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“Adventure is a path. Real adventure – self-determined, self-motivated, often risky – forces you to have firsthand encounters with the world. The world the way it is, not the way you imagine it. Your body will collide with the earth and you will bear witness. In this way you will be compelled to grapple with the limitless kindness and bottomless cruelty of humankind – and perhaps realize that you yourself are capable of both. This will change you. Nothing will ever again be black-and-white.” –Mark Jenkins
Saturday, 25 July 2009
Day 82 – 25th July – Saturday, Manses near Mirepoix

Day 81 – 24th July – Friday

Perry’s family used to be part of a travelling circus, as clowns, magicians and general entertainers. Perry’s son, Correo, has rigged up a tight rope on the lawn which I have become worryingly addicted to. So it’s only a matter of time before I will be writing about some injury or other.
We are so impressed with the kids here; Lukas from Denmark is only 11 and can speak at least 3 languages, the Belgian boys also speak 3 or 4! Puts us to shame it really does.
The BBQ was good fun, Correo entertained us with his impressive table magic and we followed it with a few drinks in the Apollo Lounge bar (which is a converted Airstream trailer inside a tent; pictured – very funky). Perry span some old records and Correo again amazed us with his juggling skills using glow in the dark sticks and spinners.
Day 80 – 23rd July – Thursday, Back in Southern France

Day 79 – 22nd July – Wednesday, Andorra

We drove the 20kms or so to the capital and continued straight through. The city was full of car showrooms, perfumeries and duty free shops. We climbed right to the top of the Pyrenees and passed ski resorts, hotels and restaurants before settling at a place on the Andorra – France border called Pas de la Casa. We parked in a car park with about 30 other mobile homes and walked into town for a beer before dinner. Nothing too special, very pricey, (unless you want to buy cigarettes, alcohol, knives or a stun gun!) we had to be out of the car park by 8am, so we attempted an early night, but by 3am mobile homes were moving to shelter from the high winds that battered the car park.
Day 78 – 21st July – Tuesday. Montblanc.

We travelled past the Delta de Ebro and crossed the Ebro River before getting stuck in traffic in L’Aldea. We then stopped at a Bonsai place just outside town and saw some awesome trees that were more than 120 years old. We eventually found a campsite on the hill outside the Medieval town of Montblanc. Reasonably priced (for Spain) and with good facilities. We have been here all afternoon hogging the washing machine. Everything in the van was covered in red dust from the hurricane, so we have washed the back curtains, the bed sheets, cushion covers and clothes etc. Hopefully clean sheets, an open tailgate and mosquito nets will bring a decent nights sleep.
Ant’s managed to scrape his head again down the washing line; I suspect by the time 8 days are up there won’t be any staples left to take out!
Day 77 – 20th July – Monday. Torre de Sal.

We spent the afternoon on a beach at Torre de Sal, north of Orapesa. Ant slept and I walked the beach – still not able to sleep in the heat.
Phil and Lee arrived in their van about 7pm and we all went out for a lovely Paella meal along the beach. Gonna miss those two, I haven’t laughed so hard and so often in ages.
Wednesday, 22 July 2009
Day 76 – 19th July – Sunday – The Killers

Day 75 – 18th July – Saturday


But the show must go on….. we ventured inside with Phil and Lee (pictured) in time to catch the last 30mins of Bell X1 on the second stage. We also saw Elbow (unfortunately the sound was incredibly poor) and Franz Ferdinand, who were excellent, as well as some other Spanish dudes I can’t remember the name of. (lots of beer on board!).
Day 74 – 17th July – Friday

The day then turned into the most surreal day ever – First Ant split his head open and had to have it stapled together by the first aid team, then we ventured into the festival to see Weller and the Kings of Leon, but Weller was delayed starting due to a fire in what we think was the VIP area, then after a fantastic start (45 minutes into Wellers set) it was stopped altogether due to high winds. The stage lights were swinging wildly, the big screens came down and the electricity temporarily died. We waited about 3 hours to see if things would start up again, but every announcement said the same… ‘ we are doing all we can, we will keep you informed’. When the wind reached ridiculous speeds, we headed back to the camping area amongst total chaos; tents and belongings flying in all directions. Dirt, sand and grit encrusted in our faces, we got back to the van and found the awning on the ground in a crumpled heap, but the van was ok. The wind got worse and we disappeared into Phil and Lees van to watch from there as people were being evacuated from the site, some of them with only the clothes they were wearing. Things quietened down about 3am and we tried to sleep.
Day 73 – 16th July – Thursday – Festival Opening night

