buy more provisions, but I got mixed up looking at various itenoraries). Anyway, several people noticed and before I knew it half of the group was throwing food my way! I felt even more embarrassed, but also grateful. Many people said they had made the same mistake in the past. I am glad they helped me because we ended up having a person in the group with serious pain in his legs which caused our descent to take twice the time our guides predicted it would take!

Estas rosas, si las conozco bien!

La ultima cruz y por fin llegamos al pueblo, El Soto del Real

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Avila

On Saturday, I took a daytrip with two other women to Avila, the provincial capitol of Castilla Leon, a province that boarders la Comunidad de Madrid to the northwest. The city was founded by the Vettones, 5th Century BC, pre-Roman time. They built one of their strongest fortresses there and called it Obila, High Mountain. Later, the Romans conquored Obila and called it Abela. After the fall of the Roman Empire, the Visigoths, who once held power over most of present-day Spain and France, took control of the area..and later the Arabs, who called it Abila. During the Christian reconquest of Spain, Christian warriors repeatedly attacked the town until it became virtually uninhabitated. It was repopulated in 1088 and soon afterward the wall that still stands was constructed under the orders of Raymund of Burgundy, the son of Alfonso VI of Castilla Leon.  

Avila is the highest capitol city in all of Spain, resting at 1132 meters (3714 feet) above sea level. The old city is not only surrounded by the aforementioned medieval wall but is also embraced by the river Adaja. Avila is the birthplace of the Catholic nun, Santa Teresa, famous for the poems she wrote in adoration of Jesus Christ and for the yemas which may or may not have been made by her first. The town is well known for the variety of artesan treats, like yemas, some following recipes maintained for centuries. We were pretty impressed by the sweet shops' window displays in the plaza. The town is small enough that we began to retrace our footsteps in it after just a few hours exploring.  The most impressive monument in Avila, and the main reason I felt compelled to visit, is its well intack wall, which you can pay an entry fee to walk atop and view the city and surroundings from. The wall clashes horrendously with recently constructed shops and pisos, particularly the structures you view outside the wall. It truly feels like two times being smushed together. Enjoy the photos of Avila...


Entry to the historic center of the city, still completely walled-in.

Liza, Johanna (from Germany) and Shayna, from Oregon
standing on top of Avila's wall.

The Cathedral, which we opted out of seeing. With so
many holy places and cathedrals in this country, I really don't
feel the impulse to see them all, at least not inside and out!


Las ciguenas construyen nidos encima de las catedrales siempre. This is
one of my favorite parts about cathedrals, the stork nests!

Johanna y Shana paradas en la murralla de Avila

The cities of Spain are stony and dense.

The town of Avila, protected for centuries by the same old wall.

Another puerta de la ciudad.


Liza y Leon, en Castilla Leon



Another church and in the distance, peaceful countryside.

Another perspective of the Catedral

I wonder how many people have walked this wall?


Liza y el oso...o es vaca o es cerdo?

Santa Teresa

There are countless sweetshops named Yemas de Avila. Yema is Spanish for
egg yolk and the sweets are just that, egg yolks combined with sugar, cinnamon and lemon.
We decided we'd try them before leaving the town and it was about the last thing we did.
We went from shop to shop trying to find someone who would sell us las yemas por unidad
(singles) and no one would. They are always sold packed in boxes because the yolks
get hard...but at the time, I didn't think that the yemas were truly egg yolks.
I thought they merely imitated egg yolks.

El rio Adaja. It looked very polluted, sadly, but we did see geese (gansos) and ducks (patos), including Mallards paddling along.

Fall in Spain is mainly yellow..those are Birch trees!

Viewing the wall from outside. You can't even see the town at this angle!

This is where we ended up settling on buying two-pack boxes.
We had been anticipating trying yemas for a couple of hours at this point...

I think yemas are the most disgusting thing I've eaten
in Spain. I do not consider myself to be a picky eater, but
these seriously made me gag. I couldn't finish even one.
The taste persisted long after the experience, even after
drinking water and eating other food. Still, I'm glad I
gave the yemas a try while I was in Avila. Otherwise,
I'd still be wondering what I'd missed out on.

