Vacation Dreams

Category: Main article

  • New York:

    A change of date….on October 19th,
    we have yet, another interesting guest speaker!! Liz Ferber will be doing
    a picture show and presentation about some of her favorite exotic locations,
    with an in-depth look at some of their most special features. Highlights
    will include: India, Peru, Africa, and Thailand, specifically: Northern
    India, the Andes mountains and Cusco area, Senegal and the Gambia in West
    Africa, and the Andaman Sea, food in Chiang Mai, and the best chicken
    in Thailand!

    Elizabeth Ferber is a freelance writer whose work has appeared in The
    New York Times Book Review, The Washington Post, New York Magazine, and
    several other publications. She is the author of ten books, is a graduate
    of Barnard College and received her Master's Degree in Education from
    New York University. She is the President of Design Alternatives, a firm
    specializing in environmentally-sustainable interior design. She currently
    lives in Katonah, New York with her husband and two children. Together,
    they travel to the ends of the earth as often as possible.

    New York meetings are held at The Wings Theater, 154 Christopher
    Street (btw Greenwich St and Washington St), to the right of Crunch Fitness,
    in the Archive on the first Saturday of each month from 4pm -5:30pm. $8.00
    for members, $10.00 for non-members.


  • London:

    7th September 2002 London meeting Review
    by Padmassana

    We had two excellent speakers who both captured the essence of the countries
    they talked about with some fantastic photographs.

    Our first speaker was Marion Bull who showed us the N’Afjer
    plateau in the Algerian Sahara. This area is the site of the world’s
    oldest rock paintings, some dating back 12,000 years. Marion explained
    that although UNESCO protects the paintings, many have been damaged over
    the last few years by Arabic graffiti, and as there have been few tourists
    to this area, the government has not protected them. The slides of the
    rock paintings Marion showed us depicted prehistoric scenes of long extinct
    animals, pastoral scenes of grazing cattle, newer pictures of what appeared
    to be a boat and fishermen and paintings of chariots being pulled by animals.

    This area of Algeria is also the site of The Forest of Stones, which
    look like streets and stretch for 35 miles. These “streets”
    of rock have spectacular pinnacles, which Marion said were difficult to
    photograph due to the shadows cast by neighbouring towers of rock. But
    Marion did these wonderful formations justice with her colourful slides.
    We were lucky that Marion was able to show us these wonderful images,
    as when she was leaving the area her plane had a little mishap, and she
    had to spend another night in her sleeping bag on the runway tarmac.

    Our second speaker was Julian Webster who treated us to some
    glorious images of India. These included pictures of the Ganges high in
    the Himalayas, right down to India’s southern tip, showing us a
    lifeguard complete with a pointy “Go Faster” swim hat! We
    saw colourful images of religious India including temples in Kerala, Buddhists
    in the north, Christian nuns and Oracles who treat the local people with
    their magic. Julian moved onto India at work, from the washing Ghats in
    Bombay (Mumbai), where we saw clothes being beaten clean on stones, Fish
    markets, Railway station bookshops with English sounding names and even
    the office of “The World Famous Sex Therapist”! Julian finished
    with some of the classical images of India such as holy cows and the Taj
    Mahal.

    On Saturday 5th October, Eamonn
    Gearon
    will give a talk called “Walking to Siwa – and
    then staying there!” This features solo camel trekking in the Libyan
    desert and life in the Egyptian oasis of Siwa, past present and future.
    This is an extract from just one of Eamonn's expeditions in North
    Africa – he is already planning his next to Sudan/Liberia.

    After the break, Tahir Shah will give a talk entitled “In
    search of King Solomon’s Mines.” Tahir is the third generation
    of his family to become obsessed with King Solomon's mines. He travelled
    to Ethiopia to a remote cliff face monastery where visitors are pulled
    up by rope, the ruined castles of Gondar, to rock-hewn churches of Lalibela,
    an illegal gold mine, and the hardest leg to the accursed mountain of
    Tullu Wallel, where legend says the shafts to the entrance to King Solomon's
    mines. All class competition for Rider Haggard's classic adventure
    novel!

