Tuesday, October 25, 2005
Monday, October 24, 2005
Côte d'Azur
Monaco Monte Carlo's the first stop on the Côte d'Azur. Two hours of wandering and I am not impressed. The F1 track is as invisible to me as to others before, a cheap sandwich is too cheesy to finish and the white yatchs at the port are a bit of an eyesore.
S receives me at Nice Ville station and the trek up the hill gets us to the house. It's less of an apartment and more of a holiday nest and I realize what's lacking at our place in Barca. Class on Tuesday morning back at ESADE mean the only things I can savour at Nice are the view from the balcony, a proper dinner after 2 days and a night's rest before I head to Cannes en route to home.
Monday the 24th
Cannes is Monaco with less of a hilly terrain. I manage a glance at the venue for the annual film festival and half an hour lolling on an almost empty beach and it's time to rush for the station. Being on the road (or the rail) four days a week can take the joy out of the best of places. Either that, or there's nothing to write home about The Azure Coast.
The route home is Cannes-Marseilles St.Charles-Pizzeria-Run with a mozzarella in hand a la Moose Miller-Marseilles St.Charles-Montpelier-Barcelona, with intermittent fits of How the mind works?, mental wandering and napping.
Back home, ID and Phuku add spice to a dinner of puliyogre. I decide to take a day off from travelling in the coming weekend, before retiring for the day.
Saturday, October 22, 2005
Queen of the Adriatic
Habit forces acquisition of the Vencice map at 2.5 euros, when the LP map ought to've sufficed. First up is no.82 which criss-crosses the Grand Canal in a joyful ride to San Marco. As predicted by LP, I get lost amongst the lanes in search of Piazza San Marco (San Marco Square, the centre of Venice). But soon I am wishing I was here 15 years back, on a sunny morning in the summer holidays, with all day and two months more to go and nothing to do but explore the countless campi and canals.
Piazza San Marco mesmerizes. A tour inside the Basilica is turned down to linger amongst the pigeons and the tourists and gaze at the ancient facades which surround the square. For the first time on my crazy travels, I wish I wasn't alone. But soon enough, reality calls me back to my senses. The ATMs deny me the withdrawal of the last fifty euros in my Caja Madrid account and I am left with 20 euros for another day in Italy and the trip back to Barcelona.
Change of plans, again. A pepperoni pizza in a LP-indexed pizzeria later, I scuttle a night and another morning in dreamy Venice for the comfort of the floor in Sudipta's room and a loan of 50 euros.
23 years, 4 trains and a lockout
It's 12 hours and 35 minutes before I reach Milano Centrale. En route, I change trains thrice, at
The Nokia and Phuku save me a night at a youth hostel as a detailed SMS guides me through two metro trains and tram no.9 and past the reception desk to Sudipta's room.
An attempt to bypass the reception desk as I forage for my b'day dinner misfires when we are locked out of the Bocconi hostel building but within the campus walls. Frantic waving at a passing resident gets us back in through the back door and it's past midnight when I go to sleep on biscuits and chocolate.
Thursday, October 20, 2005
Gotta start sometime
Tuesday, October 18, 2005
There ain't no free lunch
The train reaches Latour-de-Carol on the Spanish border too late for the connecting train to
Monday, October 17, 2005
Art attack at the Louvre
Cergy le Haut’s distance from
1630
It’s with some relief that I finally find my way out of the Louvre. An hour of sitting at the base of Arc de Triompf and gazing at passers by, another walk down Champs-Elysees and pop-ins into a couple of Parissy shops and a couple of by-lanes later, I work my way through the metro to Gare de Austerlitz for the train home.
D-Day gone waste
Day 0 all over again. A late rise at 1130 leaves Loki, Jai and me on a 1600 train to Bayeaux in Normandie. This town is the base for exploring the D-Day beaches. But Sunday evening at 1730 and the place is asleep, rainy and cold.
0000 hrs
Pizzas for dinner as Tommy cuts a birthday margherita at
Sunday, October 16, 2005
Day-0 in Paris
Touring around is funny business. Chiru’s aim is to click 10 GB worth of photos, Tommy looks perennially worried about how many and what places he can cover in a day, and Loki hates the fares for travel and entry into places. It was meant to be fun, wasn’t it?
