Saturday, February 21, 2026

"Balls of Steel" Gazpacho


Well, we got back to Málaga without incident yesterday. Car travel is really pretty awesome, if you don't mind the expense -- which I do, at least enough not to do it regularly. But it's hard to beat in terms of convenience.

Before we left Granada, I took a walk up into the hilly neighborhood just below the Alhambra to photograph the street art there. Dave and I saw some amazing murals when we rode up by taxi the day before, and walking gave me a chance to stretch my legs and get some fresh air before getting in the car for the hour-and-a-half drive to Málaga. I stopped in a park and saw this guy:


That's a lot of dog! He was brushing their coats and as he'd work on one, the other two watched me intently, as if I were a gigantic dog treat.

The car ride was smooth and back in Málaga we checked in to the same hotel where we'd stayed earlier in the week, coincidentally on Calle Granada. Then we headed out to the Plaza Carbón for lunch.

The adjacent Plaza del Siglo

We found a table in the shade and I ordered an excellent sangria and some salmorejo, a cold blended tomato soup similar to gazpacho. It was all excellent until I got to the bottom of the salmorejo bowl and found these:


They looked like tiny ball bearings, the size of BBs. I've been warned in the past while eating birds like grouse or pheasant that they could contain birdshot, but there was no poultry in my gazpacho! We could only theorize that an immersion blender used to mix the soup had somehow self-destructed and thrown off these ball bearings. The servers were very apologetic and gave me the soup for free. Fortunately it was smooth enough that no chewing was required, and they were very easy to detect so I'm reasonably sure I didn't swallow any. (Will I set off the airport metal detectors?)

After lunch Dave went back to the room for a nap (you can see this is our pattern) and I wandered around Málaga. I wanted to get out of the tourist zone, so I headed west and north, winding my way through the streets roughly between the hotel, the river and the Plaza de Capuchinos. I walked past graffiti saying (in Spanish) things like, "there is no Covid-19," "the virus is the television," and "chemtrails: they are spraying us." So there are crazy people in every country.


I passed this fun mural by Sara Fratini on the Calle Padre Mondejar. I couldn't get the whole thing in a photo so I had to make a video, made more awkward by several streetlamps on the sidewalk that I had to step around!

Finally, last night Dave and I decided to head down to the beach. Málaga is known as a beach resort but I'd only barely seen the Mediterranean, and Dave hadn't seen it at all. So we walked to the Playa de la Malagueta, where we found a restaurant that seated us just at sunset. We had some good seafood tapas, followed (for me) by some fish stew and a strawberry dessert made with Inés Rosales cake ice cream. I knew about Inés Rosales cakes from Mitchell's blog, so I was glad to try it, albeit in ice cream form.


As we ate dinner, a group of about 20 teenagers on some kind of school trip -- we think they were American -- gathered on the walkway just outside the restaurant windows and ate pizza, which proved distracting. And then some little kids eating with a family in the restaurant ran out onto the beach to play on the Malagueta sign (above). It's hard to tell, but there are six of them in that picture. I don't think I would be an overprotective parent, but I'm not sure I'd have felt comfortable having my under-10 kids running around on a dark beach with no parent nearby! (The adults stayed seated indoors.)

Soon, we'll be off to the airport. Thank you, by the way, for slogging through my overly long Spain posts. I know I've been cramming a lot in here each day and I appreciate your indulgence. They will help me remember this trip in the future. Coming to you tomorrow from London!

Friday, February 20, 2026

Alhambra and Nostalgia


As it turned out, not having tickets to the palaces at the Alhambra worked out fine for us! We still got access to the hilltop fortress known as the Alcazaba, which The Clash would have called the "casbah" (before rocking it). And we got to walk the landscaped and forested grounds, which are beautiful in their own right, and to visit the Generalife, a 13th-century palace on an adjacent slope, which offered great views of the Alhambra (above).


The place was positively teeming with Spanish schoolchildren in big, loud mobs -- and when I looked back in my journals to read about my visit in 1994, I complained about mobs of people then, too. So this is not a new phenomenon.

