Friday, October 24, 2008

Teasers and Spoilers

I know I'm behind on this blog, but I'm working on it. Until I catch up, heres a quick spoilers/teasers list:
  • I have an apartment near the beach in Cádiz
  • My mailing address is: 
Avendia Jose Leon De Carranza 18 7ºC
p/c 11011 Cádiz, Cádiz España
  • I have a new photo album up 
  • I am on a swim team here, and swimming every day.
  • I am really getting into my job, I love working with the kids.
  • My Spanish is getting a lot better, I am losing my shyness speaking it.
  • I haven't done any traveling, but I am definitely OK with that because I love this city. But now i have Fridays off, so I might start seeing what's out there.
Ill expand a little later

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Getting lost / La Barrosa



When I finally emerged from my cave, I walked out onto the beach and finally took in my surroundings. Even after the recent storm, which lasted way into the night, and the cloudy sky that persisted through the day, this was truly a stunning spot. I believe it is one of the most beautiful beaches I have ever been to.





Above: If you look closely, you can see the castle up on the hill :)

As I was walking around, I was stopped by more than one group of Germans who, upon seeing my height and blonde hair assumed I was German and started asking me something or other in their language. What followed was a rather awkward tri-lingual conversation away from which we all walked away feeling unsatisfied



I decided I was going to get to know Chiclana. After very little research (asking one dude at a bar) I decided I needed to heard back to the center of Chiclana. Being very proud of the strong legs I had developed walking around Munich and Barcelona, I decided I would walk. Maybe now I should show you a map of Chiclana, so you don't make that same mistake.
Zoom out once

I saw a map similar to this before I set out, but I neglected to look at the scale of the map. The line I put here is 5 miles long, but it is straight. And when you think five miles, you won't imagine that the street is nowhere near as straight as it looks here. Also when you think five miles, you probably don't think you'll be walking mostly in the moto/moped lane on a provincial highway. Since you are walking on this highway, which is on 3 bus lines, you'd think that if you got tired you could just stop at a bus stop, wait for a bus, and one would eventually show up. You'd also think that in a region that sees about 3,000 hours of sun a year it wouldn't rain all day after a morning that only saw a light cloud cover. Ill cut this short and just say you'd be wrong on all counts, and also that there is even less between Chiclana Central and La Barrosa than it looks like.

As soon as I made it into Chiclana Central, the weather of course cleared up. It was siesta time, so everything was closed, but I was able to grab a badly needed coffee at a small place. After that, I had a great few hours getting myself completely lost and not minding at all. I knew I needed to find a place to live but I wasn't worried about it that day. i was caught up in the fact that I was here in Spain. For the first time, as I wandered around, the enormity of what I had done and what I was doing hit me. My excitement gave me the energy to wander on what felt like every street in Chiclana. I saw some really beautiful things but of course did not have my camera with me. I may try to hunt these places down again in the next few months.

I took the bus back to my hostel, wandered out to the beach to watch the sunset (I'm going to make an album of more pictures, these included, and link to it somewhere here), and had a great meal down by the beach before finally turning in after a few beers at the hostel bar.


Saturday, October 4, 2008

Arrival



This is an old post I wrote shortly after arriving in Cádiz. I don't know why it didn't get uploaded earlier:

The closest airport to Chiclana is Jerez, so after some last minute scrambling using the only really weak wifi signal I could find from our hotel room in Barcelona, I set myself up with not only a flight to Jerez, but a tentative bus schedule to get me from Jerez to Chiclana. I also scouted out how to get to the barcelona airport form my hostel. It was a little stressful, because the train I was planning on taking was sold out and the internet kept blinking in and out. Whatever. I booked my flight and went to bed at about one in the morning so I could get plenty of sleep before I caught my 7:30 bus. It was all rather uneventful; I paid my extra €30 for my overweight luggage and I was on my way to Jerez!

View Larger Map
Sweet, there would be no problems getting to my prebooked hostel and preparing myself for a simple apartment hunt before I had to report to my school in 3 days.


First off, I overestimated how ready I'd be for Spanish. Studying a language for a few years in high school and two semesters in college is not good enough for sudden complete immersion after 3 years of atrophy. Everything went rather smoothly, even when I got to Chiclana. I had assumed that it was a very small town, which turned out to not be true. But I tagged along with a German family who was also going down to the beach (La Barrosa) of Chiclana. Among the 4 of us adults, we combined our skills to match those of at least one passable Spanish-speaker, and we made it on the right local bus.

I made it down to the beach area, asking the bus driver where my street was, as it didnt seem to exist on any maps I saw. The bus driver couldn't tell me anything, but a couple just happened to overhear my floundering Spanish and recognized the name of my hostel. They came up to me as the bus was beginning to close its doors and told me I needed to get off with them at this stop. I gathered up all of my bags and scrambled off the 
bus as quickly as I could. They were very patient, given that my brain was so fried at this point that Spanish was to me more like that mumbling language Furbys speak. But they pointed in
 the direction of my hotel, saying "El Campanario" a few times, I understood that.

The weather.








That made things a little more complicated, but I stayed in good sprits.
The beach was completely abandoned, which makes sense, I guess. Why would anyone go outside when its raining? Also it is now the off season for tourism in a city that sees its population triple when the beach bunnies come south from Germany and the rest of northern Europe. I took shelter under the awnings of shut-up beachside restaurants and made dashes during breaks in the storm. It was only about 2/3 of a mile from the bus stop I got off at, which was a much shorter walk than Dan and I had either in Munich or Barcelona. However, it felt like quite the trek, as frazzled as I was and with the weather.

I finally arrived at the hostel, bought a sandwich at the attached bar, and went into my room. I didn't emerge until sunset the next day.