    London meetings are held at The Church of Scotland, Crown Court,
    behind the Fortune Theatre in Covent Garden at 2.30pm the first Saturday
    of each month. There is no London meeting in August, but we will be back
    on Saturday 1st September. For more information,
    you can contact the Globetrotter Info line on +44 (0) 20 8674 6229, or
    visit the website: www.globetrotters.co.uk


  • Ontario:

    On September 20, Bruce Weber & Hoang Nguyen will talk about: “Impressions
    of Vietnam” (with slides). Bruce, the first-time visitor and Hong
    returned after 15 years. We will also have some Visiting medical students
    talking about: “Secrets of Bavaria”

    For information on Ontario meetings, please contact: Svatka Hermanek:

    shermanek@schulich.yorku.ca
    or Bruce Weber: tel. 416-203-0911 or Paul Webb: tel. 416-694-8259.

    Meetings are held on the third Friday of January, March, May,
    September and November. Usually at the Woodsworth Co-op, Penthouse, 133,
    Wilton Street in downtown Toronto at 8.00 p.m.


  • Texas:

    14th September 2002 Texas branch meeting Review
    by Christina Smith

    Two wonderful presentations were enjoyed by the 18 in attendance. Emily
    Naberhaus
    , a regular attendee, discussed and demonstrated packing
    techniques for a week or a month.

    Sue Howell, a soon to be regular attendee, introduced the group
    to her new business Vacations Unlimited Travel, Inc. Everyone had
    time to share their travel stories and dreams, and do some networking
    before the meeting ended. Two door prizes were given.. More than half
    of the group continuedtravel conversation over a few beverages and a bunch
    of peanuts at the Hoity Toit.

    On October 12th at 2 p.m, resident photographer Chris Schorre
    will present a slide show and provide travel facts about Croatia. As always,
    everyone is invited to the New Braunfels Public Library in New Braunfels,
    Texas to meet with fellow travelers.

    Organizer of the Texas branch meetings Christina Smith says: “The
    monthly meetings are the exact support I need in dealing with the travel
    bug that bit me early in life. My desire and obsession for travel takes
    center stage. Fortunately the fellowship of other travelers on a monthly
    basis continues toenhance my addiction. I love this wonderful support
    group”. The Beetle says a big thank you to you, Christina for
    making the Texas branch what it is today – down to your enthusiasm
    and dedication!

    The Texas branch members have decided to take a trip together! Plans
    are being developed for a group excursion to the Copper Canyon in Mexico
    for Spring 2003.

    Future meetings: October 12and November 9th

    A reminder that Texas meetings will start one hour earlier, at 2pm and
    not 3pm.

    Meetings are held at 2pm at the New Braunfels Public Library,
    700 E. Common Street in New Braunfels, Texas. The meeting ends at 5 p.m.
    If you would like to continue travel talk on a more informal basis, we
    plan to adjourn to the Hoity-Toit, a local New Braunfels establishment.
    If anybody would like to enquire about meetings or help Christina, please
    contact her on:
    texas@globetrotters.co.uk


  • Dubai – building a new island

    Dubai has never been known to do things by halves. Tourism is a huge
    earner for Dubai, the tiny state on the Arabian peninsular. They already
    have super de-luxe hotel complexes, reputedly the world’s first
    6 star hotel, golf courses created from grass imported from the United
    States, watered each night from a massive desalination plant. You start
    to get the picture that nothing is too much. And now, the Dubai government
    has started work on what will be the world’s largest artificial
    island called The Palm.

    It will be 300 metres offshore, and 5km long, in the shape of a palm
    tree. The marketing company in charge say that it will be visible from
    the moon. Press information states that the project is using 415 architects
    and 760 labourers, working 24 hours a day to obtain the rock and sand
    that the island requires.

    Foreigners will be allowed to own property, on a 100 year freehold basis,
    and there will be an estimated 3,000 villas, townhouses and apartments,
    many with private access to a beach and moorings. Sound tempting? Villa
    prices start at £350,000 or $550,000, but buyers can chose the style
    of their villa, from Italianate, Caribbean or Middle Eastern. 40 boutique
    hotels are on the drawing board, many designed according to a set of themes:
    Tahitian, Moroccan, Greek are just some of the styles.

