Showing posts with label Portugal Trip 2018. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Portugal Trip 2018. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 01, 2019

Complete compendium of 2018 travelogues: Porto, Gdansk and Munich.

Diana and I are exceedingly fortunate to have been able to visit Europe three times in 2018. We're very well matched as travel partners, and it's a pure joy. For years I refused to take a phone with me when traveling, but eventually relented, and since 2016 we've been "facebooking" our trips.

Your comments are much appreciated by both of us, and because so many of you have told me that you enjoy the photos, I've taken to arranging them at the blog in the form of travelogues.

Following are the links to our 2018 trips; Munich and Gdansk are in the form of links to "search by label," so just click and scroll. Porto was arranged earlier with all links in one place. Each trip also was accompanied by a prelude of articles of historical and topical interest pertaining to our destination.

I hope you enjoy all these articles, and thanks for reading.

Munich, Germany (and a side trip to Bamberg)
Bavarian Christmas Interlude 2018
Prelude: Munich Tales 2018

Gdansk, Poland
Gdansk Pilgrimage 2018
Prelude: Eight Days of Gdansk

I did it a bit differently last spring.

Porto, Portugal (and a side trip to Madeira)

Your courtesy compendium of links to the "Portugal Trip 2018" and "Focus on Portugal 2018" series.

Sunday, March 25, 2018

Your courtesy compendium of links to the "Portugal Trip 2018" and "Focus on Portugal 2018" series.


Indeed, knowing that we'd be visiting Porto and Madeira, the winter of 2017-2018 became a veritable adult education course on all things Portuguese.

And that's just the way I love it.

Pleasure travel absent context simply isn't pleasant for me, and so I learned what I could; then we went, and I learned even more.

After 38 repetitions of this cycle, you'd think I'd qualify for a "life experience" Master of Arts degree. Maybe some day.


The travelogue, day by day:

Portugal Trip 2018 (1): A Tuesday arrival and introduction to Porto.

Portugal Trip 2018 (2): São Bento Railway Station, Mercado do Bolhão, Jardim da Cordoaria and a big Liverpool win.

Portugal Trip 2018 (3): A rainy day's Port lodge crawl in Vila Nova de Gaia, and an inaugural Francesinha sandwich.

Portugal Trip 2018 (4): Madeira – island of eternal spring (and fortified wine, Coral beer and black scabbard fish).

Portugal Trip 2018 (5): FC Porto versus SC Lusitania in Portuguese professional basketball.

Portugal Trip 2018 (6): Sunday at the beach, then some fine eating (Taberna Stº. António) and a solid craft beer bar (As 7 Maravilhas).

Portugal Trip 2018 (7): An epic stroll along the Douro to lunch at São Pedro da Afurada.

Portugal Trip 2018 (8): Beach, park and cemetery, with a few Spanish beers and tapas.

Portugal Trip 2018 (9): History, sandwiches, sunsets and craft beer on the final day in Porto.


Three epilogues:

Public art: Is it Funchal (Madeira) or New Albany (Indiana)?

Thanks for asking, Delta Air Lines. I'm happy to tell you how likely I am to recommend you to others.

ON THE AVENUES: The books I've been reading during the winter months (including the two consumed while in Porto).


"Focus on Portugal," a series that I prepared in advance and published while we were away.

Focus on Portugal: A history lesson upon arrival for a second visit to the country.

Focus on Portugal: Vila Nova de Gaia, the Douro and other tasty aspects of Port wine.

Focus on Portugal: Porto's quintessential Francesinha sandwich.

Focus on Portugal: Madeira, both islands and wine.

Focus on Portugal: Learn about the music called Fado.

Focus on Portugal: Was António de Oliveira Salazar an autocrat or a dictator? Tyrant or protector? It's complicated.

Focus on Portugal: The Carnation Revolution in 1974, and Portugal in the current age.

Focus on Portugal, which remains a central player in the world's production of natural cork.

Focus on Portugal: The characterful and historic azulejo tiles of Portugal.

Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Thanks for asking, Delta Air Lines. I'm happy to tell you how likely I am to recommend you to others.

Hello Roger,

We wanted to follow up on the opportunity to share your feedback regarding your experience on your flight from Atlanta (ATL) to Louisville (SDF) on February 22, 2018. We are committed to providing exceptional service on every flight and understand that we didn’t meet those expectations with a delayed arrival.


