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This is Peter and Maureen Scargill's Spanish website. We live in Galera in Andalusia (for clarity, that is the English spelling - Mid-Spain they spell it Andalucia and pronounce it "And-a-loo-thee-a").

We've had a home in Spain for more than 14 years and it is now our permanent base though we retain a small home in the UK.

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Archive

Archive for the ‘General’ Category

A lovely Sunday at the lake

Sunday was a fine day and we started early in the morning with a walk down to the village for cafe con leche at the local bar/cafe La Posa.

After a long walk back up the (very steep) hill, slowed down somewhat by stopping to chat with other Brits, we headed off in the car, via the back roads, eventually through Baza to Lake Negratin where we spent the afternoon sunbathing in the warm fresh water and in the process burned our as-yet untrained poor bodies to a crisp before heading back, stopping at restaurant Monte Carlo for a late lunch/early dinner. We spent the remainder of the evening washing the car, fixing lights and generally getting the place ready for visitors.

Monday we headed off early to pick up friend Marsha from Granada airport, stopping off at Brico-Depot and Carrefour on the way to pick up groceries and hardware.

Panorama of Galera first thing in the morning

Still suffering from overdoing the sun, there’s nothing better than proper after-sun (temperatures are currently around 37c or higher in the afternoon (making the car body dangerous to touch) so none of yer wimpy ALOE stuff but a good lathering of Lidocaine – no doubt banned from UK stores however happily Hawaiian Tropic after-sun with LidocaineMaureen brought a supply back from the USA some time ago. Well recommended for taking the edge off start-of-season sunburn.

I’ll leave you with a picture of Sunday night’s magnificent sunset – I’ve more including some great 3D pics of the lake to put up later.  Monday night we basically blew, eating tapas and drinking wine with Marsha – there was a slight mist preventing the normal excellent view of the milky way at night – perhaps that’ll clear today. This morning the plan is to walk down to the village for coffee, though I’m up dead early as I was a little too warm overnight (we need to start being cleverer about leaving keeping bedroom doors closed during the day to keep the heat at bay – the basic internal temperature of the place is fine but the warm air can make a lot of difference).

Tonight I’ve got to figure out what to do with the 5m of colour-changing LED strip I brought over with me to add a little ambience to the IT cave… and some improvements to the Pergola before embarking on a new solar experiment.

Sunset in Galera, Andalucia

The First Week – Grapevines and the London Olympics

We’re coming to the end of our first week and up to now we’ve seen 2 drops of rain, yesterday which lasted a short before the clouds magically disappeared – and now we’re back to beautiful sunshine.

The Grapevine

As you can see from the photo, the first grapevine is coming along splendidly, we’ve just added another to the other side of the Pergola we well as fixing some wear and tear to the sun-shades.

The IT CaveThere has been a very slight mist for much of the week which has kept temperatures in check to a magical 30c mid-day – which is just about right IMHO. Yesterday after a late start we went off shopping and Maureen did a spot of painting while I caught up with emails and added some finishing touches to the revised “IT Cave” which as you can see is coming along nicely.

Last night we popped into the village to meet up with friends and ended up spending most of the night sitting in front of the pizza cafe. We met up with a couple we’ve known for some time now and while the girls went off to investigate the Flamenco dancing and a chance to do a spot of line-dancing (over my dead body), Len and I decided instead to sit outside and watch the Olympic opening ceremony – and I have to say, very, very impressive it was.

Jet pack from 1984The colours of the stadium itself and the various teams were just stunning and as for the “Bond” scene – magic… though it’s going to take something to beat the 1984 Olympics in which Bill Suitor flew into the Los Angeles Olympics wearing the Bell Aerodynamics rocket pack (Jet pack) in a real-life scene straight out of science-fiction, a scene watched by 2 billion awe-struck people. That jetpack is in use today for search and rescue. It would have been nice to see a 21st century version of that stunning display at the Olympics yesterday but none-the-less yesterday was an event to be proud of.

You might be interested in this reminder of the amazing 1984 display. If you can see past the dodgy video quality and bear in mind they had no-where near the technology we have today, this was a pretty stunning opening.

Bill Suitor at the 1984 Olympics

This morning we had a lie-in, by the time I got up Maureen had the paint-pot out again – and apologies to any of you who’ve been trying to look-in via the www.bedrock.es domain – I just discovered that 123-reg had screwed up the linking – that is now back in working order.

We’re having a night-in tonight having well and truly overdone it during our first week – perhaps a trip to the lake tomorrow assuming the weather holds out.

A somewhat lazy week so far

Arrived late Sunday, bought some cement Monday to fix potholes. Yesterday we headed off to Baza and beyond so Maureen could get her share of plants and a new olive tree, calling in at the Chinese junk store in town for a new sunshade for the beach and a nice sandwich at Sevillanos (opposite Lidl and one street behind the main street) before heading off home to do a spot of maintenance painting and decorating.