    For more info, take a look at: Palm Island Info


  • The Gambia by Rosemary Hamblin

    Fate has a strange knack of intervening in your live when you least
    expect it. 1999 had been the worst year of my life ending with the death
    of my father after a long drawn out illness. I just wanted to get away
    from everything. I didn’t care where it was so long as it was hot
    and I could sit on the beach, relax and recover. So I found myself in
    The Gambia for the first time in late December 1999. I loved The Gambia
    immediately. Although not scenic, I was captivated by the warmth and friendliness
    of the people. I had travelled extensively in Africa before but there
    was something indefinable about this place that drew me like a magnet.
    All I wanted to do was relax so I would rise early and lay on the beach
    for a couple of hours to set me up for the day. I enjoyed being on the
    beach early, most tourists were still in bed and the peace and the early
    morning sun revitalised me. I did not want to be sociable so I read or
    feigned sleep. However, I could not help but be fascinated by one lady
    who also at on the beach every morning. She was always surrounded by Gambians.
    They encircled her, sat on the bottom of her sunbed, chatting away. They
    called her Mama Africa. As the days passed my self-imposed exile began
    to waver and my curiosity surfaced. Who was she? Why were The Gambians
    always flocking around her? Why did they call her Mama Africa? In the
    end I could stand it no longer and I approached her and asked her my questions.
    That long conversation was to alter the course of my life. Mama Africa
    and her dynamic daughter Debbie worked tirelessly to collect medical equipment
    which they shipped to The Gambia in a container every year. They were
    also involved in collecting items for the schools and the emergency services.
    She gave me her address and I promised to try and help. Over the next
    ten months I collected items towards their next shipment. The more I came
    to know them both, the greater the respect and admiration I had for both
    of them. They worked tirelessly for The Gambia. The project was by this
    time expanding so rapidly that Debbie took the decision to amalgamate
    the medical, educational and emergency services under one umbrella to
    become an official charity. Thus GO GAMBIA was born. I was asked to become
    a Trustee and took on the responsibility of Sponsorship Program Administrator.
    We now run an educational sponsorship programme for 200 children as well
    as providing desperately needed equipment for the schools, hospitals and
    the emergency services. GO GAMBIA continues to expand and has become one
    of the great passions in my life. I could go on forever about it but it
    would be easier to log on to our website where our work is explained in
    detail. Go Gambia website Fate led
    me to that beach in The Gambia in 1999. I often look back and think how
    strange it was that a conversation on Banjul beach turned my life upside
    down when I least expected it. Any Globetrotters members interested in
    sponsoring a child’s education or who can assist the project in
    any way can contact us through the GO GAMBIA website. Alternatively, you
    may contact Rosemary by e-mail on: rahamblin@hotmail.coms


  • Cyprus – An Island Divided by Andy Brouwer

    The majority of tourists visiting Cyprus are blissfully unaware of the
    pain and division that has haunted the island since 1974. To most, the
    image and experience of Cyprus is one of sun and sand, the snow-capped
    Troodos Mountains and exquisite frescoes housed in Byzantine monasteries.
    For the island's inhabitants its a different story altogether. After
    gaining independence in 1960, peace between the Greek and Turkish communities
    was already fragile with the Turkish minority, representing 20% of the
    population, retreating into ghettos and enclaves after sporadic violence
    and harassment. In their defence, the Turkish army launched an invasion
    of northern Cyprus in July 1974 and occupied the northern third of the
    island, leaving thousands dead or wounded and huge numbers of refugees
    fleeing to their respective sides of the divide. That division of Cyprus
    has remained to this day.

    Whilst the south has enjoyed international recognition and a booming
    economy boosted by tourism, the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus has
    found life a lot tougher and depends on its sponsor Turkey for its economic
    survival. Separating the two factions and running almost the length of
    the country and dividing the island's capital into two is the Green
    Line, also known at the Attila Line – a buffer zone maintained and patrolled
    by the blue-bereted peacekeepers of the United Nations. Talks of a reconciliation
    between the two sides have stuttered and stalled on many occasions and
    feelings still run high, fuelled by recent incidents like the deaths of
    the three Deryneia Martyrs in 1996.