Friday, November 16, 2012

Mi largo fin de semana en Asturias con Wendy Walker

Last week, I made a long weekend for myself and headed to the north. I took advantage of working at two schools and managed to talk my way out of working on a Thursday at one school and a Monday at the other without either school knowing I planned to take TWO days off, enabling me to travel on a Wednesday night and stay through Monday morning of this week, thus spending four complete days in Spain's green, sea-facing, mountainous province, Asturias. I found cheap plane tickets, 10 euros each way, and convinced the teachers at each of my schools that I could make up for missing the days by working on Fridays in the future, which I normally have off (today, I made up for one of the days). I planned to stay with Wendy Walker, a professor of mine from Huxley who has been working and living in Oviedo (capitol city of Asturias) this Fall, teaching eco-turism and parks/recreation classes to a group of students traveling abroad. She greeted me warmly when I arrived to her flat late on Wednesday night, an hour later than anticipated due to a labor strike at Madrid's airport. She generously hosted me for the entire weekend. We planned a different excursion for each day, making my weekend in Asturias by far the most adventuresome and varied of any prior, and I loved being in Wendy's company immensely.
This is the university in Oviedo, where Wendy has been working this season. Doesn't that sky look like November in Washington?


At times during the weekend, I saw bits and pieces of the northernmost route for Camino de Santiago and I very much would love to return to the north to walk along its coast from one end to the other.

Certainly, the cloud-filled sky, humidity and almost constant chance of rain reminded me of home. Moreover, I discovered that Asturian forests host licorice and maidenhair fern varieties, as well as Alder, Hazelnut, Birch, Beach and Pine trees that create landscapes quite similar to Western Washington. Many of the plants are foreign, yet familiar. I have never encountered before traveling. I acquainted myself with the Madrono Trees too (Strawberry Trees); these are not the same as our Pacific NW Madrona, but they are quite similar and belong to the same great family of plants, Heather. I can see why the Spanish explorers mistook our Madrona for their Madrono and thus named the Native American species for their Spanish version.
There are some Madrono Trees planted on Western's campus outside of the Rec Center...look for them! Also, the fruits are edible 








Thursday: My solo day in Oviedo. Wendy taught her class that day so I spent the day exploring freely and I had a great time doing so. I found the city to be much calmer and cleaner than Madrid. I liked being in a place where I didn't need to take a metro to get from one end of town to the other; I could walk! I visited an archeological museum for free. It was a really interesting museum, filled with artifacts from prehistoric, roman and medieval times..I took some photos.
Prehistoric horse art
It's the sort of museum I'd love to go back to.  I made my way up into the hills to walk along a paseo from which I enjoyed vistas of the city and of hills and mountains, many snow covered, in the distance.
el paseo

Colorful houses in the countryside
I met up with Wendy that evening and we went out to eat a traditional Asturian dinner together. I was excited, after having been told by many that the food in northern Spain is a great deal more delicious than Madrid's. I knew what I would order before I even opened the menu to look at the options-- Fabada Asturiana!! I had seen these words posted on signs outside restaurants all day as I explored town. We also shared a couple of bottles of Sidra (Cider) and a serving of flan for desert. While we ate, we listened to traditional Celtic Asturian bagpipe music, live! Part of what tips you off that you're in a different region culturally when you're in Northern Spain is the strong Celtic traditions still persisting, including beautiful Celtic folk music.
Fabada Asturiana: White beans, chorizo, blood sausage, bacon fat and ham bone. There are records of Asturians eating this dish as far back as the 1600s. Originally it is quite a humble supper, mainly consisting of beans and whatever meaty ends people had to add to it. Today, it is the most prototypical traditional Asturian entree, present on the Menu del Dia (Daily Special) at every restaurant in Oviedo. It's hearty farming food. This week in the metro, I've noticed many advertisements for canned fabada..something tells me this just wouldn't be the same...
This is our waiter pouring sidra for us. People go through training courses especially to become sidra pourers. As you can see, it's quite a trick. They pour from way up high, aiming for the glass, in order to make the otherwise flat cider carbonated. You must drink what the waiter pours fairly immediately or else it turns flat again. Drinking sidra natural is not for those who sip! It demands more attention from servers, as well, for they must come back again and again pouring sidra for you until you finish the bottle! This tradition lends itself to sticky restaurant floors!! For every pour, a little sidra slips onto the floor.
After dining, we poked around the center of town looking at a few of the hundreds of quirky statues randomly strewn about Oviedo. We especially sought out viewing, "la Maternidad (aka la Gorda)" by Botero..

