Showing posts with label Denia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Denia. Show all posts

Sunday, 6 November 2016

Memories of a young traveller Childhood Spain-Barcelona

Childhood Spain - Barcelona
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One year we stayed close to Barcelona.  To be honest my strongest memory of this holiday was that it was quite unremarkable!  I know I met a fun bunch of people and spent hours in the pools messing about with my friends.  Our parents got on well but it wasn’t a friendship that was to last much beyond the holiday.  The beach wasn’t the best either, the sea becoming too deep for me quickly and the waves were large, so we stayed around the pool at lot.  The food was different too to that eaten on the islands and further south.
My strongest memory is of the excursion into Barcelona, a city with unique architecture and atmosphere.  It’s Spanish, but not quite so, due to the strength of the Catalonian culture.  Franco was still in charge on my childhood visit so the city residents were supposed to speak Castellano, the national language, but Catalan could still be defiantly heard.   After touring the city, of which from that visit I remember surprising little, we visited the famous Barcelona football ground.  Stood near the top of the stand looking down on the pitch it would be fair to say that as a non-fan of the game I was decidedly underwhelmed by the experience.  One memory stands out clearly, the pride with which we were told this pitch had the ‘greenest grass in Spain’ – as a child from the UK I just couldn’t understand why I was supposed to be impressed by the stuff that grew the same colour in my own back garden!
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Many years later I returned to the city, this time with Dave, and it had a totally different effect on me.  The Catalan culture and language plus its unique architecture give Barcelona a very different feel to the Costa Blanca.  It is a city I intend to visit again one day.
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Sunday, 25 September 2016

The importance of the towns squares

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The importance of the towns squares
In larger towns the traditional buildings are townhouses with maybe a courtyard or a roof terrace and low rise apartments with shops and bars at ground floor level with squares at regular intervals throughout the town for safe social areas. My parents’ last home in Spain was in the centre of Moraira town, a fourth floor apartment. The front terrace overlooked the street and the back terrace looked down onto the square, almost enclosed by other apartment blocks. One side of the square had seating and trees, the other side a children’s play area.
In the mornings the main users were older folk sitting chatting in the shade of the trees. Late afternoon the square was very noisy with happy children of all ages playing on the equipment, ball games or bike riding and mothers huddled in (loud!) conversation. This was repeated in several locations around the town. The Spanish like to socialise! In the evening it would be quieter again, people strolling through on their way home from work or with shopping, or maybe heading off to meet friends outside a restaurant or watch a football match in a local bar.
The weather in the south coastal areas of Spain means it is comfortable to be outside all year round, and it seems no-one expects children to be quiet! You see multi-generation families in the squares together, eating, drinking or just chatting, in a way I have rarely witnessed in the UK but have seen in other Mediterranean countries. In summer the children will stay up very late as it is too hot to sleep, a practice often criticised by the British holiday makers, but the children will have had their siesta earlier in the day so don’t need early nights.lingo2

Sunday, 7 August 2016

Our Spanish Dream Part 50 Cranes of Hope

Cranes of Hope

We’ve all heard of the Costa Del Sol, The Costa Blanca and the Costa Verde but how many have heard of the Orihuela Costa?  Well it’s not a Costa in the way we Brits picture them, it’s just 16km of coast in the very south of the Costa Blanca, Alicante region.  Forty years ago it was farmland and coastal scrub land, now it’s a large town divided into several separate areas; Campoamor, Cabo Roig, La Zenia, Playa Flamenca, Los Altos, Villamartin, Las Ramblas and part (not all) of Punta Prima.  Although often wrongly classified as part of Torrevieja, the area actually comes under the control of the townhall in the city of Orihuela, some 30km away, hence the name.  Popular with ex-pats from across northern Europe it has diverse population.
City of Orihuela
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An all year round destination for holiday makers, thanks to the milder winters, blue flag beaches and the famous golf courses of Villamartin, Campoamor, Las Ramblas and the newest addition, Las Colinas.  A lack of hotels means most holiday makers rent private apartments and villas, maybe one of the reasons A Place in the Sun magazine named it in their recent Top Ten of places to buy a holiday rental property, although even they mistakenly stated places such as La Zenia and Cabo Roig as being part of Torrevieja!
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And now Orihuela Costa boasts the largest shopping mall on the Costas!  Opening last October with 150 shops and bars, sporting some of the best known names on the high streets of Europe, plus a bowling alley, casino, ‘town square’ complete with dancing fountains, free parking and sea views, La Zenia Boulevard is a shopper’s paradise.  And it’s always busy.  Spain may be deep in recession but people still go shopping!
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Forever reading in the British press about the unsold new properties littering the coastal resorts and how nothing is being built, this area is genuinely ‘bucking the trend’.  At any one time there are half a dozen cranes to be seen on the skyline building new low-rise apartments and houses, which are selling.  There is nowhere near the flurry of activity that could be seen a decade ago, but there is building work, a rare sight in Spain these days.

