Pla de l’Estany, Catalunya

Pla de l’Estany, Catalunya

History and archaeology in the lakeside town of Banyoles

If the first day of our Live the History tour in Pla de L’Estany was all about the lake at Banyoles and food and wine, our second day was jam packed full of history.

Our first stop was at the cave complex of Serinyà.  Beginning with a short video we were given a guided tour around the caves where we learnt how the prehistoric hunters and gatherers lived and we were also told how we know so much about their lives today from the evidence which is being collected at the site.  And you get a quality tour because the guides are also the archaeologists and are passionate about the region and the history.

the prehistoric caves

A series of caverns are set into the cliff above the river (a water source close by was a necessity) and we could stand in a cave where people from the Palaeothanic period once lived, and where they stored their supplies and buried their dead.  We were invited to stand on the platform that the archaeologists work from and were shown how the area is divided up into square metres with cords and lines (imagine a game of Battleships) and then we went down to the area by the river for some demonstrations and workshops.

first you have to capture your lunch

We shot arrows at a target to replicate hunting for our lunch, we saw how to made fire from pieces of flint and also how to fashion a ‘knife’ from a piece of flint.  Maria painted on a wall with paints made from various minerals and we ate a lunch that had been cooked using food and methods from the prehistoric age.

learning how the cave dwellers lived

After lunch we drove to a nearby village.  There are 11 towns and villages in this area with 64 Romanesque churches.  The church that we visited is always locked and nobody normally is allowed to enter, but somehow, the tourist offices of Costa Brava and Pla de l’Estany had pulled it off and it had been unlocked for us.  It was a small church similar to many others, but this one had a thirteenth century fresco above the altar.  Other frescos from the other churches have been preserved but this one is special because it s the only one still in situ in its original location.

And then we went back to the town of Banyoles where we visited the Neolithic village of La Draga.  A reconstruction of some of the huts and their contents is displayed on the actual site where the remains have been unearthed.  And what makes this place special and rare is that archaeologists are unearthing actual fibrous, material remains.  The lake water flooded the site and then the chemical soup preserved the timbers, canes, thatch, ropes and everything else – all the materials which would normally decompose over time and which leave the experts guessing.  Here they don’t have to guess because they have access to building materials and items that were last used 7400 years ago!  Now that is seriously old!

the reconstructed village of La Draga

The items are being excavated and carefully preserved in damp, humid conditions which replicate the lake water, but I was allowed to hold a piece of timber which once formed a part of a Neolithic hut, thousands of years ago.  Marta was another person who was passionate about her subject of archaeology and excitedly showed us around the site.  The following day we would be meeting up with her again for a tour of Banyoles town.

an ancient house timber

Dining Out

We had dinner in the local, family run Restaurant Can Xabanet in Banyoles. We had lots of different style Catalan dishes to try, and in fact the food just didn’t seem to stop coming. We compared a picture to the owner as he was when he first opened the restaurant and we ate and we chatted and we compared travel stories.

then and now

The restaurant has a very comprehensive menu with traditional Catalan dishes and made from the finest ingredients.  They were presented in a fresh modern way in relaxing surroundings and with a fine attention to detail.

Sleeping

We spent 2 nights on the outskirts of Banyoles couresy of the Hotel La Sala de Camos.

The owners Vanessa, Mario and Vanessa’s dad Juan took over the existing hotel very recently but already it feels as if they have been there forever.  Their warm welcome and attention to the little details will make your stay here memorable, relaxing and very special.  There are just 8 bedrooms, all of which are individually styled and decorated and each is very different.

La Sala de Camos. The church is the building on the right

My room was tucked in the corner on the ground floor and it had views out over the lawn.  The bathroom was very unusual and stretched out behind my room and further, with a bath tub set lengthways  in an alcove and the toilet was at the furthest end and around the corner.  It was a little sanctuary and a perfect place to unwind.

my perfect bedroom

There are lots of little nooks and crannies at La Sala de Camos where you can sit and relax, with areas to read a book or watch TV.  There are balconies and mezzanine floors, verandas and in the top bedroom, a shower and a toilet with a view!  There is a lovely large swimming pool and lawns and flower beds, outdoor furniture and a little snug where you can sit and chat at one end of the veranda.

a pool with a view

The house comes complete with a well – now covered with a glass panel, holes in the wall through which the priest used to spy on who was coming and going to the church, and which is within spitting distance from the house – in fact you can almost reach out and touch it – and terracotta pots on an outside wall for birds to nest in.

a loo with a view

Just along the path is the home of a local family who live in the traditional rural way – that is – above their animals.  Goats scramble in and out of the barn to their yard in the front and you have amazing views down across the trees.

traditional living above the animals

We had a good breakfast at the Hotel La Sala de Camos and they will also prepare lunch and/or an evening meal if you let them know, and whilst it is set in the countryside, it is not far at all from the town.