The cat above sought refuge in the sun beneath a cannon perched on the hillside overlooking the city. Lots of people were taking its picture, and I told Dave, "I bet there will be 600,000 pictures of that cat on Instagram today."

I took plenty of photos, but it's easiest to show you our experience via a short video.

 

First we visit the Alcazaba, or fortress, and go up in the highest tower, from which we get the best views of Granada and the snowy Sierra Nevada mountains. Then we walk a path with artfully trimmed juniper and box hedges to get to the Generalife, where we see its fountains and ornately carved interior.


This is a picture of me, in March 1994, when I was 27 years old and visiting the Albambra for the first time. I'm atop the Torre de la Vela, or bell tower, having come over from Morocco, where I was working in the Peace Corps. I met a friend from Florida and we toured around Spain for a week or two.

Dave and I decided to recreate the picture yesterday:


It's almost the same time of year, so the trees look similar, though some of them are much bigger! No surprise there, after 32 years. I look like I have a pom-pom atop my hat but that's just a tree behind me.

Anyway, after descending from the Alhambra, Dave and I got a coffee and a type of sweet custardy treat called piononos in the Plaza Nueva. Again, back in 1994, I took a photo of a bar facing the plaza, and I wanted to see what it looks like now:

Left, my photo from 1994; right, the same place today

I blogged about this photo years ago, and I knew the bar was no longer there. I'd say the building has lost some character, don't you think?

From there, we headed to the cathedral.


In my journal from my 1994 visit, I described the cathedral like this: "It had a pretty window of orange stained glass in a sunburst shape at the end of the nave, and the walls were white-gray marble. I told (my friend) I wished I could fly when I walk in those huge cathedrals -- with those soaring arches and spaces, you really yearn to touch the ceiling. He said, imagine building such a thing today -- the time and the cost. It really puts into perspective what an indescribable treasure those places are."

I couldn't describe it better now.


After that, Dave went back to the room for a nap and I continued wandering the city on a slight nostalgia binge, visiting the Hotel Reina Cristina, where I stayed back then. I remember watching MTV in the room there -- it was the first time I saw "Beavis and Butthead," and I also remember Bjork's "Violently Happy" and the Cranberries' "Linger" videos being on heavy rotation.


I stopped in the shady Plaza de la Trinidad for a beer and a bocadillo, or small sandwich, and soaked up the atmosphere.

Finally, last night, Dave and I went to a tapas place called Avila around the corner from our hotel. We lined up with a mob of Spaniards for the 8 p.m. opening and got a table right away, and dined on lemon-fried boquerones, or anchovies, as well as chicken fingers with honey-mustard dip and of course a plate of sliced pork. Oh, and sliced tomatoes, just to get a vegetable in.

Today we're headed back to Málaga, and guess what! The trains are out again! At least this time we knew what to do -- we went straight out and hired a car and driver. I did not try to faff around with buses. I'm not thrilled with the added expense but we gotta do what we gotta do.

Thursday, February 19, 2026

Granada


Here we are in Granada, in the foothills of the snowy Sierra Nevada mountains, where the first thing we noticed is that the temperature is a good ten degrees cooler than it was in Córdoba. Dave looked up our altitude and we're above 2,000 feet, so that's quite a difference. I've had to break out my trusty green jacket again.

The good news is, we got here. The bad news? Remember those tickets to the Alhambra I was proud of resourcefully ordering through a tour company? Well, they sent us a message after 9 p.m. last night saying they were unable to procure them and our tour was cancelled and our money would be refunded. (I expect so!) So it looks like we won't be getting into the Nasrid palaces, but as I wrote before, I've seen them, so I'm not heartbroken. Dave has never been there, but he's not that attached to the idea.

I was able to get last-minute tickets to the Alcazaba and the Generalife, two parts of the Alhambra complex that are less in demand. So we'll at least see those.

