Spanish life is not always likeable but it is compellingly
loveable.
-
Christopher Howse: A Pilgrim in Spain.
Life
in Spain
- Here's my fellow-blogger, friend and Business Over Tapas author, Lenox Napier, on the question of why the Spanish aren't a nation of consumer complainers. As he put it: After almost forty years of democracy, the DNA of the Spaniards still does not incorporate the culture of claiming their rights as consumers. So, guess what happens.
Someone's
cited 10 dishes you must try if you're visiting the UK and here they
are:-
Roast beef
and Yorkshire pudding
Pork pie
Omelette
Arnold Bennett
Scotch
eggs
Golden
syrup steamed sponge
Rice
pudding
Welsh
rarebit
Fish and
chips
A 'Full
English breakfast'
Afternoon
tea
I've
actually eaten some of them. Well, most of them, in fact.
CAMINO
NEWS . . .
Colmenar
Viejo is an odd place. And it seems to
be a one-taxi town. I tried – using the number displayed at the
station - to arrange a cab for my friends arriving an hour after me,
to be told that they'd have to wait at least half an hour before it
was free to pick them up. The most outstanding aspect of the place
was that most shops seemed to be obliged to have particularly
unattractive signage from (presumably) the same company. Which I
assumed belongs to a relative of the mayor/mayoress.
But – unlike my friends and hour before – I found the basilica open and was impressed by its splendour:-
As ever, though, the only other people in it – in this country of moribund
Catholicism – were a group of 6 or 7 elderly (presumed) widows
responding to a voice on a PA system leading the chanting of the
Lords Prayer and the Ave Maria. My guess is they do this every
evening, more for company than for anything else.
Finally
. . . I fled from the horrendous throbbing backbeat noise of the
hotel for the old quarter at 7 yesterday evening but made the mistake
of entering a quiet bar en route for a shandy. Whereupon the
bartender put on music at a level even louder than that of the hotel.
Just for me, the only customer. In fact, it was so loud I couldn't
hear her when she told me how much I owed her. This is one aspect of
Spanish society I will never be able to adjust to – the correlation
between having fun and deafening everyone within a 100 metre radius.
With the concomitant and total lack of consideration for those who
aren't 'having fun'. When I asked the hotel receptionist when the
noise would finish, he replied that he didn't know but assumed it
wouldn't continue at night. This is a nothing answer in Spain, where
this could mean it could end at any time between 10 at night and,
say, 5am. Fortunately, it didn't. The music started to fizzle out
during the evening and ended before 9pm.
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