Liguria, or the Italian Riviera, as it is commonly known has some of the most beautiful scenery in the world. A drive along the Grand Corniche, visits to towns such as Cervo made us see that. Here are just some shots of the wonderful Hotel Caravelle where we stayed in Diano Marina and some other lovely moments that we shared in this beautiful, underappreciated land.
Novelist and travel writer, Mary Morris, reflects on landscapes and literature and the role that each has played in her life. For more on Mary Morris go to her website marymorris.net
Friday, June 28, 2013
Sunday, June 23, 2013
Moonstruck: The Problem of Re-Entry and the S.O.V. solution
We've all faced the difficulty of coming home. You've gotten away for a couple weeks. You haven't had to walk the dog or pay the bills (you took care of all of that before you left). You aren't going to get any bad news. Or good for that matter. You can briefly put your money woes aside. Then you go home. As any astronaut can tell you, re-entry is always a problem.
Somehow from the minute you get on the airplane all the good loose feeling just goes away. The seats are cramped, your seatmate snores. Your jaw tightens. By the time you've landed you're already tense, and it's downhill from there.
This is how we felt when we got home from Spain. Where were those pintxos (Basque tapas) on the bar? The wine poured from high? Basically we wanted to sell our house and move there. But was it really Spain we wanted or was it the way we were when we were in Spain? I realize that's a complicated sentence, but I can't find another way to say what I mean. We live in New York City. Surely we can recreate some aspects of our Spanish vacation. But can we morph into the footloose people we were then?
We woke up Saturday morning, feeling blue, and decided that we needed a plan. A plan that would take us back to how we'd been a week before. So we created S.O.V. day. Not to be confused with S.O.S. or s.o.b. Or S.U.V. or my favorite show, S.V.U. Or even H.O.V. whatever that means for commuters on the L.I.E
We decided to have a "Stay on Vacation" day.
Now "Stay on Vacation" shouldn't be confused with a "staycation." A "staycation" is a holiday you have at home. But we were trying to recapture what we'd just done in our two weeks away.
And what did we do on our vacation? Well, pretty much nothing. Which is something we're actually very good at. We like to stare into space. We can easily sit in one cafe for four hours, then move on to a bar for another three. We didn't force ourselves to go to museums and look at art (Actually we couldn't because there is no museum in San Sebastian and, despite our best intention, we never made it to Bilbao). We didn't go sightseeing that much. We went to cafes. We wrote in our journals. We scribbled and drew. We sat and let our minds wander. Now we wondered if we could replicate this feeling in NYC.
We packed up our bag with pens, pencils, book to read, journals, the movie section of the NYTimes, my paints and off we went. First stop was Cafe Martin not far from the house where we read the paper (a luxury we rarely allow ourselves) and sipped espresso from ceramic cups (NOT styrofoam). Then it was close to noon and we headed to midtown where we stopped at the Biryani Cart on 46thst street for arguably the best chicken tikka with rice in NYC. And I'm not the only one who thinks so.
On to MOMA where we'd intended to see some photographic and art exhibits, but since we are members we can go to go MOMA anytime. Instead we found some chairs and sat in them for four hours. At which point Larry went up to the outdoor bar and brought us back a beer, for him, and a lovely glass of Sicilian rose for me.
On to the Village where we wanted to find a restaurant we like a lot, but haven't been in a while, that's near the High Line. We got off at West 4th. Ambled. Lost our way. Ambled some more. Tried to remember where the place was. I took out my IPhone and then put it away. I wanted to follow my nose, not my phone.
Half an hour or so later we were seat, eating crostini and frissee salad at ZAMPA (Highly recommended for small bites, near the High Line). Then off to the High Line for an eve
ning walk. As dusk was settling we didn't want to go home. Larry recommended that we go to Txikito - our favorite Basque restaurant in NYC. Given that we were just back from Basque country what could be better than a glass of txacoli and a plate of Guernica peppers which is what we had.
On our way back to Brooklyn we were stopped dead in our tracks. I'd read about it. The Supermoon. The moon that night at its perigee (the closest to the earth it ever comes). It was the night of the summer solstice and the moon at its point of perigee.
