21st October –
Vouvray, France
Due to the extent of the rain we have been having and the
earlier leak we found, we thought we would get the camper checked over for
damp, we left early to get to the service place in Tours which was shut for all
of Monday so we back tracked to Vouvray for the night. Nice spot in a quiet
town just off the main road. Practiced our juggling, went for a walk, had a
shower and drank wine. Nice relaxing day.
22nd to
23rd October – Oradour Sur Glane, France
We got moving early again to get to service centre.
Through German, English, French and a whole bunch of hand gestures we got it
figured out. She tested BB's walls and seems like there is no moisture in there
so we celebrated by buying a bike cover, fly screen for the door, heater, blue
loo stuff and a door stop, it’s like x-mas for BB.
With dark clouds
coming we couldn’t be bothered going into tours so we headed south to Oradour.
The next day we headed into the burnt out old town of Oradour. Not to give a
history lesson but this village/town was burnt to the ground by the Germans
during WWII on June 10, 1944. 600 something people were killed including women
and young children. Apparently the men were separated and shot in different
areas of the town and the women and children were burnt inside the church. The
worst thing was that this was when the Germans were being defeated and beginning
to leave parts of France. People were shot in the legs so they couldn’t get
away and when some managed to get out of the church they were shot. I guess the
town has been left alone as a reminder of what war can do.
Back at the camper spot and we relaxed in the sun for a
bit, got chatting to our English neighbours before the thunder, lightning and
rain started. Soon enough after it was sunny again followed by more rain and
then sun again which is apparently normal for this region. Better than all day
rain in any case.
24th to
1st November – Sjef & Roly’s Place (Nats Uncle & Auntie),
Payrac, France
We ended up spending a fun 9 days at Sjef and Roly's
place. BB stayed out by the house which we still slept but we were treated with
great home cooked meals for the 9 days. We especially had fun with all their
animals that rule the house. The extended family included: Boy, Beau, Gizmo,
Kootz pootz, sheba, chanel and lady, 3 dogs and 4 cats.
Our home for the 9 days
Nat took boy for a walk most mornings and I joined when I wasn’t hung over. Nat gave BB a good clean while I helped Sjef remove a tree from the top of the block so they could have access during the winter as the entrance is steep and difficult when slurry. It took us three goes to get up and I had BB swinging left to right on one occasion.
BB with new bike cover, more professional looking now
Working (still time to pose though)
Drinking after working
Eating after working and drinking
Best seat in the house
More drinking and relaxing after working, drinking and eating
After all the working, drinking and eating
There was a lot more dutch talk than English so lucky I had
my sexy translator, although towards the end of most nights (after a few hours
of drinking) the translating was a bit sloppy!!
Moie tieten (nice tits) being one of sentences that I learnt after some
raunchy TV. This was after an advert for a show on an adult tv channel called
HIV house….yes that was the name of the program. We didn’t have access to the
channel though….
We got stuck into “The voice” and “Hollands got talent”. There
are a lot of gay guys on tv in Holland, not that there is anything wrong with
that, the shows are quite funny.
We went out to lunch and dinner on a couple of days and we
were treated to a 5 course meal at a Belgian place which was really tasty.
Sjef and Roly took us to La Poopie (he he he he) which is a
beautiful town on the hillside.
So basically the 9 days was full of good food, good drink and laughter, and lots of love from the extended family. Be warned, there are a lot of animal photos, I couldn’t help myself.
"you should have seen the other guy"
Apparently Boy didn't eat for a day when we left.
A big thanks to Sjef and Roly for having us and not allowing us to do the dishes.
On the way to Saint Cyrias (rained pretty much all day) the drive was still very beautiful and despite the rain we stopped off in Sarlat La Canade which was a nice
town.
Some shots on the way to Sarlat la Canade
We then stopped at a nice aire (free camping) in the middle of the Saint Cyrias.
3rd
November – Bergerac, Dordogne, France
In the morning we walked through the markets and bought 4
sausisons (like a small salami). Garlic, pepper, fig and duck were our choices.
We even tried a donkey sausison, although it wasn’t as good as the others.
