Here we sit in the Madrid Chemartin train station - exactly where we sat at the beginning of our journey as we waited for our night train to Lisbon. Caitie had warned us that the trains to/from Alicante sell out, but we have not yet experienced a problem getting on a train when we wanted. Until now. We arrived at the Avila train station at 11:00 for a 12:17 train direct to Alicante to find that it was "Completo" which Mike was savvy enough to figure out meant, "Sold out- should have planned ahead". The ticket officer told in Spanish to get on the train destined for Madrid pulling in immediately and worry about getting to Alicante from Madrid. Running down the stairs and up again at the next set of tracks in order to get a train from which people were already streaming out was a challenge but we made it. Even this train was almost full, so we spent much of the train wedge into backward sitting seats across from a young couple that provided what little entertainment available on this pokey little local to Madrid. We got to see her apply her make-up while he sheepishly held her mirror for her as part of an overall morning grooming session. A soft spoken Spanish man, he sat wearing a shirt prominently displaying a Camp Pendleton logo, although he probably had no idea where this spot, nearby to my childhood hometown, resided.
After arriving in the main Madrid train station we stood in line (once again, divided lines for future or "Anticipata" tickets, vs the long line we needed to stand in for tickets for "hoy/immediata". Here they also have lines for international trains. Above the hoy line was the not very promising sign listing "completos" and all trains to Alicante until 7:00PM. Which is why we find ourselves sitting in the train station today in the same waiting room as we sat in a month ago, eating the same sandwiches, working on the blog. Deja vu.
Although we have gained a lot by not following the pre-planned itinerary (things like the ability to travel to cooler locations, to spend more time in a location you love, like Portugal or Northern Spain) we have also spent time in train stations waiting around for unpopular train times because we did not reserve ahead, or paid a slightly higher hotel rate because the lower rate hotels were "completo". Nevertheless, I think we are quite happy with the trade-offs we have made.
We talked to Caitie last night and she is expecting us today. We are so excited to see her and have her show us around the city she loves so much.
I'll write after we get to Alicante and let you know how it is. The weather report predicts two 90 degree days today and tomorrow, so let's hope the air conditioner we paid extra to get in Alicante is working and the jinx has passed.
Deanne
Monday, August 13, 2007
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3 comments:
Dear Deanne and Mike,
There is so much deja vu for me as you write from Spain. Think 1954-5, Franco in charge of Spain. People still wearing black in mourning from the Civil War. We were traveling with so little money, staying in really cheap hotels with a toilet down the hall, and eating ham and cheese sandwiches every day. And pregnant during some of the travels. I remember the vendors calling out their wares early in the morning outside our hotel room. "pan", "pan", etc.
The smells and sounds of Spain in those poor days and the struggles are all coming back to me. A few happy memories, but also many sad ones. Spain seemed all in mourning to me at that time. Bullet holes still remained on many of the buildings, and most people were poor. A very small middle class. There! Did I cheer you up? Also, NO air conditioning of course, any where, except the Ritz Hotel in Madrid. (Where we would sneak in just to get cool.)
I love your unfolding experience.
Give my love to Caitie. How fun for her to be able to translate for you. Lots of love, Donna
I think you can finance your next trip by selling this blog to a travel channel. It's priceless!
Love Ya,
jaye
Thank you both for writing. Donna, you get a chapter in the book and Jaye, you can be our agent selling this to a tv station. It is wonderful to know you are out there reading about our adventures. We love you both,
Deanne and Mike
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