Thursday, February 3, 2011

Viva Espana!

The year 2010 had arrived and with it the number 25 was added as new age! It was high time I thought I travelled to a little destination called 'Europe'. Hence, having brainwashed a colleague of mine to be my travel partner on this completely self planned trip, I set out to cross the first big hurdle in front of me - the Budget. After detailed research and several painful looks at my bank statements, we set out a budget for a 22 days trip across 3 of the most popular countries for tourism in the world - Spain, France and Italy. Lonely planet being my bible for the next few weeks and hostelworld.com my homepage, we had finally fixed an itinerary and were all set to fly.

Madrid
We couldn't have chosen a more appropriate day to fly - 9/11. And our trip cudn't have begun on a more adventurous note. Our Turkish airlines flight with a stopover at Istanbul before it lands in Madrid was delayed by 4 hours. Which meant we missed our connecting flight, which also meant we dint reach Madrid at 3.45 in the afternoon like our original plan but instead at 11.55 in the nite! Of course this was not acceptable to us and being 2 young girls (i still like to think of 25 as being young) with no knowledge of Spanish and no proper directions to our hotel, landing in Madrid at midnite, didn't quite sound like the adventure we had hoped for in this trip. Having pity on us and our plight, Turkish guys got us tickets in Qatar airways. So now we were all set to fly Mumbai - Doha - Madrid. We reached Madrid after a long and sleepy 15 hours flight and after lots of wrong turns and language barriers, we finally found our hotel. I must admit that a few hours into our hotel room and I was feeling depressed. That’s because Madrid was nothing like I had expected it to be. We were greeted by empty streets, silence of a thousand souls, sunny weather, MAJOR communication barrier, people with no information or direction sense and more. But once I was out for dinner, I never for one moment after that ever felt depressed on the trip. Our dinner was as adventurous. We went into this quaint streetside café and again faced the now famous "communication gap". Not understanding what was written on the menu card we asked the waiter in whatever Spanish we had learned for this trip and ordered food. And he from whatever he understood of our mixture of Spanish and English brought us 2 glasses of white wine and a plate of tapas which constituted of 4 toasted bread slices with tomato toppings. Tapas is basically a starter in Spain served mostly with drinks. This “lavish” (sense the sarcasm) dinner was costing us 25 euros. We were exhausted and hungry, so we eat like two pigs not having fed for a week and finished off the last piece of food on that plate. A while later, the waiter (he was cute btw!) came with a huge plate of beef steak. In all our communication error (or not), we had managed to tell him that we were really hungry and that we wanted the best meat dish in the house. And the 25 euro dish also consisted of the beef steak. Unfortunately we wasted some bit of the steak (too full on the tapas), but it still was the BEST BEEF STEAK I have ever eaten!

Madrid
3 days in Madrid and i think i finally found the city that my soul, body and mind needs to be in...the city where i should have really been born - Madrid. The restaurants in the city are always packed especially in the evenings (I don't think they cook in Spain post lunch!), but they all serve lipsmacking food. I would say Spain is a treat for any foodie. I was however scandalized by the amount of PDA shown by the couples in Madrid (no wonder the spanish football captain kissed his gf on national TV after they won the world cup, Spaniards love PDA!). It took me a day to get used to watching couples go down each others throat in front of a church (wat are the odds of seeing such a sight in India!). But after sometime of being constantly exposed to such sights, i found it all very charming. You could feel (and in this case see) the love in the city. No one cared a damn of who you are, where your from, what you're wearing. Everyone was all about having fun. Lunch and dinner by roadside cafés, salsa in the park, puppet show on the streets for kids, overcrowded yet colourful flea market El Rastro, museums of art and history, bustling street of Gran Via, attending a Spanish mass in a gorgeous monastery, colourful graffiti on the walls...Madrid in a postcard for me.

Montserrat, Barcelona
Next stop - Barcelona Baby! One of the reasons for my excitement about going to the next destination was travelling in Euro Rail. It is definitely one of the underrated highlights of my Europe trip. The trains were of course highly sophisticated and we were travelling first class, so the experience was even more posh and special. I could feel my DDLJ moments on each of the Euro Rail journeys. If Madrid is the Delhi of Spain, then Barcelona is the Mumbai of Spain. The sophistication, class, designer wardrobe, shoes and bags were all missing in Barcelona. This city spelled simplicity yet very rich in liveliness. We stayed in one of the friendliest and colourful hostels in Barcelona called Buba House and had a very helpful guide in the form of Marcos our hostel keeper. We made some friends there who were not natives but living in the hostel and were travellers like us. We made a small detour from Barcelona to Montserrat one day and it was one of the most gratifying trips of my life. We had to travel in a cable car over a mountain above 4000 feet to reach a monastery which is famous for its Black Mother Mary. That night we traveled what felt like the length and breadth of Barcelona for good catalan food. If I had to compare this city to something, it would be to a young teenager who has fallen in love for the 1st time - happy, excited and oblivious to the surroundings. We even watched a Mexican dance being performed on the streets of Barcelona and the locals were all out in hundreds, cheering and enjoying themselves. It's also rather alarming to see the number of Bangladeshis residing in the city who are basically hawkers selling chinese products (China doesnt spare Europe also). Gaudi's unbelievable parks, La Sagrada Familia Church (though i thought this monument is highly overrated), Barceloneta beach, overcrowded and happening La Ramblas street, the famous local food - Paella and a lot more complete my travelogue for Barcelona.

Park Retiro, Madrid
The language barrier notwithstanding, I LOVED SPAIN! Of all the 3 languages I tried to learn in a few weeks before i ventured on this magnum opus trip, Spanish was the language I loved listening and learning. The people though not very friendly, be warned - the people mind their own business a little too much and may not entertain you. We walked around Madrid and Barcelona and found the cities unpretentious and a visual delight. The vibe of the cities were electrifying and youthful. The food - great, sights - classic, language -lovely! Definitely a country I would want to live in or atleast visit again - Viva Espana!

1 comment:

Varun Kumar said...

loved reading every bit of this blog! I was thinking that u rename ur blog to Memoir of a Drama Queen - was missing the word ghastly surprise for some reason - but hey u totally managed to do what u set out to - rubbing ur fabulous trip to europe in our face!!!