Spent the evening in the festival with Carly and Liam. Saw The View (excellent), Mystery Jets (not so good), Oasis (shite) – we left half way through and thankfully missed the Gallagher doing his usual strop on and off stage a few times. We went over to the ‘Pista Pop’ tent and boogied till it got too hot – moved to the FiberFib stage and watched the end of ‘Gang of Four’ when the drummer smashed a microwave to smitherines before heading back to the van. Rock n Roll Man.
The strap on my beloved African rafter sandals that I have had for over ten years finally snapped on the way home. Not happy.
Day 71 – 14th July – Tuesday
Slept a little and woke because of the heat. Spent the evening with Carly and Liam, Hanne and Crispijn at the back of our van and were later joined by Gary and Leslie, Phil and Lee. Much laughter, much beer and even more sangria.
Day 72 – 15th July – Wednesday
Went into town for supplies, then after an aborted BBQ, we again spent the evening drinking and chatting with our neighbours Carly and Liam.
Day 70 – 13th July – Monday –FIB Heineken, Benicassim - Music Festival.
Arrived early enough to be the 3rd van there. First were Gary and Leslie from Scotland, then Crispijn and Hanne from Belgian. After us came Liam and Carly from Australia and then Phil(lippa) and Lee from Hertfordshire. All of us managed to chain 4-way cables to get some electricity, but our fridge is still not performing. After helping Phil and Lee erect their Gazebo in high winds, we spent the evening (until dawn) drinking with them; a hilarious, down-to-earth couple with our sense of humour.
Sunday, 12 July 2009
Day 69 – 12th July – Sunday
What a fantastic night! (http://www.kecofontana.com/) Wesley’s ‘friend’ turned out to be the lead singer, guitarist and Wesley’s ‘husband’. We arrived shortly before 11pm and ordered a couple of beers, the place was cosy, modern and thankfully void of English. The 4-piece band came out and sat on stools in the window… the drummer, Keco the lead, a male singer/clapper and a female clapper/dancer, who was amazing. She got up to perform for a few of the pieces and each and every time the crowd went mad, the floor vibrated and the goosebumps rose. Fantastic.
Wesley joined our table about half twelve and introduced us to various friends, his mother-in-law (an English teacher) and to Keco himself. We finally got back to the campsite about 3am still marvelling at their tribute flamenco version of Michael Jackson’s ‘Thriller’!!!! Awesome.
We had unbroken sleep until about 8am which was a huge improvement on the last few nights, and have spent the day doing all the menial stuff in preparation for the festival… clothes washing, cupboard rearrangements (think we bought too much beer) and stowing of valuables etc. The festival campsite opens at 9am in the morning.
Wesley joined our table about half twelve and introduced us to various friends, his mother-in-law (an English teacher) and to Keco himself. We finally got back to the campsite about 3am still marvelling at their tribute flamenco version of Michael Jackson’s ‘Thriller’!!!! Awesome.
We had unbroken sleep until about 8am which was a huge improvement on the last few nights, and have spent the day doing all the menial stuff in preparation for the festival… clothes washing, cupboard rearrangements (think we bought too much beer) and stowing of valuables etc. The festival campsite opens at 9am in the morning.
Day 68 – 11th July – Saturday