We stood looking at what seemed like a moon someone had just stuck in the sky. Like that moon in "Moonstruck." "Was it Marisa Tomee in that film?" I asked Larry.
"No," he said, "I think it was Cher." Then he paused. "Maybe they were both in it."
By the light of the Supermoon we made our way home. But we made one more detour, at our local jazz club, for a nightcap of Irish whiskey where we toasted and planned our next "S.O.V."
(Pictures: My feet and art supplies, at MOMA; our little meal at ZAMPA; Lovers on the High Line; Goldenrod blooming on the High Light; The Empire State Building by the light of the Supermoon)
Somehow from the minute you get on the airplane all the good loose feeling just goes away. The seats are cramped, your seatmate snores. Your jaw tightens. By the time you've landed you're already tense, and it's downhill from there.
This is how we felt when we got home from Spain. Where were those pintxos (Basque tapas) on the bar? The wine poured from high? Basically we wanted to sell our house and move there. But was it really Spain we wanted or was it the way we were when we were in Spain? I realize that's a complicated sentence, but I can't find another way to say what I mean. We live in New York City. Surely we can recreate some aspects of our Spanish vacation. But can we morph into the footloose people we were then?
We woke up Saturday morning, feeling blue, and decided that we needed a plan. A plan that would take us back to how we'd been a week before. So we created S.O.V. day. Not to be confused with S.O.S. or s.o.b. Or S.U.V. or my favorite show, S.V.U. Or even H.O.V. whatever that means for commuters on the L.I.E
We decided to have a "Stay on Vacation" day.
Now "Stay on Vacation" shouldn't be confused with a "staycation." A "staycation" is a holiday you have at home. But we were trying to recapture what we'd just done in our two weeks away.
And what did we do on our vacation? Well, pretty much nothing. Which is something we're actually very good at. We like to stare into space. We can easily sit in one cafe for four hours, then move on to a bar for another three. We didn't force ourselves to go to museums and look at art (Actually we couldn't because there is no museum in San Sebastian and, despite our best intention, we never made it to Bilbao). We didn't go sightseeing that much. We went to cafes. We wrote in our journals. We scribbled and drew. We sat and let our minds wander. Now we wondered if we could replicate this feeling in NYC.
We packed up our bag with pens, pencils, book to read, journals, the movie section of the NYTimes, my paints and off we went. First stop was Cafe Martin not far from the house where we read the paper (a luxury we rarely allow ourselves) and sipped espresso from ceramic cups (NOT styrofoam). Then it was close to noon and we headed to midtown where we stopped at the Biryani Cart on 46thst street for arguably the best chicken tikka with rice in NYC. And I'm not the only one who thinks so.
On to MOMA where we'd intended to see some photographic and art exhibits, but since we are members we can go to go MOMA anytime. Instead we found some chairs and sat in them for four hours. At which point Larry went up to the outdoor bar and brought us back a beer, for him, and a lovely glass of Sicilian rose for me.
On to the Village where we wanted to find a restaurant we like a lot, but haven't been in a while, that's near the High Line. We got off at West 4th. Ambled. Lost our way. Ambled some more. Tried to remember where the place was. I took out my IPhone and then put it away. I wanted to follow my nose, not my phone.
Half an hour or so later we were seat, eating crostini and frissee salad at ZAMPA (Highly recommended for small bites, near the High Line). Then off to the High Line for an eve
ning walk. As dusk was settling we didn't want to go home. Larry recommended that we go to Txikito - our favorite Basque restaurant in NYC. Given that we were just back from Basque country what could be better than a glass of txacoli and a plate of Guernica peppers which is what we had.
On our way back to Brooklyn we were stopped dead in our tracks. I'd read about it. The Supermoon. The moon that night at its perigee (the closest to the earth it ever comes). It was the night of the summer solstice and the moon at its point of perigee.
We stood looking at what seemed like a moon someone had just stuck in the sky. Like that moon in "Moonstruck." "Was it Marisa Tomee in that film?" I asked Larry.
"No," he said, "I think it was Cher." Then he paused. "Maybe they were both in it."