Please know that we are committed to providing exceptional service on every flight, and we appreciate hearing from valued customers like you. We ask that you share your thoughts regarding your recent flight experience by completing this short survey.


How likely are you to recommend Delta Air Lines to others?

Thanks for “reaching out” to me, Delta Air Lines.

On the evening of Thursday, February 22, we left Atlanta for Louisville roughly on time, to be informed by the captain that arrival at SDF might actually be a tad early.

This was welcome news. We’d already been awake for more than 20 hours since rising to depart Porto, Portugal for Amsterdam and Atlanta, and gratefully, we hit the runway in Louisville at 11:35 p.m., a full 20 minutes early.

Then we exited the plane – at 12:35 a.m., after waiting an entire hour for a gate to debark, which was explained to us by the captain as a case of other flights being diverted because of fog (with heavy rain predicted after midnight), and with one plane apparently sitting at our arrival gate with almost no workers present to move it out of the way.

He never explained why someone decided to park a plane at a gate where another flight would be due later that evening. If there is any justice in the world, it was an ex-employee.

We got to the car just as the rain started. The way back to New Albany took a bit; we were so long getting off the flight that the storm had moved in, and effective visibility on the interstate a few yards, with a speed of 35 mph.

A little after 1 a.m., we were home, where we rushed immediately upstairs to check on our elderly cat Hugo.

Wait – I forgot to mention that we’d been informed by the cat-sitter that our elderly cat Hugo didn’t look well, and the hour spent on the tarmac was vivid in my mind as we sadly found him lying dead. The circumstances strongly suggested that he passed after midnight. The faithful little guy tried to wait for us, but Delta had other ideas, so listen carefully, engorged multi-national corporation.

Neoliberalism and monopolies being what they are, and Louisville’s connections with Delta being pervasive, we have little realistic chance of boycotting Delta in the future. To claim such would be unrealistic, and I’m not in the mood to shake my fist at you.

Just know that I’ll never, ever forgive you for whatever staggering levels of incompetence led to a plane being parked where it shouldn’t have been, and for sitting on the ramp for a full hour, knowing our cat needed us, and being unable to get to him in time.

Fuck you, Delta Air Lines.

In the future, every time I authorize a payment for a flight, I’ll pause just for a second to honor Hugo’s memory, and I’ll look at the Delta logo, and I’ll repeat, perhaps as many as 16 times (his age): Fuck you, Delta Air Lines.

If it is humanly possible to “hate” a corporation, then be aware that I hate Delta Air Lines’ guts. Apart from that, the flight was just dandy.

Sincerely,

Roger

P.S. I see that there was no oval to be blacked in with my response to the question of whether I’d recommend Delta Air Lines to others.

The proper reply: I’d rather drink Miller Lite; if you know me, you know exactly what this implies: Fuck you, Delta Air Lines.

Saturday, February 24, 2018

Public art: Is it Funchal (Madeira) or New Albany (Indiana)?


Duh -- of course it's Madeira; there ain't no palm trees in Nawbany, but apparently when David Duggins became enamored with the imagery of Anchors, he didn't bother with a trademark.

Note this shop in Porto.


Back in Funchal, we found no shortage of public art in Zona Velha. It's the city's "old town," with some buildings dating to the 1500s. These days Zona Velha is Funchal's restaurant district.

As you look at these photos, just think about the possibilities when art bubbles up from the grassroots, rather than being dictated by higher-ups.












A reminder: Funchal is the capital city of Madeira, which is an archipelago in the Atlantic Ocean west of Morocco. Since 1976, Madeira has been an autonomous region of Portugal.

Wednesday, February 21, 2018

Portugal Trip 2018 (9): History, sandwiches, sunsets and craft beer on the final day in Porto.


I've prefaced the travel narrative of our visit to Portugal (which has been backdated) with a series called Focus on Portugal, which provides background on a European destination that's scandalously little known to Americans. Previously: "Portugal Trip 2018 (8): Beach, park and cemetery, with a few Spanish beers and tapas."

It was Wednesday, February 21, the ninth and final day of our visit to Porto, and it dawned with the promise of being sunny and warm. There were several items on the sightseeing agenda, and we were determined to bind these loose ends.

For the second morning in a row, breakfast was taken at Sabores da Invicta, a family-owned and operated cafe located where Rua Flores merges with the square called Praça de Almeida Garrett. The cafe faces Sao Bento train station right across the street, but there weren't many tourists amid the morning crowd either day.



