School started to wear on me last week so I decided to take a hiatus for a week/possibly two and visit some of the daytrips the region offers. Also, I think reading the newspaper and watching an few hours of Spanish TV daily is equally beneficial at this point in my learning. I may go back for the last week of April.
Our crew from the Rising Cock came to visit us this past Friday and we spent a couple of days touring around. It has been under 3 weeks since we saw them last but felt like the better part of several months. Saturday we lounged around the Plaza Mayor with bags of McDs and BK. We are really taking advantage of the local atmosphere if not always the cuisine. Sunday, we sent Texas Joe off to Madrid where he is flying to Paris, Today we are sending off Luke and Ben who are headed to Logroño, Wiebke to Lagos via Lisbon. Good times guys!
Cuídate: Techo Mojado
Loonies de Agua
Salamanca (and the rest of Castilla Leon) celebrated Lunes de Agua, the historical end of Easter and thus the return of prostitues to the region from their banishment during Semana Santa, by sitting outside and relaxing at Parque Aldehuela. You got to love Spanish holidays.
Fonzie had an easier time with the word wrong than I do with the word Itinerary
In unrelated news, I am thinking of canning my return to the states on June 10th in favor of the world's longest train ride to China from Warsaw via Moscow and Ulaanbataar. This may end up as a bonafide RTW after all. The reason is that I am starting to doubt whether the Japanese stay is going to happen. I am not tired of traveling but I am starting to get the 2 month homesick pang a bit. Much less than last time around, but still there which means after another month in Salamanca and 6 weeks on the road I think will have another month or two in me before I find traveling to be more of a burden than the enjoyable experience it should be. All that said I have to do some more research because Transsiberian railroaders require visas, embassy invitations and a bunch of other bureaucratic hassles. At the same time the demand for the direct tickets is substantial so I may head to Eastern Russia and then to Ulaanbataar and then to Beijing. Or maybe I do the sane thing and just come home and fly roundtrip to Hong Kong...nahhh ;)
Today Em and I were saying that every photo on this blog is due to Andalucia day. Sounds funny right? Had Andalucia day never happened, we would have stayed in Sevilla in our own apartment or with the school. That being the case, we would not have hung out at Samay (and the Rising Cock) and met Ben, Luke and Joe. We would not be in Salamanca now, if at all.
--Joey
2 comments:
Hey guys,
Enjoyed the blog entry...remember you gotta put in some Cordoba stuff in there.
Joey, you may want to apply for your Chinese visa while you are in Spain - just so you can be in one place long enough to complete the process.
Em, where is Wiebke from?
Hasta luego...How are them palabras del dia working for you?
Joey and Em, Enjoyed the update. I had to read more about the Lunes de Agua holiday, and I found a blog with this additional story. The woman who writes the blog has a favorite bar in Salamanca, El Padre Putas, and she had always wondered about the name. Turns out that when the prostitutes were vanished from Salamanca for all of Lent- not just Holy Week- a priest was sent to accompany them across the river, make sure they stayed across the river, and bring them back after Easter. His title: El Padre Putas. See if you can find this bar; should be easier than finding the frog. Love, Tia
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