About us and the boat

About us and the boat:

We were lucky enough to retire early at the start of 2013 so we could head off and "live the dream" on board our Nordhavn 47 Trawler Yacht. The idea is to see some of the planet, at a slow 6 - 7 knots pace. There are no fixed goals or timings, we just had a plan to visit Scotland and then probably the Baltic before heading south.

The idea is to visit the nicer areas in these latitudes before heading south for warmer weather. If we like somewhere, we will stay for a while. If not, we will just move on. So, for the people who love forward planning and targets, this might seem a little relaxed!

If anyone else is contemplating a trawler yacht life, maybe our experiences will be enough to make you think again, or maybe do it sooner then you intended!

The boat is called Rockland and she is built for long distance cruising and a comfortable life on board too. If you want to see more about trawler yachts and the Nordhavn 47 in particular, there is a link to the manufacturers website in our "useful stuff" section. For the technically minded, there is a little info and pictures of the boat and equipment in the same section

Regards

Richard and June

Sunday, 3 November 2024

More Spain and the disastrous floods

We were all kind of relaxing into the slow pace of Altea life, morning coffee shop stops (where you could buy three for the price of one in the UK) then the tricky decision of where to pick for a late lunch. So many good options, so few days to try them all out. Stress beyond belief. 

We opted to stagger along the promenade and back up to the beautiful church so that Tina could see it too - when we visited before she was busy enjoying the sun on the terrace of the apartment. Sunbathing is now known as Ronsealing,.based on her skin colour.

Someone had been very artistic /' romantic on the stony beach area:


and the uphill bit was well worth it for the views towards Albir, the nearby town:


Once again, there was a wedding underway at the church:



So poor Tina never got to enjoy the interior of the place - she had to make do with the photos we'd taken on our earlier trip.

Spanish wiring still amazes and scares us in equal measures:


But it seems to work so who are we to criticise.

After an excellent week in the truly lovely apartment, we had to leave. We didn't want to but it had to be done. So, we treated ourselves to breakfast out at the rather good "Differens" cafe ensuring we were stoked up for a drive into the heart of the country. This little guy seemed keen on our breakfast too, and was brave enough to perch on the spare chair at our table:


We topped up with nice cheap diesel, then did the three hour drive to Teruel. This took us around the outskirts of Valencia, one day before the horrendous floods happened. More on that later, we try to be chronological if a bit disorganised and confused in our memories. That we put down to age and gin.

Teruel was quite a place. Have a look at Wikipedia link  for more information on the city that is reckoned to be the least understood and worst connected in Spain. The architecture that gets mentioned in that article was amazing in real life. As an example, a set of steps leading up into the main part of the city had wonderful detailed decoration (not too visible on this poor picture):



and a rather ornate "landing" at the top:


In the main square, there were some most impressive buildings:


and that continued throughout the place:


Sadly, as you can see, there were a few rain showers around so everything looked a bit gloomy and we refuse to tart it up using Photoshop for you. This statue of a bull is famous:



and here is an image borrowed from Wikipedia showing it on a better day weather-wise:




Which makes "El Torico" look very imposing. Only it is pretty tiny really:



Almost insignificant in the square that surrounds it.  We happily wandered around the place enjoying the architecture:



and then did the short drive to the Parador hotel. Again a borrowed image as things were pretty overcast when we arrived and pouring with rain when we left:



The evening meal was special. Being Brits, we struggled to wait until the typically Spanish restaurant opening time. So, we wandered down punctually to find the place in darkness. A few folks in the bar area next door but that was it. A waitress came out and we asked her if the restaurant would open - she told us to wait, went inside, turned on the lights and then came out announcing "it is now". We were then treated to some of the best ham we've had (speciality of the region) and an amazing venison steak. Excellent place.

The next morning it was raining. Hard. No, very hard. The captain selflessly moved the car closer to the entrance door but we still got soaked loading up. We were driving to a Winery - the Vinicola Real which was around three and a half hours away. To begin with we simply followed a truck on the main dual carriageway as he was nicely removing the standing water on the road surface. We had around 50 minutes of torrential rain then as we got further north it dried up and the sun wanted to come and play again. Little did we realise what carnage the rain was causing further south, around Valencia - we were just catching the edge of the rainstorm and that was bad enough.

