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Good Crack

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We never actually intended to come to Italy as part of this journey and when we eventually decided to go, we found a part of Italy we wish we’d known about forever.  Before the main event we made a fuel stop in one of the country’s many food capitals.  In Bologna, arched portico sidewalks shimmer in an endless expanse around the city; although it’s entirely possible that the shimmer was a result of a satanically named heatwave chasing us through the European continent.  However, no amount of hell sent heat deters from the heaven that is pasta in Bologna.  Meals were followed by slow strolls accompanied by mounds of gelato worthy of their reputation.  Summer outdoor movie theaters were set up in the main square for free viewings every night.  We left as fast as we arrived, but it was plenty, and we were eager to escape the heat.                                  
The train dropped us off in the thick humidity of a Venetian summer.  Without so much as a pause for a picture for a gondola, we ducked our way through crowds of selfie sticks wielded like samurai swords, and joined the five other travelers for our holiday van ride to the mountains.  As the only Americans present, we knew we were onto something that was going to be different.  Through the thick Venetian haze it was hard to imagine that some of Europe’s most beautiful and dramatic mountains were only a few hours away.  Sometime later we weaved our way into deep valleys and carved up sharp switchbacks into the beginnings of a range of mountains that encouraged shameless attempts at blurred photos through the windows. 

Our destination was a small family run Chalet in a small village tucked up into northeast corner of Italy.  Up here international borders are purely geographical.  The residents on this high knee part of the boot speak Ladin, followed by German and Italian.  English is a rareity in this part of the Dolomites.  A river carves through the village, each side occupying an opposite slope of the valley.  Other brown and white chalets, haus’, and sport hotels dot the landscape complete with one slender church spire.  Our haus is most aptly described as an adult summer camp.  A self serve bar modeled after a traditional german pub gathered other adventure chasers each afternoon to swap the day’s stories over a pint to two.  Tomorrow’s excursions would be presented and lunch order sheets passed around.  We’d sit at long tables to share family style dinners cooked by the grandmother and her son.  Most of the week’s residents knew each other from year’s past, always meeting here during the same few time every year.  They’d pick up right where they left off, and we were warmly folded into the family, complete with a scotch soaked blessing form four Scottish priests.  They’d been crowdsurfing at a concert until 2AM the night before but they still managed to get up for the 16 mile hike that morning.  The next day, they’d still cruise past us up the hill. 

We discovered a landscape that felt like parts of different planets.  Mornings would be spent drifting through rolling green fields plucked right from the set of “The Sound of Music,” complete with families on the trail clad in Lederhosen and leather knapsacks.  White gravel paths lay like ribbons over grass valleys spreading in every direction.  The air up here is clean and warm, but for the first time in months it doesn’t feel heavy or oppressive.  Currents of cool and gusty breeze whip down at just the right times, pressing us to continue upward.  Eventually the grassy knolls give way to a new landscape that could have been imagined from Elon Musk’s version of Mars, or the moon.  Craggy rock spires and towers erupt through the clouds.  Their surface are the gods’ version of ancient drip sand castles.  At their bases loose scree piles up like sand dunes.  At each of the spine’s summits the wind blows a little bit harder, sometimes swooping us into momentary cold gray clouds.  For hours we walk atop this alien moonscape.  The only sound around is the crunch of gravel under our boots and the whistle of the wind’s bow on the spire’s stings.  On the descent we pause on our first grassy plateau to visit with golden brown colored cows perched on the cliff high above our village.  We carve our way down a ski run, stopping halfway at the deck of a refugio for a glass of local cider and homemade strudel with our group. 

That evening after dinner we sit together on the deck for some good crack with a few scotch drinking priests and wild and free Brits.  We laugh at each other’s idiosyncrasies.  We tell each other stories of our lives from parts halfway across the world and marvel that despite how big the world is, the things that connect us are very small.  One of the priests gives an “Amen“ followed by a “cheers” and “down the hatch.”  Not long after, thunder ripped open the sky above us, lightning splashed off the rock faces, and we watched the rain hit the ground like a million pieces of gravel.

