is situated in an old Arabian quarter, the Albaicin. The narrow road up the hill runs along a river and broadens into squares here and there filled with young hippie-type people, this is a university town, with creative rastafi hairdo's and often trailing a dog or two.
The Carmen de la Victoria is an old house set in a beautiful gardens with many stairs, up which one must carry the luggage. A stern lady at the gatehouse urges us to catch the (free included) lunch NOW, and thus we find ourselves faced with the sole choice of a breaded and fried piece of chicken, which we gamely wash down with a cold beer.
When we later struggle up to our assigned room, the ubiquitous smell of sewer? mold? bothers us and it is also present in our new monastic quarters, where two narrow beds pretty much fill the room. We have, however, a very nice and warm bathroom.
As we leave to explore the town we run into Carlota and Abel arriving from Seville. They, too, are urged to run for the lunch and we arrange to meet later. Oswaldo and I walk down the hill watching all the young people, like a colder version of Berkeley in the 60s, and their shivering dogs. We end at a statue of Isabel la Católica listening and agreeing to Christopher Columbus' plans,
without which we would not be standing there! Then we meet up with our friends for a coffee and shared comments about our accomodations. When we get back to the Carmen, we forego dinner and relax with the TV showing back to back American series, while Oswaldo goes over his talk.

Is there more than one Alhambra?
ReplyDelete