Cable box cover in Córdoba

Before we left Córdoba yesterday morning, we sat for a while in one of the parks and then went to meet Mitchell and San Geraldo (aka Jerry) for coffee.


And this time we managed to take a picture!

Then Dave and I were off to the train station for our nearly two-hour journey to Granada. Before we climbed on the train Dave popped into the Ale-Hop, a chain of gift shops that Mitchell has written about before. A cow is their mascot:


(I love that it's on casters. I wanted to roll it around the train station.)

Dave bought his very own Speed-Poo, which Mitchell has also written about, but as far as I'm concerned the less said about that the better.

After checking into the Barcelo Hotel Carmen here in Granada, we went out for a glass of something and wound up in a square dominated by the Fuente de los Gigantones, a fountain topped by a figure of Neptune and supported by four grotesque giants.


Here are some interesting street sights:


How desperate would a person have to be to dial a phone number with not even a picture or gender to go on?


Where to go when you're feeling hungry and somewhat sacrilegious.


This is where we had dinner last night. The menu included some story about a Robin Hood-like figure known as "Big Ears" who roamed Granada in antiquity, and who knows whether that's true, but supposedly he inspired the name of the restaurant. ("El Orejas" translates to "The Ears.")

We had a good meal, though quite leisurely because our single waiter was consumed by serving a family of 12 (!), including at least half a dozen small children, at an adjacent table. (Plus three other tables besides ours.) Fortunately we didn't have to be anywhere fast!

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Mezquita


Well, we are having an interesting time here at Las Casas de la Judería, where the internet has been out all morning. I've been up for more than an hour and eager to post, but the front desk told me that their web provider is down not just here but all over Andalucía. So I'm hot-spotting through my phone -- hopefully I can work my way through this post!

Yesterday we went to see the Mezquita, which I just learned is Spanish for mosque. The Mezquita is a medieval building that began on the site of a Visigoth Christian temple from the mid-sixth century. When the Muslims arrived, they built a mosque in the late 700s, and over the years, through the dynasties of several Muslim rulers, the mosque was expanded to become a veritable forest of columns with striped arch supports (above).

After the collapse of the Caliphate, the building was reconsecrated as a Catholic church in 1236, and over the ensuing centuries a gothic and baroque church rose from the middle of the former mosque.


That's looking up into the dome of the church.

Dave and I wandered around for a while, checking out all the chapels with their ornate paintings and artwork, as well as the Islamic ornamentation that dates back to the medieval mosque. Here's a video to show you what it all looks like:


When we first got there, a religious service seemed to be happening and we heard chanting and organ music, which you'll hear at the start of the video.


With its fascinating blend of Christian and Muslim architecture and influences, the Mezquita is certainly the most famous sight in Córdoba, and I'm glad I finally got to see it. When I came to Spain in 1994 and passed through Andalucía, I was traveling with a friend, and we opted to go to Granada rather than Córdoba -- and I've always felt like I missed something!


After the Mezquita, Dave came back to the hotel for a nap, and I went for a photo walk through some of the newer parts of town. I love Spain's quirky mix of retro old shopfronts and newer, swankier retailers. I walked up toward a large linear park that cuts through that part of town, and then back down to the Judería (historically the Jewish quarter, hence the name).

I passed through public gardens where tree-trimmers were pruning the palms -- seems like the thing to do at this time of year -- and oranges littered the footpaths. I've never seen so many oranges lying around in my life. They are literally underfoot. (Our driver from Monday, Richard, told us they're inedible -- I keep meaning to try one to find out if that's true. I suppose it must be or people would be picking them.)


Dave keeps commenting on how gay-friendly Spain seems. Yesterday he said he hadn't seen many rainbow flags, though -- and as if to prove him wrong I came across these benches on my walk. A little battered, but the sentiment is right.


In the afternoon we had a fantastic lunch at a restaurant on the river, La Regadera. We ate out front, streetside, with the sun so intense that the people next to us asked for an umbrella for their table. I just basked in it. Probably terrible for my skin, but oh well. For lunch I had a carrot with ginger and miso appetizer, followed by pig's trotter and a fantastic lemon sorbet/cake/foam dessert.