 

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The Real Spain

Our seaside summer continues.  It gets hotter; and more crowded.  The water gets a little less blue, and the sand gets a little trashier.  We sidestep and pick our way down forever expanses of sandy beaches sardined full of other holiday makers who seem to have only picked this particular plot for its proximity to their parking spot and the adjacent strip of restaurants with pictures on their menus.  We were sure we’d made a mistake, that Spain in the summer was too popular, and our secret stretch of Spanish beach only existed in long out of print Lonely Planet books.  This turned our to be only partly true.  For every ten tourist traps there hides a hidden gem down a side street owned by a free spirited proprietress who will only whisper to you magic of the Spain less discovered.   Walk further past the beach parking lots, and trumpeting summer camp marching bands; past the rows of floating yacht mansions, away from the melee and one of many of the country’s greatest paellas waits at the edge of a private beach cove, just waiting for a lazy swim after a long lunch.  Back in town we let the crowds of people wash us into a dirt floored stadium open on one side to the marina.  We stand behind barely narrow enough bars as teenage boys wait to test their manhood taunt raging bulls.  They charge at kids who sometimes scramble back through the bars with us, while others dive headlong into the water coaxing the bull to follow them in.  One or two of them take a head-butt or horn to the backside.  This isn’t a Spanish bullfight from the travel channel.  This is something much more raw, by the locals for the locals.  This is the Spain we’ve been searching for. 

As we work our way further north we move towards smaller towns inland.  We find small tapas towns and the birthplace of a great architect.  There are civil war reenactments and outdoor concerts at vermouth museums.  We drive away from the coast and into Spain’s most under discovered wine country.  There we find ancient hilltop towns perched atop red rock cliffs.  Its few residents, as old as the town, hang lavender and dried flowers from their short wooden doorways.  The cobbled streets smell like orange blossoms and stringed instrument music drifts out of an upstairs window.  The roads through hills there only out of necessity, in the least obtrusive way to the landscape.  Us and the occasional motorcycle are its only travelers.  Occasionally we pass a small cluster of stone buildings, a street sign announcing a town’s name and then just as quickly another letting us know we’ve left.   We stop in one outcrop for a tour of a gold medal winery.  It’s barrel bellied owner waits for us on a sloping lane and takes us not to a winery, but into his home and backyard-basement wine operation.  He speaks no English, but no translation is needed, we get the message. 

Back down towards the water we meander our way closer to Barcelona.  First we stop in a small port city.  True to theme, they’re celebrating their local annual festival.  There’s a parade with tall dancing statues in traditional dress and more marching bands.  We stop in Barcelona just long enough to right a wrong and visit the inside of it’s most famous church.  The colored light filtered through the stained glass reflects off every white surface.  We stare up at the ceiling, its own city in the sky, long enough to make our necks ache for weeks to come.  We promise each other to come back in ten years when its finished. 

We drive still north into rocky beach coves dotted with white painted towns.  Streets the size of sidewalks snake along a seawall where candle lit tables are perched just above the splashing water.  Past a deserted border crossing there’s a little known French town where wine vines drip down into the sea.  In a valley between clifftop roads we stop in a nameless beach bar in a nameless town where men are carrying baguettes.  And of course, it’s their annual festival; complete with parade, and drums.  Here in the middle of nowhere, on a beach from the long lost Lonely Planet book. 

We again cross the derelict French border and drive past miles of fields of blooming yellow sunflowers and through the Pyrenees.  In dire need of clean clothes and looking like street kids we land in Spain’s swankiest north coast city and food capital.  We stand at the top of the bay as waves from far away slam into the cliffs and burst thirty feet over our heads.  At a small wood paneled bar we stand shoulder to shoulder with locals and well informed travelers all here for the steak that is supposed to change our lives.  It’s worth the journey. 

Our Spanish summer finishes in Madrid where its brutalizing heat bakes into us that feeling we’ve been searching for in Spain.  It’s become a general rule of travel for us that the harder a place is to get to, the better it’s going to be.  And this has held true.  But a summer in Spain reminded us that amazing experiences don’t always require going the distance, they only require being ready to receive them; a traditional bull run set next to the crowded beach, the inside of the country’s most famous church shoulder to shoulder with every other tourist, countless town festivals when we were only looking for a quiet cove, and men always carrying baguettes for a reason we’ll never know but an image we will never forget either.  We went in search of a guidebook fairy tale, and we left Spain with real interactions and experiences that were completely different from the guidebook version, but no less magical.

