Granada Day 1
Easy
transition from Madrid to Granada on the train then a bus. Not much to
see in between but there are many red poppies in bloom in the
non-cultivated areas along the tracks. We had detailed directions to our
AirBNB but the taxi can take us only so far The last bit was paved but
still a single lane of two-way traffic (luckily we didn't meet anyone
coming in).
Here
in Granada when the roads and sidewalks aren't paved with concrete or
asphalt they
are "paved" with rocks set in concrete - larger rocks for
the roads and smaller ones for the
sidewalks. The sidewalks often even
have designs made of light- and dark-colored rocks.
The rocks stick up
out of the concrete so it is far from a flat surface though they are
shiny
and smooth (and somewhat slippery when wet).
Where
the taxi dropped us off the paving shifted from asphalt to rocks. We
made it about 10 feet pulling our wheeled luggage along. Jeff was the
hero and carried both the larger bags the rest of the way which was
short and downhill but still the bags are 30-40 pounds each. When we
leave it will be a similar distance but we will be continuing downhill
(and some of that has concrete sidewalks).
Our
host was there to meet us and show us a bit around the house and where
we are on a map. We are VERY CLOSE to the Alhambra which was intentional
but Serena made these reservations so long ago she didn't remember the
details. We have a tour tonight of the Nasrid Palaces at the Alhambra
but in the meantime we went down to the Plaza Nueva area to get maps
from the Tourist Info office and try to find a grocery store so we can
buy coffee and breakfast items.
Our house (https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/886960)
has a rooftop deck. We decided to enjoy it and have dinner here. We
bought some savory pastries and wine in town and had a light dinner at
the house.
BTW - We didn't get lost once yet today; this is unusual so far.
We
didn't wish to press our luck so we left the house with plenty of time
to spare to get to the meeting point for our tour and we were quite
early. (FYI - Going down a short dead-end street parallel to the one you
really want is NOT really "lost".) We were a small group of only three
couples (the others from Chicago and New Mexico). Our guide Sophia (or
Sofia?) grew up in Granada. She studied abroad in Manchester England for
a year to improve her English. She was fluent but still a heavy accent.
She was also quite knowledgeable and very proud of the local heritage
(rightly so). We ended up on the night tour of the Nasrid Palaces
because despite our early planning we were too late to get the regular
tickets. It was an excellent tour and we ended about 11pm at a different
gate than the one we came in at. And yet we still didn't get lost. We
did recognize at one point that we were definitely someplace different
than we had been earlier but we chose the right direction from there and
shortly we were home. This being Spain and it not yet being midnight we
of course didn't go to bed. We had a snack and a drink and got to bed a
bit before 1am. Good thing we didn't go to sleep right away because the
trash area is right next to our house and they pick up the trash here everyday and apparently they do it at 11:50 at night!
Day 2 in Granada
Our
"street" is a dead-end so not a lot of traffic and it was quiet enough
that we slept until 11am. That wasn't the plan but it's okay. After
breakfast and starting a load of laundry we headed uphill back to the
Alhambra - our night Nasrid Palace tour ticket included admission to
everything else today.
The
map brochure says the average visit is 3 hours; for us it was closer to
5 hours. We wandered throughout the Generalife gardens, both museums in
King Charles V's palace, the Partal Palace and the Alcazaba. It's nice
to be here in spring when the gardens have so many flowers in bloom. We
highly recommend a visit to the Alhambra and the Nasrid Palaces (though
you can probably skip the Museum of Fine Arts).
We
left the grounds through yet a different gate and headed back to Plaza
Nueva so we could have dinner at a Moroccan restaurant we picked out
yesterday. The dinner was very good and the herba buena/mint tea was
intense and sweet. Afterwards we were back at the house on the deck
doing the usual - Jeff examining and culling photos and Serena doing her
daily journal.
Granada Day 3
We
bought 24-hour tickets in advance for the tourist train (wheeled
passenger trolleys linked and pulled by a small bus) and today we used
it to visit the Royal Chapel adjacent to the cathedral. This chapel is
where King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella are entombed. You can see their
carved marble headstones above and go below for a view of their lead
caskets. There is also a museum with relics from their lives. We didn't
plan to go to the cathedral and that was decided for certain when we saw
the line for buying tickets. We caught the train back to the stop
closest to our house which resulted in a downhill rather than uphill
walk home. :)
After
lunch and getting our luggage ready to go for tomorrow we had lunch and
enjoyed our deck again. Today started with light rain first thing in
the morning but since then it's been a mixture of overcast (but bright)
and sun.
Caught
the "train" around 7pm over to St. Nicholas overlook which has a
panoramic view of the Alhambra. We had hoped for sunset light
highlighting the buildings but it's too overcast now. It was still
beautiful and we did have some nice views of the snow-capped Sierra
Nevada in the background. They light up the facades of the Alhambra at
night so we got a window table at one of the restaurants below the
overlook and settled in with a bottle of wine and a few tapas. The
restaurant was only lightly occupied until just when we were leaving
about 9:45 p.m. At that time a very large group of Japanese tourists
started streaming in. We were able to take the "train" back to Plaza
Nueva and walk up to the house.
Leaving Granada
We
didn't realize until we arrived at the station this morning that we get
to ride the bus again. Back to Antequera and catch a train from there
to Seville. It's lightly raining this morning in Granada and we expect
rain in Seville too.
Serena
is enjoying her ipad and finding it super convenient to be able to
journal and type these blogs when we're in transit without internet.
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| Alhambra and the Sierra Nevada |
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| Alhambra at night (in the foreground is our restaurant) |
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| Alhambra view from Generalife (also part of the Alhambra) |
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| Interior decoration |
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| Interior decoration |
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| Typical road paving with Jeff's feet for scale |
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| Jeff with the Hotel Alhambra Palace |
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| Granada Cathedral & Serena |
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| Alhambra rose |
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| Interior decoration |
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| patterned sidewalk |
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| interior decoration |












Wonderful commentary and really enjoy the photos. Almost like I'm traveling also.
ReplyDeleteHey, you guys, great stuff here! I'm enjoying your blogs. Hope y'all are now catching up on sleep in peace and quiet in Venice! Wine options there certainly seem entertaining. BTW, great pictures of the races and jubilation aftermath, Jeff. ~Robin
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