Then I went walking on the Roman bridge (above) which Mitchell recently featured on his own blog. I climbed the historic tower at the southern end, the Calahorra, which gives a great view of the bridge and the city beyond. The Guadalquivir River -- the name comes from Wadi al-Kebir, Arabic for "big river" -- still seems quite high after all the recent rain. All that water flows westward through Sevilla and eventually into the Atlantic.


That's the Mezquita from the roof of the Calahorra. The pigeon was not impressed.

Last night we had a quiet dinner of tapas at a nearby restaurant, which was almost empty when we sat down at 8 p.m. There was a stage for flamenco dancing and I was terrified they would crank up a show while we were sitting there, so we got in and out. (I'm sure, given Spanish timetables, any after-dinner entertainment wouldn't begin for several hours at least.)

Today, off to Granada!

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Córdoba with Unexpected Pivot

Gigantic rubber tree in Málaga

Our plan yesterday seemed easy enough: Get up, have a leisurely breakfast and then catch a train for the one-hour trip to Córdoba. We were flexible on the time, so I wasn't worried about not finding a train. We could go whenever.

Only...when I tried to book a train online, none were available, of any variety. I looked in the news and on the Renfe website for some announcement of outages and there was nothing, and Google couldn't find any reason why there wouldn't be trains, so I figured it had to be some kind of booking glitch and I walked to the train station.

"No trains to Córdoba," the woman at the ticket desk helpfully informed me. She said the track had been "broken" by the recent accident -- even though it happened north of Córdoba -- and the whole line was down. I'm not sure when this closure happened, because I had researched whether trains were running before we left London and they were.

Looking for Plan B, I popped next door to the bus station, which as you can imagine was somewhat chaotic. I stood behind a young man in a gray sweatsuit who had obviously recently been in a fistfight and had a crusty, bloodied nose. He was still in a bad mood. I managed to buy a bus ticket for a 7:30 p.m. departure -- the earliest available -- but we wouldn't get to Córdoba until 11 p.m.

I felt better having the tickets, but I didn't want to show up in Córdoba at that hour, so as I walked back from the bus station, I tasked Dave -- back at the hotel -- with finding out if flying was an option. It was not.

Fountain in Málaga

He did learn, however, that we could book a private car with a driver. We agreed it was worth the money, and soon enough, "Richard" was assigned to pick us up at 2:30 p.m. Whew! Much better.

We put up our feet at a cafe on a main square in Málaga and watched people for a couple of hours, and I wandered around and took photos. I saw (and heard) some exceptionally noisy monk parakeets in the Plaza de la Merced, with its central monument to General Torrijos:


Finally, at the appointed time "Richard" did indeed show up in a luxurious black Mercedes. It made me feel like an ambassador. We meandered through town and onto the freeway, which snaked through scrubby hills that reminded me of L.A. (Especially when traffic came to a brief standstill for some road work!)

We pulled into Córdoba about an hour and a half later. I was so happy to just get here.


This is our hotel, Las Casas de la Judería de Córdoba, a collection of former houses gathered around a series of inner courtyards.


The hotel had a welcome slideshow playing on the TV, telling us about the local amenities. This was one of the photos, and it cracks me up. Doesn't the woman on the right look like she's thinking, "God, I wish I could get away from these two." Clearly they've been traveling too long together.


We explored Córdoba a bit, including the area around the Roman bridge and the Mezquita, which we are scheduled to tour today. That's the 18th-century Triunfo de San Rafael de la Puerta del Puente, above, a triumphal column with Raphael, the guardian angel of Córdoba, on top.


We had a glass of wine and some tapas at the foot of the Roman bridge. I wrapped our tiny, crusty breadsticks in slices of ham, creating a "blanket in a pig."

