Thursday, June 22, 2023

Random stuff from Spain


This post is a catch-all for stuff we thought you might find interesting, but that didn't fit anywhere else. 

In an earlier post, we showed the breadmobile that makes the rounds of little towns in the Somiedo area. I assume that happens elsewhere too, but don't really know.

Earlier in the trip we had encountered a mini grocery store: this truck pulled up and a bunch of women gathered to do their daily shopping. One of them had done a special order of something, but the rest were just buying from the minimal selection of stuff on the shelves. As you can see, there were some fresh fruits and vegetables...makes sense: probably most of the customers do most of their food shopping by going infrequently to a supermarket in a larger town, but want fresh fruits and veggies.




 


Phil, in particular, tends to notice signage and to find some of it amusing.

Love this security sign. 

When we got to this spot we weren't 100% sure which way to go. Fortunately they had this helpful signpost. 


We've already noted the cat-on-a-keyboard nature of the Basque words and signs. Here's another nice example (click so you can see a bigger version). 


Another nice sign.



And another.  We did see bears, at Somiedo Natural Park (a mama with two cubs, and another mama with one) but only at a great distance.




Vermut (vermouth) is big in Spain. Indeed, you can say "I'll see you at vermut" to mean "I'll see you at noon." There's quite a wide range of flavors.


This beer was pretty good, malty and flavorful. But it bears nearly no resemblance to an IPA (India Pale Ale), which the bottle says it is supposed to be.  

That's a lot of chocolates!










Saturday, June 17, 2023

Vitoria-Gasteiz

Several years ago, our friend Cyrus was in the town of Vitoria-Gasteiz, in the Basque area of Spain. (Cyrus is a massage therapist, now with the St Louis Cardinals, and he was in Spain with the US Wrestling Team). Cyrus loved the town and told us we would love it too: According to Wikipedia, "it is the first Spanish municipality to be awarded the title of European Green Capital (in 2012) and it has been also recognized by the UN with the Global Green City Award (in 2019)."  On Cyrus's recommendation, we decided to give it a go.  We spent two days there and we loved it. 




It looks kinda empty here, but in fact the trams are heavily used, as are the bike paths. 



The first day, we walked a few miles from our hotel to the Samburua Wetlands, on the edge of the city.



The wetlands have lots of birds, and other animals including deer.





Juliet got this great picture of some storks. 


There are interesting murals on some of the walls in the city:





Our second (final) day, we rented bikes from the hotel and went for a ride around part of the perimeter of the city. There's are a few routes that go all the way around, but we just went partway and made several detours.

To get to the edge of the city, we followed one of the nice bike paths.

We biked through an arboretum...


...and through agricultural land.


We stopped for lunch at a cafe where a bike path crosses a country road. That's the bike path in the foreground.


All in all it was a great place to spend a couple of days. It would have been nice to have some more time. They have a museum of playing cards! Within the city there are several other interesting attractions too. Getting out into nature was our top priority but if we go back someday we might spend at least a bit of time in the city itself. We did at least walk around the old medieval center.

We are glad Cyrus recommended the city to us. Now we will recommend it too!
 










 



Monday, June 12, 2023

Drifting down the Sella River

Besides hiking and biking, we also spent a very pleasant few hours drifting down the Sella River in kayaks, surrounded at times by dozens of rambunctious Spaniards enjoying varying levels of intoxication. 

We started just above the town of Arriondas. There's a kind of exciting flume leading down to the river, so they give you a push and down you go.  Phil capsized right away at the bottom, so then the guys at the kayak place told everyone else "back-paddle on the left as soon as you hit the water."  Hey guys, maybe mention that a little earlier, eh?


Preparing to Launch.


The launch ramp.

The river is broad and shallow, with occasional minor rapids. The great thing is, there's a forested green band all the way down the river.  Every now and then the preserved area is quite narrow and you can see that you are just fifty yards from farm fields or a few houses, but mostly it is wide enough that you're basically out there in nature...with a bunch of other people drinking and carousing, of course. And this was well before the tourist season really gets started! I can only imagine what it's like on a hot day in July or August, when everyone decides getting out on the river would be a fun way to cool off.

Somehow Juliet managed to get a photo of Brigitte and Hal that didn't have other kayakers in it:

Brigitte and Hal

All in all it was a really fun outing, and gave Phil and Hal a much-needed rest day from their biking.


Sunday, June 11, 2023

Hiking in the Natural Parks of Asturias

 Walking? Hiking? When does a walk become a hike, or vice versa? I dunno. I suppose that for me, if I change into hiking boots or think about changing into hiking boots in order to go for a walk, it's a hike. Anyway we did both walking and hiking in Spain, everything from easy strolls along to steep trails in the mountains. In a month many of these routes will be busy or at least not empty, but in May and early June we pretty much had them to ourselves. 