The dining room with a reading space above

The following day Marta led us on a walking tour around Banyoles.  This pretty little lakeside town was founded by Benedictine monks after the French invaded the region whilst chasing the Moors out.  One quirky feature in Banyoles are the irrigation channels which were cut all through the town to bring water from the lake.  This water worked mills and provided sanitation and still runs along channels down the sides of the streets and under the roadways.  Behind the building which houses the tourist offices on the main square you can see a water wheel in what was once the House of Millmen.

The original water course from the lake

Flour was ground at this site in the 13 Century, courtesy of the water courses – and we also visited an ancient building – the Llotja del tint – that now houses the tint or dying museum.   There were once deep pits in the floor where the dying process took place and it has a high Gothic vaulted ceiling to allow the toxic fumes to escape.  The water channels brought fresh water to the dye baths and the region was famous for its coloured wool products.

Nowadays the main square is home to a bustling and colourful market on a Wednesday with stalls set among the 40 arches that line the square, much as they must have done down the centuries.  The old town walls can still be seen in places dating from the 13th Century and the town museum is situated in what was originally the first town hall dating from the 1303.

Packing up the market in the square

Carrer Nou (New Street) is actually one of the oldest streets in the town and is lined with many traditional buildings.  The old three storey houses lean inwards and you can still make out some of the symbols which have been carved over the doorways and which indicated what trade the occupants carried out – a pedagogic message for the people who were unable to read and write.  The city became wealthy from its cloth dying industry and as a result there are many old buildings and churches which were built by the emerging bourgeois class who fought the clergy for more power.

Arches surrounding the square

We were also allowed to view a magnificent silver box which was sadly stolen and damaged.  It was crafted in 1435 and as the church raised money they added intricate figures of saints and martyrs to the cover of the box, but they were broken down and sold off after the box was stolen.  Some of the figures were recovered in an auction in the Netherlands and the art thief known as Erik the Belgium was finally captured although there are still some missing elements from the piece.

The beautiful silver box

I had a wonderful time in the region of Banyoles.  The Catalan people are welcoming and friendly, the food and drink is fabulous and the countryside has plenty to keep nature lovers and history buffs entertained.  I hope to return and view the completed works by the strambotic artist Quim Hereu (click here if you missed my previous story) and explore some more of the pretty countryside.  Before this trip ended I also found time to visit Girona during the wonderful flower festival and relax at the beach resort of Platja d’Aro.  Sign up and follow me to make sure that you catch future articles.

The main square after the market has gone

 

I would like to thank the tourist boards of Pla de l’Estany and Catalunya for their support in making this visit possible, however all opinions and comments are, as always, my own

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A pairing dinner and a Michelin star restaurant

A pairing dinner and a Michelin star restaurant

An engineer turned artist;

an artist turned chef 

We were driven to an industrial park on the outskirts of Banyoles for dinner.  The itinerary told us that we would be attending a ‘pairing dinner’ with the strambotic painter Quim Hereu. In the golden evening sun we were warmly welcomed by Quim and his wife Tania and taken inside the industrial unit where a surreal world had been created.  Follow this link to Quim’s website: hereu.net

 

The Stram Project

Jaume introduces Quim and his work

The large space was totally dominated by Quim’s latest work in progress – which is the second of a trilogy of works.   The entire back wall was a work-in-progress – a MASSIVE painting with vibrant colours and wherever you looked you could spot something surreal or something simply beautiful.  The  first painting was already boxed up in readiness for its journey to Mexico where a buyer hopefully waits, the huge wooden crate stapled shut, although Quim would dearly love to see the painting exhibited in Girona.