By the light of the Supermoon we made our way home. But we made one more detour, at our local jazz club, for a nightcap of Irish whiskey where we toasted and planned our next "S.O.V."
(Pictures: My feet and art supplies, at MOMA; our little meal at ZAMPA; Lovers on the High Line; Goldenrod blooming on the High Light; The Empire State Building by the light of the Supermoon)
Sunday, June 16, 2013
Liguria: A Layered Land
We were driving through Liguria a few days ago and my friend, Nicola, was telling stories. As we drove on a road that wound along the sea and through mountains terraced with olive trees, he was sharing some funny stories that I swore I would not repeat, but most of Nicola's tales come more in the form of legends, little histories of this beautiful land.
And then I pointed to a cluster of houses, tucked deep into a mountainside. I asked who lives in these houses and why. They are almost impossible to reach. I tried to envision the kinds of people who live here. Then Nicola told me that if you walk in the woods you often come up houses that have been abandoned. Whole houses, made of stones, that are crumbling to dust.
That's when he explained to me about ubago. Ubago is a word of Ligurian dialect. Ubago is a wet, dark place. You can come upon it only in the deepest reaches of the woods. Here you feel that anything can happen. It is where you will confront ghosts and mysteries and perhaps your own demonds. The past itself can arise. Ubago is the forgotten. It is the darkside.
I'd met Nicola at a conference in Genoa the previous fall. Genoa is the heart of Liguria - the province of Italy that abuts the French Riviera. Liguria is thought of as riviera "lite" - without Cannes or St. Tropez. Not to mention Provence. It has none of the jet set allure and hence is less known. Perhaps in its own way Liguria is a bit of a forgotten place.
I'd only been here once before. With my mother decades ago. We'd stopped in Genoa and spent a night in La Spezia. I had been to Genoa before and once decades ago with my mother to La Spezia.
I knew little about this part of the world but when Nicola told me that his family had a four-star hotel (Hotel Caravelle in Diano Marina) and that he had his own olive grove (where he produces organic olive oil), well, it seemed like a no brainer. We made this side trip from our vacation in Spain.
When driving through Liguria, you can't miss the terraced landscape. Nine hundred years ago, Nicola explained, the people of this region recognized that this land had the perfect combination of rich soil and brilliant sunshine for growing olives and grapes. But it was also very difficult because the mountainous land was so rocky. If they managed to till the land, where would they put the rocks? So they developed a technique of creating terraces, braced with walls of stone. To this day this is how this region is farmed.
What I'll call the layered look - of this multi-layered land.
But now as Nicola was explaining to me about ubago, I got a look at another kind of layers. Something that went beyond the mountains and the sea and the terraced terrain. Liguria is a prehistoric place (I actually saw a prehistoric plant at the Hanbury botanic garden that had a boy plant and a girl plant whose centers weirdly evoked human genitalia). Its beginnings were pagan and so it still has a tradition of ghosts, and spirits, and unseen things.
The sun and the mountains, the sea and the dark side. Olives and grapes. Hilltowns and abandoned houses made of stone. Prehistoric plants. Come to Liguria and find your portal into another world. It can be hard, I know, where everywhere you look is beautiful and mysterious at the same time.
And then I pointed to a cluster of houses, tucked deep into a mountainside. I asked who lives in these houses and why. They are almost impossible to reach. I tried to envision the kinds of people who live here. Then Nicola told me that if you walk in the woods you often come up houses that have been abandoned. Whole houses, made of stones, that are crumbling to dust.
That's when he explained to me about ubago. Ubago is a word of Ligurian dialect. Ubago is a wet, dark place. You can come upon it only in the deepest reaches of the woods. Here you feel that anything can happen. It is where you will confront ghosts and mysteries and perhaps your own demonds. The past itself can arise. Ubago is the forgotten. It is the darkside.
I'd met Nicola at a conference in Genoa the previous fall. Genoa is the heart of Liguria - the province of Italy that abuts the French Riviera. Liguria is thought of as riviera "lite" - without Cannes or St. Tropez. Not to mention Provence. It has none of the jet set allure and hence is less known. Perhaps in its own way Liguria is a bit of a forgotten place.
