Monday 28 May 2018

Farewell España 💃

The white cliffs of Dover
After over five months travelling around Spain it was finally time to make our way back home to our home in Sussex. We felt sad to be leaving especially as the weather seemed to have settled, every day was warm and sunny and the wind had finally settled. Spain was doing what it does best by offering fabulous weather!!
We had a truly wonderful trip, visited lots of amazing places and made many new friends. We feel that we have become part of a new community and feel sure we will be meeting up with many of the people we have met along the way, it's all so much easier to keep in touch now with social media - Facebook and Whatsapp etc.
The lovely promenade of Mojacar Playa
We didn't always have an easy time of things, it was challenging trying to book the vehicle in to a garage to have the work done for an urgent safety recall, Google Translate is brilliant if you want to send an email but it's not so easy when you come face to face with someone who doesn't speak English and you don't speak Spanish!! But we got by and managed to get the work done although we did have to spend the night camped up on the Industrial estate for the night so that we could check the van in at 8am! We also had to find a dentist when Keith developed toothache, but we solved that problem easily by travelling to Mojacar where we found an English speaking dentist where we were given excellent treatment.
Islamic arches in the Cathedral of Córdoba

We enjoyed the coastal resorts, revisiting some of our favourite haunts as well as finding new places, but we also travelled inland and enjoyed equally exploring the city of Córdoba as well as some of the less visited areas such as Ubeda. We ventured off the beaten tourist track and found what felt like the 'real' Spain.
Our final week was spent at Castellon de la Plana (one of our favourite haunts!) on the area designated for Motorhomes by the airfield so not only could we enjoy the cycle path right outside the gate but when we were back at base we could watch the light aircraft and parachutists. Every day we headed along the cycle path to the Via Verde from Benicassim to Orepesa, we just didn't tire of it with its beautiful views.





Our last Spanish stopover by the airfield at Castellon 



Whilst we were there we met a couple, Anne and Terry. Anne introduced me to Polarsteps a great app for recording your journey.









I have set it up for our journey home if you want to have a look:
https://www.polarsteps.com/AngelaGardner/648016-home-from-spain?s=27695db8-89fd-41fe-a0f7-18f57e05efce
Back home cycling the disused railway line in Sussex 

And so my blog for this trip comes to an end, but it's certainly not the end of our travels - we are planning our next trip already, inspired by Colin and Sandra, we hope to make the journey across Europe to Greece in 2019 - just watch this space!!

Tuesday 8 May 2018

Our Motor-Roaming life

I was wondering what to write next on my blog and I thought you may be interested in what it's been like to be living in Spain in our motorhome for the last five months. It's wonderful to be free to go where you want whenever you want and to visit so many different places - cities, countryside or coast.
Spain is such a diverse country there is always somewhere new and different to discover and their customs and culture often surprises us. Sometimes we get a bit lonely when all we have for company is each other, but over the last months we have begun to feel more and more that we are part of a large community of like minded people touring around in their motorhomes for months and sometimes years (or sometimes the motorhome is their home having sold up in the UK)

With every place we visit we have ever-changing neighbours and if they are from the UK we often get chatting over a coffee or even enjoy a cycle ride or a meal together. One couple, Alan and Sophie, we met in Chinchilla, we chatted and Sophie and I contacted each other a couple of times using Whatsapp. A week or so later we were cycling along the Benacassim cycle path when we thought we recognised Sophie going the other way, so I sent a Whatsapp " Was that you we just saw?" I said, and it was! We were both parked up at Castellon about a mile apart, the next day we met for coffee and the day after a cycle ride along our favourite Via Verde. We have a lot in common, Alan being a keen runner and Sophie is a hypnotherapist like me, our friendship was cemented and we hope to keep in touch as they live in Sussex (like us). With all the people we have met over the last few years, I think we now have more motorhoming friends across Europe than we have at home in the UK. With today's social media it's so easy to keep in touch and we exchange ideas, information about gadgets (Paul Steel especially!!)  and our favourite places to stay - there's nothing better than recommendation - so many of the great  places we have stayed have been as a result of a recommendation from a fellow Motorhomer.

The practical side of life as a Free camper can be challenging at times especially finding somewhere to do your laundry.
Can you imagine my delight when we found the El Palomar camperstop on our route? I had been told by someone we met that you had use of the washing machine free! And the added bonus was they only charged 5€ a night to stay.
We stayed two nights and in that time I did four wash loads and got it all dry on our makeshift line.

It's the simple things in life that can give you great happiness, who doesn't like to snuggle up at night in between fragrant clean sheets!!

Friday 4 May 2018

Yet another Via Verde

You might be imagining when you read about our Moho adventures in Spain that we are having wonderful weather, but I think you have to agree there is definitely something unusual about the weather right across Europe. Being April we expected the temperatures to be soaring and we could put our winter woolies away, but we have experienced so much wind in the last months often a cold wind, yesterday it was a hot and sunny 25° yet today the day started at 3° and has only risen to a chilly and very windy 12° with frequent showers including hailstones . Weird eh? What is going on? Back in the UK the weather has been much, much colder - so much for global warming!
Nevertheless, we get out on our bikes or walking almost every day and we love nothing better than a Via Verde for our cycling.




Which is why when we left Ubeda, we travelled to Alcaraz, where using Park4night, we found a car park right at the start of the Via Verde de Sierra de Alcaraz, we stayed three nights and in that time we had the car park to ourselves and very nice it was too, peaceful at night with another interesting historic town to wander around and explore close by.
Not everyone likes to stay in this kind of isolated car park on their own but it suits us just fine.

On the Via Verde we hardly saw a soul as the trail wound through the rather lush hills, sometimes literally as there were quite a few tunnels (with automatic lighting, which worked well most of the time, just occasionally there was a delay on the motion sensors and we found ourselves cycling in the pitch black - Scary!!)
It's a bit strange really (and the kind of thing you find all the time in Spain) but this wonderful Via Verde which stretches 74km from Albecete to Alcaraz has hardly any access points along its entire length, which probably accounts for why we saw so few people!



Chinchilla-that's us in the bottom left corner!

Our next stop was recommended to us by a fellow motorhomer, another hilltop town called Chinchilla. Here there is a massive Aire with room for up to 50 vans with all the usual facilities of water and waste disposal with an added bonus that it was really peaceful at night (except for the chiming of the church bells - not so good if you're a light sleeper!)
Once again exploring the town on foot left your calves aching from the many steps and steep hills, but it's always worth wandering around the winding narrow streets that have hardly changed in the last few centuries.