We left St Cyrias after the markets and managed to stop at
Maccas to get on the internet after quite a while. Managed to get the guitar
books (which we bought from Amizon and had them sent to Nats mum place,
although she didn’t recognise it and sent it back!!) sent back to Nats mum again
for free which is pretty good considering our mistake.
We made it to Bergerac and we followed Nats Dads coordinates
for a place to park but it was kind of an odd place next to some industrial
plant or something. Anyway we thought we would continue and see what else was
there. We drove up a hill to some other place where there was no one and in a
very small village with not much happening so we continued onto an aire in a
new suburban area. We were the only ones there for the night but still felt fairly
safe.
4th to 5th
November – Dax, France
We left Bergerac for greener pastures, well hopefully a
place with less rain so we continued south. We drove through several places but
the sites didn’t look too interesting so we kept going all the way to Dax. We
ended up staying for 2 days, mostly in BB as it......yes continued to rain.
Roman baths
Dax is a thermal spa city, not that we took advantage of
it. It looked as though most of the spas were within hotels and a bit expensive.
Once we were sick of the view of the carpark we headed further south towards
Basque land.
The camper place was up on a mound surrounded by hedges and just 100m from the beach. It was a pretty good spot actually with free water. There was a small community of campers and finally two days of sun. Even with the sun out everyone else still just stayed in their campers. Crazy. Some of them ventured out for walks. They walk past our GERMAN plate camper with an AUSTRALIAN flag in the window and still talked to me in French!
We made the most of the sun by practising our juggling,
beach walks, reading and relaxing and then it started raining again. It was then time to head further towards San Sebastian in anticipation of Nat’s mum
arrival and my first taste of Spain.
Our day trip to Biarritz
Els (Nat’s Mum) was arriving today so we checked her bus drop off in town which looked easy enough to reach and then checked into the camping. The camping was up in the hills with some not so nice driving but it was nice to finally have some power and internet so time to update the blog, photos, facebook and fully charge everything. We picked up Els from the bus stop and then just hung out in the cabin that night away from the rain and cold.
Watching two liquored up Dutchies trying to put the pillow case on the longest pillow in history was the main source of entertainment.
The first one was pretty good, we had rabbit and garlic, quinoa and some other chicken dish I think. All very tasty and cheap but not to the extent that we thought.
The Rabbit
Day five was raining and cold so we just hung around the campsite again.
16th November - Bilbao, Mums holiday inn carpark
The so called 'modern art' that was on display was the funniest ever for all the wrong reasons! We each received an audio guide which spoke about each of the pieces and if you didn’t know any better it could have been a comedy act. Some of the explanations for the art work were absolutely bizarre and hilarious.
17th to 18th November - Salamanca, Spain
19th November - Aveiro, Portugal
20th November – Coimbra, Portugal
So it was a lazy wake up this morning, quick chat with the swiss next to us who said Lisbon was nice to visit so we ditched Porto and decided to go further south towards Lisbon. The swiss couple had been travelling for 2 1/2 years. They looked like real easy going hippy types living the life. They told us about their travels to Morocco two years ago where they were unfortunate enough to be attached by 3 youths while the streets were empty because of a football match. They held them at knife point for their money which they wouldn’t give. They screamed and two ran away but the other one smashed the guy in the face with a broken bottle. Not good! They also had a more entertaining story of a Moroccan climbing into his trailer to try and get onto the ferry to Portugal. He found him sitting on his scooter!
Moving onto our drive, we went along the coast which had some nice spots but there was no one around so we didn’t want to risk it.
The Site
21st November - Batalha, Portugal
Afterwards it was time to find another place to camp out
which ended up being Batalha, also in the hills. There was a cathedral which
they were cleaning and not much else to see but we camped out for the night.
Finally back to the coast again after a short drive. The camping spot is in the town only 250m from the beach. The spot itself is not very nice, just a car park on the side of the road with a large dirt car park behind it but the esplanade of the town is nice. Rained a little today but still not as cold as it has been.
Day three was another walk on the beach, some relaxing teas by the harbour (4 teas for 4.4!) and then towards the square for lunch. Mid arvo we headed back to BB to find the pack of Portuguese neighbours sitting out in the sun. Girls to the left of BB all sitting around knitting and boys to the right of bb playing cards. We sat in the middle of them for a read and headed in when the sun started to set.