http://www.aipp.org.uk/members/spanish-dream-property-beverley-townsend/2

Sunday, 24 July 2016

Our Spanish Dream Bull Running part 49

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 Bull Running

I hesitated about adding this one, it is a controversial subject, although not as inflammatory as bull fighting.  Whilst Pampolma is by far the most famous, and possibly also the largest and most dangerous to both man and beast of the bull running festivals, there are thousands of towns and villages across Spain that have their own annual events.  I attended one in Benitachell some years ago from sheer curiosity.
Part of the town is shut off to cars and strong cages set down both sides of the street.  The cages are for people, not the bulls!  Some are two storey with seating areas on the roof of the cage.  These seats are usually reserved by a local business or groups.  In some villages the ‘cages’ are built fresh each year from local tree felling instead.  We witnessed a case in an inland village a few years ago where tree trucks were set upright into the pavement each year instead of cages – that year one was placed outside the bank, the doors of which opened outwards so the tree trunk prevented the door from opening.  Instead of moving the trunk the bank manager opted to keep the bank shut for the whole week so the bull running fiesta could proceed unhindered!
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The foolhardy or brave, depending on your perspective, gather at one end of the town whilst the young bulls are in a large pen.  Once the men start running the bulls are ushered out of the pen to chase the men.  The idea is, of course, to get to the end of the course before a bull gets you!  Along the way people cheer the runners on from the safety of the cages.  The gaps between the bars of each cage are wide enough for a person to slip between for safety when a bull gets too close for comfort, but not for a bull.  Except one very enterprising youngster during the Benitachell run which somehow managed to get his head and horns through by turning his head sideways, then straightened his head and tried to pull his now stuck head back out – the bull shock the cage so hard the people on the top couldn’t get off quick enough as the cage below rapidly emptied!  Encountering an angry bull that close up is not an experience I wish to repeat in a hurry!
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Generally these small village events end with no injuries to either man or bull and are generally not opposed even by the anti-bullfighting lobby.  However 2015 was quite different as several fatalities were reported during the larger events (including Pamploma), bringing the matter very much into the news.  It may be a nightly event for a whole week in the town.  Whether ex-pats actively oppose these events as animal cruelty or accept it as a cultural activity is a very personal choice and one on which I do not wish to comment here.  Having experienced an event of this nature I personally would NOT choose to go again.

Thursday, 2 June 2016

Property Of the Day

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Ref: VRE 2888
Type: Villa / Detached
Area: Costa Blanca South
Town: Daya Vieja
Beds: 6
Baths: 5
Pool: Yes
Price: €1,300,000
Description:
This Magnificent Four Bedroom Mansion + Two Bedroom Guest House in Daya Vieja is situated amongst the ever so beautiful countryside, surrounded by citrus groves, farmland and picturesque valleys leading all the way to stunning mountains. Just a 5 minutes drive to the towns of Daya Vieja, Rojales, Benijofar,
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Dave & Beve Welcome You To Spanish Dream Property

Wednesday, 1 June 2016

Property Of the Day

Property Of the Day

Dave & Bev welcome you to Spanish Dream Property

Where Your Dream Matters



Ref: HEQ0027
Type: Villa / Detached
Area: Costa Blanca South
Town: Benijofar
Beds: 4
Baths: 2
Pool: Yes
Price: €210,000
Description: This four bedroom detached Villa situated in a popular area of Benijofar, occupies a spacious plot boasting: off-road parking, covered dining area, swimming pool, private seating areas, sun terraces, plus an abundance of outdoor living space.
Direct link to Property
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