     

       

                 

       

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Spanish Summer

The difference was immediate and distinct.  A stiff wind dried and cooled our bodies that had oscillated between sticky-damp and profusely dripping over the past two weeks.  On the beaches burkas were replaced by bikinis, or even lack thereof.  Tuna tataki stepped in for tagine, and the imams call to prayer was muted by the fast finger plucking of guitars in bars.  If Morocco was our cleanse, then Tarifa was our reward.  Sitting on the beach that first night we watched the sun whip with the wind over the horizon towards home.  In front of us was the gateway to Europe.   Only later did we discover that this place was world famous for its wind.  In the moment however it was famous to us, simply for resembling something close to a return to familiarity and normality. 

Liberated by fresh air we swapped in our bus tickets for a set of car keys and took to the Autovia.  Our first stop parked us in the wine country of Rhonda valley in the heat of wedding season.   A short walk away dipped into the valley itself and left the crowds behind.   We sauntered though small vineyards on dirt paths; crushing stray grapes beneath our feet.  The smell of dry hay and musky wine casks hung heavy in the hot air.  A secret trail wound us up a deep ravine through abandoned stone watermills with caved in ceilings draped in sun drenched ivy, and collapsed floors open to the  storming whitewater below.  We burrowed deeper along the hillside, where it seemed only rebellious teens and pioneering homeless had gone before, until we popped out at the base of a waterfall from the land before time.  Although famous to many for it’s venues with views, Rhonda will always be famous to us for the world’s best caprese salad. 

For the few days we practiced our best high society look alike lifestyle in the charming and all too popular old streets of Marbella.  Endless boutiques lined the streets with racks of all white clothing, next to equally endless restaurants packing the sidewalk with all white tablecloths.  Fourth of July docked us in deck chairs at an ever famous beach club while an American hits cover band played cheesy classical rock ballads on the stage over the pool and all the pretty people jammed along on red, white, and blue blow up guitars.

Our costal tour detoured inland with a stop in an ancient city famous for its Alhambra, the last defeated stronghold of the Moors.  We toured its manicured gardens and dazzled at its boundless fountains finding an excuse to take a photo or two.  By night the city is best enjoyed by foot, tapas hopping from bar to bar accompanied by a glass of dark vermouth and a diminishing sense of direction.  Being lost after dark could never be more fun. 

Back on the coast, and in search blue water, we set our heading for a national park, infamously the only qualified dessert in Europe.  We lugged beach chairs and an umbrella through baking sand dunes for miles, often running from swarms of furious bees, desperately in search of our private paradise.  When we finally got there, our eyes burned from sweat and sunscreen, and our feet blistered from sandy sandals.  While we may not have been the only people that day to find our perfect beach, the experience was no less special. 

When we ferried away from North Africa in search of our own clear blue freedom we unknowingly sacrificed a different sort of freedom.  Gone was the isolation of standing on a rooftop over the medina listening to the call to prayer and watching the sunset.  From here on our sunsets would be viewed shoulder to shoulder with the entirety of summering Europe; cigarettes and all. 

 

 

lisboa
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Lisboa

We arrived in the European sister city of San Francisco only to discover that aside from a few bridges, and several hills throughout the landscape, these two sisters have very different personalities.  The oldest neighborhood in her American counterpart is a century and change of age; while the slightly more matured neighborhood we called home for the week, could trace it’s origins thirty centuries yonder.  The Alfama they called it; meaning hot fountains.   Both sisters however, are frequent victims of some infamously shaky ground.  San Francisco’s most notorious one hatched in 1906; while her older sister had the shakes back in 1755, and had the added misfortune of brining with it a tidal wave that erased nearly the entire city, save for our 3000 year old neighborhood on a hill. 

Maybe from effect of receding tidal waters, or from the persistent glazing summer heat; or possibly from the centuries of feet that have pounded and polished it’s surface; the sidewalks here are shiny and smooth to the point of denying traction to even the most rugged trekking boot.  Although their utility can be perilous, their visual effect is entirely unique.  And so again, on new old ground, we trod our way down grand boulevards, along water fronted sea walks, and lost ourselves on ancient pathways training up and down the old neighborhood. 