Arrived at camping in Cascais which was a sandy place with trees everywhere. Trying to find a place with some sun Nat reversed into a branch and snapped a piece of the bike rack. Another thing on Nat’s list.
The next day we headed into Lisbon which was a nice city. We only went in for one day and ended up doing mostly shopping. We took advantage of the hot showers and got ready to head further south which was hopefully away from the cold and the wind.
First morning they had aerobics which we joined and I killed it! Despite the 3 months with minimal exercise I was leading the pack and showing the way……..then I realised that everyone else was 30 years older. “ohh I can’t get back up” “this is going to hurt in the morning” were just some of the comments coming from the elderly group. Actually the whole thing was more of a laugh then anything, very little movement required.
The BBQ I am forced to use whilst on this trip, doesn't look like much but does the trick
4th to 11th December – Portimao, Portugal
“but can you numb my thumb or something it really hurts”
Arrived in Silves to find a large parking place full of campers. Walked around to find Kees and Rinnie. By chance its Rinnies birthday today! They said the camper place with power we were looking for was just up the road so we made our way to find the Aussie/Kiwi couple we had met who invited us over again tonight.
We headed back to Portimao which is only about 25min drive. I wanted to go back to the restaurant we ate at along the beach for my birthday dinner tonight. This was after a very competitive game of pool against Nat who won best of 5 because I potted the 8 ball. I have learnt to play sober against her now.
Not sure where this was
9th November - Camper plaats, San Sebastien
We were planning to stay in Hendaye but the camper place
was being renovated so we had to keep on going. Couldn’t find the camping site
that Nat’s Mum had given us the details of just over the border into Spain so
we went to a free site in San Sebastian which was just a car park.
BB with friends
10th to 15th November - Igueldo
Camping, San Sebastian. Spain
Els (Nat’s Mum) was arriving today so we checked her bus drop off in town which looked easy enough to reach and then checked into the camping. The camping was up in the hills with some not so nice driving but it was nice to finally have some power and internet so time to update the blog, photos, facebook and fully charge everything. We picked up Els from the bus stop and then just hung out in the cabin that night away from the rain and cold.
With an 80% chance of rain the next day we decided to stay
in the camp site and took to the comfort of food and alcohol.
The second day
of the visit looked promising so we caught the bus into the city but it did not
stop raining all fricken day. Nat lost her battle with her umbrella but we won
the battle of the tapas which was awesome. Thanks to some research from Els
and google maps we started our tapas crawl through the city.
The first one was pretty good, we had rabbit and garlic, quinoa and some other chicken dish I think. All very tasty and cheap but not to the extent that we thought.
The Rabbit
The second tapas was what I will be expecting when I enter the gates of heaven. You had an option of meat, tomatoes with oil and salt, red peppers with oil and salt and that was the extent of the menu. The waiter came out with two huge slabs of beef, each around the kilo I reckon. The waiter looked and smiled waiting for an answer from us.
We looked at each other and I asked if there was something smaller, to which he replied “noh….thisa one or thisa one”.
I then asked can we have half of that one, to which he replied “noh…thisa one or thisa one”.
So after finally getting the gist of it we chose the smaller one and sat down wondering exactly what we have ordered. How can we go wrong in this place anyway, if it’s good enough for the couples dog next to us (which was being fed whilst in his little purpose made doggy bag) then it’s good enough for me.
So we started to tuck in to the salted tomatoes and paprika which were nice but incredibly salty, the water was fleeing my body with ever mouthful. Then the meat came out, sliced and still sizzling on the plate. It was just the beef with salt and nothing else and was bloody awesome!! Whatever water I had left in my system was now gone, so much salt but so good!
Natty getting directions from the locals
It was then off to the desert bar where we stuffed
ourselves again and then headed home to dry ourselves off.
Day
three was the tasting menu day. A special treat given to us by
Els who herself always wanted to do something like this in Spain. She had
booked the three of us at Martin Berasategui’s 3 Michelin start restaurant for
lunch and what a lunch it was!
The tasting menu consisted of 12 plates accompanied with
their chosen wine, we only asked for one change which were the oysters, we
changed them to roast pigeon and natty also made a small change to the desert
so she could have some ice cream (no surprise there). They even gave us each
our own copy of the menu each with the necessary changes.
