Saturday, December 29, 2018
Yorkshire
Ee bah gum, can yer belly touch yer bum? A trip to Yorkshire in England for a few nights. Up in the Yorkshire Dales, where I never was before.
This place is the National Train Museum in York itself, a large sprawling shed, or sheds, filled with old trains and railway paraphernalia. The Mallard of course still holds the world land speed record for a steam train, set in 1938. Not sure exactly what speed it reached but it was close to a million miles per hour.
Above is the Coldstone Cut near Pateley Bridge, a large art installation on top of a hill. You walk up to it and on the other side, surprise, is a large quarry.
This is Brimham Rocks, a large area of weathered sandstone that has been carved into weird and wonderful shapes over many centuries. You have the Dragon and The Giant and The Pentium Processor. Okay, I made the last one up.
Ribblehead Viaduct, built in the 1800s at enormous cost to life, to straddle a valley on the Yorkshire moors. There are 24 arches altogether. Many of the Irish navvies died constructing it, through illness or fighting and are buried en masse in a nearby churchyard.
Saturday, August 11, 2018
Ceuta
And so, like the great explorers of the Middle Ages, we travelled by sea and set foot for the first time on continent number four - Africa!
Ceuta (pronounced Say Utah) is the Spanish equivalent of Gibraltar. It is an autonomous Spanish enclave on the southern shore of the Straits of Gibraltar. When pressed on Spain's determination that Gibraltar should be returned to Spain, yet Ceuta should not be handed back to Morocco, the answer is invariably, "that's different."
The town is small in area and population, undeniably Spanish but with a sizable Arab population. It has recently become more and more under pressure from immigrants trying to break in from Morocco.
This is me and Hercules. The story goes that Herc, on one of his tasks, had to cross Mount Atlas that lay at the western end of the Mediterranean. Rather than going over it, or round out, Herc decided to go through it, thus joining the Med with the ocean beyond. All that was left of the mountain were the two pillars on either side - the Rock of Gibraltar and Monte Hacho in Ceuta.
This is Aunty Brenda and Monica who brought me all around Ceuta as they searched in vain for a souvenir shop.
And this is how they carried me........
Saturday, July 28, 2018
Ronda
A trip up to the hillside town of (Help, help me) Ronda, where we viewed the magnificent gorge from the old new bridge and then went drinking.
Estepona
Summer holidays 2018 in the Costa del Sol. We stayed in Estepona, famous for its flower pot streets and giant murals. Much less commercialised than other resorts along this stretch of coast. Weather hot and sunnty but surprisingly occasionally windy.
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