A couple of very happy nights at the hotel in the winery followed. It was a great find. Lovely staff, amazing setting and we booked a winery tour and tasting too. Oh yes. The tour took us into the cellars (not ideal for Tina who dislikes road tunnels - at one stage the lights went out and she had to grab the arm of the crew until the guide hit the timed light switch again).  The bottles were covered in a storage grey stuff which the guide explained was a fungus that grows there naturally and has a form of penicillin in it. The fur coat helps keep the bottles at a constant temperature and protects the corks from other moulds:



The winery majors on the "200 monks" (200 Monges) wine and they only sell stuff that is suitably aged. Lots of oak barrels were underground too. The tasting was more of a drinking session really, a proper glass full of 3 whites and then 3 reds to sample and enjoy:



The wines were introduced and explained really well following our private tour. The white wines are made with the body of a red wine and are very distinctive. The 200 Monges red and white offerings were outstanding and far from cheap too - you can buy it in the UK:



but most of the production goes to China. Lucky China.

Meanwhile, the results of the DANA rain storms had trashed some areas around Valencia, involving a massive loss of life. We used these roads a day beforehand: 


and the residential areas nearby were horrific:


You could argue that after our two Thames river trips that were aborted due to flooding, we are somewhat fated. Actually no, we reckon it is Tina.  She is the link to all of these and to a Barbados holiday too when it rained in a way they had not seen in years, flooding parts of the hotel and stopping the staff from getting in. Here is the Rockland blog link as a reminder. 

The country declared three days of national mourning for the victims as we reluctantly left the Winery and headed to Santander for the last couple of nights away. Tina (yes, her again) had recommended a hotel near the ferry port that she'd used before. Only she must have been on a different level in the car park - U3 involved using a car lift that was narrow enough to need the wing mirrors folded in and then some tricky manoeuvres around a couple of pillars and the nose of a parked car. The crew was seriously stressed by it all. However, we parked OK in our allotted space and the hotel was good.

We liked Santander a lot, even though it felt strange to see a public air raid shelter in the middle of a nice square:



Someone had a real sense of humour when they named this umbrella shop:




In the lovely weather we wandered around enjoying the buildings and temperature:




conscious of the official period of mourning as per the half mast flag:


The evening was Halloween and there were an amazing number of kids and a few grown ups suitably dressed visiting some shops for treats. Quite an event.

When we booked to be in Santander on November 1st, we hadn't realised that it was a public holiday. It seemed that the locals were in full holiday mode with the beach busy and the cafes in town mobbed. we walked along the harbour area to the lovely beaches, admiring some rather palatial housing on the way:
 


and the energetic game(s) underway on the beach as per this video:



The weather was perfect for our last day in Spain:



however as all the cafe / restaurants were manically busy, we struggled to find a place to have dinner. Luckily, in the little road leading to the hotel we stumbled across a real gem of a place, which had to be frequented for breakfast the next morning before we carefully extricated ourselves from the garage, braved the lift and checked in for the ferry.

In the queue, we were behind an aging Citroen Picasso that was empty - the slightly strange owners had walked back to the terminal building to get some cheap wine. Watching them try to store it in an already full boot was amusing, then they vanished again despite announcements about returning to the cars. The lady had the most severe bob haircut we'd seen. thick hair hanging down like a curtain that swayed as one lump  when she walked. Anyone remember Dougal from the Magic Roundabout? 


Naturally Dougal and her man were nowhere to be seen so we reversed and then  passed them as did everyone else. As we queued to get on board the ship,  Dougal's car was all alone in the marshalling area. They finally returned to what was an empty area and instead of rushing to drive up to the customs posts they walked to find someone to ask what they should do. Annoyingly, they still got onto the ferry before us.

The same ship (Salamanca) offered the same excellent cabins and lounge area and this time, a flat calm Bay of Biscay for the trip back. So much so that we made quick progress:




so much so that the ship slowed right down as we approached the Isle of Wight.