Finally, in the evening, Dave and I walked into what looked like a slightly newer part of town and met up with blogger Mitchell and his spouse San Geraldo, Córdoba dwellers who are Internet celebrities in their own right! Unfortunately, as I belatedly realized, I scheduled our dinner with Mitchell at exactly the same time that I had to be on a conference call with my family to discuss my late stepmother's estate. HOW MANY MORE CURVE BALLS was this day going to throw at me?!

I wound up making the call from a sidewalk outside the restaurant, which worked out fine -- I got to hear the important points while Dave entertained Mitchell and SG. I finally joined them after half an hour and got a much-needed glass of vino tinto before dinner. They were very gracious about my double-booking.


Here's what I ate -- "broken" eggs and ham over chips with "baby eels" on top. The eels are not really eels, Mitchell and SG assured me, but gulas, made from fish that has been extruded to look eel-like. (I didn't want to eat actual eels because they are struggling as a species from overconsumption.) I thought they were pretty good but a vegetable wouldn't have killed me.

And of course Mitchell and I both forgot to take a selfie, which astonishes me and will require hopefully a second meeting, if I can tear him and SG away from their devoted cats.

Monday, February 16, 2026

Málaga With Screaming Children


Yesterday might well have been the longest day of my entire life, from getting up at 4 a.m. in London to going to sleep at 8:30 p.m. in Málaga. I was exhausted by the end of it. But we're here now!

That's the view from our hotel balcony, looking down at a souvenir stall on the Calle de Granada below. As you can see, the weather is so far cooperating, with bright sun and blue skies.

Getting to Málaga was not that fun. Soon after 5 a.m. we took the tube to a very crowded train -- surprisingly crowded, given the hour -- and got ourselves to Gatwick. There, we stood in the British Airways queue to check in, since I'd bought the ticket through BA, but it turned out the flight was actually operated by Vueling, so we had to go stand in a different queue. And then my boarding pass didn't work at security, because of a printer defect at the Vueling counter, so I had to go back and get a new one.

And then we were on an airplane with a family with three small children in the row in front of us, and those kids fought like cats and dogs the entire flight -- screaming at the top of their lungs. The girl, probably kindergarten-age, was upset because her brother was playing the video game that she wanted to play, and then she was convinced he had Internet and she didn't, and the completely ineffectual parents kept trying to negotiate with the kids to use this or that game console or iPad and the kids were having none of it. Tantrums, tantrums, tantrums.

As Dave and I remarked later, the negotiation needed to stop. The parents should have separated those kids and taken away all the digital devices, and after about 20 minutes of staring at their shoes they would have been more compliant. There was a similar meltdown from the youngest daughter just before landing, and the flight attendant actually came by to ask them to be quieter. Permissive parenting -- ha!


A pre-arranged driver collected us from the airport and we found the hotel and, praise God, they sent me the access codes so we were able to get in. We dropped the bags and set off for a wander around town, where I saw this clever monk parakeet snatching food from the pigeons on the Plaza de la Merced.

We settled into a sidewalk cafe, where we had a few drinks and some tapas like gazpacho with cubed salmon, sardines on a skewer (apparently a Málaga specialty) and a ham & cheese board. There was some kind of carnival event going on and there were people wandering the streets in costumes, mainly children.


I found this sticker near the gelato place where we went after our tapas. I guess some family made a cartoon of themselves to post here and there on their travels? They look like a friendly bunch.


As the afternoon wore on, Dave went back to the room and I set out for the water. I wanted to see the sunset and the Mediterranean. So I climbed up a series of paths to the hilltop Castillo de Gibralfaro, overlooking the waterfront. Lots of people had gathered there to watch the sun go down.


That's the bullring down below, in the district of La Malagueta with the beach beyond.


And here's a 40-second video clip so you can get a better sense of what it was like on that hillside, with the sun going down and a guitarist playing nearby. (The "birdcalls" are actually whistles, being sold by another vendor.)


As the sun got lower I found myself on the waterfront near the glass cube of the Centre de Pompidou, a branch of the Paris art museum.