The late start costs us dear. The other three head back home while I sit at the entrance to the Louvre and make plans. I decide not to miss the trip up the Eiffel. An old pedestrian bridge across the Siene plays host to dozens of tourists picnicking in the twilight with guitars and baskets and the works. But being alone, I walk on, guided by the sweeping beam from the tower.
The view from the top’s good, the air’s chilly, the flashing lights make a good photograph and the crowd has people from across the globe but no emotions are evoked. Now I’ve been there, done that, good bye.
Back at Cergy le Haut, tortillas and dal for dinner. The French tortillas are almost chapattis and totally unrelated to the Mexican / Spanish tortillas which are omelettes. Cricinfo’s reports on the Super Series are read and Normandie and the D-Day beaches are chosen for a Sunday outing.
Friday, October 14, 2005
Camp Nou
Just one day of home and classes and a new weekend starts. Vikash, Rohit and I visit
1400 hrs
1610 hrs
The train to
Thursday, October 13, 2005
Home and high
I return to 43, C/Pavia with a feeling of quiet exultation at an adventure where things worked out. The good thing about the 2200 departure is that I have time for both bath and breakfast at home before setting out for college and classes.
Wednesday, October 12, 2005
A day on the road and night by rail
The sun’s not up yet when I reach the bus-stop. A backpacking couple soon joins me and we are introduced as we click each others’ photos. They are a German speaking Swiss pair studying in
The journey home is long and I have Janine and Thomas for company all the way to
2130 hrs,
I get to Madrid Atocha station after bidding goodbye to the Swiss with my e-mail id hurriedly scribbled on a scrap of paper, and traversing the concrete labyrinth of
Tuesday, October 11, 2005
A manic hike
At the bus-stop, I encounter an Englishman, Tony, who is backpacking with Lonely Planet Andalucia in hand. Attempts to hitch a ride to
Cathedral – Iglesia de las
South of La Almadraba – lighthouse – Faro de Cabo de Gata (southern tip)
8.5 km walking track
Left hand turn @ Café Bar El Faro leads up to Torre Virgin Vela Blanca (atop cliffs)
Just before the tower, track leading to Playa de Monsul (3 km)
Out of the cove and a further 2.5km – Playa de los Genoveses – Borronal
Track continues a further 4 km –
The next 5 hours is one memorable hike. At La Almadraba, I refuel with a large meal of calamares and fries and stock up with two 1.5 litre water bottles. The walk along another deserted beach soon ascends into rugged hill territory.
The hills on one side and a drop overlooking the sea on the other make for spectacular viewing. The big load on the back means that I stop every 20 minutes. Passers by in cars stare at the solitary hiker and several times I consider thumbing a lift. But then the landmarks in the notes start appearing on the horizon, one after the other.
Quite a few parties pass me in the opposite direction, all trekking uphill towards the tower, and all with holas. Playa de Monsul is reached at 1730 hrs after ignoring several other playas (beaches) on the way. The waters here are clear and calm and I walk in about 20 feet with the sea just reaching above the waist. Two hours of the little swimming I know and sitting on the beach leaves me shivering visibly but thanks to a Frenchman and his jeep, I get to Albergue Juvenil de
Monday, October 10, 2005
The Alhambra and onward
A rainy morning in
The
Lunch is back down hill at Tabernas Salinas. The setting is out of a Western movie: all wooden walls, barely lit, old wine bottles resting in the loft... but an adventurous order of smoked fish is barely edible to my Indian tongue and I depart with the complimentary bread in a plastic bag to assuage my hunger on the bus to the station.
A huge map of Andalucia comes free with the guides to Costa Tropica and Costa de Almeria I purchase at the main tourist info centre.
Motril isn’t more than 10 km off
The walk turns into a march along an exit to the freeway. There’s little space for pedestrians and cars whiz by. On both sides of the road are automobile rentals, garages and salvage yards. Hoardings of the Nissans and the Peugeots scar the countryside. Everyone in Europe seems to own a car and past their prime, the cars are dumped in the Motrils, away from the pretty touristy towns and cities.
The exit soon reaches the highway to Motril and with no beach in sight still, I’m forced to turn back, and up to the station. I grab a bite and send an offline message informing Bangalore of my whereabouts, as they say, just in case, before boarding the bus to
Sunday, October 09, 2005
Picasso and going solo
Slipping into solo pilot mode, the m.o. is clear. Head towards the closest tourist information centre, get a map and trace one of the recommended paths through the town. The path snakes in and out of beautiful cobbled streets and past a makeshift stage where local artists play rock on a sunny morning.