Glassware and cutlery gleamed on a circular table in the centre of the room and the Argentinian chef Gonzalo Martinez  who is based in Barcelona had set up a kitchen in one corner of the room and was studiously piping tiny little balls of foie gras onto plates.  An old iron bed which had once belonged to Quim’s grandfather and a glasshouse glowing with light from a red chandelier were the only other decorations.  Casually propped against one wall was the original drawing from which Quim was replicating his painting.

the table set for dinner

 

Quim was passionate about his subject and spoke vivaciously in Catalan whilst Juame Marin the Director of Marketing at the tourist board: Costa Brava Girona  was translating just as fast.  Forgive me if I am a little inaccurate but there was so much information to absorb.  Strambotism is an artistic movement that was created and originated in Catalunya around 1974.  At first glance it has similarities to surrealism but it is a totally separate entity.  As I have already said, you could gaze forever at Quim’s work and always see something new.

After the introductions we all took our seats, joined by Jordi Xargay i Congost, the President of the Consell Comarcal del Pla de l’Estany and Ferran Vila Pugol who is one of the top sommeliers in the region. Gonzalo the chef had designed and produced each course to represent, compliment and explain a different aspect from some of Quim’s works, while Ferran the sommelier had paired a drink to compliment the food (and therefore also the paintings), even brewing or making some of them himself.

the centre piece of the painting

The first of the trilogy represents time, the birth of Venus and the craving to get eternal youth.  I hope that Quim will forgive me if I don’t explain this correctly but the snail is key to the factory of time and also appears in the second painting which is about power.  Not the power of swords, or strength or males, but it is more subtle. The centre figure of a lady on a horse is the first queen of Catalunya who had power over her subjects and even the Pope of the time.  She holds a snail in her hand – and here is another link where the snail mirrors and represents time.  Watch a snail and it moves frustratingly slowly.  Move away for a short while and when you return it has gone.  In the same way as time slips suddenly away from us and you are at the end of your life.  Blink and you miss it. The third painting will represent freedom; because without freedom one can’t enjoy the other two concepts of time and power.  The works represent six years of Quim’s life, with the majority of his time taken at the design stage with a blank canvas.  These works are massive – 6metres by 12 metres, and the problem has been finding a buyer or a space large enough to exhibit them.  As I mentioned before, Quim would dearly love Girona to display them, and preferably displayed together.  He is so passionate about this that he is actually prepared to donate them for free, despite the amount of time that he has dedicated to painting them.

 The food and drink

the chef Gonzalo at work

This pairing dinner formed a part of the ‘Live the History’ trip which Jaume and his team had arranged following the TBEX conference.  Three other travel bloggers and myself had the most interesting of evenings.  The four of us dined along with Jaume, Vikki who was our tour guide, and the other guests while Gonzalo kept extremely busy in his kitchen. You can see his website here: (www.gonzamartinez.com).  We were in the company of true creatives and artists, passionate about their respective mediums and their region. Our first drink was a beer, brewed by Ferran with 3 different types of hops – and – this is the cool thing – the texture in the mouth was more important than the smell or the taste as it complimented the textures of the food and the art. By eating replicates of the snails and the clock we were consuming the representation of the snails/time and internalising it.

The flavours were sublime: Catalan style spinach, pinenuts, raisins Iberian ham, fois gras and a tiny cypress tree, together with a label – continued the theme of internalising the art and strambotism. Our second drink was a sparkling wine – again made by Ferran who had produced only 300 bottles and which balanced the saltiness of the chequerboard of the carpa of tuna and anchovies and raspberry caviar.

soup with a twist – in porons

Perhaps the pairing was most visual with the third dish.  It was matched to a desert scene but one where the turbaned camel riders had porons instead of heads (a poron is a typical Spanish way of serving wine) – and now we had to drink the most exquisite soup from glass porons.  The desert theme was continued with home made harissa and fish on skewers and paired with a very special white wine from the region.  We kept the same shape wine glasses throughout our meal and Ferran explained that in his sommelier world the shape of the glass has no meaning at all. The drink is appreciated through smell and taste not by the shape of the glass.  He also told us that this region of Catalunya is one of the chief producers of cork, and while the artificial bottle stops are fine for a young wine, an older wine should only be stoppered with cork. Our fourth course was a sweet sausage accompanied by a foamy mashed potato.  But even the sausages were not simple.  They each had a centre of the local herbal drink ratafia and had an outer casing first of a seaweed and then the finest, thinnest spring-roll pastry.  The strong flavours of the sausage were balanced with a robust red wine from the south of Catalunya.