I made my way back to the hotel and joined Dave, who had already collapsed into bed. Today, we're off to Córdoba, but we'll be back to Málaga for one more night at the end of our trip.

Sunday, February 15, 2026

Rodentia


I'm cheating a bit by writing this post on Saturday afternoon, and scheduling it to publish Sunday morning. That's because we have to catch an absurdly early train to get to Gatwick in time for our 9:40 a.m. flight. I don't know what I was thinking when I bought these plane tickets -- 9:40 a.m. seemed like a reasonable departure time (and the tickets were probably cheaper) but when you consider that you have to get to the airport two or three hours in advance, well, ugh.

The good news is, I reached out to the hotel in Málaga via Whatsapp and they did receive our documents and told me somewhat impatiently that I would be getting access codes to the door on the day of our arrival. So never mind that thing on their website that says we get the codes 48 hours in advance.

In other news, look! The bench outside the phone exchange on Finchley Road has been replaced! I'm shocked that they bothered to install a new one. I figured they'd just go benchless after hauling the old one away. After all, who sits in front of the phone exchange? But no, a new one was evidently warranted.

I spent yesterday packing, doing routine houseplant care and catching up on blogs. I am bringing no books but at least ten of my back issues of The New Yorker with me to Spain. I'm going to read them there and/or throw them away, one or the other.

We did nothing special for Valentine's Day, though Dave did buy me a pastry on the high street. If he's not trying to get me to drink more, he's buying me pastries. Has he taken out extra life insurance on me?!


This week's garden cam video comes from the patio, where I set up the camera right outside our bedroom door to see who or what is prowling around out there at night. Plenty of foxes, or perhaps just one very persistent fox, as well as a few unwelcome critters.

Here are some highlights:
-- At 0:20, you'll see a fox trot by with several links of sausage hanging out of its mouth. This is not the first time we've seen foxes with sausages in our garden. Someone must be feeding them, or maybe they've figured out how to raid the high street butcher's rubbish bin?
-- At 1:03, yikes! A rat! This is not terribly surprising since we live in the city, especially with foxes gnawing on sausages in the garden. But it doesn't make me happy because the last time we saw rats on the patio we had to call an exterminator and I am still psychologically scarred.
-- At 1:23, a token pigeon. I got tons of videos of solo pigeons wandering the patio in daytime.
-- At 1:44, a pair of amorous robins. That male is definitely trying to get the female's attention.
-- Random fox wanderings, and then at 2:52 it runs in at top speed and seems to be surveying the corner. Maybe it saw one of the rodents? It looks like it's in hunting mode.
-- At 4:04, a robin sings happily in the pre-dawn darkness.
-- At 4:26, the fox sneezes while sniffing the garden plants. I think it's hunting again. At least there's no coughing this time!
-- At 4:30, we get a brief daytime shot of the fox. Look at its beautiful red fur! It's easy to forget how colorful they are, looking at the pale infrared footage in my nighttime videos.
-- At 4:40, a mouse visits. I'm not sure that's any better than a rat.
-- At 5:00, I put down a bit of duck breast for the foxes. Now, before you criticize me, let me assure you I have only done this sort of thing three or four times in all the years we've lived here, and I would not have done it had I known we have rodents out there. So don't blame me for the rats. I think they're probably coming around because of the bird feeders. (You can blame me for those.)
-- At 5:12, the fox eats the duck breast and sniffs around hoping for more.
-- At 6:13, the rat is back. The camera caught no evidence that the rodents got any of the duck, thank God.
-- Two token squirrels at 6:47, the only other daytime visitors besides the pigeons and robins.
-- We finish with a last fox sighting. I think the fox is probably attracted to the patio partly because of those rodents. I hope it eats them.

Interesting that we saw no cats on the patio -- where it looks like we need them!

This coming week, I've set up the camera to film the bird feeders directly. I want to see if those rats or mice are climbing the pole and having a nosh. If so, I need to relocate the feeders away from the house. (I probably should anyway.)