In Somiedo Natural Park

Also Somiedo. That's Juliet off in the distance.


In the hills above the heavily touristed but pretty town of Potes.

Somiedo Natural Park. Really cool geology. Also, if you click to see the bigger photo you can see several traditional-style thatch-roof huts. 


Here's a close-up of some of the huts. Now used just for sheltering animals.

Of course there were also lovely rivers, creeks, bridges, etc.

Brigitte and Juliet did a walk along the coast. Loved it. 

It's a great area and a great time of year for birdwatching: lots of birds migrate up from Africa to breed, so the forests and fields are constantly loud with birdsong from both resident birds and migrants.


Here's a wagtail wagging its tail at us. 

We didn't get photos of the mama bear with cubs that we saw at Somiedo Natural Park -- they were much too far away -- nor the 'rebecos' (French word is chamois; they are antelope-like animals that live at high elevation).  The only time we saw a lot of people in one place at Somiedo was when we came upon a big group looking for bears. It turns out this was a meeting of nature guides from all of the parks in the region: at the end of the day, after the meeting was over, they all came out to see what they could see.


Anyway we got no photos of the charismatic megafauna. But here's a nice green lizard.



Even the tiniest towns have their own church.  Many of them are not used much (I'm sure some aren't used at all), and I would guess that eventually a lot of them will be torn down or converted to other uses or something. But for now they add a focal point to every little village.



This was definitely the right time for wildflowers, which were all over the meadows and along the roadsides in great profusion.

Spring wildflowers were everywhere.


Where there are flowers there are pollinators. We saw many bumblebees of different sizes and color patterns, and many butterflies.




Wednesday, June 7, 2023

Biking: near Bilbao, near Arriondas, and Angliru

 

Juliet and Phil (and our friends Brigitte and Hal) all did some biking, but Phil is going to write this entry from his perspective.

We rented four nice road bikes from Basque Country Cycling. They are based in San Sebastian but for a reasonable fee they dropped off and picked up the bikes for us in Bilbao. And because we were renting them for 12 days, they gave them to us for 50 Euros per bike per day instead of 60. All of that is good. The bad news is, even though Hal and Brigitte were there for four fewer days than us, we had to rent their bikes for the full period due to the pickup/dropoff issues. I whined about this and Basque Country Cycling knocked a couple of days off their rental. And the bikes were quite nice, although mine quickly developed a loud clicking sound in the bottom bracket and clearly needed an overhaul by the time I returned it. The bikes were all from Orbea (a Spanish manufacturer that also made my mom's E-bike). They were provided with helmets, water bottles, seat bags with multitools, pedals of our choosing (between us we had an eclectic mix of clipless and clip-in shoes) and a few energy bars and extra goodies. All in all it was a good rental, a bit expensive but I couldn't find anywhere cheaper, and BCC were friendly and made sure we had the bikes and accessories we needed.



Juliet and I had a day in Bilbao before Hal and Brigitte arrived, so we each went for a ride. Juliet rode down the river to the industrial port area of the city, while I (Phil) did a loop through the Basque hills that I found on the Strava website (Strava is a website for keeping track of one's fitness activities). The first part of my ride was along some major roads and wasn't so fun, but once I got into the hills it was great: beautiful countryside, nearly no traffic. I didn't take many photos but here are some sheep.




That was the first of what turned out to be 8 rides in Spain. Not sure anyone would be interested in the details but here they are anyway in reverse order (i.e. most recent at the top):


I very much enjoyed all of these, but there are three to mention in particular: 

First: "Lagos de Covadonga."  Hal and I did this ride starting from our hotel, following a route his Garmin bike computer suggested, which was very similar to one my Wahoo computer suggested (though not identical). Neither of us could convince our computers not to take us on dirt or gravel roads. It's not clear to us whether the software was ignoring our selection of "paved routes only", or whether it thought htese routes were paved.  This was mostly not a problem, since we could ride our road bikes on dry dirt or gravel roads just fine, but in a couple of places we had to divert to paved alternatives where our tires wouldn't have been able to handle the computer-generated route. 


On one of the dirt roads we encountered this old guy with his shy dog. I cautiously petted the dog and the man and I said good morning and a few other words. With his permission I took his photo, partly because he's wearing traditional wooden shoes. I'm not sure you can tell in the photo -- I didn't want to make the guy feel self-conscious about it so I didn't take a photo of just the shoes. Anyway it was a big surprise to me that someone in the modern era would still choose to wear these. I'm glad, though: it makes the world a bit more interesting when there are still local customs. 



