And then there was Granada. A few days with Billie, being introduced to the tourist delights of the quaint cobbled streets of the Albaicin and to the yummiest, cheapest gelato, in more varieties than I could ever imagine – heavenly! Spanish manners and buses and endless throngs of tourists wending their way up and down the Albaicin – the old city from the days when the Moors ruled Spain. They held out against the Christians longer than anywhere else here and left a legacy of exquisite architecture.
When Hannah came back from Berlin, we
spent three weeks
together while she packed up her life in Spain ready to head off to California.
The highlight for me was going to the Alpujarra for three days. High up in the mountains of the Sierra
Nevada, we stayed in a village almost empty of tourists and could walk along
mountain trails while stuffing ourselves with wild figs and grapes – the
Mediterranean is a food bowl overflowing with delights. I hardly heard a bird
sing, or saw any native animals, but there is food for humans everywhere. There is also water everywhere, one of the attractions of the area for the Moors who delighted in its abundance. Water cisterns through Granada and in the countryside are fantastic for cooling off and drinking.

The gypsy barrio of Sacramonte was my favourite place, whitewashed cave houses dotting the hillside – little front doors off the steep cobbled laneways, opening to reveal cool little houses dug out of the hillside. The doors of Spain are worthy of an entire book, there is nowhere near enough room here except to say they are mindboggling. Many of them in the Albaicin were made huge and thick enough to keep invaders out - and big enough to herd the horses and animals inside for the winter. I could see why Tara took a million photos of them. Anyway, the cave houses spread out in a scatter across the hillside, getting sparser as you climb up the dry, rocky outcrops and ending in beautiful quiet bush, from where the beauty of the city and of the Alhambra is best enjoyed at sunset. I went up there as much as I could – and treated myself to an early morning birthday walk along the hills to the Abbadia del Sacromonte, where fascinating ancient crypts and relics of martyrs were revealed.

It was great to watch Hannah busking in the little plazas of
the Albaicin, she is wonderfully alive and funny and beautiful and singing
really well, people loved it – especially the locals who have come to know her.
My favourite place to watch her was near the Mirador San Nicolas, where lots of
people come to gaze at the Alhambra – but I liked it best for the gelato, which
was the bees knees. The story is that the sultans of old sent their fastest
riders to the snow-covered mountains of the Sierra Nevada by night, to return
with buckets of fresh snow – which was then covered in sweet syrup…so Granada
has a long tradition to keep up.

