Afterward, we ventured to meet up with some of Wendy's students at a show at a local bar where a group from Portland, Blind Pilot, were to perform. Unfortunately, we didn't get to hear them for very long; by the time they came on we were tired and ready to rest for the adventure awaiting us in the morning. Still, I felt lucky to see them live in small-city Oviedo, free of charge. The lead singer had lived in Oviedo and attended the school there and so the group had a special invitation, I'm sure, to the town and bar. In Madrid, seeing them would have cost 25 euros..more than my round-trip airfare to Oviedo!

Friday: We rose early to catch a bus to Cobadonga.
Iglesia at Cobadonga, built around 1860..so not terribly old.
From Cobadonga, we piled into a taxi van with three Venezuelan immigrants to Spain and headed to los Lagos, in el Parque Nacional de las Montanas de Cobadonga, part of Picos de Europa. I felt relieved in the mountains, far from any major city. I felt comfortable in mind, body and spirit. It was interesting to notice differences in Spanish national park management customs..the greatest and most apparent being that this park was pastoral. Part of what this national park preserves and protects is the traditional agrarian lifestyle that has for centuries altered the ecosystem. The mountains, from a distance, appear as raw and pristine as ever a mountain could, but up close it is apparent that these places have been and remain to be heavily influenced by humans. Biodiversity of wildflowers, shrubs, grasses and the creatures that would be attracted by a more varied array of plantlife is lower...and the lakes and streams are not so tempting to drink from as those that run through Mt Rainier National Park, considering the quantity of cow pies underfoot. Clearly, the plants and animals fittest to live along with livestock and farmer flourish.. We saw many a stone sheep herder's shed, and they blended in well with the natural rock formations. I am not writing this to criticize Spanish parks, but rather to describe them as foreign places, much as Spanish cities are to me. I hadn't considered that the way by which a national park serves to protect and preserve could vary so from country to country.
A sheep herder's place

free ranging horses..

One of the two lakes

Liza meets Fall in Picos de Europa

Here I am with Wendy Walker and a Yew Tree! What a treat..

Wendy Walker in Parque Nacional de los lagos de Cobadonga

Wendy and I hitched a ride back to Cobadonga and hung around for nearly two hours, exploring la cueva sagrada (sacred cave, a shrine to catholic saints and virgins) and the most beautiful rosy toned church I'd ever seen (rosy because its made from local limestone). We reveled at our luck at having met a day with no rain, even as the sky began to change to a telling shade of grey.
Shrine at the end of la cueva sagrada.
Cobadonga is famous for the battle fought by Pelayo, the first King of Asturias, cerca 725; it marked the start of Christian reconquest of Spain from the  Moors.

At Cobadonga, I also noticed mossy rocks covered with licorice fern, Pacific Northwesterner's delight!
 On our way back to Oviedo, we stopped at another town, Cangas de Onis, to take a look around, seeing el Puente Romano (not actually a roman bridge, but it is beautiful..and quite steep on either side). It has been made famous recently by the movie, The Way, about el Camino de Santiago). We had a delightful dinner of papas bravas and stuffed peppers (okay, not the best dinner we'd had..the potatoes were just french fries...at least we didn't go hungry!) We made it back to Oviedo around 10, tired as cats and happy as clams, with big plans for Saturday just a few hours of sleep away!
el Puente Romano


I had never crossed such a steep bridge..wouldn't like to ride a horse over it; however, we saw a woman succeed to do this.