I'd only been here once before. With my mother decades ago. We'd stopped in Genoa and spent a night in La Spezia. I had been to Genoa before and once decades ago with my mother to La Spezia.
I knew little about this part of the world but when Nicola told me that his family had a four-star hotel (Hotel Caravelle in Diano Marina) and that he had his own olive grove (where he produces organic olive oil), well, it seemed like a no brainer. We made this side trip from our vacation in Spain.
When driving through Liguria, you can't miss the terraced landscape. Nine hundred years ago, Nicola explained, the people of this region recognized that this land had the perfect combination of rich soil and brilliant sunshine for growing olives and grapes. But it was also very difficult because the mountainous land was so rocky. If they managed to till the land, where would they put the rocks? So they developed a technique of creating terraces, braced with walls of stone. To this day this is how this region is farmed.
What I'll call the layered look - of this multi-layered land.
But now as Nicola was explaining to me about ubago, I got a look at another kind of layers. Something that went beyond the mountains and the sea and the terraced terrain. Liguria is a prehistoric place (I actually saw a prehistoric plant at the Hanbury botanic garden that had a boy plant and a girl plant whose centers weirdly evoked human genitalia). Its beginnings were pagan and so it still has a tradition of ghosts, and spirits, and unseen things.
The sun and the mountains, the sea and the dark side. Olives and grapes. Hilltowns and abandoned houses made of stone. Prehistoric plants. Come to Liguria and find your portal into another world. It can be hard, I know, where everywhere you look is beautiful and mysterious at the same time.
Sunday, June 9, 2013
Shelf Life
People come to Spain and say they are searching for Hemingway´s Spain. What exactly are they looking for beyond the bulls running in the streets of Pamplona which really is a fairly silly thing to do and most injuries and death occur because people slip in cow patties and then the bulls run over you. (something the government prefers not to reveal).
The other day at about eleven a.m. we were getting up late and had just had a pastry and coffee, then decided to stop in a local pintxos bar. It was filled with morning customers. Some out on the street, smoking as they sip their coffee. Which you know they think they should be doing inside. Inside the room is dark, musty, with sides of ham hanging from the ceiling and little plastic cups stuck into the bottom to collect the dripping grease. We grab our coffee and head outside and that is when I stumble upon what for me marks the real Spain.
There is a little shelf. It´s just a small, varnished piece of wood, hammered into the side of the bar. But this is where you can rest your beer, your glass of txacoli, your espresso as you sip on the street and talk to your friends, make out with your lover, pet a dog, hang out with your father. It is so simple and yet it´s message is clear. It says pause. Take your time. This is what it means to be alive and in the world. No one is staring into his laptop. There is no silence. There are just people, hanging out, laughing, jammering away. All because of a shelf.
I began to notice them everywhere. Almost all the bars and cafes have a window that opens to the outside and from here the barista serves you your drinks. On nice days and rainy days these Basque and Spanish people stand outside, resting their drinks on a shelf. I have come to covet this invention and I know once I am home I´m going to yearn for it the way I´m going to yearn for the little ceramic cups in which your morning coffee is served and not the take out styrofoam.
What is the difference bt. the culture that offers ceramic cups and little shelves and the one that doesn´t?. The former implies a place where the goal of all of this is to talk to your friends. The latter where the goal is to keep walking, don´t delay. You might be late. You´ll miss god knows what that probably didn´t matter in the first place.
So I have found my inner Hemingway in the form of this shelf. Spain exists in its pauses, its sipping, its endless chatter. In the country where I come from people sit in cafes, staring into their laptops. Here solitude is for when we are alone. The rest is for road trips and trysts and insurrections. And having a beer or two with old friends as you rest your glass upon a little shelf.
The other day at about eleven a.m. we were getting up late and had just had a pastry and coffee, then decided to stop in a local pintxos bar. It was filled with morning customers. Some out on the street, smoking as they sip their coffee. Which you know they think they should be doing inside. Inside the room is dark, musty, with sides of ham hanging from the ceiling and little plastic cups stuck into the bottom to collect the dripping grease. We grab our coffee and head outside and that is when I stumble upon what for me marks the real Spain.
