Day 6 - To Seville

A minor cash flow problems means a trip to the bank first to stock up with pesetas, then, having paid the hotel bill (for parking) we're on the road to Seville, opting for the pretty route with some nice views.

The first attempt at sightseeing was Medina Azahara, but the time we've allowed ourselves and having to pay for parking as well as entry means we take a picture from the road and move on to "The Hermitage" for a panoramic view to Cordoba. That, at least, was the plan but the route to the hermitage was less than clear - we appeared to be driving down this long road for miles before we decided it was the wrong road and turned back to travel down another long road for miles.
It got to the point of reversing up a drive to turn round, when we decided to check our position with the GPS. The reading we got suggested that our destination was just a couple more kilometres further on - we trust the high tech navigation equipment and continue on to find the hermitage a couple of kilometres further on!

Had the atmosphere not been so hazy, we would have picked out Cordoba without any problem. As it was, the GPS gave us the bearing and a view through the binoculars revealed the bell tower of the Mezquita.

The Hermitage itself was a quiet very peaceful place. There were a number of two roomed houses for the hermits and the general ambience was very pleasant.

No time to rest, though, we have to be on our way and lunch beckons. The village of Almodovar is the chosen spot - it has a picturesque castle perched on the hill top. [Our guidebook describes the place as "One of Andalucia's most dramatic silhouettes breaking the skyline as the traveller approaches"]
We dine, but being lunch time, aka siesta time, the castle is closed, but the town square and castle make a nice picture.

Next stop Palma del Rio, the home town of bullfighter "El Cordobes" - An 18th Century Baroque church, Inglesia de la Asuncion, sits in a small park and surrounded by remains of the 12th Century walls around the town.

It is mid afternoon local time and the temperature is about 35C - we are pretty warm as we walk around the town walls and watch the storks nesting in the church tower, then it is time to drive in the general direction of Seville.

Anticipating no time to stock up with refreshments and other provisions we pick a town at random to find a supermarket - The random town was easy to find but the supermarket therein was not. The town was Cantillana, and everyone was still on their siesta. Eventually (18.00) we found somewhere suitable to buy food. The town was pleasant enough to walk round, too.

So it was, suitably stocked up, we made the final leg to Seville.

Of the hotels we have stayed at so far, the hotel in Seville, Hotel Regina, promised to be the easiest to find, it was north of the city, next to the river. Suspicions were aroused as we drove down a road that wasn't named what we though it should be, though that isn't unusual in Andalucia we have found, there was no sign of the river and the city gradually worked its way round from ahead to being off to the right to not getting a mention. Time to stop and ask directions, and as usual I select a Spanish only speaking person and between us (and another passer by) we are unable to pinpoint ourselves on the map - it turns out later it is probably because the place we have chosen to stop and ask is a new road and not on our map!

We set off again and turn right, based on general location of the city it seemed the way to go and it was - we encountered a big road, a sign to somewhere we could relate to on the map and eventually found ourselves at signs pointing to our hotel down the usual set of one way streets that is Andalucia.

The room is particularly nice. It is on two floors, the lower is the "lounge" and the upper, via a spiral staircase, is the bedroom and bathroom. We overlook an attractive patio in the centre of the hotel - one of several scattered about the place. If all that wasn't nice enough, the air conditioning works.

Having settled in and eaten, we pop out for a walk. Seville has a lot of dogs, and I didn't have to see them to know that. Around the streets one has to tread carefully.
We left the hotel at about 9.00 as Croatia and France kicked off in the World Cup semi-final, and we got back not long after the second half started having completed a mini-circular tour around the area to get our bearings, passing the "pillars of Hercules" in our round trip. The "Alameda de Hercules" had several shady characters around, and around the restaurant area at the southern end there seemed to be several "ladies" hanging around the streets. Our guide book describes this boulevard as one of Seville's seedier areas.

Back to the hotel for an early night after the long day of sightseeing in the heat - the best laid plans..... - France and Croatia are drawing and it goes to extra time (and sudden death), then it goes to penalties, then it gets to be later than I wanted. I also didn't get want I wanted out of the football - Croatia lost.


Go to Day 7
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Author: val_and_andrew@hotmail.com

Copyright © 1998 Andrew J White