What we originally assumed was just the beginning of the summer bustle, turned out be what was to become a much more consistent theme for our jaunt through Europe these next few months.  Our first night in Lisbon was marked with the opening day of their month long Festas de Lisboa.  Pop up food stalls were assembled; buckets of sardines were hauled in to be grilled; all manner of banners, market lights, and bright paper streamers were strung up overhead.  A jimmy-rig of outdoor speakers and miles of wires completed the fiesta effect.  They played the same monthlong soundtrack in unison like one gigantic block party. And the party never stopped.  Crowds in numbers only befitting a festival, drank, ate, danced, and did it all over again each morning until 7AM.  Some friends for a night took us on a midnight walking tour of the area; past gated castle walls, through plazas shoulder to shoulder with all of humanity; and to a hilltop view of the seven hills; where hipsters strummed at guitars and drifted off in clouds of smoke.  This was like their Christmas they said; only better. 

After a few days of endless festival fun, another friend suggested a day trip to the beach forty five minutes away by train.  A welcome reprieve offered cool water and whole grilled fish deboned and served table side with noting more than a wedge of lemon and not a sardine in sight. 

And then there was Sintra.  Another day’s trip by train dropped us back in time to where Portuguese royalty would spend their time away from the capital.  It’s the place fairytales and children’s stories are fashioned after.   Walkways twirled their way through living gardens and past sparkling fountains.  Rock grotto’s gave way to secret passageways that tunneled in all directions.  One exit would lead to the spiral staircase coiled around an underground well tower through which sprays of sunlight occasionally pierced.  Another passage would lead us to the crypt of a small empty chapel.  The castle, with its lion’s head door knockers and carved rose spires, amongst the majestic beauty of its grounds, didn’t tower over them; but managed to appear and disappear at will. 

On our last morning in Lisbon we woke in the early morning darkness in search of some solitude and a sunrise.  Wiping the sleep from our eyes we walked up our old hill, stepping over last night’s festival remnants.  Fading embers still sizzled from the barbecues wafting the permanent stench of charred sardine.  We stood atop a cement vista looking at our neighborhood and further to the water where the sun would rise.  We stood in the company of last night’s party goers also waiting to welcome the new day.  Together we watched as the sun slowly rose and so did the old city.  We stared at it and it glared back; and we tried with all our might to remind ourselves that this is not a dream.

 

                                                      

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The Tiles of Ruby

Our first destination in mainland Europe is exactly as euphoric and special as the city wants it’s visitors to feel.  With the highest tourist to resident ratio in Europe, we’re clearly not the fist ones to discover the ruby city of Porto, but it hardly matters.  We wind our way through what by now should be a familiar concept of narrow undulating and curving alleys, but like each city before, we’re equally enthralled at what surprise lies around the next corner.  Cobalt and sunflower colored moorish tiles cover whole walls of buildings; not just on the inside for the enjoyment of their owners, but splashed down entire street faces for the pleasure of any passerby. 

We sat at small tables in terraced layers on sloped and cobbled side streets and ate fresh caught fish that chef invited us to pick out of inventory.  At the bottom of the street the Atlantic blue water peeked through small slit between buildings.  Around a nearby corner we could hear the lone violin of a street musician serenading the lunchtime crowd, even though it felt like it was just for us. 

After lunch we would absently stroll along the port wall.  In the warmth of the afternoon sun, we joined the rest of the population lounging or napping on the warm pale tile, our feet dangling over the edge.  Ten feet below schools of fish glide, waiting for the occasional hoof of a baguette.  Wooden boats, reminiscent of oversized gondolas with giant oars, ferry cameras and the tourists strapped to them up and down the Porto river.  They bear the names of the big port wine houses which are visible from across the channel. The stained barrels are stacked on the ship decks, as if still ready to sail off for the king and queen who had ordered them.  Sometime later we wander our way up more twisted streets to find our apartment.  At each crest and summit, we’d find another church, grander and wholly different in design than the one five minutes prior.  Before the weekend was over, we would count five weddings in this town; and bear witness to two of them. 

The slow wine soaked pace of the day disappears all together once the sun goes down.  The lazy boardwalk of the daytime, previously awash with sleeping tourists and violin music is replaced by a cacophony of one hundred beats per minute.  Outdoor tables are setup and filled with patrons sipping on gin and tonics.  Fire dancers spin and toss flaming chains. The chest rattling boom of a massive drum and bass show vibrates across the water from the other side of the channel. Later that evening a fourth of July worthy fireworks show crackles above the old and colorfully tiled buildings.  The palms of the blasts are reflected in the perfectly calm channel water.  As it turn’s out, it happened to be a holiday for the city’s patron saint; but Porto made us feel like it could have been just for us. 