There is a little shelf. It´s just a small, varnished piece of wood, hammered into the side of the bar. But this is where you can rest your beer, your glass of txacoli, your espresso as you sip on the street and talk to your friends, make out with your lover, pet a dog, hang out with your father. It is so simple and yet it´s message is clear. It says pause. Take your time. This is what it means to be alive and in the world. No one is staring into his laptop. There is no silence. There are just people, hanging out, laughing, jammering away. All because of a shelf.
I began to notice them everywhere. Almost all the bars and cafes have a window that opens to the outside and from here the barista serves you your drinks. On nice days and rainy days these Basque and Spanish people stand outside, resting their drinks on a shelf. I have come to covet this invention and I know once I am home I´m going to yearn for it the way I´m going to yearn for the little ceramic cups in which your morning coffee is served and not the take out styrofoam.
What is the difference bt. the culture that offers ceramic cups and little shelves and the one that doesn´t?. The former implies a place where the goal of all of this is to talk to your friends. The latter where the goal is to keep walking, don´t delay. You might be late. You´ll miss god knows what that probably didn´t matter in the first place.
So I have found my inner Hemingway in the form of this shelf. Spain exists in its pauses, its sipping, its endless chatter. In the country where I come from people sit in cafes, staring into their laptops. Here solitude is for when we are alone. The rest is for road trips and trysts and insurrections. And having a beer or two with old friends as you rest your glass upon a little shelf.
Thursday, June 6, 2013
The Lonely Guitarist
The other day we´re coming back from lunch along the docks at LaRampa, where we´d had a little more wine, and a glass of port, than we´d intended. We heard it´d rained in San Sebastian for all of May - the most rain in one month since 1929. And now the San Sebastians are all out in droves. The wharf is packed with children who have been cooped up for weeks, mothers breathing a sigh of relief, lovers who can lie together at last, old men in berets who take the first daily walk they´ve had since the rains began.
We wander among them, following the sea. In first blinding bright sunny day since our arrival we come to the ancient archway that marks the entrance into the old city of San Sebastian and here we pause. Under the arch a young man is playing guitar. His sound is melancholic Flamenco. It echoes through the arch and on to the docks where twenty or so people lie on park benches or on the cement docks or under trees, dozing.
Larry and I sit down as well and I put my head in his lap and proceed to drift off as the young man plays. The music is sad, filled with yearning. It reminds me of that Portugese untranslatable world - saudade - which I can´t pronounce either but means something like you are yearning for what was never really there. The aching of the human heart for what we cannot have or even know we want. Or as a friend of mine puts it, the engima of emptiness.
We sit on that bench, me with my head in my husband´s lap, our eyes closed, the sun beating down after days of rain and sadness. And that music, haunting, calling to us about something we cannot name. I am about to fall asleep when the music stops. I am hoping it is a pause before he begins a new refrain. But Larry tells me no. The musician is packing up. He´s puting his guitar away. He´s walking away now, Larry tells me. And then he´s gone.
On the benches and under the trees there is a heavy sigh. A collective deep breath as couple after couple rises from their slumber, their broken dreams and trances, wherever that music had taken them back to other lovers and moments forgotten or opportunities missed. One by one they walk away. I thought they were sleeping. But they were listening.
And then I think of the guitarist who made that music. He´s returning home with too few euros in his pocket where his mother will yell at him or his wife will doubt him and his children ignore him.
Or perhaps he´s just returning to empty rooms and a bottle of Rioja. He doesn´t know that the people who seemed to be sleeping were listening and his music brought remembering. He doesn´t know that because of him for a moment we were all dreaming the same dream.
We wander among them, following the sea. In first blinding bright sunny day since our arrival we come to the ancient archway that marks the entrance into the old city of San Sebastian and here we pause. Under the arch a young man is playing guitar. His sound is melancholic Flamenco. It echoes through the arch and on to the docks where twenty or so people lie on park benches or on the cement docks or under trees, dozing.