First dish was smoked eel which we have never had,
actually tastes a lot like smoked oysters (which we do like), it had a
caramelised apple top. I think this was probably my favourite dish of the day.
After having this dish I thought that perhaps this menu
won’t be so bad after all. My positive thinking soon vanished when confronted
with the next dish. “Squid soup, creamy squid ink ravioli served with squid
crouton” Now for someone who doesn’t eat or like squid the word “squid” was
mentioned far too many times in the title. As the dish was placed down, it
looked like a thin bowl of semi clear liquid with a round ball in the middle.
When the plates were placed the waiter explained that we must keep our mouths
shut when eating the squid ink ball and to eat it in one go.
As I had conquered the smoked eel with great success I was
feeling rather confident, I was also trying not to think about the ink ball. Nat
was the first to try and…well…we now know why the waiter explained to us that
you must keep your mouth closed. The black ink was everywhere, her wine glass,
plate and the very white tablecloth (I’m pretty sure I saw some on the back
window). It was pretty funny actually, especially with her frozen ink face look
she had when it happened. I believe her next statement was “I don’t like things exploding in my mouth!” (I will leave that one
alone….but damn its hard…..not to)
A small portion of the ink, the rest was on her chin
After Els finished her ball it was my turn and I think my
face was as white as the ravioli ink ball itself. Probably the worst thing I
have ever eaten. It really didn’t taste all that bad but the texture was
all wrong. Felt like we were drinking the ink…..i really had to concentrate as
my gag reflexes were in full swing. The good news was ,how can it get any worse
than this!!
Another highlight was Els dropping her camera into her
soup, we put it down to the alcohol, we were all pretty drunk by the end of
the meal (which took about 2.5 hours) and were the loudest in the room by far.
There were probably about 16 guests in the room and about the same number of
waiters and staff.
Nat enjoying her sweets
For those interested the dishes were:
1)
Smoked eel, foi-gras, spring onion
and green apple
2)
Squid soup and squid ink ravioli
3)
Hake with stuff
4)
Sauteed black garlic with beet
ceviche, ice radish and raifort cream
5)
Raw fennel and risotto
6)
Foie-gras with seaweed
7)
Corrotxategi egg on herb liquid
salad
8)
Veggi salad with seafood
9)
Red mullet with edible scale
crystals, soybean sprouts
10)
Roast pigeon
11)
Desert of apple lemon, celery,
cucumber, gin and mint
12)
Mist of coffee and cocao over banana
with whiskey sorbet and slush (Nat had chocolate souffle’)
I still don’t know what half of it was but most were
pretty tasty.
The great man, thought he'd be taller
After our cab ride home we cracked open the champagne
which gave us all a headache the next day.
On day four, we
went into town again. This time we ate some of the food which they present on
the top of the counters in the bars. It all looks very good but you can’t help
think about the germs and bacteria getting breathed on it.
Day five was raining and cold so we just hung around the campsite again.
The view that made us get a move on
16th November - Bilbao, Mums holiday inn carpark
Left early for Bilbao. Tried to find the camper place
first but the roads have changed a lot and brenda hasn’t been updated recently
so after several attempts we decided to drive to the hotel and look for a plan
B. We parked BB at the hotel, had lunch and then caught the bus into town to
visit the Guggenheim. The building is very unique with a brass like colour and
all curved edges. Its set along a river and has the rest of the city in the
background. It was pretty nice even with the overcast sky. (pictures don't really do it justice)
The so called 'modern art' that was on display was the funniest ever for all the wrong reasons! We each received an audio guide which spoke about each of the pieces and if you didn’t know any better it could have been a comedy act. Some of the explanations for the art work were absolutely bizarre and hilarious.
The first display were large paintings of women’s faces on
all four walls. This was a unique room because the painting were large and of a
passport type photo (um ok if you say so).
The next room had the “The Matter of Time” sculpture which
you could walk through, the spaces shrank and grew and kind of had a cool
effect. Although I wouldn't go this far “..these sculptures create a dizzying,
unforgettable sensation of space in motion” ha! Hilarious.
