When I walked out of Spanish class I didn't see the poster advertising an organized trip to Toledo.
It was the Canadian girls standing around the don Quijote message board
hollering "roaaad triiiip!" that caught my attention. Although a coach
ride from Salamanca to Toledo and back could technically be considered
a road trip, I was hoping for something more exciting
I had no
doubt that the good people at don Quijote, my Spanish school here in
Salamanca, would organize a well laid out tour, catering for everyone's
taste. While I do like my Spanish classes that well-organized, I prefer
my road trips unforeseen and lawless. Coach trips are just a bit too middle of the road for me. Plus coaches make me nauseous (the tour guide yapping away in the microphone doesn't do much good for it, either).
I don't
want to pass judgment though. Few people annoy me more than those
horribly contemptuous, "authentic" backpackers telling you how you
should travel, belittling you for owning a Lonely Planet or for washing
your hair. Not me. Nor will I force local delicacies down my fellow
travelers' throats when they really feel like eating Chinese food or
Burger King. Want to get a picture of you holding up the Tower of Pisa? Be my guest. For all I care you can go to Louisiana and pick up an "I looted New Orleans and all I got was this lousy T-shirt" shirt.
We all have our favorite way of travelling but it really isn't necessary to bother other people with it. Nevertheless, I would like to impose my travel mantra on you: road tripping – the real deal, no half-cocked coach trips. The preparations are minimal. All you need is a car, music and sunglasses...
The quintessential road trip vehicle
is obviously a minivan. Preferably one with a big-ass spoiler and a
knob on the wheel. Unfortunately, I do not yet own a black 1983
G-series GMC (uhuh, the A-team van)... So my friend and I went to a car
rental place instead. Alas, no flower-power Volkswagens were available either. Considering there would just be four of us, we eventually settled for a less-exciting yet practical new Renault.
Music is at least as important as the car.
Do not, and I cannot stress this enough, do not embark on a road trip
in Southern Europe relying on local radio to entertain you. Bring CD's
and plenty of 'em or you'll go stark raving mad. You'll want to keep
the entire car happy so don't be selfish. Think mainstream.
Our
playlist went a little something like this. Plenty of guitars and
classic rock for on the highway: Rolling Stones, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Jimi
Hendrix, Bob Dylan and the like. I always bring some acid jazz or other
lounge tunes for serious chilling. Saint-Germain always does the trick.
For dead moments it's nice to have a couple of lame sing-alongs that
are so bad they actually become funny. I particularly love to hate "Yes
sir, I can Boogie", "Do you really want to hurt me", "So lonely", "Papa
Chico" or anything by Vanilla Ice.
Don't forget some cool music for cruising by the beachside.
You know what I am talking about: one driver's tanned arm out the
window, shades on your nose and Don Omar's "Dale con dale" cranked to
the max. By the way, here's a tip to make traffic jams more
interesting. When no cars are moving, open all windows. Everybody but
the driver get out of the car. Put on some party music (my personal
favorite in this case: Vitalic's "Poney part 2"). Get on the roof of
your van (what do you care, it's a rental...) and start partying like
it's 2999. Try and get the commuters to join you, the looks on their
faces are priceless.
That's it, we're good to go. You could make an itinerary
first if you want to... I prefer just asking around on where to go.
Planning simply creates expectations the actual experience has to live
up to. Chance adventures are that much easier to enjoy.
Friday
finally arrived and my partner in crime Sebastian and I picked up our
fellow trippers (Fabienne from Antwerp, Belgium and Jessica from New
Haven, Connecticut) in our brand-new mpv. After the all too obvious
multi-purpose-vehicle jokes it was time to decide where we'd go. We
didn't have to talk for long about a destination. Of course we would drive off into the sunset, i.e. direction Portugal.
The first couple of days were random but very enjoyable. Lots of good
food, even more mediocre alcohol, uncalled-for dancing etc... During
daytime we didn't avoid the cultural sights although we probably spent
more time at the beaches to shake off our hangovers. The scenery in
Portugal was no less than breathtaking. Ironically, the many forest
fires seem to have made the Portuguese landscape even more attractive,
at least from a distance. The withered trees range in color from gold
red to pitch black, contrasting with the burgeoning green of young
weeds.
Fall was
catching up with us so we turned our back on the beaches and headed
inland, towards the mountains. We ended up in the strangest of mountain
towns: Bragança.