Larry and I sit down as well and I put my head in his lap and proceed to drift off as the young man plays. The music is sad, filled with yearning. It reminds me of that Portugese untranslatable world - saudade - which I can´t pronounce either but means something like you are yearning for what was never really there. The aching of the human heart for what we cannot have or even know we want. Or as a friend of mine puts it, the engima of emptiness.
We sit on that bench, me with my head in my husband´s lap, our eyes closed, the sun beating down after days of rain and sadness. And that music, haunting, calling to us about something we cannot name. I am about to fall asleep when the music stops. I am hoping it is a pause before he begins a new refrain. But Larry tells me no. The musician is packing up. He´s puting his guitar away. He´s walking away now, Larry tells me. And then he´s gone.
On the benches and under the trees there is a heavy sigh. A collective deep breath as couple after couple rises from their slumber, their broken dreams and trances, wherever that music had taken them back to other lovers and moments forgotten or opportunities missed. One by one they walk away. I thought they were sleeping. But they were listening.
And then I think of the guitarist who made that music. He´s returning home with too few euros in his pocket where his mother will yell at him or his wife will doubt him and his children ignore him.
Or perhaps he´s just returning to empty rooms and a bottle of Rioja. He doesn´t know that the people who seemed to be sleeping were listening and his music brought remembering. He doesn´t know that because of him for a moment we were all dreaming the same dream.
Tuesday, June 4, 2013
What I love about San Sebastian, Spain...
The other day as we were leaving from JFK the baggage handler looked at our luggage tags and said, "Where´s San Sebastian? Never heard of it." We told him it was in the north of Spain and he just shook his head, surprised that we were flying to a place he´d never known existed - and moving bags was what he did all day long.
We weren´t surprised really. While this is our third trip to SS (as we call it), there isn´t much to do. There are no must-see tourist attractions and the only museum, Bilbao, is an hours drive away. We have yet to go there. Nor have we ventured to Pamplona, Rioja, or Bordeaux. All a short commute from the city. Really there isn´t much to do except when the sun is out, which thankfully it is today. And then you walk with your lover, your friends, your dog, along the sea, and greet other people who are doing the same. You might wander down near the acquarium and have a lunch of fresh caught hake and some local white wine in an unmarked bottle.
And on a rainy day there´s really nothing to do except hang out in the pinxo (Basque for tapas) places with the locals as they munch on seafood nibbles and olives and fried calamari and potato omelettes. Sipping the local txacoli wine that is a green wine poured from high above the glass or the beer that always flows from the tap.
Men in blue berets, lifelong friends, still find things to laugh over, and children run in and out, and dogs find ways of slinking in out of the rain. After a beer, we might go to a cafe and sit, stirring our cafe con leche in its ceramic cup. It seems odd - not to have seen styrofoam in days. Not to see everyone staring into their smartphones or plugged into their music. It is odd to hear the constant din of people talking to one another, elderly parents walking with their children, young familes wandering about, women with hair all dyed some maroon color that isn´t found in nature chatting with the girl who gives them their croissant.
We have taken the twenty minute bus ride to San Pedro where we once stayed, and fell in love with this place and its people. This is also by the way the little villages that Victor Hugo fell in love with long ago when he went to stay with his mistress in SS. Out for a stroll one day he stumbled upon San Pedro and San Juan. And then he stayed for as long as he could. We´ve walked along the sea, then taken the little 60 cent ferry to San Juan, another small basque village where we have done exactly the same thing. But that´s about as far as we´ve gotten so far on this trip.
We do plan to go to Bilbao on Friday unless it doesn´t rain and then we´ll probably just go to the beach. At the beaches at about three in the afternoon you see well dressed men and women, walk to the sand, put down a towel, take off the business suits and dresses, to reveal the bathing suits they wear beneath. They will jump into the sea. Or just sunbathe for an hour. Then get dressed and go back to work.
The other day in a pinxos bar (Atari - highly recommended) we met an American couple from Manhattan. They´d been there two days and asked us how long we´ve been. We told them we´d be staying two weeks and that this was our thirty visit to SS. Third? They looked surprised. So what do you do when you´re here, they asked us. And Larry and I looked at one another. Why, we do....this.