Sevillanos in Baza

Sat next to 3 young women who we guessed were not academics as their entire conversation was based on discussing how much alcohol they’d sunk, punctuated with the odd “and I was like, wow”.

Picked up a new test meter as the old one had succumbed to software rot and refused to display anything other than 1.1volts regardless. I’m testing some solar cells and power units I brought over (a super capacitor and a lithium button cell) to see how well they charge under Spanish sunshine! Also picked up some material to improve the pergola (sun blasts in the side in the mornings).

Huescar market tomorrow – no doubt we’ll bump into friends.

So much to do, so little energy…

The Summer of Sun

26c in the shade in San JavierWe’re here! Arrived last night (Sunday), beautiful night, got into the (Murcia) airport around 7pm Spanish time and headed straight off down the road (maybe 10 minutes drive) to San Javier and to the shopping Centre which was heaving with happy shoppers (take note, lazy MetroCentre which will be more or less dead at that time of night on a Sunday).

Eroski shoppingThis morning we’ve been checking what repairs need doing – always on-going in a cave-home and re-arranging the furniture to give me a little more room to work (I’ve plans to work on some solar projects while I’m here and later in August of course I need to video conference back to the UK).

We’re off now for a brief trip to nearby Huescar for some paint, an extension and other general goodies and to see if anyone has a solar water-fountain following up my inspirational idea that moving water might keep the wasps occupied instead of invading the hot-tub (or as it’s used here – the cold-tub – it’s warm already and we’ve not put the heater on yet).

And that’s it, perhaps a pizza tonight and tomorrow there is some repairing to do.

The end of the beginning

That’s it for our pre-summer trip – cleaned the place up, sorted the bedroom – not too much work left to do for the summer other than repair the gateposts that ex-builder Tony put together for us and which immediately fell to bits! Now I know what materials are needed the repairs should last.

Sunset Saturday 10th June 2012 - GaleraThe weather here has been superb and we’ve done our bit for the community, cleared some of the weeds, put some new lighting on the roundabout etc. and done far more walking than I would have imagined. Stopped in last night

Came up with some new ideas for solar lighting which I’ll put together in the summer once I have all the bits I need (inc. batteries) and we’re looking forward to soaking in the lake (the water this time of year isn’t QUITE warm enough but give it a few more weeks of blasting sunshine).

I took the panorama above Saturday night just on the mountain, it covers around 180 degrees – quite late at night… you just can’t beat the view and it’s different every time. This morning the weather is great – probably 28c already, theory has it, its over 30c down at the coast and our flight is this evening so we’re planning to have a leisurely trip this morning, late lunch up North of San Javier then pick up a garden hose and a few other bits and bobs which we’ll leave in the car (the car is parked long-term outside of the airport at a very reasonable rate – sub-300 euros a year) for the summer trip.

El Weekend

Cafe at HuescarOur last full day for this short break then it’s back to the grind for a while, but not long before we’re back here again for the summer hols. Meanwhile today, armed (finally) with a working car we went off to Huescar for some goods and "churos and coffee" – rapidly becoming an essential part of visiting Huescar.

We go to the little corner cafe you see here near the square. We also managed to get some round staples so next time I’ve some wiring to fasten up, we’re all set….  at lunchtime we returned to Galera and I fitted the new radio to the car, not without issues as the aerial socket is ever so slightly different to the car fittings as you can see in the photo below. Just found an "iso to din" adaptor on Ebay for the aerial so that’s on it’s way.

Mismatch between aerial plug and socketAs that means no Spanish FM radio for now (which we don’t understand anyway), that’s not too big a deal, the radio has Bluetooth (tested, working), auxiliary input, USB input (tested, working) and SD memory input  so all I have to do it kit out a 16 gig SD with all of our music and Spanish lessons and we’re all set. That’ll be ready for the summer.

Bought a new storage cabinet which I’ve just spent part of the afternoon filling up with electrical rubbish and tonight we plan to stay in and enjoy a glass or two of wine and take in the view.

Next week I’ve a ton of meetings lined up in London and elsewhere but first I’m putting my trusty oscilloscope on Ebay as I’ve spotted a modern pocket version which will be ideal for the summer (I’m sure if I brought a proper scope over on the plane, they’d think it was a terrorist device and not let me on the plane. I was stopped on the North/Southern Ireland border once with the same kit and they were convinced I was up to no good).

Hide My AssMaking the best of the REALLY nice weather as I’m let to believe that (surprise surprise) the weather back in the UK is rubbish – on the other hand I’ve lots of Chinese goodies waiting for me back home not to mention our kitties.

Incidentally, while we were over here, obviously the BBC i-Player doesn’t really like one being overseas neither does Netflix but we were fine thanks to the continued reliability of Hide-My-Ass.