There is a certain specialness to this city.  Luxury here is on the outside, not hidden behind gates and walls of mansions.  It’s supposed is to be shared by enjoyed by everyone present.  This might be a tourist town, but it’s no surprise why.  Besides, it’s just no fun to “ooooh” and “ahhhh” fireworks all by yourself.

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alhamdulillah
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Alhamdulillah

That first morning our guide Mohammed was waiting for us in the lobby, hands clasped behind his back and head bowed.  With a graceful slowness he shook both our hands. 

“Are you ready to see our great city?” he asked us.

“ Born ready!” we replied.  Little did we know that we weren’t born ready to see anything that was coming next.

“Yalla, let’s go” said Mohammed. 

 We ducked behind him out into the morning bustle of the dusty streets.  He schools us in the art of side stepping scooters and ushering away swarms of children whose hands are quick to beg and quicker to swipe a unguarded wallet.  We walk deeper and deeper down crumbling ancient brick and dust corridors; making enough lefts or right turns that we must be back where we just had started. 

“Look at this keyhole shaped door.” he says to us.  “These doors are always only for the mosques.”  Just then midday call to prayer echoes off the sandy brick walls.  Men in brightly colored baboush and white jellabas shuffle listlessly past us toward their afternoon duty.  We walk through the oldest mosque and school in the city, where 900 boys once lived and studied the holy book together. 

“Come with me.” Mohammed says. “I’m going to shock you now.” 

We exchanged baffled looks of what we assumed could only be language lost in translation.  A corner later we stepped into the beginning of our first Moroccan street souk.  One vendor was selling fresh young rabbit from a cardboard box to shrouded women.  With practiced indifference and efficiency he would shake each rabbit unit it’s neck snapped and it hung limp.  He would then gut and offer to skin it.  Two stalls over a vendor displayed an entire cow stomach and intestine, where it fizzled in the arid heat; flies crawling out of its severed ventricles. Fish mongers dozed off with their boots resting on piles of ice, while great slabs of raw fish turned rancid and putrified the air.  Sardine slingers sloshed bare hands around crates of bloodied semi-living miniature fish, spilling glop onto the street.  A mint and herb vendor gave us a short reprieve before we hurried past chickens receiving the same fate as the rabbits, and halved watermelons covered in what looked like an abundance of black seeds, but on closer inspection were plagues of black flies and midges.

Around the next bend, the leather auction was in the height of its afternoon excitement.  More men napped on piles of barely dried raw skin hides, while a lazy auctioneer pretended to keep the sales moving.  The dust and hide particles floated through beams of bleeding sunlight like something our of science fiction movie. As we walked through the place, the stench burned our nostrils and scorched the back of our throats.  Next we walked through the raucous clamor of the metal workers, dodging showers of sparks as metal saws bit into metal rods.  Eventually we stumbled onto the finished product of traditional baboush shoes, and embroidered jellabas.  An aisle over would have only bronze crafted sconces and lamps in ever more intricate pattern work.  Woodworkers, ceramic tiles, and spice shops would follow. 

The process of accomplishing anything was made tenfold more difficult as we closed in on the last part of their month of Ramadan.  While they were forbidden to eat or drink anything during the day, with a penalty of jail, we would half apologetically and half fearfully hide our icy water bottle in a sack when walking through the medina in the mid afternoon heat.  Once inside, stall owners would corner and separate us until a deal was struck.  Touching, or even looking at the merchandise was the same as eating an apple in the garden of Eden; all hell would break loose. Later in afternoon, the same air that once radiated with possibility and newness when we arrived in Morocco, would blister and boil with pent up aggression of the starved, dehydrated, and overheated populous.  The same children that practiced their “hello’s” to us in the morning were liable to pelt us with stones in the afternoon.  While the fast may have been in deference and sacrifice to God, it sadly sometimes came at the cost of everyday human interaction. 

