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Sobella Chronicles
15. Help, I've eaten a bit too much...
11/07/2009, Cadiz, Spain

Or, was the performance really that bad? The Roman ruins in Cadiz included an amphitheater, and a vomitorium. Ok, I don't know why, but it was on the lower level, just inside this tunnel. It's a Roman thing.

While berthed in Rota, we took a ferry over to Cadiz and spent a day wandering though its' various neighborhoods...Roman,Medieval, Moorish....a whole history unwrapped before our eyes.

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16. Tiles, Tiles, Tiles!
11/07/2009, Cadiz, Spain

We love the tile work in Moorish Spain and Portugal. This was a fountain in one of the parks in Cadiz.

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17. The Old Man and the Tree.
11/07/2009, Cadiz, Spain

Captain Vasco do Gragg standing next to a huge tree in one of Cadiz's parks. Wandering around Cadiz, you are never far from the sea. Something the Captain was very pleased about.

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18. Sangria Stop
11/07/2009, Cadiz, Spain

Instead of pit stops, it is far more pleasant to have a Sangria Stop!

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19. Narrow Winding Alleys & Streets
11/07/2009, Cadiz, Spain

Jutting out into the Bay of Cadiz, this city is thought to be Europe's oldest.The old town is full of narrow passages, open squares, noisy small fish and vegetable markets, all alive with the haggling of vendors and their customers.

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20. Flamenco Muscian
11/07/2009, Cadiz, Spain

What better way to while the afternoon away than sitting in the sun at a sidewalk cafe, drinking wine, and listening to this fellow really into his music while he played flamenco. Talk about atmospheric! Waiter, more wine, por favor!

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21. Trafalgar Lighthouse
11/07/2009, Just North of Barbate, Spain.

From Rota, we sailed to Barbate, "Tuna Capital of World". Sadly, much of this area has been fished out. Fortunately, the area hasn't yet been overdeveloped for the tourist trade, and we found the beaches along this stretch natural and beautiful.

Cape Trafalgar marks the spot, offshore, of one of Britain's most famous and decisive battles. It was here that Admiral Lord Nelson and his outnumbered British fleet, defeated the combined fleets of the French and the Spanish. Nelson lost his life during the battle, and he was shipped home in a cask of spirits! What a way to go!

From here, we thought we would have to wait for a "weather window" to round the cape at Tarifa and enter the Straits of Gibraltar, but the weather and tide conditions were great, and we left the next day.

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22. Windy City
11/07/2009, Straits of Gibraltar

Tarifa is considered the windiest point in Europe. Note the windmills in the background dotting the hillside. Just across the Straits is Africa! We rounded this point with our sails down, anticipating a real blow, but it was a non-event, and we enjoyed the scenery...Tarifa on our port side, Africa on our starboard, and Gibraltar dead ahead!

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23.Approaching Gibraltar
11/07/2009, The Straits of Gibraltar

The wind suddenly picked up as we approached Gibraltar, and we were screaming along at 9+knots! Gerry and I were screaming, also, as we played dodge ball with all the freighters, ferrys, cruise ships and commercial fishing boats which came at us at all sorts of angles. White knuckles subsided when we tied up at Queensway Quay Marina, and a shot of whisky helped too!

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24. Looking Down at our New Home
11/07/2009, Gibraltar

Looking down from The Rock is our new home at Queensway Quay Marina, where we are Med moored, bow in, to the quay. We are the eighth boat from the bottom left hand side of the picture.

Med mooring was a new experience for us, as we have been spoiled by being side-tied to a berth and gracefully hopping off the boat from either our portside or starboard. In Med mooring, you tie up with either your bow or your stern facing the dock. Then you have to figure how to get off your boat!

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25. The Rock
11/07/2009, Gibraltar

So, this is The Rock, or at least part of it. It is now what we look at from our 'backyard'. The view from our cockpit looks up, and up, and...well, you get the picture.

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26. What? You want me to walk across the runway?
11/07/2009, Gibraltar

Yes, in order to cross over the border from Gibraltar to Spain (or vice versa), you have to drive or walk across Gibraltar's runway. The working runway. The runway they use for the military and commercial flights.Right, you want me to cross from here over to there???? Luckily, they give you plenty of warning before one of those Hornets or Harriers come roaring through!

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27. Narrow Street in the Juderia
11/07/2009, Cordoba, Spain

we got a little touch of "island fever" while living in Gibraltar, so we took a jaunt to Cordoba and Grenada.
The heart of Cordoba is the old Jewish quarter known as the Juderia. We had a sense as we wandered around its narrow streets that nothing has changed in a thousand years. We saw secluded squares, tiny workshops, wrought iron gates enclosing small courtyards, public fountains, and best of all, no cars!

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28.Proud of Our Patios
11/07/2009, Cordoba Spain

Cordoba is known for its interior patios and many residents leave their outer doors open so passersby can peek in

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29. Hats for Fashion
11/07/2009, Cordoba, Spain

Women in Andalucia dress beautifully, and have a style of their own. In the summer, many carry fans, and flutter them to stay cool. Fashionable hats are part of their accessorizing. We chanced on a wedding while wandering through the Juderia, and many of the women were wearing hats. This one took my fancy. It looks like it is getting ready to take off, and fly on its own.

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30. And Hats for Fun...
11/07/2009, Cordoba, Spain

We found these girls barreling up one of Cordoba's narrow streets, shrieking with laughter and sharing some joke between them. Women in Andalucia love the color red, and we see it everywhere...in scarves, handbags, shoes, shawls, hats and dresses.

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31. Birthday Night Fiesta!
11/07/2009, Cordoba, Spain

The 24th was my birthday, so we went to a flamenco performance complete with dancers, singers, guitarists and lots of hand clapping , castanet clacking, and impossibly precise foot stamping. . Most of these performances start at 10:30, but we had no problem staying up for it, because restaurants here in Spain don''t open until 9 p.m.! The Spanish clock is set on a whole different level than ours! It has taken us some getting use to.

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32. Flamenco Duds
11/07/2009, Cordoba, Spain

This was a store we encountered in Cordoba. Not a tourist spot, but a place to buy your costumes. If you are a flamenco dancer, singer or guitar player. And, the people in Cordoba, as many in Andalucia, are very serious about their flamenco!

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33. Flamenco Senorita
11/07/2009, Cordoba, Spain

We we charmed by the photo of this little miss, all decked out in her flamenco duds!

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34. The Romans Knew How to Build 'Em!
11/07/2009, Cordoba, Spain

A friend of ours from Chicago e-mailed us when he heard that we were going to visit Andalucia. His question was this:
"Why are the Roman bridges in those cities still in use and the bridges on the Edens (major highway in Chicago) practically falling down?" We can apply the same question to San Francisco and New York, too!

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35. The Golden Doors
11/07/2009, Cordoba, Spain

There are 19 of these doors leading into The Mezquita Mosque/Cathedral. Yes, part of the mosque was destroyed to accommodate the cathedral which was started in 1523, after the Moors were evicted from Spain. Was this one of the first concepts in multi-use?

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36. The Mezquita
11/07/2009, Cordoba, Soain

There are more than 850 columns of granite, jasper and marble. How did they do it? The mosque is dazzling.

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