There are dozens -- nay hundreds -- of cafes in this approximate model scattered throughout urban Porto. They serve varied baked goods and sweets with coffee in the morning; light sandwiches in midday; a beer or glass of wine; and more coffee or tea throughout the day. These cafes are civilizing institutions.

Duly fortified with sugar and caffeine, we trundled downhill to the Douro. To this point, we had failed to experience the view from the hilltop vantage point of the plaza between the Sé do Porto (Porto Cathedral) and Paço Episcopal (Bishops' palace), which together dominate the skyline in widely distributed views of city.

The reason for hurrying downhill to gain the hilltop is the existence of a funicular (cable railway for steep inclines) at the foot of the Dom Luis I bridge. Arriving at the entrance, our enthusiasm abruptly ebbed, because the funicular was closed for no stated reason, requiring us to walk back up the hill by seemingly endless stairs in order to reach a spot we might have accessed from Sabores da Invicta via a brief, relaxing grade from the train station.

Once on top, the vistas were worth the strain.










The panorama of Vila Nova de Gaia across the river included a close-up of Quinta do Noval, our favorite of the Port wine lodges.



Awaiting investment.


The ubiquitous azuelos tile and iron railings.


And, finally, a glance inside the cathedral.


For lunch, I was determined to devour one last Francesinha sandwich. Numerous times we'd passed ELoi'os Cafe & Snack (Rua dos Caldeireiros 13), and each time I was struck by the tiny size, unobtrusive presence and suggestive signage.




Simply stated, the specialty of the house is suckling pig -- but as noted, my objective was a Francesinha, and it was my favorite one overall.



Diana wanted to duck into Claus Porto, a shop located on Rua Flores. It specializes in bath soaps and body care products, and while I'd usually avoid such a venue owing to the bad effects on my allergies, the latter have been somewhat alleviated with medication, so inside I went.

It turns out that Claus Porto is a world-famous corporate son of Porto, founded by Germans in the 1880s, and Portuguese-owned since the aftermath of World War I, when the Germans were booted out and the company nationalized -- which is to say that in addition to being a swanky sales outlet, there's also a museum of sorts upstairs, and when there's a museum to visit I can (almost) forget about the hefty price tags on the merchandise.









With public transportation passes still fully charged, the evening plan was set. First we'd hop the bus back to the Foz do Douro and the city's Atlantic coastline north of the Douro's mouth (where we had roamed the previous day), find a place to have a drink, and watch the sun set.









Ya gotta love it when a plan comes together. Next, we rode the bus back to the starting line and walked to As 7 Maravilhas, the craft beer bar and eatery we'd enjoyed so much on Sunday night.




On Thursday morning we were able to take our time, walk to the Sao Bento light rail stop, and make it all the way to the airport using our transport passes.

As I finish this final installment, it is March 25, more than a month after our return from Porto.

As regular readers know, our beloved elderly cat Hugo died just hours before we made it home, circa 1:00 a.m. on the 23rd; four days later, the final documents were exchanged in the NABC settlement; Joe and I had announced Pints and Union (the pub project) just before we left for Porto; and the first anniversary of my mother's passing came on March 12.

Talk about a swirl of emotions. The usual gentle post-travel glow was not to be found, and there for a while, I was wondering if the roller-coaster of the return might forever dim the legacy of the marvelous journey to Porto and Madeira.

But ... now it's been a bit more than a month. In fact, I've been profoundly moved by just about everything that has occurred in my life since late January -- it's been exhausting, but exhilarating, even Hugo's passage across the proverbial bridge.

He was old, and we knew he was winding down. We also knew that our feral reclamation cat, Mila, probably wouldn't delve into self-domestication until the way was cleared and the hierarchy altered, and it has been -- and so has she. It's been almost like witnessing a birth, even though she's six years old.

Porto was a blast: Francesinhas and Port, sights and sounds, rain or shine, with basketball, pork ribs in the fishing village and the advent of craft beer. I hope we make it back to Madeira for a week. The island was truly enchanting. Through it all, whether on the mainland or on a speck of volcanic rock in the ocean, the people were uniformly incredible.

I leave you with the photo in the front entryway of the Hotel da Bolsa. I've known about Porto because of Port, but as usual, there's quite a lot more to it.