Eventually Hal and I reached the bottom of the climb, and up we went.  The Lagos de Covadonga climb has been used many times in the Vuelta a Espana bike race (both men's and women's editions) and I had really been looking forward to it. The climb itself is very nice: as is common, it started by following a river valley upwards, then turns off and climbs the forested mountainside, until eventually takes you out of the forest into the high meadows.  (There are some photos from the top on the Saturday, June 3 blog entry). Unfortunately there was also quite a bit of traffic and the road is quite narrow. Cars and buses were good about giving us space and waiting until it was at least mostly safe to pass, but it would have been a much more pleasant experience if there were less traffic. 

We included some photos from the top in a previous post, but here's another one just to fit in with the narrative. The climb starts at the level of the agricultural lands way down at far right in the photo.

From our hotel to the top was only 22 miles (but 4500 feet of climbing!).  Juliet and Brigitte met us at the top and we did a couple of hikes, as previously described.  A very nice day. 


Two days later (after an intervening day where we all did a kayak trip down a river, maybe we will do a separate entry on that), Hal and I set out again, this time for Ponga Natural Park. This turned out to be a fantastic ride, some great scenery -- better than Covadonga! -- but no traffic at all...and only in part because of the crazy route we took.

Once again, we tried using the route selected by our bike computers (or by Google Maps). This time we knew not to trust them: if they tried to put us on a gravel or dirt road that looked too jankety, we were fully prepared to deviate. The first hour or so was terrific: we were immediately routed onto small farm roads that rolled along through the fields and hills... often quite steep (an 8% grade is very typical) but nothing we couldn't handle, and without a single car.  Really fantastic; as Hal said, it didn't really matter whether we ended up at our intended destination or not, we could happily ride that way all day. Of course, just ten or fifteen minutes after making that observation we ran into trouble: sure enough, our computer-generated route tried to lead us onto a steep gravel road that didn't look so good. But the roads to left and right also did not look so good.  And we were running low on water and would soon need a refill.  We asked a guy walking past whether there was a place around to buy a Coke, and he laughed and shrugged and gestured and said something about death.  "All the businesses died" is what I thought he said, but Hal thought maybe it was "if you try going that way, you'll die".  Anyway we chose a promising-looking direction and set out climbing up a gravel road. The road alternated between gravel (on the relatively flat parts) and concrete with diagonal scoring for traction (on the incredibly steep parts).  It was really hard. The gravel honestly wasn't that big an issue, but the steepness certainly was.  Finally we reached the top and had a nice view down into the valley, where we could see a paved road.  I don't have any photos from the climb but I do have a photo from the spot where I finally said "Hal, we are going to make it." 


From there we had a steep descent to the paved road far below, which we joined right at an entrance to Ponga Natural Park.  We still needed water. We thought about calling it a day and riding back to the hotel -- we had already had a very nice ride and done a fair bit of climbing and were pretty tired -- but fortunately we decided instead to continue with Plan A: ride into the park and over a mountain pass we had identified on the map. So down, down, down we went into the valley -- stopping at a small intermediate town to pet a cat and fill our water bottles at a fountain -- and eventually we got to the bottom, where there was a restaurant where we each got a couple of Cokes. Then we started riding along a road that followed a stream up the middle of the valley. The scenery was fantastic.  I took Juliet back there the next day and we started at the Coke place to do this same part of the ride. I snapped a couple of photos from my bike but they don't look like anything special. You'll have to take my word for it: it was great. And no traffic!


After a few miles, the road heads out of the valley and up the hillside, and so did we. The day Juliet and I were there, we stopped at the very nice small museum in the town of Beleño, halfway up the hill. Both days, after passing through Beleño we continued to the top.  Hal and I went over the top and down the other side, whereas Juliet and I turned around here and went back down for lunch at a lovely creekside hotel.  Juliet agreed that this was a beautiful place to ride.



For those of us who like fast, scenic descents (this is me!) the descent down the other side was fantastic: the road surface was excellent, the road was curvy enough to be interesting without the curves being dangerously sharp, and there were great views of the rocky, steep-sided canyon. 



I don't think Hal loooooved this ride to the extent that I did. For me it was great, top 10, in spite of the pass itself being nothing special.  (Not top 5, but hey, can't have everything).  It had 90% of the scenic beauty of some of the rides I've done in the Dolomites, Alps, and Pyrenees, with none of the traffic. From the time we left the main road in Arriondas near our hotel, to the time we go to the end of the section photographed above, we saw 5 cars. 

We eventually made it back to the town of Cangas de Onis (mentioned in a previous entry), where we had lunch -- including a giant plate of padrón peppers -- before the final few miles back to the hotel. Really great day on the bike.  It didn't seem like it while we were struggling up the incredibly steep gravel and cement roads with no clear idea of where we were going to end up, but, as Hal noted at the time, no matter what happened after that we would at least have a memorable ride. But 'after that' turned out to be really nice.




