It wasn’t my first trip to Spain, although it was a long time ago now. I walked into Malaga with a rucksack on my back and followed the signs for ‘Centro’ until I found myself in the crowded central district of older narrow streets with three- and four-story shops and cafes, guest houses and cheap hotels. The second hotel I tried offered me a perfectly adequate room on the third floor at a very good price.
The hotel was old. The wooden floors of the corridors were worn and polished by the passage of countless feet, and everywhere seemed gloomy. It gave the impression of having more nooks and corners where light never penetrated than it should. But the only light came from the occasional bulbs hanging from the ceilings, and other than by returning to the street, the visitor would only encounter daylight once they had reached their room and opened the curtains.
The bed was old, and sagged a good deal more than it should, and the furniture was so dark with age it was difficult to make out the grain. As a base for a few days, I decided it would suit me fine. As I unpacked and settled in, I suddenly heard a violin being played. It sounded quite close, and I opened my bedroom door to investigate. I had just decided the sound was coming from a neighbouring room when it stopped, and then a door opened. A man about ten years older than myself emerged and stopped when he saw me.
‘I’m sorry,’ he said. ‘Did I disturb you?’
He introduced himself as a German who I shall call Matthias, although I am no longer certain that was his name, and who immediately invited me to go for a beer.
It would have been rude of me to refuse.
Matthias was meandering around Europe, he told me, and supporting himself largely by busking. Later that week I was to see him playing in the street and be surprised at just how many passers-by threw coins into his hat. It seemed a particularly enjoyable way to travel. Over those beers and then over a few more later in the week, we talked travel and philosophy, music and religion. When I meet someone while travelling, I find it interesting how I often have less constraint than I would when I meet someone for the first time in more familiar surroundings. Frequently, I will reveal things about myself I would never dream of doing to someone I meet perhaps for the first time at a friend’s house, or at my writing group. I presume it is the unspoken knowledge we will never meet again.
Beside the entrance to the hotel was a little café where I made it my habit to take a breakfast consisting of strong coffee, sometimes with slices of thick white bread dipped in olive oil, sometimes with fried eggs. It was a good place to sit and watch Malaga waking up. Its clientele were a broad mixture of workers all grabbing a quick breakfast on their way to office, shop or building site. Mostly they sat in silence, reading the morning paper and smoking, other than to give their orders to the waiter. On the bar a tiny transistor radio chattered away in speech too indistinct for me to make out more than the occasional word. In a way, though, that only added to the atmosphere. Despite it being a familiar situation, there was enough of the unfamiliar and the foreign to make it feel a little exotic.
I wanted adventure, I wanted to explore. I’ve wanted to do that for as long as I can remember. I travelled in those days with a few changes of clothes in a rucksack and a minimum of half a dozen paperbacks, which invariably included something by Hermann Hesse and at least one poetry book.
That, at least, hasn’t changed much.
I liked to travel light (other than the books, of course), so I had no camera with me and probably very few of the essentials most people would think to take on a Spanish holiday. No swimwear, for example. I don’t do beaches, at least not in that way.
But I had come to Malaga because I had a peripatetic nature, and my itchy feet were troubling me. After a few days I decided to take a walk out to the little town of Colmenar, to the north of the city. I would take a room there for one night and return to Malaga the following day. Any other destination would have done just as well; the purpose was the journey, and the journey was the purpose. I chose this route simply because while wandering around the outskirts of Malaga I saw a narrow road winding up into the hills with almost no traffic on it, signposted to Colmenar. The morning after I had made the decision, I packed my rucksack and checked out of my hotel immediately after breakfast.
Part 2 to follow
Look forward to part 2!
Well written!
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Thanks, Ishaan.
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welcome sir.
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Are you sure his name wasn’t Laurie?
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He was a bit younger than Laurie would have been then!
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You little spider you enticing us back for another part.
Hugs
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He he! Hugs back!
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In the great tradition of Laurie Lee and Walter Starkie, not to mention George Borrow. Wonderful and evocative,
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Thanks, John. I read ‘As I walked out one Midsummer Morning’ on another walking trip in Spain. A fantastic book. And I don’t know why more people don’t go to Spain to walk, there are some absolutely wonderful trails.
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L like Laurie Lee and also Walter Starkie’s Spanish Raggle Taggle and Don Gypsy.
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One of the beauties of travelling is meeting different people on your way, especially the sort of people that you perhaps wouldn’t encounter in your ‘normal’ life. We’ve met so many wonderful colourful people all over the world in strange and varied situations. Always a great experience and always so memorable.
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Absolutely, Jonno. One of the joys of travelling. Of course, the flip side is encountering those excruciating individuals who should never be allowed to leave their own shores!
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These days people travel differently so this provides a reference point from travel during yesteryears.
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I still prefer to travel this way when I can, Arv. But I agree fewer and fewer do so.
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yeah! that’s how it is.
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It’s so interesting the quick bonds we build with strangers while traveling, people we often never see again. I kind of love it.
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Yes, me too. It feels as though it’s a part of living lightly, not carrying too much along with us.
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Pingback: An Andalusian Adventure (2) – Mick Canning
Fascinating, Mick! Now I shall go read Part II … I’m enjoying this very much!
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Glad you are!
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How lovely to travel unencumbered like this, Mick. I have always either traveled with my mother or with my children, both of which require a care taking role. This sounds very freeing.
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It is certainly a great way to travel, Robbie. Naturally, I also enjoy travelling with company, but often solo travel suits me best.
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I’m sure most travellers are more likely to chat to strangers, that is part of the point of travel. In the same way people will get on an ancient rickety bus and allow themselves to be driven up a dangerous mountain pass, but at home would only get in a respectable licensed taxi! Looking forward to the next part.
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Ancient rickety bus? Dangerous mountain pass? I don’t know what you mean…
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