The funniest of them all which had the two dutch ladies
cracking up the most was the collective works of Antoni Tapies which included
the following:
·
Chair with clothes thrown on it
·
A wardrobe with messy clothes
·
A pile of plates
·
Old couch
·
Rolled up mattress
The discussion on the plie of plates was pretty funny too,
“why that many plates stacked in that way” “these objects mark the birth of a
language of three dimensional objects”. Looks like a pile of plates to me. In fact the whole thing looked like something
from a very poor bachelor’s house.
Another 'art' piece was a collection of photos a lady took
of her computer screen which was dusty with fingerprints. Each photo had an
image on the screen of a different photo of a museum.
Another crack up was photos of empty billboards taken in the
US. Maybe we are not open minded and appreciative enough of 'modern art' but
this stuff is surely pushing the “art” category.
At one point I was looking at some fabulous art which
involved cutting people out of magazines and separating their arms, legs and
head from the body and sticking them into the grid, next to the visual
illusions that we have seen via emails 10 years ago. “you get the sense that
they are trapped behind the grid” Ha! Funny! But at one point I turned to leave
and the camera bag knocked one of the stands (there were about 6 of them lined up),
luckily Nat was there and stopped it from falling to the next one creating a
domino effect for the rest of them. THERE’S YOUR ART!!!! A big pile of rubbish,
should fit right in!!
After the comedy we had dinner at the hotel, bid mum
farewell and slept in the car park. No one even noticed!
17th to 18th November - Salamanca, Spain
Driving from Bilbao to Salamanca took us about 5 hours and
there really wasn’t much to see. The first part was through mountains, rain,
fog etc and then into a sort of desert area. We stopped along the side of the
road at a petrol station for lunch and it felt a bit like we were in a place
on the movie 'the hills have eyes'. We were happy to finally get to
Salamanca and checked out the camper places but they were empty so we opted for
the camping which was only 16 euro with pretty good WIFI.
The site
First lesson (Still no better)
The next day it was
actually dry and we rode into Salamanca which was a nice town with lots of
churches.
They are expecting -1 degrees tomorrow so we shall
continue west in chase of the warmth
19th November - Aveiro, Portugal
After food shopping and a quick petrol top up we headed
West for the sun. The landscape from here reminded me of Aus in the desert.
Quite dry with the odd bush or tree. Then we headed into the mountains and soon
over the Portugal border. You can see the difference almost immediately with
lots more shrubbery/bushes everywhere.
After a couple hours through the mountains we came to Aviero near the coast.
The parking place is next to a canal and in front of an overpass - not overly
peaceful. Especially when the local choir group decide to practise under the
overpass at midnight, at one point we didn’t know if they were some young
hooligans that like to sing, but apparently it is common.
20th November – Coimbra, Portugal
So it was a lazy wake up this morning, quick chat with the swiss next to us who said Lisbon was nice to visit so we ditched Porto and decided to go further south towards Lisbon. The swiss couple had been travelling for 2 1/2 years. They looked like real easy going hippy types living the life. They told us about their travels to Morocco two years ago where they were unfortunate enough to be attached by 3 youths while the streets were empty because of a football match. They held them at knife point for their money which they wouldn’t give. They screamed and two ran away but the other one smashed the guy in the face with a broken bottle. Not good! They also had a more entertaining story of a Moroccan climbing into his trailer to try and get onto the ferry to Portugal. He found him sitting on his scooter!
Moving onto our drive, we went along the coast which had some nice spots but there was no one around so we didn’t want to risk it.
Continued to try find another spot but got caught on shitty roads which turned
to dirt so we ditched that idea and headed for Coimbra instead. Coimbra camping
spot is along the river near some sports halls. We think that the owner of one
of the sports halls was dealing in campers that he had parked there as well,
kind of weird.
We set up and took it easy.
View from the site (well almost)
21st November - Batalha, Portugal
Headed into Coimbra for a walk around this morning. Nice
town set up on a hill with the river running through it.
The site
22nd to 24 November – Nazare, Portugal
Finally back to the coast again after a short drive. The camping spot is in the town only 250m from the beach. The spot itself is not very nice, just a car park on the side of the road with a large dirt car park behind it but the esplanade of the town is nice. Rained a little today but still not as cold as it has been.