    This was the background to my visit to the island's capital city
    Nicosia, or Lefkosia as it's called today. The holiday rep at my hotel
    in Pafos had whetted my appetite when he told me that crossing the Green
    Line wasn't a good idea, as I might not be allowed back. That statement
    immediately sparked my thirst for adventure and my wife Sue and I set
    off early one morning in our hire car to cover the 150 kilometers to see
    for ourselves. Our first stop in the capital was the 11th floor of the
    Woolworths department store on Lidras Street, where telescopes gave us
    a bird's eye view across into the northern half of the city. At the
    end of the street, an observation platform allowed us to peer into the
    buffer zone to see a street with rubble-strewn buildings and rolls of
    barbed wire, left as it was in July 1974.

    On foot, we followed the Green Line westwards, punctuated by a series
    of UN bunkers, roadblocks, a wall of sandbags and oil drums and signs
    forbidding photographs and stopped at the Holy Cross RC church, isolated
    inside the buffer zone and guarded by a solitary UN soldier. Nearby is
    the only spot on the island where you can legally cross into the north
    on a day excursion, at the site of the old Ledra Palace hotel. As we approached,
    Sue's nerves became a little more frayed when we encountered up to
    fifty wailing Cypriot women, dressed in black mourning clothes and holding
    pictures of loved ones still missing since the 1970s.The stern-faced Greek
    Cypriot border guards made little effort to disguise their disgust at
    our desire to cross as they slowly copied details of our passports onto
    a list and pointed at a sign that instructed our return by 5.30pm. It
    was a few minutes past eleven o'clock.

    Leaving the checkpoint, Sue and I walked quietly along a connecting
    road, the ruined Ledra Palace hotel on our left, now used as a billet
    by the UN (who have 1,500 personnel on peace-keeping duty on the island),
    and desolate waste ground to our right. Two female UN soldiers nodded
    their hello as we completed the 300 metre walk and checked into the Turkish
    police control building. A few minutes later and the form-filling formalities
    completed, we were in northern Cypriot territory and Sue began breathing
    normally again. No real hassle at all but a mixed feeling of excitement
    and unease nonetheless, heightened by the soulful wailing of the widowed
    Cypriot women we'd left at the border post as we crossed no-mans land.

    For the next four hours we walked around the old city, along narrow
    passageways and empty streets, enjoying the friendliness of the people,
    soaking up the atmosphere and visiting a few notable attractions including
    the soaring minarets of north Nicosia's most prominent landmark, the
    Cami Selimiye Mosque. Its a working church with a strong French Gothic
    style but it was empty as I stepped inside and removed my shoes for my
    first look inside a mosque. Next door is the sixth century Byzantine church
    ruin known as the Bedesten and nearby is another ornate Gothic church,
    the Cami Haydarpasa. Undergoing restoration work is the Buyuk Han, a rare
    example of a Middle Age inn, known as a caravanserai. Although closed,
    the foreman invited us in to look around before we finished off our tour
    with a ten minute walk to the Turkish (Mevlevi Tekke) Museum, the former
    home of the mystical Islamic sect known as the Whirling Dervishes. They
    are famed for their spinning, trance-like dance that flourished for 700
    years until they were banned in 1930.

    Returning to the old city, we stopped at a sidewalk cafe in the pedestrian
    zone and listened to a rock band playing an open-air concert. One unusual
    aspect which gave Sue a few jitters north of the divide was the distinct
    lack of female shoppers. Instead, large groups of young Turkish men were
    much in evidence, either standing on street corners or wandering aimlessly
    and appeared to be army conscripts in civilian clothes. With an hour to
    go before the border closed, Sue and I made our way back towards the crossing
    point via the quiet back streets where buildings have been left unoccupied,
    others are bullet-scarred and in ruins including a church and the Roccas
    Bastion, where Turkish Cypriots can look through a barbwire-topped fence
    into the southern half of the city and what for them is forbidden territory.