For the next ten days we were never quite comfortable, but we were certainly never bored.  A journey to the Stone Dessert sat us atop our first camels, technically dromedaries (one humped camels),  led over the baking rocks by a weary host.  Afterward his family hosted us in their traditional Berber clay house for a meal of assorted tagines, tomato salads, and home baked breads.  Despite what seemed to us a torturous end to a month of starvation and thirst, they were ever gracious hosts accompanying us throughout our visit.  The rest of the day toured us through the remaining desert and surrounding mountain towns.  In one village we passed a large group of women and girls standing on both sides of the street.  Behind them the men, and the men only gathered in the graveyard for the burial of one of the local inhabitants.  That evening we returned the medina and scrambled upstream past the piles of old and young men alike, surging towards the mosque for the evening call to prayer. 

Two days later we entered Casablanca as quickly as we could leave it.  Whatever Hollywood romance and wartime aura had enchanted generations prior, was dust in the African wind as far as we were concerned.  Surely with more time in Casablanca, we would have found our own niche here, in fact certain sections of the Corniche glittered with fast cars and faster nightclubs; but at this point we were suffering from some second hang Ramadan aggression, coupled with residual temperamental tagine tummy. 

With some welcome reprise the blue washed city of Chefchaouen reinvigorated us, if only for a few moments.  The narrow twisting hillside sloped streets, dotted with now familiar low hanging doorways to riads hidden within were lined with chalky blue walls in one hundred shades of the same light blue. Their plaster would crumble like eggshell to the touch, and prove nearly impossible to capture on camera without looking staged, or confusing a lens to the point of making us look like smurfs.  And then, as quick as a delicate moment had come, we’d be throttled back to a serene reality of boys careening down a street no wider than a sidewalk on mopeds in an exhibition of manhood and celebration.  It was, after all, no longer Ramadan, but the exhaling festivus that is Eid, the termination of Ramadan.  Restaurants shuddered their doors, families came together, and squares filled with white jellaba clad men smoking hashish and sipping coca-colas.  There was no rager, no banger, no parade, or party; there was only the exhale that comes after the long sip of cold water, and the long drag of a water pipe.  There was a return not to a new normal, but to a very, very old one. 

On our last day in Morocco we didn’t say much.  In our car from Chef to Tangier we sat in silence processing the last two weeks.  For us, this was the first taste of not just Africa, but of a majority Muslim culture.  Granted this was probably a most delicate and westernized introduction into this version of the world.  Marrakech is after all is one of the few prestigious world locals to host a high society Nikki Beach club, and the Parisian bred Raspoutine. But behind its new world glittering gems are the true diamonds in the rough.  Their names are Hicham, Mohammed, Sayyid, and Anass.  They’re kind, spiritual, and engaging of people like us, clearly so far away from the world they’re from.   As we walk towards the boarding area for the ferry to Spain a familiar persistent sense of guilt wells inside of us again.  We’re happy to return to somewhere that reminds us of home, but equally grateful for the experience that we’ve received here.  In the ferry terminal Stevie Wonder’s “This is a Man’s World” drifts through the loudspeakers.  The irony here is not lost on us, but it’s not an irony we can manage a laugh at either.  The thing is, we’ll be back one day; because we have to.  It was an exposure to history that no history book or novel can ever broach.  It has to be experienced, every last bit of it.

                                      

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Two Suns

The rush of heat that fills our first breath of air Marrakech carries with it an enchanted essence that would radiate through everything here.  It’s intensity fills our bodies and emblazons our souls in a way that makes all five senses fire at once.    

We drive through the dusty narrow streets of the old medina no faster than the pace of the donkey carts in front of us.  Young and often barefooted kids scurry through the street in and out of shaded doorways where old women sit.  Right now, we’re still foreigners watching through a tinted window, but even so we know this place is going to be very, very different. 

Our riad host, Medhi, greets us a few blocks away and we walk the last five minutes, all of a sudden very aware that we now are on the other side of the window; the watched and not the watchers.  A minute later we can’t help but feel a pang of shame when the worst that happens are enthusiastic waves and attempts at hello in sprinkles of French, Arabic, and English.  We come to a small door in a dark part of a covered ally, through which we must bow our heads to enter;  an architecturally forced reminder of respect to God.  In the small entry room where we remove our shoes we’re swirled into a perfumed cloud of rose water and orange blossom.  A step further brings into an oasis miles away from the city right outside the door.  Keyhole arches line hallways that surround a central courtyard, in the middle of which water shimmers in a blue pool that naturally air conditions the room.  In one corner a palm tree rises up towards the baking sun. Intricately carved bronze chandeliers throw light patterns onto the daybed sized couches that cover the terraces above us.  Small sparrow birds chirp, flit, and dart around the room.   