Let´s be fair to ourselves. We did make a dinner reservation at a renowned restaurant in Hondarrabia and we are going to spend a few days in Nice with friends. But some days we don´t venture past the little garden out back with its lemon tree, full of ripening lemons. Some days we don´t feel guilty if we stay in bed until noon.
Have we become sloths? Or is this just the way we prefer to see this world. From the inside looking out. When we come to SS, we are traveling. We are living here. So what can we tell people who ask why we keep coming back and what there is to do while we´re here?
We say that because there is nothing to do we don´t feel guilty doing just that. And we find we are very busy, talking, sipping, strolling. La dolce fa niente is alive and well in this city we´ve come to love. Yesterday, for example, after lunch we took a nap on a dock. Along with about a hundred other people. Really I cannot account for the days though they seem to be flying by.
We weren´t surprised really. While this is our third trip to SS (as we call it), there isn´t much to do. There are no must-see tourist attractions and the only museum, Bilbao, is an hours drive away. We have yet to go there. Nor have we ventured to Pamplona, Rioja, or Bordeaux. All a short commute from the city. Really there isn´t much to do except when the sun is out, which thankfully it is today. And then you walk with your lover, your friends, your dog, along the sea, and greet other people who are doing the same. You might wander down near the acquarium and have a lunch of fresh caught hake and some local white wine in an unmarked bottle.
And on a rainy day there´s really nothing to do except hang out in the pinxo (Basque for tapas) places with the locals as they munch on seafood nibbles and olives and fried calamari and potato omelettes. Sipping the local txacoli wine that is a green wine poured from high above the glass or the beer that always flows from the tap.
Men in blue berets, lifelong friends, still find things to laugh over, and children run in and out, and dogs find ways of slinking in out of the rain. After a beer, we might go to a cafe and sit, stirring our cafe con leche in its ceramic cup. It seems odd - not to have seen styrofoam in days. Not to see everyone staring into their smartphones or plugged into their music. It is odd to hear the constant din of people talking to one another, elderly parents walking with their children, young familes wandering about, women with hair all dyed some maroon color that isn´t found in nature chatting with the girl who gives them their croissant.
We have taken the twenty minute bus ride to San Pedro where we once stayed, and fell in love with this place and its people. This is also by the way the little villages that Victor Hugo fell in love with long ago when he went to stay with his mistress in SS. Out for a stroll one day he stumbled upon San Pedro and San Juan. And then he stayed for as long as he could. We´ve walked along the sea, then taken the little 60 cent ferry to San Juan, another small basque village where we have done exactly the same thing. But that´s about as far as we´ve gotten so far on this trip.
We do plan to go to Bilbao on Friday unless it doesn´t rain and then we´ll probably just go to the beach. At the beaches at about three in the afternoon you see well dressed men and women, walk to the sand, put down a towel, take off the business suits and dresses, to reveal the bathing suits they wear beneath. They will jump into the sea. Or just sunbathe for an hour. Then get dressed and go back to work.
The other day in a pinxos bar (Atari - highly recommended) we met an American couple from Manhattan. They´d been there two days and asked us how long we´ve been. We told them we´d be staying two weeks and that this was our thirty visit to SS. Third? They looked surprised. So what do you do when you´re here, they asked us. And Larry and I looked at one another. Why, we do....this.
Let´s be fair to ourselves. We did make a dinner reservation at a renowned restaurant in Hondarrabia and we are going to spend a few days in Nice with friends. But some days we don´t venture past the little garden out back with its lemon tree, full of ripening lemons. Some days we don´t feel guilty if we stay in bed until noon.
Have we become sloths? Or is this just the way we prefer to see this world. From the inside looking out. When we come to SS, we are traveling. We are living here. So what can we tell people who ask why we keep coming back and what there is to do while we´re here?
We say that because there is nothing to do we don´t feel guilty doing just that. And we find we are very busy, talking, sipping, strolling. La dolce fa niente is alive and well in this city we´ve come to love. Yesterday, for example, after lunch we took a nap on a dock. Along with about a hundred other people. Really I cannot account for the days though they seem to be flying by.