    The smiling faces of the Turkish police were in stark contrast to the
    dour look on the faces of the Greek border guards as we returned to the
    southern half of Nicosia via the long and eerie walk past a lone UN soldier
    on sentinel duty midway between the two factions. The wailing widows were
    still massed just past the guardroom and we were handed a flyer asking
    if we knew of the whereabouts of Pavlos Solomi and Solon Pavlos Solomi,
    missing since the morning of 15 August 1974 and the beloved husband and
    17 year old son of the old woman who'd handed us the poster. Her name
    was Panayiota Pavlos and she told us that 1,588 people are still missing
    from that time, their fate unknown and the encounter was a poignant reminder
    of the human face of the division that still separates Cyprus today.

    For more information on Andy’s travels, visit his website which
    has lots of travelogue stories with pictures. Andy Brouwer's
    website


     Amina Lawal to be stoned in
    Nigeria in the 21st Century As you may recently
    have read in the papers, a court in Northern Nigeria has confirmed that
    30 year old Amina Lawal will be executed by stoning due to giving birth
    to a child after her divorce. “The crime”, proved by Ms Lawal
    becoming pregnant was made at a time when the Law of Sharia was not yet
    legal in the area. Funnily enough, the father of the “crime”
    could not be prosecuted because of the requirement of 4 witnesses to the
    event, who, strangely have not come forward. The stoning will take place
    when Ms Lawal has finished breast feeding her 8 months old daughter. What’s
    more, Miss Universe are still considering scheduling their event in Nigeria,
    despite this sentence.

    At Amnesty International (AI) England's home page you can sign an
    open letter to Nigeria’s President to protest against this cruel
    sentence. AI say that more than 18.500 people have already done so. To
    sign the letter, visit: Amina Open Letter


  • Visiting Cape Town for the first time by Geoff

    Most visitors to Cape Town arrive by air and land at Cape Town's
    International Airport. The International terminal has recently been upgraded
    and facilities are good. The airport is about a twenty minute drive from
    the centre of Cape Town along the N2 freeway. For those brave people who
    like to drive themselves it is easy to hire a car as most car hire firms
    are represented at the airport.

    Anybody who is used to driving on the right is in for a surprise. We
    don't! The Brits taught us to drive on the left. Please remember this
    as you could find yourself in trouble on the roads. BEWARE of the taxis.
    They drive like maniacs, stop anywhere and don't stop at traffic lights.
    The roads in and around town are good and well sign posted. If you know
    where you are going you should not get lost. That's easily said, I
    still get lost sometimes. You know us men, we don't like asking for
    directions.

    Cape Town has three major access roads to get you in and out of town.
    The N1 which takes you to the north and the suburbs of Parow, Bellville
    and onto Paarl and the winelands if you keep on going. The N2, takes you
    along De Waal drive down Settlers way to the airport and Somerset West
    and if you keep going to Mosselbay via Sir Lowry's Pass. To avoid
    peak traffic do not drive along these roads from about 4.30 onwards in
    the afternoons. The third is the main road which takes you south through
    all the suburbs of Cape Town to Simonstown. Plenty of traffic lights,
    stop start driving and pedestrians. For shoppers there are some large
    shopping centres to visit.

    Century City (Canal Walk) is the biggest and is found just off the N1
    highway about 5 kilometres out of town. Here there are hundreds of shops
    to browse through. Do yourself a favour and wear your walking shoes when
    visiting Canal Walk. You will walk for miles and are sure to get sore
    feet. However, there are many restaurants and coffee shops to visit when
    you get tired, trust me you WILL! It is enormous with two levels and two
    shopping malls on each level. A shop-a-holics dream come true! While you
    are there take a boat ride on the canal and visit the bird hide on the
    island.

    Cape Town itself has plenty to see and do. If you want to avoid driving,
    take a bus to the waterfront and visit the shops restaurants and pubs
    there. Many of the larger chain stores you find at Canal walk (Century
    City) are also represented at the Waterfront. The V & A Waterfront
    as it is named is part of Table Bay Harbour and is still used as a working
    harbour. Like boats? Take a cruise. Fancy a trip to Robben Island? They
    also leave from the harbour.