The afternoon welcomes us with the slow applaud of a thunderstorm.  We climb to the roof and take in our first view of the old city.  A sprawl of red terra-cotta buildings is so thick we could walk from roof to roof across the whole of its expanse.  The thousand year old walls are disfigured and crumbling.  To our left a woman is hanging her laundry outside.  Upon seeing us she abruptly apologizes and scurries back inside.  To our right a boy on a roof swings a long wooden pole in the air.  Behind its arc fly the gaggle of pigeons he’s training.  In front of us the saffron orange African sun swells as sets over the medina.  The sky above us blazes and a horn from a minaret blares.  Through a battered loudspeaker a single imam chants the evening call to prayer.  Another joins him; then another, then ten more.  Together we stood there, slowly circling to take it all in.  If we were watching this on television back home it could have easily been the start of a Jason Bourne movie, but here standing in the middle of the real thing is an experience parallel to hearing mass in a great Roman cathedral, or kneeling in a high Tibetan temple.  Here we stand; as the thunder claps, the imams sing, and the horizon burns as our misguided expectations sink with the sun.  Here we are in Northern Africa, and the world couldn’t be bigger. 

 

   

                   

the-middle-of-nowhere
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The Middle of Nowhere

A cancelled flight, missed connection, and unscheduled ferry ride make this hard to reach place in the Azorean Islands seem further than it already is; but that’s also the point, to feel far away from it all.  Sitting in folding metal chairs drinking cheaper than water beer while looking out at the final port of call before the transatlantic route for the many the sailboats in front of us; we’re periodically blasted with the overripe salty stench of hardcore-recreational sailors.   At the tables next to us we can pick out strings of Dutch, Italian, French, and Portuguese.  The walls around the port are painted with flag sized commemorations of earlier conquests. On the bow of a boat in the distance an amateur trumpet squawks into the breeze.  It notes are rusted from days at sea and it sings that nobody ever arrives here, they only pass through.  

Our next island is roped with black volcanic stones piled into six foot high walls that criss and cross over the evergreen landscape.  As fast as the earth could spew them out, locals would stack them and rack them.  In the fields of green and gold between the walls, every color of cow grazes on tall grass.  Knotted roads twirl through small oceanside villages where the white plaster cottages are speckled with brown cow spotted stones.  Tourism hasn’t discovered this corner of the planet yet.  Shops sell only the necessities and nothing more.  Dinner is taken at a reasonable hour; influenced by a history of early risers for the daily catch or harvest.  On one hand, it’s invigorating to have such an authentic and untainted experience.  On the other, we could make a killing on a taco truck here. 

That first night we befriend a local guide who hosts us at his restaurant that evening where he feeds us fish in every form.  The next morning he brings us to a holy festival where we share a traditional meal packed into a community hall with every member of the town.  Later they parade in the streets.  That afternoon he takes us on a tour of secreted ocean coves and backyard wine bodegas.  During the summer he says, dolphins and whales infest the glassy waters.  Today, it’s just us. 

The roads on these islands whip and wind higher and higher into lands before time.  White fog swallows us up and spits us out again on top on an ethereal lake of half baltic blue and half limey green.  We stop for a quick paddle through the whimsical water and then continue on our way.  The end of the island gives way to sharp volcanic cliffs which we traverse down towards a tucked away tidal cove.  Volcanic steam creeps out of the searing black rocks that line the shore.  In the cove we cling to lengths of rough rope and let cool sets of virgin ocean water roll over.  On each ebb the water comes back warm,  inflamed by a deep and distant part of the planet below.  Here we stay, far away from everything; and close to the beginning. 

 

                                                       

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Organic Disney

From the start it wasn’t unlike one of those 3D interactive ride experiences at Universal or Disney World.  We waited with the throngs of society to board the first part of the ride.  Through the big bay window in the front of the  bus we watched a strobe light show on all sides.  Flashes in the night illuminated a black and white negative of rolling country landscapes that gave way to an ever more dense jungle.  Water effects dripped down the windows and onto our laps in our moving amphitheater, maybe as as a precursor of what was to come. 