This fourth course was paired with the massive painting under which we were all seated and by now I was certainly appreciating the imagery and the connections.  The strength of the horse, the meatiness of the sausage and the flavours of the red wine all connected and flowed through each other. The fifth course was about cats and the apple temple, and like the painting and the sparkling Muscat wine it had an altogether lighter feel to it.

work in progress

Quim talked about his influencers and how with the Catalan spirit and strambotism his creativity and techniques can fly. What makes Quim so amazing is that he initially studied as an engineer but he followed his passion and moved across into the art world.

A Michelin star lunch

The following day we took lunch at a Michelin star restaurant in Banyoles where the chef had moved from the art world into that of food and cooking.

Both Quim the artist and Pere the chef are true masters in their second choice of career and are at the top of the tree – which also proves that it is never too late to follow our dreams and our hearts and we should pursue that which makes us truly happy.

Ca l’Arpa is a Michelin star restaurant in Banyoles where we were privileged to a tasting lunch.  The chef Pere Arpa is from the town and his restaurant and small boutique style hotel is in what was once his grandfather’s house.  Decorated in muted greys and whites with just a few splashes of colour, one of the nice touches in the dining room were the huge plate glass windows which offered a view to the shiny stainless steel kitchens and the chefs working behind the scenes.

the window into the kitchen

Our wine was carefully chosen to compliment the meal and as was to be expected, everything was sourced and produced locally and from Catalunya.  The first wine interestingly was aged in ceramic barrels as opposed to the traditional wood and from the Finca Olvidardots and made by a woman which is apparently also quite unusual in what is a predominately male dominated occupation here.  The wine accompanied our starter of a ravioli of apples and black sausage (blood sausage and rice) – and then the food kept coming.

We had numerous, exquisite tastes and bursts of flavours, all presented on little platters or saucers and served to us either by Pere himself or his wife Montserrat, along  with a detailed explanation of what we were eating or drinking and how the flavours had been designed and combined. One of the wines was a biodynamic wine and came in a plain bottle with no label – just a simple collar around the cork.  This was produced by a Swiss owner at the cellar Bell Lloc near Palamos. Then followed an animated discussion around language and exactly what cut of meat we were eating when Pere presented it to our table before carving it.  He said that it was veal – and the ultimate general consensus was the shank, but whatever, it just melted in the mouth and it was divine.  Pere had not forgotten that one of our group was a vegetarian and he had devised separate dishes for her with just as much care and thought as those for the rest of us.

Pere Arpa explains his dish

Our menu included delights such as a fresh cheese and plums, a sweet and sour terrine of pig’s head with onions, marinaded sardines on a little bed of chickpea puree with sunflower seeds scattered over the top and green, white and purple asparagus.  There was a sweet sausage of liver and curry butter (very subtle and delicate), a dessert of passion fruit and marscapone and a whole range of breads during the meal and a selection of little bonbons at the end.

After our lunch Pere showed us around the hotel upstairs and some of the bedrooms which have all been tastefully decorated and which overlook a serene little courtyard and garden at the back of the building.   Pere changed the direction of his career at the age of 25 and for 20 years he has dedicated himself to cooking.  He moved into his grandfather’s old home 8 years ago and extended and altered the house so that he could accommodate guests whilst cooking.  The overall ambience is one of calmness and tranquility.  There is a link to his previous life as an artist (with paint as he is still creating masterpieces albeit with food) as one of his paintings is displayed behind the reception desk.

Ca l’Arpa

 The magic and passion of Catalunya

The unique experience of the pairing dinner hosted by Quim Hereu was a very different experience to our lunch at Cal l’Arpa, but the Catalan region was weaving its magic and encircling and entwining us, drawing us tighter with strands of an opaque smoky substance.  Hard to see and not entirely tangible but there and ever present, the region has a culture and an identity, a passion and a pride which is expressed through its people and its food and its drink.

Engineer becomes artist, artist becomes chef. two men.  Both creative, talented and passionate.  Both proudly Catalan.