The third ride I'll highlight was one I did solo, after Hal and Brigitte had decamped and I had had a day to rest my legs: I drove an hour and a half farther west and did a famous climb called "Angliru".  Earlier in the week I had suggested to Hal that we do the route that the Vuelta a Espana will take on one of the stages later this year: climb two Category 1 climbs and then the "beyond category" climb of Angliru at the end.  A dozen years ago, when Hal and I were considerably younger (duh) and were also in much better shape, this wouldn't have necessarily been a crazy thing to try... but even then we would not have succeeded, I can now say with some certainly. Anyway it's a good thing Hal didn't express any enthusiasm for it whatsoever because it would have been ridiculous.  Even driving to the start and just doing Angliru on its own was extremely hard and there's no way I could have done it if I had done any climbing whatsoever on the way there. 

Here's what a Reuters article said two years ago: 

WELCOME TO HELL

If there are to be any fireworks, they will come once riders have passed kilometre six - marked on the road by daubing that say ‘Hell starts here’.

From the climb’s halfway point it averages over 13%, with kilometre 11 an eye-watering 17.4%, including sections of ramps that hit 24% - and do not slip below 16.2% - at the 450 metre Cuena les Cabres section.

It is this point that breaks many amateur riders tackling the climb - and at that steepness it is nigh-on impossible to resume riding, leading many to turn around back to the start defeated.

THIS IS INHUMAN

Former Scottish pro David Millar famously refused to finish a 2002 stage that culminated at the climb’s peak, stopping his bike just before the finish line and taking off his rider number in protest. He was eliminated from the race for not finishing the stage. “We’re not animals and this is inhuman,” Millar said at the end of the brutal stage. On that day, Millar crashed descending the Alto del Cordal en-route to the Angliru, and this year riders will take the same route into the summit finish.Oscar Sevilla, who came fourth in that year’s Vuelta, described it as “an inhumane climb.” 

Meanwhile former Kelme team manager Vicente Belda went one further, saying: “What do they want, blood? They ask us to stay clean and avoid doping and then they make the riders tackle this kind of barbarity,” when asked about the climb.

For some reason I wanted to do this climb, so I drove to the town of L'Ara, parked the car, and started up the hill.  I took it very, very easy on the 1200 or so feet of climbing that it took to bring me to Kilometer 0 of the Angrilu climb itself.



 In fact, I took it as easy as I could the whole way: when the road was flat I pretty much coasted along, when the slope was 8% I took it as easy as I could on an 8% grade, and so on.  Normally I would tend to push pretty hard on the very steep sections, to get them over with, and then try to catch my breath a bit on the less-steep sections. Fortunately I knew what was coming, so I knew that would take too much out of me. Instead I forced myself to stay very calm and non-aggressive. It all went OK, heart rate mostly under control even on the hard sections...until I got to the "Cuena de Cabres" section mentioned in the quote above. I had just climbed a steep ramp, then got five seconds of easy pedaling at a sort of flat spot in the hairpin turn, and then I found myself facing this ridiculous slope. It looks flat here because I was stupidly pointing my camera parallel to the road rather than horizontally. It is very very steep. It's a pretty safe bet that you've never climbed a slope this steep; and an even safer bet that if you _have_ climbed a slope this steep, it wasn't anywhere near this long.  (I took this photo, of another descending rider off in the distance, as I was on the way back down). 

          




There was a guy about halfway up this section who was pushing his bike slowly uphill. He had to go quite a ways to get to somewhere flat enough that he could get back on and get started again.  Even though he was walking quite slowly, he was almost to the top of the section before I reached him: I was weaving back and forth across the road (this is called 'paperboying'), just barely keeping the pedals turning. I averaged 2.5 mph on this section.

And it's not like it got flat after that, it just got less ridiculously steep. 

Still, if you keep climbing long enough you eventually reach the top. For the 4.5 miles that constitutes Angrilu proper -- a short distance over which you climb more than 2800 feet -- I took 1:06. The fastest time is just barely under 30 minutes.  I used to aim for taking 1.5 times as long as an elite rider, but in this case being within shouting distance of 2x is fine with me: I'm not getting any younger, and I'm a bit under-trained. If I ever come back and try this again, as I hope to do someday, I'll try to get under 2x the fastest time. But I'm not going to complain about my result. I finished!







I want to come back to Asturias and do a lot more riding. If you choose a good route, you get scenery comparable to the Dolomites but with none of the traffic.  (Oh yeah: thank god there was essentially no traffic on Angliru -- I was passed by only one car -- and much to my surprise there weren't even very many bikers, I saw only about a dozen all day). 

Note added later: I'm writing this in the city of Vitoria-Gasteiz on July 7, our last day in Spain. Juliet and I just did a bike ride on some bikes we rented from the hotel, exploring around the outskirts of the city. Our friend Cyrus suggested we come here, and we are very glad we took his suggestion. Today we just putted around but there are some great rides around here too.