We drove through the centre of Valencia (beautiful city) and found a supermarket near Benicassim. Bought bed sheets, new saucepan and supplies for the festival, before continuing on to the town and the campsite Alhazar…. where we were booked in by Wesley from San Francisco. Wesley invited us to join him at a bar, La Nomade, on the beach at 11pm for a Flamenco show that his friend is a band member in. He also kindly agreed to print our camping ticket for the festival on his home computer for us and bring it along tonight, we are still concerned that the faxed copy won’t scan very well.
We spent the afternoon wandering through town and back along the beach – still not found the venue for Monday, but we at least now have a map.
Day 67 – 10th July – Friday. Benidorm – L’Albufera.
Left Benidorm around lunchtime and drove through the Parc L’Albufera south of Valencia which was gorgeous, vast lush wetlands with herons and egrets all over the place. We found a large open beach just north of El Perello and wild camped. We spent the afternoon on the beach – the sea was the warmest yet and the waves the most powerful. It also had beach showers and so we were able to freshen up before our pasta dinner on the sand watching the fisherman (glass of vino in hand of course). Unfortunately sleep wasn’t easy; the car park we had chosen (farthest away from the road and quiet) seemed to be a favourite after dark – particularly for a couple of guys who parked right next door to us and began dancing for each other right outside the van! As fears grew that we’d picked a local dogging spot, we realised the pair were actually doing us a favour…. each car that pulled in shone their lights at the half-clothed guys and drove straight out again, best security guards in the world!
Next to disrupt were the mosquitoes …in full force – we sat up in bed at dawn and killed a dozen or so before finally we could hear them no more.
Next to disrupt were the mosquitoes …in full force – we sat up in bed at dawn and killed a dozen or so before finally we could hear them no more.
Day 67 – 10th July – Friday. Benidorm – L’Albufera.
Left Benidorm around lunchtime and drove through the Parc L’Albufera south of Valencia which was gorgeous, vast lush wetlands with herons and egrets all over the place. We found a large open beach just north of El Perello and wild camped. We spent the afternoon on the beach – the sea was the warmest yet and the waves the most powerful. It also had beach showers and so we were able to freshen up before our pasta dinner on the sand watching the fisherman (glass of vino in hand of course). Unfortunately sleep wasn’t easy; the car park we had chosen (farthest away from the road and quiet) seemed to be a favourite after dark – particularly for a couple of guys who parked right next door to us and began dancing for each other right outside the van! As fears grew that we’d picked a local dogging spot, we realised the pair were actually doing us a favour…. each car that pulled in shone their lights at the half-clothed guys and drove straight out again, best security guards in the world!
Next to disrupt were the mosquitoes …in full force – we sat up in bed at dawn and killed a dozen or so before finally we could hear them no more.
Next to disrupt were the mosquitoes …in full force – we sat up in bed at dawn and killed a dozen or so before finally we could hear them no more.
Day 66 – 9th July – Thursday. Benidorm still.
Still alive, although Ant is a little worse for wear today – had a massive fry up and even treated ourselves to a can of Heinz baked beans to go with it.
Thankfully the sun is not out today and we woke to a bit of warm rain… perfect for a fuzzy head.
We checked the festival website on the campsite computers and realised Bee also needed a ticket for the campsite so after many complications and four random reboots by the computer, we successfully bought one, which Sarah then kindly faxed back to us as there are no printers here – fingers crossed they let us in with a faxed copy.
Thankfully the sun is not out today and we woke to a bit of warm rain… perfect for a fuzzy head.
We checked the festival website on the campsite computers and realised Bee also needed a ticket for the campsite so after many complications and four random reboots by the computer, we successfully bought one, which Sarah then kindly faxed back to us as there are no printers here – fingers crossed they let us in with a faxed copy.
Thursday, 9 July 2009
Day 65 – 8th July – Wednesday. Benidorm!

We wandered into town after lunch looking for a dress and some new shorts. I tried on countless dresses, got very sweaty, sticky and frustrated, and was just about to give up, when we found a surf shop on the beach and found what we were looking for. A much needed beer was called for, so we headed along the beach a bit further and sat in a bar watching the brits on their mobility scooters going backwards and forwards along the beach in front of us. Before we knew it, one beer turned into five (or was it six?!?) and it was gone midnight!! Drinking in the afternoon on an empty stomach in 40 degree heat, is not a wise move.
Day 64 – 7th July – Tuesday. Vilajoyosa.

Ant joined me on the beach shortly after and we watched it fill up with various nationalities. We heard a scream and looked up to see two women racing to get out of the water as one of them had seen a huge jellyfish. I waited until the lifeguards had searched up and down in the water with their goggles on before having a swim myself.
We left around lunchtime and decided to travel the 15kms north to Benidorm and find a campsite. Last time I went to Benidorm I was 18 and on a girls-only, brits-behaving-badly-abroad package holiday. An eye-opener I can tell you. Ant’s only knowledge of the place is stories told him by his mate from Cyprus, and the Johnny Vegas portrayal on TV…so we decided to give it a go. I have a feeling we might live to regret it.
Day 63 – 6th July – Monday. Vilajoyosa.

Day 62 – 5th July – Sunday. Santa Polo.

Sunday, 5 July 2009
Day 61 – 4th July – Saturday, Los Lobos.
Staying again – this place is great; quiet, excellent facilities and the most entertaining couple we have met so far (‘C-Thatch’ turns out to be talkative Cherry from Birmingham). Every evening we sit by the van listening to her on the phone outside her little office (garden shed) opposite us chatting to friends family and residents about anything and everything.
Day 60 – 3rd July – Friday, Los Lobos.

