Wednesday 5 August 2015

Foz do Arhla to Logos De Santo Andre.

Woke up in Foz do Arhla yesterday am. Not such a great night's kip. Diggers worked through the night (Portugal's on a mission),  Betty was scratching which shakes the whole van and the Lady R awoke at 3am convinced that the dog was on her bed. ' Get down Betty, good girl' was the gentle admonishment. I looked down, to the sofa beneath my bed where Betty sleeps. There was hound, in allotted place. Whilst the Lady R sweetly tried to persuade B to remove herself Betty looked up at me in consternation.  We shared a moment.

Eventually it emerged that the 'dog' was actually a bag. Not sure what had been mistaken for the wagging tail but we all went back to sleep.

Foz had a beautiful beach, free parking and showers. Loads of night life and lots of vans.  It was pretty good.

 It'll be alright on the site.
El toro.
Teriyaki salmon for tea.

Then we drove to Lisbon. It isn't much fun,  city driving. Because I'd been there before I had a long list of places to avoid: the centre,  the narrow old part,  anywhere with a tram, the beachfront. So..most of it.  Tried to get the sat nav to take us for some delicious Pastis De Belem (cakes) but it had obviously noticed the failure of the diet and offered post blank refusal. We stopped outside the beautiful Cascais for lunch before motoring south.

 We're sadly proud of our range of salad options. Yesterday's offering...
Leaving Lisbon.

We had an unfortunate incident involving getting stuck in a narrow street in the next place we hit, big fat panic. Sesimbra (DO NOT VISIT OF YOU HAVE A CAMPER VAN) was hilly and narrow and unyielding, but the Lady R kept her cool and we got out of dodge.

Headed for the coast further south and reached Logos De Santo Andre. Funny little place. Slightly sad and droopy, it has unused buildings which look as if it was created for holiday makers once upon a time. This is a great place to visit if you have a van because you can literally abandon it anywhere.  The beach is also fab. Negatives are the mozzies.

We took a walk on the beach last night.
 Post swim Betty.
 Sunset boat.

This morning I went out again. Last night the Lady R and I remarked upon the remarkable number of bins which lettered the beach. The peoples of Logos D.S.A. evidently are trying to combat the Portuguese problem.
 The bins of Logos De Santo Andre.

I did notice - as we walked - the stay of lovely fauna this particular area of Atlantic coast has to offer. Like any good anorak,  I photographed it to share.



Just noticed it's market day.  They are setting up as I type..hmm new addition to the salad range for lunch??

Monday 3 August 2015

Hair today, gone tomorrow.

For no particular reason, except that it's a total mystery, the brush count:

England: two hairbrushes, one comb.
France: one hairbrush, one comb.
Spain: one comb.
Portugal: De nada.

Where are they?

The East coast south of Porto.

Where we stayed last night was beachy brilliant. Just drive south and keep to the coast. Plenty of parking.

 Camper heaven.
 Morning walk.
 Beach art.
 Betty collapses a cliff.
The Old Beach Club.

Betty tries to kiss a frog.

Whilst swimming in the river Betty spots a frog.                              
 It jumps away from her, so she chases it.
 she grabs it in her jaws.
Before realising it's a bottle.
 She chases it down river, but sees that it's a container.
 She catches it as it swims past. Uh oh, it's a twig.
 She searches endlessly.
Whilst the frog enjoys the show.

P is for...

So I've been to this small, but not insignificant, country quite a few times before. Although (admittedly) I was mainly confined to Santiago do Cacem - before you ask no it was not an asylum. The Lady R has ner set foot on these here shores and neither has my Betty. 

The first night we found a place by a lake in a little place called Marco de Canaveses. Not a lot to recommend it really, we didn't sleep well thanks to the local twenty somethings who consider midnight drag-racing to be a suitable pastime. Even Betty, bless her, stayed awake most of the night on guard and growling at the external noise. 

