Laurel and I have just gotten back from a two week holiday in Andalusia, about an hour inland from Malaga. We stayed in the same place (even the same room!) as we did last year - a small hotel in the mountains overlooking the town of Alcaucin, designed for people with mobility issues and owned and run for the last twenty two years by a charming English couple - Hannah and Adrian.
The food was excellent, the company convivial (more of which later), the pool - most welcome in the thirty two degrees plus temperatures we were exposed to - wonderfully refreshing and then there was the Alhambra Palace….
We had planned to visit the Palace (around 90 minutes from where we were staying) as part of our stay and so duly booked it in some months beforehand. As the number of visitors is controlled you have to book in advance and are not able to just pitch up on the day.
The palace itself has a fascinating history and is a delight to look at so I will let a few of the 200 plus pictures I took do the talking!
As part of this visit I had made a point of reading up on the Reconquista and the fall of Granada beforehand and also, unsurprisingly, made a point of looking at the naval side. Granada was blockaded by the Castilian fleet for the most part which restricted the arrival of any reinforcements from North Africa. A few blockade runners managed to sneak through so there is some gaming potential there - stopping blockade runners being a popular naval pastime, probably since the time of the ancient Greeks!
From the land perspective raids and sieges loom large and so I am looking at some suitable figures for something Portable/Dominion/DBA ish.
Trafalgar with Cheese and Cider….
One of the guests at the hotel gave a very engaging talk on the Battle of Trafalgar one evening. Dave used pieces of cheese to represent key elements of the opposing fleets - Brie for the French, Manchego for the Spanish and Cheddar for the English although the two main attacking lines of the Royal Navy were represented by tins of Cider! Once the talk had concluded the assembled company then joined in a rousing rendition of ‘The Wellerman’ in a variety of keys, some of which were even right ones….
Trafalgar as you have never seen it before! The large lump of Manchego (in the uppermost red ramekin) is of course the Santisima Trinidad….
Dave and I also decided to have a ‘loud shirt Friday’ in which I have to say that the honours went to him for the rather fetching number you see below - the dark blue background of my own attire was eclipsed by the pink hue his own shirt enjoyed….
The two Daves doing Dave stuff….
The only souvenir I acquired whilst on holiday - aside from the pictures and wonderful memories - was a small beer glass. The glass itself was produced to go with a local beer called, you’ve guessed it, Alhambra.
An Alhambra glass, embossed with typical Moorish patterns and with the name near the top. It really is quite lovely and no, it was not obtained by any knavery on my part - I asked the waiter at the restaurant we had lunch at for one and was prepared to pay for it but he insisted I took it free of charge. Ideal for the ‘little green bottle of joy’ that the beer comes in.
We are already looking at returning next year for some new adventures.