Saturday: I was lucky enough to be invited by Wendy to tag along on a class outing with some of her eco-tourism students.We bused to a small village, rented bicycles and rode along la senda del oso..an old mining railroad that has been turned into a bike trail which runs 20 kilometers along a salmon rearing river with lush forest and cliff surroundings. It also takes you by a bear rehabilitation center and through a town where there is an interpretive center dedicated to educating people about the bears that live in Northern Spain and to bear conservation..we saw two bears from the trail and stopped in at the center. I had no idea that Grizzly Bears roam wild in Northern Spain!! They live only in very remote parts of Europe! The trail we rode took us through many narrow rock tunnels and at times the cliff edges offered us cover from rain..we met a couple of wandering goats at one point along the way and some of Wendy's students expressed fear to me that these goats might harm us if we approached them..I said, "They're just goats!" I rode toward them and sure enough, they high tailed it up a cliff away from us!  I sure loved pedaling along la senda! I felt at home, again, body, mind and spirit, just as I had hiking in the mountains the day before. The day we spent riding, amid washes of rain and bursts of sunshine, filled me up with contentment. I ended the day not soaked, but rather, grateful.
Wendy's eco-tourism students, la Senda del Oso

Goats!!!

At the end of the trail...

Oviedo rocks!

Food storage on stilts..

Casa del Oso is in this town, the bear intepretive center

Sunday: We slept in, 'til 8:30 or so. This was to be our most relaxed day, dedicated to exploring a beach neither of us had yet been to along the northern coast of Asturias. But first, Wendy and I strolled through Parque de San Francisco together. She is well versed in the history of this park and was able to teach me about many of the monuments there, as well as introduce me to the oldest tree in the park. We encountered a flowering rhododendron bush and I'm sure this was a good omen to us!
fungi growing on an old stump!

This is Wendy with the oldest tree in San Francisco Park, 300 years old. The park was once the garden of a monestary.
Soon, we headed via train to a small fishing village, Cudillero. The train left us a couple of kilometers up from the town. Cudillero itself had just one main street which spiraled down through a fairly steep and sudden valley to the ocean, houses and shops crammed together on either side. We had to walk along a highway for a couple of kilometers further before reaching a beach not affected by seawalls. The beach we found was unmarked to us by way of road and so who knows if we trespassed or not in order to make it there...we saw no signs warning us from going, and so we went. We took a chance, and trusted my iphone's googlemaps, and bravely traversed a dirt road toward the edge of the land. We encountered cows along the way and soon crossed a bridge over the railroad...and entered a thick and thorny gorse forest! The path down to the beach twisted and turned, steeply falling at times, and we went only as far as we felt comfortable and then sat and gazed out on the wild north coast. It was absolutely beautiful.  Before rain struck, we made our way back toward Cudillero. After eating by the sea, a menu del dia  of sopa de mariscos, paella, escalopes, and vino, we walked up into the old town a ways and climbed a spiral tower mirador...I very much enjoyed the views from above, as well as seeing fish hanging up to dry on clotheslines and one rooftop entirely covered by licorice fern.
Atlantic Ocean

Cudillero

A lighthouse we weren't aloud to visit

Licorice fern roof!

just hanging out to dry...


We caught a bus from Cudillero to Aviles and from Aviles transferred to a bus to Oviedo...we slept. I woke up, walked through Oviedo before sunset to the bus station to catch the airport bus...to get to the airport, to board the plane that would bring me back to Madrid! Transitioning back into my life here in the big city has been a bit of a trick. I really loved being in the north, and I can't help but admit here in my blog that I am better suited to live in smaller towns with greater exposure to nature and the elements of this planet..
As we flew away, I took a last look at the northern coast...not sure when I'll see it again!

Picos!!!!

Transitioning back to dry.