Thursday, November 1, 2018

Five days in Krakow

Flying out from Stansted in the UK to meet up with friends in Krakow, we spend a really enjoyable, if exhausting (and sometimes emotional), five days visiting the second largest city in Poland. There's so much to see here that five days just about does the trick although an extra day might have meant that a more relaxed itinerary was possible..

Most of the main sights are within easy walking distance.. and there's always the tram system, which is frequent and heavily used. All the sights info is HERE...' and here's the DETAIL

The large Main Square, old town, is dominated by the Cloth Hall, once a major centre of trade but now home to gift shops and other tourist shops.It's got a great feel though, with performers, tourists, more tourists and beautifully prepared horse drawn carriages.


A trumpeter sounds the hour from the Gothic tower of St Mary's Basilica



The Jagiellonian University Museum houses wonderful instruments of Copernicus and other notable astronomers. Must-see for me




The Salt Mines are a surprising highlight


There are memories of a more sinister nature here, of course; a trip to Auschwitz brings the absolute horror of mass murder of thousands under Nazi rule into powerful focus.




  Back to Krakow, Ghetto Heroes Square remembers the fortitude of Jews in the appalling conditions in the ghettos created by the Nazis.


Thursday, June 14, 2018

Flamingos and Ancient Mysteries....

A Road Trip in Andalucía...

When we're in Nerja and have a couple of days to spare (which is always more difficult than we think it will be) we try to get away in our little Spanish Ford Ka on a 'Back Roads' tour using the excellent book by David Baird:



These trips always take longer than we expect because there's always something that grabs our attention for far longer than planned.  This time we head off to spend a night in Antequera on his 'Flamingos and Ancient Mysteries' tour and, needless to say, we have a great time.

We head to Malaga on the Autovia then turn north on the increasingly winding A7075, stopping first at the small town of Almogía with its Moorish tower. The following two days are full of reminders of Spain's Moorish past and, as ever on these trips, we feel privileged to spend part of our lives in this fascinating country.

Here are some highlights in pictures:

El Torcal - limestone that was, of course, once the sea bed but now eroded into wonderful sculptures



Lobo Park - wolves!


Antequera's 4000 year old Dolmens (ancient burial chambers :


Pena dos los Enamorados: Looks like a reposing head; it is said that two young lovers flung themselves off the top, realising that a Moor and Christian would never be allowed to marry.


Flamingos on Laguna de Fuente de Piedra


Plaza Ochavada of Archidona - a beautiful eight sided square


Casabermeja cemetery - at the foot of the amazingly steep Calle Real which, they say, climbs to heaven; having climbed it, we certainly felt as if we deserved to be in heaven.


Almogía, tucked into the mountainside


Viewpoint above Almogía



We could go on... and on.. but that's enough. Time to clean the dust off the poor Ka.

Monday, January 8, 2018

Summer`s Over


Here's the usual (but late) update on our summer travels in the UK...

After arriving back from  the Balkans in mid-July we`ve been based at our UK home, taking a couple of trips on our coastal tour of the UK. At the current rate of progress we should be around 110 by the time we complete it; hope the car will last that long.

I'm writing this in our Nerja base and it's later than usual because we've been in the UK for longer than expected. At least we made it out for Año Neuvo after a great Christmas in the UK.

The hot sun and cooler winter air often give us a chance to see the Moroccan Atlas Mountains from our terrace out here as the light is refracted by the air density changes acting as a lens; this year was excellent for this phenomenon. It always gives us a thrill and reminds us of our trip across the Tizi n'Tichka Pass in our caravan in 2011.

Africa!..from our terrace:

On the horizon


and in close up


..and, of course, it's back to wonderful walking.





So what about our UK coastal tour?

Here are a few images as we visited Cambridge (OK I know it's not quite on the coast) and sauntered around the bits of the Kent coast we haven't previously completed:

Name that Cambridge Bridge..


Wish I could say it was warm and sunny..


Loafing about in Sandwich:

Sandwich Butchery Surgery!!

Eastbourne Upmarket Band Stand


Ramsgate looking pretty


They actually sailed his model viking ship - Cliffsend [info]


Margate's dubiously decorated seafront


Polegate Windmill & Museum


Back home there was the opportunity for a shot of December's supermoon:



So that's about it for our travels in 2017.
Can't go without mentioning our visit to our local  Chelmsford Cathedral to see our eldest receive her Masters in Human Resources which was uplifting. Also uplifting in a different sense was our drive into London to help our youngest move into a new house share - which has turned out very well. To us, the cost of living here is prohibitive with high rents and increasingly high prices. Can't help thinking that our generation had the best of it.

Need to work out some travelling plans for 2018....