First stop is the Museo Picasso Malaga. The guy’s said to have said that it took him 60 years to learn to paint like a kid and how right he is. The pencil sketchings convince me that my Biology lab records have a future at the Louvre but I leave well entertained.
G’s been lost from my radar for 2 hours but I’m enjoying the solo trip and make no attempt to radio him. Pescado is too expensive and I settle for a pollo baguette and a chocolate cone. Admission to the Alcazaba (fortress) is free from 1400 but not at 1345. Fifteen minutes are filled with a visit to the remains of a Roman amphitheater, a stone’s throw away.
The Alcazaba is pretty, filled with gardens and provides a splendid view of the Malaga port. The Castillo Gibralfaro (a Moorish castle) is too far to tempt me into a visit, especially with the beaches of Malaga still to go. I head in the direction of the coast and the estacion, walk through manmade clusters of Mediterranean vegetation, and chance upon an Internet centre.
All mail accounts and instant messengers checked, an idea pops up. With 4 days of the ‘weekend’ left and only fuzzy plans to explore Granada, Madrid and maybe Lisbon, I google for info on the Andalucian beaches. What I read more than convinces me to head back south after Granada.
The train to Granada via Bodadilla leaves even while I’m mapping my route using the Eurail time-table. Directions to the autobus estacion from another uniformed officer and a friendly Nigerian who hands me anti Roman Cathloic Church propaganda take me to the bus station and about three hours later I am in Granada.
Granada
The tourist office is open even at 1830. An hour of map reading gets me to Albergue de Junventud. There are no single rooms on offer and I check into a room which is already occupied by a sleeping bag and a copy of National Geographic’s guide to Andalucia. A glance through the Nat Geo indicates that our partner for the night is not quite straight.
A shower later, I get to meet my German friend. He’s nice and polite and gives me his extra bus pass for Granada and directions to cheap eat-outs, both free of cost. I decide it’s time to find out what LP means by nightlife and strike a path for the ‘happening’ centre of the town: Plaza Nueva.
Just past the mandatory cathedral, a board advertises a Mughlai restaurant. The prices are high but the hole in my stomach :) is large. I fill it with my most expensive meal to date: 16 Euros of rotis, rice and vindaloo xyz. The nightlife hunt resumes post dinner and remains unsuccessful, despite what msb later claims.
The night trip has made my plans for Sunday clear though: check out the Alhambra and clear out from Granada. The walk back to the youth hostel is through desolated streets. Even the University area is bereft of all but one old man walking a dog and one young couple sprawled all over a park bench.
Saturday, October 08, 2005
Se-vee-ya and an identity check
Sevilla is the capital of Andalucia which was a stronghold of the Muslims in Spain in centuries gone by. First stop is at a Muslim monument, the Alcazar. The audio guide in English is well worth the money as the voice holds forth on Mudéjar architecture and Muslim royalty.
Lunch means calamares and fries for me and Pizzeria San Marco for G. An hour later I struggle to stay awake aboard the boat tour on River Guadalquivir but the message gets through: Expo ’92 was Sevilla’s moment in the sun and no one will be allowed to forget that.
1500 hrs
G will not patronize anything bloody and I am left in the company of treinta other tourists and a pretty guide for a fascinating tour of the bull-ring Plaza de Toros de la Real Maestranza.
Map in hand, I navigate to the last stop in Seville, Plaza de Espana, and reunite with Chief. Half an hour of rest and mouthfuls of masala puri later, we steer towards the station and Malaga.
At Malaga station, G walks into the Renfe ticket office but my path is blocked by 3 uniformed officers. I have no clue what they want and call out to G for assistance. Passports are asked for and names are relayed one alphabet at a time to HQ. Showing our institute ID cards doesn’t help and I wonder what’s going to happen. But by the time the bags are X-ray screened, HQ has cleared us and we are free to go.
But it’s another hour before we can ease the backpacks off the shoulders at the Albergue Juvenil Malaga. Both Chief and Navigator are clueless where ‘1.5 km west of the city centre’ lies and eventually resign to taking a taxi.
Friday, October 07, 2005
Take-off to Andalucia
G is bent on getting to Malaga but non-availability of seats forces the two of us Seville-wards. The trenhotel compartments feel really small but one snuggles into a berth for a good night’s sleep.