    Cape Town has many places of interest within walking distance of the
    city centre.

    I will list a few below.

    · Museum and Planetarium found in the Gardens.

    · The Gardens and the Art Gallery.

    · Oceanarium in the Waterfront.

    · The Castle of the Cape of Good Hope found close to the railway

    station.

    · Green Market Square with its permanent flea market.

    · St Georges Cathedral.

    Cape Town is relatively safe with most areas being monitored by surveillance
    cameras. There are however, those who will try their luck, so please keep
    all jewellery and valuables hidden under your clothing. It is not safe
    to walk around by yourself at night. It's Ok at the Waterfront, but
    not anywhere else. If you are driving keep your doors locked at all times
    and do not leave valuables where they can be seen, even when you are in
    the car.

    The South African currency is Rand and cents. A British pound is the
    equivalent of about R16.00 and a US dollar about R10.50. If you are visiting
    Cape Town in summer, bring lots of beachwear and a hat. The sun is very
    dangerous. On the beaches use plenty of sunblock to prevent bad sunburn.
    Be careful of the rip tides on some of the beaches if you decide to have
    a swim.

    Enjoy your trip. See you soon!

    Geoff Fairman is the editor and publisher of Banker's Oldboy's
    Ezine, a free publication posted via email to your home computer weekly.
    To read more articles on Cape Town visit:

    Brerrabbit-subscribe@topica.com


  • London Markets: Covent Garden

    Most Londoners see Covent Garden as a tourist trap, but they still go
    there, to eat and drink or pause to watch the latest jugglers once in
    a while. (There are actually some pretty good bars and restaurants in
    the area – head for Earlham St, Shorts Gardens, or better still, cross
    over Shaftsbury Avenue and head for Soho – no shortage of good eateries
    there!) For the tourists, there are the tarot readers and fortune tellers,
    the henna tattoo artists and the London teddy bears, but actually, a Londoner
    might buy some unusual silver earrings or something else you can't
    find elsewhere in the West End. If you are going to eat in Covent Garden,
    avoid the places close to the piazza. The only exception is Chez Gerrard
    (called rather grandly, Chez Gerrard at the Opera Terrace!) a decent enough
    steak-frites kind of place on the corner, overlooking the piazza with
    an almost impossible to find entrance.

    Covent Garden market used to be a vegetable market but moved from Covent
    Garden to Nine Elms in Battersea in 1974. The old market halls have been
    preserved and are now home to stalls selling quintessentially English
    goods. It is open Monday – Sunday from 10am to 7pm.

    The old Apple Market in the North Hall showcases antiques on Mondays
    and arts and crafts from Tuesday to Sunday, selling everything from jewellery
    and clothing to silverware and pottery. South of the piazza is the Jubilee
    Market, which sells downmarket clothes, shoes and household goods. The
    piazza itself is a great place to catch some of London's best street
    performers and buskers, although keep an eye on your wallets and bags.

    For more info, visit: www.coventgardenmarket.co.uk


  • An Afternoon at Alhambra by Matthew Doughty

    The recovery from Rock Vivé's excesses was complete and it was
    time to see something of Andalucia's history and culture. Seville
    and Cordoba were considered but as our circumstances were only good for
    the day, the less distant option of Al Hambra was chosen – not to demean
    the site in anyway, as we were greatly struck by Domingos's whole
    hearted endorsement of our plans.