We walked to the esplanade the next day and enjoyed some
beers to the setting sun. Not much else you can do really.
(Jake, this is where we spoke to you on Ella's B'day)
Day three was another walk on the beach, some relaxing teas by the harbour (4 teas for 4.4!) and then towards the square for lunch. Mid arvo we headed back to BB to find the pack of Portuguese neighbours sitting out in the sun. Girls to the left of BB all sitting around knitting and boys to the right of bb playing cards. We sat in the middle of them for a read and headed in when the sun started to set.
"stuck in the middle with you"
25th to 26th November - Cascais,
Portugal
Visited Obidos today. Small village on yet another hill
with a castle wall surrounding it. According to the “1000 places to visit
before you die” book it wasn’t meant to have cars driving through it but they
were everywhere. In any case it was a very picturesque village with cobble
stoned streets, small alleyways and different coloured buildings. We tried some
Ginja which is a cherry liqueur. Pretty nice so we bought a bottle with some
chocolate shot cups. When you have it together it tastes like an alcoholic
cherry ripe – don’t mind if I do!
Arrived at camping in Cascais which was a sandy place with trees everywhere. Trying to find a place with some sun Nat reversed into a branch and snapped a piece of the bike rack. Another thing on Nat’s list.
The Next day I had this amazing idea of walking along the
coast into the town. After two hours, 12 kms and a disgruntled wife we arrived. We
had lunch and then due to the many blisters on Nats feet caught a cab back
to BB. Lunch was 6 tapas dishes for 15 Euros, but then they put bread, butter
and cheese on the table which you assume is free just like anywhere else... but
not here. 5 euros for the cheese thing and 2 Euros for the bread and butter,
they saw us coming but at least we know now.
27th to 28th November - Lisboa,
Portugal
Today we visited Sintra, also known as the village of
queens. Again on a hillside or maybe even a mountain. Pretty town with all
princess style houses around. Walked up a road all the way to the castle. Or
should I say I dragged Nat up the road who on several occasions wanted to turn
back (perhaps the 12km walk the other day had a part to play) but “benny being
stubborn” wanted to continue on and to my delight (and Nat's!) we made it to
the entrance of the castle, after an hour. Castle number 3,204,830 i think this
is. Anyhow, the castle was cool with amazing views so the walk
was well worth it. (and those were Nat's words!!)
We then discovered there was in fact a waking trail
between the castle and the town so the walk back was much easier.
We headed onto Lisbon for the night and the journey
reminded us of home with gum trees everywhere : (
The next day we headed into Lisbon which was a nice city. We only went in for one day and ended up doing mostly shopping. We took advantage of the hot showers and got ready to head further south which was hopefully away from the cold and the wind.
29th to 3rd December - Albufeira,
Portugal
After lunch, and some skype sessions with the family, we
left for the south coast. We found the camper park which is just outside of
Albufeira. Pretty nice actually for 6.5 Euros with wifi, power and service
facilities. Its nice because its only for campers, not just a car park like we
have been on in the past.
Our first spot
Our final spot
First morning they had aerobics which we joined and I killed it! Despite the 3 months with minimal exercise I was leading the pack and showing the way……..then I realised that everyone else was 30 years older. “ohh I can’t get back up” “this is going to hurt in the morning” were just some of the comments coming from the elderly group. Actually the whole thing was more of a laugh then anything, very little movement required.
That night an English lady that Nat had met invited
us to watch the end of a wales vs aus rugby match. We had a few drinks with
them in their camper which was nice. Peter and Leslie have been travelling for
2 years and plan to go another 6 months.
The camping place was nice so we stayed longer than
expected. We rode many hills into Albufeira one day and another day rode
towards another town along boardwalks. This was our 8 year anniversary so we
splurged on some tasty massive pork satays and marinated chicken for the BBQ.
Pretty good night listening to music and drinking wine. Good way to start our
9th year!
Lunch time on our anniversary
Our neighbour, been doing this for many dog years
The BBQ I am forced to use whilst on this trip, doesn't look like much but does the trick
Our anniversary dinner
With the thought of entering the 9th year with Nat I tried to end my life by slicing a corner of my thumb off, or was I trying to get the milk open, I can’t remember. Obviously I used the sharpest knife we have which actually sliced through the carton of milk and continued through my thumb.