The place did redeem itself somewhat in the morning as B and I set off for our morning walk when the fishermen were out, the mists were rolling and the views were beautiful. 


Betty showed her appreciation of the place by pebble-dashing the contents of her dodgy stomach across the picturesque path. That'd show them. 

To add insult to injury, some swine had locked the toilets. Irritated by lack of am ablutions the Lady R showed her distain:   Portugal needed to make more effort to impress us. We meandered on.

We thought we'd aim for Coimbra, having heard it to be pretty and rolled up on the outskirts of the town some time later. Contrary to the previous day's sweltering heat it was really cold the Lady R donned sweater and towel/rug, B snoozed comfortable on the floor between us. 

We decided to pull up near a river in a tiny town. It was beautiful and -mercilessly- fairly quiet (til the kids showed up). We wandered around and found a place which grilled food over live coals. This seems to be some kind of speciality. Think Nandos but better x10. We bought pork ribs. It was tricky because my Portuguese is non existent. I know ola/ adiĆ³s/ obrigada and esht (this) which is always useful when accompanied with pointy finger. Buying pork ribs was hard. The guy ignored my rubbish Spanish, refused French and English both and pointedly continued in loud/slow Portuguese. Obviously, I was totally able to understand that.




The Portuguese are a funny lot. They aren't that friendly, maybe a bit closed. I am sure that someone who knows them will say. 'Oh you need to get to know them.' Maybe they take thselves a bit too seriously, not sure.. but if we were marking them for effort we'd be jotting 'must try harder' in the margin.

On the plus side the Portuguese do great free parking and the beaches..wide, sweeping tracts of soft sand are gorgeous. They also have sun and sardines. 


This is the view as I sit and write - a nod to our sponsors bottom left. 

The Portuguese also do a great tree. Honestly, the country of trees and noise! We made a list (well, it was a fairly long drive yesterday): orange trees, eucalyptus trees, pine trees, lime trees, nectarine trees, apricot trees, lemon trees, peach trees, plum trees, damson trees, monkey puzzle trees, apple trees, deciduous trees, olive trees, horse chestnut trees, burnt trees, red leaved trees, trees, trees, trees, we decided the air quality must be amongst the best in the world and probably a reason why they aren't that fussed about litter, 'sod the mess, we got plenty of trees'. 

We received a call from a Mr S Vickers of Hamble: 
'Have you noticed the street vendors?' 
'Oh yes' replies the Lady R 'selling bread and fruit and veg and stuff in that heat'

Turns out that wasn't the kind of vendor Mr V was referring to. We had seen a few well dressed women, seemingly randomly seated along the roadside. Ahh.

Maybe prostitution was decriminalised, if you want to learn something interesting about Portugal watch: TED talks: Johann Hari - everything you think you know about addiction is wrong. 

And another thing...on arrival from Spain we were informed by the sat nav that Portugal is one hour behind its continental cousins, currently on the same time as the UK. At first we thought the sat nav was taking the P, I mean it had been privy to our inane conversations and had every right to consider us a pair of numpties. 

In support of this statement I offer the following: (I need to add that the Lady R and I seriously discussed its inclusion in the blog as possibly too much evidence of our combined muppetry).

True story:
Before we got here, occasionlly in France and more often as we moved into Spain, we saw (as European cars have) number plates accompanied by a P. Now, as you will no doubt be aware, French ones have an 'F' Spanish ones an 'E (Espana), Polish ones 'PL'. We were initially puzzled, the Lady R and I, by the 'P'. To which country did it belong? For the life of us, we couldn't think of a country whose name began with the letter 'P'. In fact, for the two to three days in which we puzzled over this (whilst approach Portugal) we proceeded to name all manner of other countries to which the 'P' could belong. Imagine our reaction (you can't) when we deciphered the answer. 

Anyway, hoping we can make it home without getting too confused. 

Ps and Steve, in answer to your repeated concerns: yes, we are washing regularly.