Blu Bar in Almuñecar is a fusion-food restaurant we literally stumbled into during a weekend at the seaside.
Delicious fruity salads, real Italian pasta, many veggie/vegan options including a set menu and the kind of wine where you want to steal the empty bottle afterwards so that you'll be able to find the exact same label again somewhere.
No crappy striplights here, either - the decor is colourful and made up of all sorts of recycled novelties and groovy artwork.
Highly recommended! GG
Blu Bar, c/ Alta del Mar, 10, Almuñecar, 18690 Granada Telephone 958 634 530
Despite a lapse in the sunshine we had a fantastic day out on 17 February, cycling with new friends from the Granada Via Verde bike group.
Although Andalucia has seen too much road construction and the destruction of natural habitats in recent decades, many old country tracks and caminos do still exist - meaning that many beautiful places are easily discovered on foot or by bike.
We had a day out without cars (always a relief!) cycling through the rural areas of La Vega, Atarfe and Albolote to the lake at Cubillas where we ate our picnic lunch and found a bar for coffee.
The day with its grey skies reminded us a little of being in Derbyshire or Scotland - but then with the huge, snow-capped peaks of the Sierra Nevada always visible in the distance, you know you're not in the UK anymore...
Our thanks to everyone in the group for inviting us along, putting up with our faltering Spanish and showing us some of the local countryside. (David tells us there are many, many more routes to explore this spring and summer!)
By good fortune we met Milan and his canine friend Mano (pronounced Mono) in the Albaicin quarter a couple of weeks ago. They're new arrivals in Granada and we were more than happy to have them over for a few days.
What kind of dog is Mano? It's anyone's guess! Mono in Spanish means 'monkey' and also 'cute'. ¡Que mono eres, Mano!
Amongst other things, Milan - originally from Hungary - is an accomplished photographer. That's his portrait of Mano, above. Here's more of his work. GG
Wow! A flyer accepted and a gig offered, both at once! On the strength of a 30-minute sample CD (track listing below) and some e-flyer ideas (final versions will be here soon) my alias Double Decca has been invited to play some tracks alongside Granada's DJ Oscar later this month, and to help publicise the gig.
I'm hoping that Jesús will play records, too - he was great last time - though we really need an all-nighter to do it justice. The bar usually closes at 4 am...
So, if you're here in Granada, please be there on 29th from midnight for the Soul Ska Shakedown Party - and bring your mates...
Friday, 29 February, Bar Aterriza Como Puedas, c/ Lavadero de las Tablas, 15 (off c/ Tablas). GG
That sample CD track listing:
Intro: The Double Deckers TV theme The Specials: Do the Dog (Double Decca extended mix feat. Brian Dog) The Ballistic Brothers: Peckings The Jamaicans: Ba-Ba-Boom Time Mr Bloe: Groovin' with Mr Bloe (Greg Wilson remix) Madness: Sorry (Diesel Tribe house remix) Diana Ross: Love Hangover Melba Moore: Magic Touch The Soul Leaders: Mother's Advice/Shoparound Musical Youth: Rockers Tony Clarke: Landslide Outro: Madness: The Prince (instrumental)/The Double Deckers TV theme
Fancy dress at last! Elaine was an angel and having already been a sailor (July 2007) I was a pirate for our first ever fancy-dress Critical Mass bike ride in Granada on 1 February.
Unlike Barcelona, Granada is poorly-equipped for bikes - and this is a shame, because in this small, compact, and mostly flat city, bikes should be the first choice for everyone. They used to be: we've seen the photos of the streets in the 1920s.
But, like almost everywhere else in Europe (the UK included), the car remains king. To make things worse, here in Andalucia motorists can do whatever they want with total impunity. The police do nothing to stop them speeding along narrow streets, driving while using mobile phones, parking in bus bays, on pavements, on zebra crossings...
The Masa Critica is a monthly mobile party, to demonstrate the efficiency and usefulness of the true vehicle of the future: the bike. The city's pedestrians were very supportive (especially kids, who love bikes, and older people, who remember a time when cars were rarer and streets were safer).
Even many of the drivers, sitting in their plastic seats, going nowhere at all in the nightly traffic jam, showed their support as we zipped past them: one wonders how much longer they can tolerate the boring, dangerous nightmare they have helped to create.
Here in Granada there really are no excuses: one can easily cycle from one end of the city to the other in 30 minutes, and there are frequent urban and inter-urban buses to everywhere else.
And in fact in Granada - as in the UK - there are already more bikes than cars. It's time to bring them out of the garages and off the balconies and onto the streets!
More video (spot Elaine's angel wings!), pics and information (in Spanish) at Granada Via Verde. GG
We love Spain and the Spanish people. We came to live here in Granada in Sept 2007. We’re improving our Spanish, teaching English, and hiking and dancing whenever we can.
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