With the thought of entering the 9th year with Nat I tried to end my life by slicing a corner of my thumb off, or was I trying to get the milk open, I can’t remember. Obviously I used the sharpest knife we have which actually sliced through the carton of milk and continued through my thumb.
The funny thing was the knife was so sharp it didn’t
actually hurt. While nurse Nat was stopping the bleeding I said “is that my
thumb in the sink?” “yes Ben, it is” Nat even picked it up and dropped kicked it
along the floor, I wanted to keep it but Nat wouldn’t let me.
That night Nat said to take the bandaid off but I knew
better and wanted to leave it on…. wrong move.
4th to 11th December – Portimao, Portugal
Arrived in Portimao after a short drive. Parked BB in the
Dutchies and english group. They have a bus pub here which gives it a bit of
atmosphere and everyone is sitting outside enjoying the very good weather. Also
less wind here which is good.
My thumb had the band aid stuck to it and I couldn’t rip it off, Nat couldn’t either because it sounded like she was chopping my head off. It was fused to my wound and hurt like hell. Bandaid pulling off a fresh wound…makes my legs go like jelly just thinking about it.
So we went to the doctors and was able to go straight in. The doctors visit was pretty entertaining for Nat. I ended up seeing a young Portugese nurse who could speak pretty good English. I sat down and asked her if I had to remove the bandaid or if we could leave it and it would magically get better.
So we went to the doctors and was able to go straight in. The doctors visit was pretty entertaining for Nat. I ended up seeing a young Portugese nurse who could speak pretty good English. I sat down and asked her if I had to remove the bandaid or if we could leave it and it would magically get better.
She said “no I have to remove now”
“but can you numb my thumb or something it really hurts”
“no”
“but cant we…….” Rrrriiiiiiip
Oh my god it hurt like hell and I had the sweats going. I received no sympathy from the nurse. “yeah, I know, you are a man, it must hurt” Nat was loving it.
The blood just started pouring out again which wasn’t good. After making fun of me she bandaged it up in a massively oversized wrap and sent us on our way with appointments to come back a 2nd and a 3rd time for new dressings. Nat took me to maccas for a treat after this ordeal.
Neighbours across the way, massive dog sleeps in the garage of the camper
Nice spot along the beach for dinner one night
We are kind of just relaxing here in Portimao, talking a
bit to our neighbours who know Kees and Rinnie where we bought the camper. Walked
along the beach boardwalk one morning which is very nice and into town another
day. We had an Aussie/nz couple approach us because of our flags who invited us
for a drink and a chat over at their place. Nice people who have been traveling
for 5 years on and off and are now on their 3rd camper.
One day we drove into Lagos for the day to recharge BB and see something different. Although it was Sunday and all the shops were shut, the town wasn’t overly interesting and the camper place wasn’t the nicest so glad we are hanging in Portimao for now.
One day we drove into Lagos for the day to recharge BB and see something different. Although it was Sunday and all the shops were shut, the town wasn’t overly interesting and the camper place wasn’t the nicest so glad we are hanging in Portimao for now.
12th to 14th December - Silves
Arrived in Silves to find a large parking place full of campers. Walked around to find Kees and Rinnie. By chance its Rinnies birthday today! They said the camper place with power we were looking for was just up the road so we made our way to find the Aussie/Kiwi couple we had met who invited us over again tonight.
The site
We went to visit Kees and Rinnie and ended up staying
there late. There were some gay dutchies there also and the night was
entertaining.
Nat in her element with other cheese heads
We stumbled to the Aussie/Kiwi couple and watched a DVD about the
pilgrimage in the north of Spain. Nice movie but a little odd watching it in
the camper with them…
15th December – Back to Portimao
We headed back to Portimao which is only about 25min drive. I wanted to go back to the restaurant we ate at along the beach for my birthday dinner tonight. This was after a very competitive game of pool against Nat who won best of 5 because I potted the 8 ball. I have learnt to play sober against her now.
Tomorrow we will head to Spain and will probably be there for a couple of months so its goodbye to Portugal for now.
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