Once inside the park, shady taxi drivers offer us different alternative endings including forays into restricted zones and illegal border crossings.  Instead we choose to follow the painted yellow footpath deeper into the heart of the park.  We putter down a rickey track on a miniature open air train and step off onto a maze of metal grated gangplanks.  We follow them over lazily flowing rivers, past little islands, and sunbathing turtles.  There are no lines today, we’re the only guests here.  Out of the blue sky around us, a soft sweet mist paints our faces.  A minute later the mist becomes a spray and shortly after that we’re standing at the edge of a thundering waterfall pulverizing the earth far below.  It sucks at the air around us attempting to swallow as much as it can as fast as possible.  Even sound is pulled away over the edge.  In return it tosses up rainbows that ripple like ribbon dancers. 

We follow the metal maze down to the the side of the river below where we board a jet boat.  It blasts up the river towards the hurricane at the base of the falls.  Down here the air is thick and the water feels sharp.  Ahead of us the sound explodes like a perpetuous grenade.  The falls smash down and then erupt upwards with all the fury of a ten story tidal wave.  Still closer the conductor drives.  Just before the bow of the boat slips into the whitewater he cuts the engines.  Like the moment at the top of a rollercoaster everything slows to quarter speed.   An interminable second later the jets roar and everything goes white.  

 

   

    

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Despacito in Uruguay

After our few weeks of pretending like we lived  there, part one of the two part Buenos Aires saga drew to a close.  With a mix of anticipation and heavy hearts we emptied our temporary dresser drawers and repacked our overstuffed and over heavy bags for the next dot on the map.  Instead of a bus or plane, we embarked onto a ferry the size of a cruise ship headed across the river to Colonia, Uruguay. 

Again we stamped our passports and again we converted currency with some familiar funny math.  Read any guide book and it will tout the old world charm of Colonia del Sacramento surrounded by it’s stone armaments.  In a way it reminded us of a smaller, less well funded Cartagena.  Outside the city wall we had to navigate a few rutted dirt roads which led us to the lemon farm that was to be our home for the next week.  A dirty golden brown and muddied pup named Hashie would be one of several of our canine hosts for the next few nights.  His compadres were similar sized, white, and fluffy; or large, and sprouting white wirery whiskers.  Seven or eight in all we were never without company on our lemon farm far removed from civilization. 

On our first morning after a breakfast slathered in dulce de leche, we set off to find our way into town.  We kicked a few tires, and decided to brave the rusted and rattled old bikes for the dozen mile ride.  Like a scene out of Wedding Crahsers, we kicked up dust on country roads while swiveling our handle bars to and fro.  We waved to local farmers and ranchers with gusto and pedaled ever forward. 

The actual old town was paved in cobblestones too rugged to ride our junkers over, and we opted  to slow our pace to that of the city in which we walked.   Ancient cars that once would have been prime candidates for a hotrod enthusiast, are parked casually along some of the narrow side streets.  Flowers sprout from their hoods and green vines curl over their doors.  Our slow wanderings ducked us through a hidden hobbit’s door and into a local wine cave in which we were king and queen for an evening.  Alone in our castle we let the day slip into night and we drifted further away from wondering what came next or what day it was. 

The next morning our sore seats ached for a break from the bikes.  So, with deliberate indifference we saddled up two local horses more befitting of our temporarily adopted royal stature.  Our German accented squire (read, ranch hand) wasted no time in demonstrating that this was not going to be your everyday American pony trail ride.  With sudden realization of the power of the beast beneath us, and absence of any brake or bike pedal; we gripped the horses’ manes and toured the countryside at a gallop. 

This place is easy to miss on a map.  For most, it merits nothing more than a quick day trip across the river. Its supposed most significant contribution to the present is the allure of it’s preserved past. It’s best version however, is only made available to those who experience this place slowly.  On our third and final night we walk along the white washed stone wall on the water; trailing the sun over the horizon.  After the sunset as the sky fades to gray, instead of turning to head home with the crowds, we slowly wait.  For a few secret minutes time reverses and the gray nothing in front of us blazes with pink fire. Only then do we walk home. Despactio as they say.