Although not at all a tourist hot spot, Bragança does have an
awe-inspiring, 13th century fortress. That's not why I'll remember it,
though. This town is the spitting image of Royston Vasey, the English
village from the comedy series "The League of Gentlemen" where ugly,
inbred locals molest and eventually kill innocent passers-by. Obviously
it wasn't that fatal but Bragança did give us a scare.
The
first local we saw, we asked for directions to our hostel. A big smile
appeared on his face; he opened the door, squeezed his burly body into
the back of the car and insisted on showing us the castle first.
Scruffy-looking and reeking of liquor, among other things, he
introduced himself as Ramiro, owner of the castle.
He promised to give us an extraordinary tour. So far, we weren't
alarmed at all and so we decided to go along. The big guy seemed
harmless enough; with his placid smile and doglike eyes he almost
looked like the village idiot.
He
apparently wasn't. When we arrived at the castle, Ramiro pulled out a
set of keys and opened the gate. No problem, maybe he's the janitor, we
said to ourselves while we set out on our tour. The guy we had figured
for a well-intentioned simpleton was now lecturing us on European
history, momentarily interrupting his discourse to demonstrate how you
wield a 15th century bastard-sword with amazing agility. Maybe it was
just the sight of the castle at dusk but, all of the sudden; Ramiro's
smile didn't seem so placid anymore...we were all getting a bit spooked.
When our
guide, still carrying the huge sword, insisted we'd follow him to the
fortress' dungeons, we simultaneously started muttering protests:
"Desculpe Ramiro, we'd love too but we have to arrive at the hostel before eight..."
"Besides, we are all getting really hungry."
"Thank you so much for the tour, though."
"We'll be back tomorrow, for sure!"
And we practically ran out of the place.
It may have been our heightened self-consciousness but we all felt like the entire village was staring and pointing at us.
We did our best to ignore the glares and continued to the only hostel
in town, where the weirdness did not cease. By now we were psyched up
and seeing ghosts everywhere.
"You are not locals,"
the clerk stated. Clearly, there was no fooling this guy. We slowly
explained him that, not being locals, we had come to this pension
looking for a place to stay the night. He nodded understanding. When we
offered him our passports, he shook his head and smilingly said: "Don't
worry about it, I'll get them later." I heard Fabienne break into
sobbing behind me.
"We are not Americans..." I began in a misguided attempt to relate to the clerk. No reaction.
"Can you recommend a good restaurant?" I tried.
"Yes, we
have an excellent restaurant right here," was all he said. Somehow
nobody felt like eating at the hostel so Sebastian and I ran out for
take-out pizza and Porto while the girls barricaded themselves in the
rooms. Seb, as always looking at the bright side of life, laid out the
gameplan for the night. After all, the whole thing had provided us with
an excellent excuse to keep the girls company at night.
We did feel stupid though, waking up the next morning. No one had been poisoned or stabbed to death.
Bragança was no Royston Vasey. Like little kids, we had let ourselves
be frightened by some eccentric castle owner. And of course the
villagers had been staring; they had just seen four flustered tourists
dash out of their castle at nightfall. Word of the weird gringos had
probably spread to the pension before we even arrived. You are not
locals, indeed.
And so,
shamefaced and tired, we got in our car and headed back to Salamanca,
contemplating our road trip. On the radio Lynard Skynyrd were giving
their best. Sweet home Salamanca!
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Road trip from Spain to Portugal
by
Christophe
at 04:00PM (CET) on January 13, 2006 | Permanent Link
Like this?
Check all the courses, destinations and services in our brochure. Receive your free catalogue at home. Comments
Re: Road trip from Spain to Portugal
by
Anonymous
on Tue 17 Jan 2006 03:30 AM CET | Permanent Link
Hi - I am interested in advertising on your site.
However, I can't seem to find any contact information, so I'm posting here in the comments section. If it's possible, please write me a note (gabemorris at symbol gmail dot com) along with contact details so we can discuss Thanks. Gabe Re: Re: Road trip from Spain to Portugal
by
Paqui
on Fri 10 Feb 2006 09:42 AM CET | Profile | Permanent Link
Hi Gabe, I've tried to contact you by email but I don't know if you got my message, anyway, you can contact me on this email address:
paqui.martin@donquijote.org Re: Road trip from Spain to Portugal
by
Anonymous
on Thu 26 Jan 2006 05:13 PM CET | Permanent Link
You were able to capture my attention and keep me reading you. Very interesting and without pretention.
Re: Road trip from Spain to Portugal
by
Paqui
on Fri 10 Feb 2006 09:27 AM CET | Profile | Permanent Link
Thank you so much for your kind comments
:) Trackbacks
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