Thursday, 20 July 2017

spain + portugal 3: to avilés and a coruña

     Next, it's back to the coast and the town of Avilés. This has a hellish hinterland of old industry, all smoking chimneys and rusting sheds. These northern provinces, iron- and coal-rich, were Spain's major workshop and the industry still clings on. But the town itself has a rather fine medieval core, with colonnaded streets, small squares and many noble palaces, a nice size to wander around at random.
      We stayed in the Palacio de Avilés, now an NH hotel, which has a lovely interior, with grand staircases and wide, tapestried passages. There is a formal garden and a park behind, and the hotel faces onto the main square, with the grand facade of the town hall opposite. The restaurant provided one of the best bargains of the trip, with a fixed price meal of three courses for 20 euros, including water and wine. Santiago, our extremely friendly young waiter, insisted on filling up our glasses frequently; and they obviously had a chef who cared, with some mouth watering offerings.
      Nearby is a beautiful beach, at Salinas, unfortunately backed by insensitive 70s residential blocks, but great for a long walk on the blustery, grey day we were there. We also visited Gijón (Xixón in the local language), a lively town with some fine very early Romanesque churches, set on rocky promontory between two beaches. There is a bagpipe museum: we gave it a miss.
      Our road, the A8, continued to burrow through mountains and fly over wide estuaries as we travelled on into Spain's most remote community, Galicia. This region has a strong Celtic heritage, with a fondness for cider and bagpipes (smaller and more tuneful than the Scottish variety) much in evidence. In this northern part of Spain you can find many red-headed, pale skinned individuals who would look perfectly at home in Scotland or Ireland. Each of the autonomous communities has its own language these days, although judging from the roadsigns, Asturian is not so different from Castilian (though they call it Bablé, which may be a joke). However, Galician is closer to Portuguese and the two can understand each other. We passed rapidly along this far north western coast to A Coruña, a bustling port city.
      The medieval core was built defensively on a rocky peninsula. Some pleasant streets here but signs of neglect with many empty buildings, especially on the less fashionable side where we stayed, which however has a very nice beach. There are signs that the local authority has put a lot of money in recent years into the port side of the city, with many smart bars facing onto newly renovated streetscape by a marina and in the nearby vast pedestrian square, Praza María Pita. She was a local heroine who rallied the troops when Sir Francis Drake attempted to invade the city, home port of the Armada.
      In fact, the English and this town have a lot of 'previous'. It was the main port for trade with England, and for English pilgrims going to Santiago, and John of Gaunt was married to a Galician princess and tried to take over the throne. His descendants included Isabella, the Catholic Monarch. It was also the site of a Dunkirk-style retreat by British forces during the Napoleonic wars.
      Just behind the port esplanade is a network of narrow streets crammed with tapas bars, and crammed with people too at the weekend when we were there. This is how the locals eat: in fact, there are very few formal restaurants. We happened upon a delightful bar where a well tattooed staff member chatted and guided us through the options, not just the traditional tapas basics but many innovative options too, including a delicious ceviche. Very nice, and she also recommended an excellent and cheap bottle of the local vino tinto.
We walked around the head of the peninsula, which is a little bleak in places, with some ill conceived municipal housing, but features the Torre de Hércules, a huge foursquare stone tower, which claims to be the world's oldest functioning lighthouse. Its core is second century Roman, although it has been overbuilt over the years. It is now a world heritage site.
      We took a side trip from A Coruña to Cap Finisterra – 'the end of the world' – in the far NW corner of Spain. This is also the end of the line for the keener pilgrims who, not content with trekking on foot to Santiago de Compostela, carry on a few days, some of them burning their boots when they get here! You could understand how this once felt like the end of the world.

      We also visited one of the best beaches we have ever encountered, hidden and untouched, with just a boardwalk across the marshes behind, near Carnota, just to the south. So good that we came back next day en route to Santiago and found ourselves literally the only people on the beach. A perfect crescent of soft white sand, backed by marram grassed dunes, with the wild Atlantic waves crashing in. Above Carnota on a remote mountain road amidst a forest of elegant wind turbines, we found a fantastic panorama back to the cape and the sparkling sea, an eagle's view of this rugged coast.

No comments:

Post a Comment