Quim produces his works in an industrial space; his initial career as an engineer stemmed from industry and Pere now lives and works in the space of his grandfather.   Thanks to everybody involved from the tourist agencies of Pla de l’Estany, Pirineu de Girona, the Costa Brava and Catalunya who made these such amazing experiences.  As usual, all opinions are my own and were not influenced in any way.

An introduction to the region of Pla de l’Estany

An introduction to the region of Pla de l’Estany

A small corner of Catalunya with a wealth of things to see and to do

Following the TBEX travel bloggers’ conference, I was thrilled to join a press trip with three other bloggers and Vikki our excellent organiser and host. Several detailed articles are in the pipeline but in the meantime, this is how our trip began.

Getting to know each other on the lake at Banyoles

After a walk along the coastal footpath which skirts Lloret de Mar our little group went by coach to the lake at Banyoles where we boarded a boat for a trip around the lake.  We ate lunch in the sun and we learnt a little bit more about the region of Pla de L’Estany from Txell who lives in Banyoles and who was to join us for a day or so. The boat was electric which therefore reduced both noise and fuel pollution on the water; and which happened to be the lake that was used for the rowing events when Barcelona hosted the Olympics.  As we glided around the incredibly green lake looking at the little fishing houses which were dotted around the water’s edge we could see the Pyrenees in the distance; some of which still had snow on their tops, and cyclists and joggers were riding or running around the perimeter path.

One of the little fishing houses

Some stats and facts about the lake at Banyoles

  • Banyoles is the capital of the Ple de l’Estany region
  • The lake measures 6650 metres around the perimeter,  it has an average depth of 15 metres and it is 132 metres at its deepest.
  • Rowing, canoeing, swimming, kyaking and triathlon all take place on the water.
  • Fishing is permitted but all fish must be returned live to the lake.
  • The water is incredibly clean being filtered first through the rocks and then via a series of underground caverns before bubbling back up through the lake bed
  • The little fishing houses were built as bases from which the rich could come and fish at weekends and during the holidays.
  • Bicycles can be rented in the town of Banyoles and there are 10 different routes of varying difficulties in and around the area.

After our ever so relaxing boat tour which was a lovely way to ease into the trip and to get to know each other, we went on to the quaint little town of Crespia.

Crespia siesta

Not a lot was happening when we were there, although once a year they host a honey fair when the place comes alive.  We left Crespia to its own devices basking quietly in the sun and we hiked a short way out of the village and up a hillside to a cave.  From the cave we had views down over a river which had been dammed to form a small reservoir and today, just a small speck sitting cross-legged under the dam wall was a drummer playing a kettledrum and a lady who was moving and dancing to the music.  The sounds floated gently up to us as we looked around the little shrine of Sant Miquel de la Roca with its little nativity figures arranged on a rock shelf in one corner and we peered out through the windows which had been carved out of the spiky grey rocks.

Can you spot the tiny figures down on the dam?

Leaving the village behind, dazzling yellow fields of rapeseed lined the roads, whilst in the fields that contained grass or cereals, swathes of poppies bobbed and nodded to the sun, their scarlet petals sometimes more prolific than the green grass that they had taken up residence in.

Our next stop was to visit the home and vineyard of Joaquim Reig and Montserrat Torrens.

The Baronia de Vilademuls Winery

Joaquim and Montserrat

Joaquim and Montserrat harvest the grapes manually and produce a red wine from their 2000 vines, usually producing 2200 litres annually.  The wine is mainly sold to local high end restaurants in Girona, although some makes its way to Belgium and the Netherlands.  Incidentally this is the only vineyard in the immediate region, and the oldest vine is currently about 30 years old although the farm has been producing wine for much longer than that.

I was interested to learn that the vines don’t suffer too much from fungal diseases, mildew or insect attack – due to the geography and the prevailing winds which blow from the north.  The winds are dry and cool and ‘clean’ the air, the land and the vines and prevent many problems which plague other vineyards.

Joaquim has been producing wines as a business venture for the last 12 years since his retirement, when he increased the time that he was able to dedicate to his hobby.  He joked that he could have spent the same amount of time and the same money in that time playing tennis or golf – but of course he would not have had any wine to drink!

