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Tag Archives: walking

Navajas!

20 Wednesday Jun 2012

Posted by frannyritchie in Uncategorized

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entertainment, hiking, nature, Navajas, outdoors, Spain, travel, Valencia, walking

For our trip to Valencia, I got a giant guidebook to Spain out of the Cambridge library.  It had a tiny little text box in the section on Valencia stating that the town of Navajas, about 60 miles outside Valencia, had a picturesque little central plaza called Plaza D’Olmo (Elm Plaza).  From the plaza, the guidebook promised, there were four scenic walking trails in the countryside that were clearly signed.  I thought that sounded just perfect, so Ian and I rented a car, maneuvered it through roundabouts and onto the open road, and motored toward a place that only warranted four lines of guidebook.

So Ian and I rocked up to Navajas, pulled into a campsite for an early lunch (because you EAT WHEN YOU CAN in countries with siestas.  Wait too long and the joke is on you, sucka), and then drove through a beautiful town (it was a sort of Adirondack camp for the well-heeled Valencianos of a bygone era, and the houses were crazy).  We found the plaza no problem, but the tourism office closed ten minutes before we got there, and there were no hiking routes to be seen.  We circled the eponymous elm four or five times looking sadder and sadder before appealing to the locals, who spoke zero English. One of them called his brother, who passed Ian onto the local English guy, who was just in the middle of giving us directions when the mobile phone ran out of credit. So then two people marched us about a quarter of a mile down the road to the city hall, where someone dug around in a file cabinet and came up with huge stacks of English language brochures that had apparently not been required for years.  They presented us with English and Spanish versions of everything, pointed us out the door and sent us on our way.

We ended up hiking for about 4 hours through olive and almond orchards, across an old reservoir, along a stream and past have a dozen historic fountains.  It was perfect.

When we circled back to the Plaza D’Olmo at about 5:30, Ian (who in theory speaks Spanish) tried to order “un beer, por favor.”  The woman looked at him with an appropriately withering expression and said “un cerveza?”  He looked so sad and tired it was hard not to take pity on him (I had just marched him through 14 km of breathtakingly lovely Spanish countryside in 28 C heat).

I was so pleased with the day.  When I was in Switzerland, I realised how much I love being outside – the time I spent hiking up a mountain in Locarno was the high point of the trip, and I hoped to recapture a bit of that in Spain.  And I would say that the hike plus the cultural experience plus the navigating-Spanish-roundabouts-and-not-dying totally exceeded my expectations.

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Mountains, Cuckoos, Stone Roofs: Just Your Average Thursday in Locarno

30 Wednesday May 2012

Posted by frannyritchie in Uncategorized

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adventure, hiking, Locarno, nature, outdoor sports, Switzerland, travel, vacation, walking

Locarno is in the Italian part of Switzerland, a four-hour train ride from Basel.  On the way there, we sat next to a little Swiss German couple in their seventies.  About 8 seconds after the train pulled out of the station in Basel, the woman started commenting on the landscape.  “Beautiful! Amazing! Fantastic!” (in German, of course; Sarah translated for me).  Basel is a nice city and the countryside is nice enough, but we were about 90 minutes away from the really pretty stuff when she started rhapsodizing.

We channeled her through the whole excursion, though, crying “amazing! perfection! beautiful!” whenever we felt particularly moved.

Originally the plan was to stay 2 nights in Locarno, but we spent longer in Freiburg than we planned and weren’t willing to give up on Strasbourg, so we decided to just go breakneck speed: we took an early train, speed-walked to the hostel, got a sandwich and started exploring.  Locarno is surrounded by mountains with a complex and very well signed set of trails.  If you’re lazy, though, you can just take a series of funiculars and gondolas and chairlifts to the top.  The transpo nerds in us wanted to take the gondolas, but the hard core sportsters in us said “gondolas are for suckers! We’re going to sweat our way to the top of this hill like a boss!”

And then we sweated our way up the mountain, like bosses.

The trail system really is amazing, though.  We took the funicular (cause seriously, who can resist a funicular?) for the first leg of the journey, and then we just followed the yellow signs to San Bernardo, a destination 2 hours away (amazing: they said it would take two hours, and it did.) We walked with no real sign that we were getting close, and then, out of nowhere, we were in a town (and in fact, walking across people’s back gardens) while cuckoos sang from nearby trees.  St. Bernardo was the first in a series of beautiful mountain villages with staircases running through them, the occasional jerry-rigged home-built funicular, and honest-to-goodness stone roofs.  SO. INCREDIBLY. COOL.

From there we went to Cardada, where we took in the view, and then we headed back down the mountain on the western edge.  All in all we hiked for about 8 hours, stumbling onto the Piazza Grande just as dusk was settling in.  We got bread and cheese and ate it, dirty and smelly and disreputable looking, on a bench while meticulously dressed people spilled out of an art opening next to us.

The next day we didn’t quite recapture the magic, but we did find our way to the river, which was breathtaking, and to Ascona, another town about 4 miles away with a beautiful little high street and harbour.  And then we took the train back to Basel (“amazing! Wonderful! too pretty!”) and joined Annie, our host, at an impromptu street party on the river before Sarah caught a 6 am flight to Amsterdam.

Nature in Cornwall

04 Friday May 2012

Posted by frannyritchie in Uncategorized

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Cornwall, eating, England, entertainment, food, hiking, pub lunch, travel, UK, walking

I posted a few weeks ago about my Easter trip to Cornwall.  Because I am blithely ignorant about UK geography (although less and less so!), I had already agreed to go back to Cornwall (this time by train).  Two Embassy workers named Erin went with me, which wasn’t confusing at all.

We stayed in Falmouth, an artsy little city on the coast, in a nauseatingly picture-perfect hotel called the High Cliffe B&B.  The full English breakfast with local sausage was one of the highlights; I think I ate more meat in three meals than I ate the rest of the month.

Anyway.  I have separate posts about Falmouth and about the many beautiful, tiny little fishing towns we visited; this post is meant to highlight the amazing natural beauty in the region.  Our first day, we ate a huge meal, drove to Lizard Point (the southernmost tip of England), hiked 4 hours, ate an enormous pub lunch, and hiked 3 more hours.  It was my perfect day, and Cornwall is unlike any other landscape I’ve ever seen.

The weather is very changeable in England in general and Cornwall in particular.  We were lucky that we had beautiful weather for the most part, although we did endure about thirty minutes of driving, miserable, freezing rain.  During the rain, it was also so windy that my rucksack rain cover went flying off my backpack.  One of the Erins pursued it until it went over some barbed wire and into a freshly manured field.  I wasn’t put off so easily; I rounded the corner, jumped a stone wall, and sprinted into the wind along the edge of the field until I reclaimed the stupid piece of waterproof fabric, now covered in poo.

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