‘Horacio’ (our onboard Cactus who is being re-housed in Cyprus) has had a facelift, Ant removed his protective scaffolding made from wooden kebab skewers as it was looking a bit ropey and replaced it with a newly carved fork support which even has his initial carved into it. Despite the countless times I’ve punctured myself on him, sworn at him and cursed the decision to bring him with us… he does look quite smart now.
Day 59 – 2nd July – Thursday, Los Lobos.
Woke late after a fairly good night’s sleep (Ant only woke to kill 2 mossies) before he ventured out of the site to find some more wood for whittling. He has finished the main pieces, only the pawns to go.
Thursday, 2 July 2009
Day 58 – 1st July – Wednesday, Los Lobos.
After another night spent squashing mosquitoes and melting in the heat (we don’t leave the back door open at night when wild camping for security reasons) we both woke a bit groggy and decided to find a campsite for a much needed shower (arse still itching) and some escape from the heat.
We headed north towards Cuevas del Almanzora because the map showed it to have a lake / reservoir. No lake. No reservoir. Only a dried up riverbed and a half-built, empty canal. Back to the beach at Villaricos and we found a campsite, but it wanted €29 per night… my arse wasn’t that itchy. We continued towards Los Lobos and in the middle of nowhere found this mobile home park with space for travellers. A much more respectable €17 per night with excellent
showers, run by an English couple. He sounds the spit of Geoff Boycott and she sounds like Carol Thatcher, but they are most helpful and keep the place in immaculate condition. As it was lunchtime and we couldn’t actually get into the site or find anybody to help us, we went looking for somewhere to buy supplies as we intend to stay two nights. We found the Spanish equivalent of ‘Arkwrights’ in Los Lobos; there wasn’t anything this tiny store didn’t sell, from meats and cheeses, veg and salad to shower curtains and DVD players. The place was rammed from floor to ceiling with all sorts of stuff.
We headed north towards Cuevas del Almanzora because the map showed it to have a lake / reservoir. No lake. No reservoir. Only a dried up riverbed and a half-built, empty canal. Back to the beach at Villaricos and we found a campsite, but it wanted €29 per night… my arse wasn’t that itchy. We continued towards Los Lobos and in the middle of nowhere found this mobile home park with space for travellers. A much more respectable €17 per night with excellent

Day 57 – 30th June – Tuesday, Castell de Ferro.

We drove on the main coast road to Almeria passing hundreds and hundreds of these plastic pepper tents, they stretched as far as the eye could see from the coast on our right to the foot on the mountains on our left. So we continued to the natural parkland of Capo de Gata where we saw fields of flowering cactus and dry scrub. We stopped at the beach opposite ‘Las Salinas’, large salt marshes just inland from the sea, and spent a couple of hours on the deserted beach (we later discovered the desertion was probably due to the hundreds of jellyfish that lined the shore!) before getting back in the van away from the searing heat.

I spent some time cooling down in the bird hide on the marshes watching the flamingos, Avocets and Godwits wading for insects in the mud. We moved the van from the beach to the marshes car park and had a fry up as visitors and dog walkers, runners and ramblers came and went. As the sun set, we were surprised to see a wild fox only metres from the van before it ran off into the scrub.
Day 56 – 29th June – Monday, La Alpujarra.


Day 55 – 28th June – Sunday, Pinos Genil.
Day 54 – 27th June – Saturday, Pinos Genil. Spain.

Ant hasn’t lost his fears of bugs yet though…. Lol… yesterday one landed on him whilst he was carving and as he tried to ‘casually flick it off’, as he put it, he managed to hurl his penknife straight past my face and into Bees side! Of course we looked through the book and discovered it must have been a flesh-eating, blood-sucking, poisonous bug of the rarest kind since it did not feature anywhere.

Day 53 – 26th June – Friday, Pinos Genil, Near Granada. The Sierra Nevada.

We finally came to rest on a tiny mountainside campsite in Pinos Genil on the Genil River. We chose it because its name, ‘Aguas Blancas’, suggested views of rushing rapids and mountain waterfalls, it turned out to be another small river that crossed the road in front of us… as we pulled in there was thankfully a wooden bridge crossing the water albeit a bit rickety.. I got out to have a look just as a man came out and told us we ought not to take the bridge, but that it would be safer to drive through the water, Bee cruised casually through and we found a lovely spot with our own bathroom; Camping en suite. We love it. By 3pm we were sat in the shade with wine, olives, cheese and fresh bread listening to the river below.
Day 52 – 25th June – Thursday, On the road again!! Yeeha.


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