Friday, January 8, 2010

Pictures from Paris






Caroline demonstrates her Italian style boef tartare (I think there's a letter missing)... not that they eat raw hamburger in Italy. I had the traditional French style.















When I said I wanted to see an exhibit of Mesoamerican artifacts, I had no idea the gallery would be at the foot of the Eiffel Tower. What a nice surprise!
















Fresco from "Teotihuacan: The City of the Gods" exhibit at musee du quai Branly.













Teotihuacan artist's paint palatte.













There were several other collections at the same museum.













Next day, I had lunch with my friend Eva, who I met in Vilnius last year, very happy that she happened to be in Paris at the same time as me.

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Running of the Bulls... Madrid Style

We were told that Madrid was the place to be on New Year's Eve, and it was no lie. Every hotel in town was sold out. Ours was on Calle Huertas, in what had to be one of the most lively parts of town. Throngs of people donned silly wigs and hats - long, short, pink, purple, fros, fairies, you name it, you'll find it on some reveller's head. Entrepreneurs from other continents sold party horns, beer and bottles of champagne from makeshift stands on the sidewalk. An endless supply of sangria flowed through the cobblestone streets.

We arrived late on December 30 and immediately left to check out the town. Puerta del Sol. That's where we were supposed to go at midnight on New Year's Eve. We can barely make our way there through the crowds. Everyone is happy, laughing, having a good time... clutching their bottles of champagne and bags of grapes as if it were the 31st. The tradition is to eat one grape for every chime of the bell at midnight on the 31st. "I wonder why people have grapes with them tonight?" Trish says.

"I have no idea."

"Today's the 30th, right?"

"I think so." The bus tickets we used today said December 30. "It has to be" I add, unconvinced. "But you're right that they seem to be getting ready to celebrate."

"Maybe it's a dress rehearsal," Trish says, and we laugh.

"I wouldn't put it past them," I say. "Only in Madrid."

We stop to talk to a guy selling enormous plastic sunglasses for 3 euros a pair. "Why is everyone celebrating tonight?" we ask him.

"Como?" He doesn't understand our dialect.

A group of fashionable Spaniards stop to buy some glasses. "Why is everyone celebrating tonight?" we ask one of them.

"It's a practice," he says.

"Practice?"

"Yes."

"For tomorrow?"

"Yes."

"You mean like a dress rehearsal?"

"Yes, it's a rehearsal for tomorrow."

I look at Trish. "You were right!" And at that very moment, the entire crowd makes a move for the plaza. Some people check their watches as they start trotting. Within moments it's a full on stampede. We look up the street and it's as if all of humanity is galloping towards us. Towards the Puerta del Sol square, in fact, but we happen to be in the way.

"Oh my god," Trish says, "it's the running of the bulls!"

"Come on... it must be almost midnight!" We run with them and make it to the square just in time for the practice dropping of the ball, just in time for the practice music, for the practice cork-popping, grape-eating, happy-new-year-wishing love fest that is New Year's Eve in Madrid.

Only tomorrow it will be even bigger, louder and happier.




Yay! Having left Portugal, we can have swordfish instead of codfish.








...or monkfish.









Fabulous Christmas Day pastries in Porto... how did I neglect to post these earlier?








Trish in her warm new paperboy hat, on the pedestrian bridge in Porto.

ISO Clan Gouveia

We went to Gouveia to search for Trish's family. Her wife's family, to be more precise. It became a bit of a mystery because we didn't find any living soul there with the family name of Gouveia. Nobody seemed to think there ever had been Gouveias in Gouveia. So was the town named after the family, or did the family name itself after the town? It could have happened either way.

If the town was named after the family, then the family would have been from the landed aristocracy. Our friend the bus station manager directed us to the ancient cemetary, where we might find remains of old families. It was a splendid cemetary climbing up a terraced hillside, with mausoleums lining both sides of a central path.

I expected to find the Gouveia family entombed in one of these mausoleums, but the names did not match. Lots of Ferreiras, lots of Da Silvas, but no Gouveias.

I peeked my head into a few where the curtains were tattered or pulled to one side. Many had 6 or 8 berths (what do you call a mausoleum bed?), a few with vacancies remaining.

"Well, maybe they had their own tombs on their land," I suggested. But we kept looking.

"Or maybe... maybe the family wasn't named Gouveia at all when they lived here. Maybe they only changed it when they moved to America."

"Maybe" said Trish.

"As a way to keep alive the memory of the place they came from," I added.

We kept looking. We read every headstone in the place, and only found one Gouveia. A man, I think he was, born 1915, more or less the same year the family emigrated to the United States. Died 1987... not so long ago by small town standards, so why does no-one seem to remember him? The mystery deepened.

I was more excited to find him than Trish was. "Maybe this guy was so homesick for the old country that he came back to Gouveia to be buried."

"Uh-huh."

I was pretty much talking to myself at this point.

"That's why no-one remembers him."

"Right."

"Or maybe they really were the landed family of the town, and they had to flee the country because they were on the wrong side of somebody's politics."

"Maybe."

"You know, it could be your castle."

"What?" At least I got her attention.

"The abandoned castle sitting up there at the top of the hill... maybe it belongs to your family. Wouldn't you like to reclaim the Gouveia castle?"

"Yes, Patti, we should come take back the castle."

We never did find any other Gouveias, but we found some really unique and impractical souvenirs... ceramics, liqueur, a jar of pumpkin marmalade. By the time we left, not only was Trish in danger of tipping over from the weight of her backpack but she had spawned a frontpack as well. Walking to the bus station in the pre-dawn streets, she could easily have been mistaken for a pregnant woman.









Portuguese mountain rescue dog.








All the towns in this part of the mountains seemed to have a burnt out tree on display near the town square. A reminder, perhaps, of the danger of forest fires???








A wolf-puppy that followed us home from a long walk. Trish was tempted to try to take him home with her.







Best meal of the trip. O Flor's wild boar with white beans. (O Flor is the second fabulous restaurant we found in this tiny town.)








More codfish, but at least O Flor adds fresh veggies.