We spotted Dougal once on board as we disembarked but had the "pleasure" of a strange couple in the Club Lounge. They arrived for breakfast dressed in identical clothing. They had a large bag with them which they proceeded to fill. First of all a plastic box appeared which they put 4 plates of salad and meat into. Then they collected three boiled eggs from the buffet and tucked two away. Then some bread rolls, then a handful of the little milk pots and so it continued. They vanished during the day, presumable to unload the spoils and return for the afternoon. armed with an iceberg lettuce. They must have brought that on board with them, The lady proceeded to cut lumps off if it using a pair of scissors. We could not resist picturing the table when they left it to collect more food:




Stealing food - yup, seen that in hotels many times. Bringing your own iceberg lettuce and giving it a haircut at the table with scissors was a new one though. Hopefully a one off.

We were the 4th to last car off the ferry which was less than ideal for Tina who was trying to catch an earlier hovercraft back to the Isle of Wight. Still, the trip had been excellent overall. Most impressed with Brittany Ferries service, Altea, Teruel and the Winery. Hic. Coming back to wall to wall grey clouds for days on end was not nice. 

Monday, 21 October 2024

The ferry to Spain - finally

After the "fun" of the two aborted Thames trips, we wondered if the replanned use of the ferry crossing that we had booked back in 2019 and moved many times would actually happen. The crossing from Portsmouth to Santander was planned as the start of a road trip through Spain, to the Camargue and then a couple of weeks on a hire boat there. It had morphed into a pure driving holiday in Spain with Tina, down to the med coast. Somehow, getting on board the ferry Salamanca and sitting in the rather lovely club lounge with a view over the delights of Portsmouth docks still did not convince us that it was finally going to happen:


Another ferry docked to spoil our view a bit:



and the wave forecast for the trip to and across the bay of Biscay made the crew a little worried:



(9.2 metre waves forecast off the Fastnet area but our route actually turned out to be fine, just a bit rolly and she needed none of the stash of Kwells she had taken along.)

Tina adopted a pensive "I will believe this is going to happen once we leave the berth" look:



and then the "wow this is really happening" look for a phone call:


After two very pleasant nights on board, we were disgorged in Santander and began a leisurely drive towards the Mediterranean coast. En route, we stopped in Haro to meet up with Norman and Julie who were in their enormous and rather wonderful motorhome on a campsite there. Indie looked as regal as ever:



whilst Stanley decided that Norman's neck needed cleaning up as only a Jack Russel tongue can do:


You can see just how much Norman enjoyed that. 

The first night was arranged as a stopover in Alfaro. Some serious buildings there:



We were impressed with how economical  a car itself weighing nearly 2.5 tons, loaded with three people and and a massive amount of luggage managed to be crossing the hills on the way:



We had another overnight stop near Valencia airport then headed to Altea to take over a rather wonderful apartment for a week. Altea really impressed us:


even if some of the shops had a strange window display. The syringe to inject some form of facial filler seemed "unusual" to our UK eyes:



Wandering around Altea we had great fun, testing the cafes and restaurants. In the yacht club, we managed to have a drink with Alf Garnett:



For the folks who are not old enough to remember Warren Mitchell and "'Til death us do part" here is a link to the details Wikipedia link. Also an image from the program to help you decide if we were rubbing shoulders with the ghost of a famous actor or not:




The Altea boating area also proved to have a  sense of humour:



We, rather wildly, decided to take the local tram system and visit Benidorm. Why? Well, not because we wanted to be part of that "scene" but because it was kind of a must see once before we die place. A mix of lovely old town, nice bay area and horrid over-development for the tourists. Here is how it plays out when that lot are put together:


Way too many high rise places, way too many people:



The things that really struck us were how we didn't see a single "English / Irish pub" in Altea or any two seat mobility scooters. Funnily enough, Benidorm has them in spades together with tourists wearing "Benidorm 2024" T shirts like a rock band tour offering.

We happily got the tram back to the apartment and civilisation after a very good lunch.

Back in Altea, Tina had a day on the large terrace soaking up the sun - basically, getting Ronsealed. We walked into the old town area and up to the magnificent church, situated at the highest point of the town. Proper old Spain stuff:


With lovely views out to sea as well:


The church domes have the distinctive blue tiles:


The interior was beautiful:


and as we were planning to leave, a wedding party arrived, well turned out and accompanied by drummers to the door. Quite a place to tie the knot and we felt quite privileged to witness it as annoying tourist types at the back of the church.

So far, the Spain trip was going very well.