    To avoid driving during the near 30 degrees C heat and to give ourselves
    a chance to enjoy our explorations, Alan and I hurriedly set off in our
    storm dirtied green Micra across the countryside, in search of the motorway
    into Granada. Much of this countryside, rural Spain at its' finest
    according to my imagination, was the perfect antidote to a hectic UK working
    life – whitewashed villages, rustic red earth, vegetable growing small
    holdings, rows of Olive trees climbing away from the roads and a sense
    of slowness! Ventas de Zafarraya, Alhama de Granada and Buenavista passed
    by all too quickly, as we were drawn into Granada's contrasting metropolitan
    modernity. It took all our patience to be able to follow the purple Al
    Hambra signs though the city and not get driven crazy by local driving
    habits – with hindsight it seems that my navigating took us through the
    heart of the city when we should have followed the well laid out ring
    road! There again I've often preferred journeys to destinations…

    Eventually we, like many others, wove our way up towards the entrance
    and way from the noise of modern life. Perched on the cooler foothills
    of the Sierra de la Nevada, Al Hambra watches westerly across Granada
    and is perfectly located for generations of Moors and Spaniards to take
    a strategic view of this landscape. Like many well managed destinations,
    we visitors are only allowed in as controlled flow, rather than the mass
    free for alls that can ruin any experience. This gives the visitor time
    to enjoy the site and gave us time to enjoy one of Spain's greatest
    attributes – a lazy lunch outdoors! As when approaching Rome's antiquities,
    we were caught by fortune tellers on the way in to the site – in less
    than clear Spanish I think they promised me love, children, a happy career
    and a long life…all for a sprig of some unnamed bush and 5 Euros!
    Escaping their clutches was probably harder than storming Al Hambra itself!

    Once inside, countless footsteps led us along the well maintained paths
    towards the many palaces of Al Hambra. Along the way I was struck by how
    the grounds are still so imaginatively maintained and how much water is
    used not only to irrigate but enhance the setting of the buildings themselves.
    No doubt the use of water in such a way during the Nasrid Dynasty (1238
    – 1492) helped illustrate the power and wealth of the ruling Sultans.
    In spite of expressing such a political dominance, the buildings themselves
    bloom in highlighting what care and thought was taken in their construction
    and subsequent life…the current authorities describe the art of
    such efforts but I prefer to enjoy their splendid practical existence.

    Though comparatively young, the palace of the Charles V stands out as
    a magnificent intrusion into the centre of the five, maybe seven, Moorish
    palaces. Its' square structure boldly enforces Christianity's
    eventual dominance across Spain and yet as a building masks an exquisite
    inner auditorium, beautifully marshalled with marbled pillars supporting
    an extravagant walk way and wide sweeping staircases. The acoustics and
    setting make it the perfect venue for summer concerts. Frustratingly I
    could not capture this entire image in one frame – my small camera just
    could not provide the necessary dimensions, so memory will have to serve
    me for the time being!

    In contrast the Moorish palaces depict much more about the general life
    of the community that existed within. Although the fortifications of the
    Alcazaba stand majestically tall in guarding the approach across the Rio
    Darro, it is the inner buildings that take your breath away. Courtyard
    after courtyard rolls at you, enhancing the sense of peace that is ever
    present as we wandered slowly through – if the tourist noise is low enough,
    it seems as though you can feel past lives. At the centre of each courtyard
    sits some water feature – be it an ornate fountain surrounded by trees
    or multi coloured fish swimming long pools. Beautifully coloured and formed
    ceilings funnel light into the smallest recesses and small benches, built
    into the walls, allow views out across the grounds. Even the traditional
    Arabic style wooden doors reinforce a different world, a different Spain.

    Now I could not be considered a gardener in any sense of the word but
    even I appreciated the gardens of the Generalife. These gardens sit across
    from Al Hambra and as you are slowly led up winding paths towards a small
    peak, a wonderful contrast exists between the red brick of the buildings
    and the vibrant and varied colours of the plant life within. Hedges mimic
    the walled fortifications and climbing roses arch across fountains. Vines
    climb up and along pergolas to provide shelter, which seemed to please
    our snoring neighbour as we sat to take in some of the scenery. Much of
    the ongoing restoration continues within the buildings at the centre of
    the gardens and yet there is still much to marvel at, particularly the
    amazing use of water yet again. Rows of fountains jet water down into
    cascading pools and channels seem to carry streams where gravity shouldn't
    take it.

    Alan and I never discovered the source of so much water during our visit,
    but the masterful landscaping of Al Hambra certainly helped to recharge
    our weekend weary bodies and conclude a marvellous afternoon.

    Matthew can be contacted on: chair@globetrotters.co.uk