The Baronia de Vilademuls wine sits in the barrel for a minimum of 10 months and is traditionally drawn off the sediment during March  at a time of a new moon or no moon. When it is time to bottle the wine, 4 people work side by side to fill, cork, label and pack and they can turn around an impressive 500 bottles an hour.  A large barrel sits in pride of place which predates 1957 and which once belonged to Joaquim’s grandfather and is another link to the past in a place where even the walls of the house remind you of what had gone before.

When Joaquim’s family decided to extend the cellars beneath their farmhouse they discovered old cellars which had previously been sealed up; although they already knew that  knew that their home was inextricably linked to the ancient castle which once stood in the village, because their farmhouse had been built into and around the original stone walls, incorporating the history of the village into the fabric of their lives.

down in the wine cellar

Their village was an old settlement which had a substantial castle dominating it as far back as the 10th century.  At that time, the owner of the castle killed the son of the lord who lived in the next village.  In revenge, the lord came and attacked the village, demolishing the castle and then he and his army covered the stones with salt.  This action would normally have prevented the castle from being rebuilt because the salt would ruin the stones, however, the revenging lord had not factored in that the cleansing wind would blow the salt away and clean the stones.

300 years later, in the 13th century the descendants of the villagers rebuilt their houses using the old castle stones.  Despite the dry atmosphere and the winds, to this day the villagers complain that they have problems with damp and humidity in their houses, and they believe that this is a legacy of the salt in the old castle stones.

After looking around the vineyard and the cellars it was time to taste. We sat in a room with a barrel arched ceiling made of bricks and tiles while Montserrat served us with good wholesome tomato bread, a selection of meats and ham, cheeses and olives – and of course their wine which was certainly delicious.

on the vine

Pa amb Tomote

Catalan Tomato Bread

If you want to make yourself one of the staples of the Catalan diet, it couldn’t be easier.

Lightly toast some decent rustic bread from a country loaf.  Rub liberally with a clove of garlic and then with half of a cut tomato until the juice has all been absorbed into the toast.

Serve plain with just some salt or olive oil to taste or top with chorizo, ham, cheese, roasted aubergines and/or anchovies.

…to be continued

Our trip around the Pla de l’Estany area continued for another two days when we were introduced to the sheer diversity of the region.  It is jam packed full of history, awesome scenery, wonderful hotels and food and drink to die for. Catalunya certainly has something for everyone; whether you are visiting as a family, a couple or as a solo traveller.

To discover what happens at a pairing dinner with a strambolic painter, learn where you can visit prehistoric caves and a neolithic village and to read about the hotels and the food and drink in the region, sign up and make sure that you don’t miss my future articles.

 

 

The trip around the Pla de l’Estany region was made possible courtesy of  the Costa Brava Tourist Board and the Consell Comarcal Pla de l’Estany.  All opinions formed are my own

My first time at TBEX; the conference for travel bloggers

My first time at TBEX; the conference for travel bloggers

 

As a first timer at TBEX I really had no idea what to expect.  I had been wandering solo around South America for a year but I was more nervous about meeting nearly 400 travel bloggers than catching my night bus to a remote Amazon town and swimming in a lake with piranhas and alligators.

I needn’t have worried.  Once I had got past the stress of deciphering the official TBEX website (TBEX administrators: please take note – a glossary for newbies would be ENORMOUSLY useful) and once I had juggled my trips, hostels and hotels, I jumped on my last minute flight to Barcelona.

There was a fabulous Welcome party in the grounds of the Hotel Santa Marta where old friends caught up and mingled with the new.  We were fed and watered like royalty, entertained and educated over the course of the conference at the Evenia Olympic Resort and we had the opportunity to see all that Lloret de Mar had to offer tourists.  We were treated to a sangria reception courtesy of Eurail and there was a closing party sponsored by Lloret de Mar and Costa Brava. My FAM Trip (luckily I eventually worked out that these were not restricted to families before all the spaces were taken up) was my first major press trip and I couldn’t have asked for a better introduction as I was wined, dined and shown all that the Pla de l’Estany region in Catalunya had to offer.

And after all of that, I decamped to the resort of Platja d’Aro where I recovered my senses at the Hotel Planamar for 6 nights.  It was here that I made plans to take my blog to the next level, inspired and encouraged by all of the people that I had met over the previous week. Not everything is rosy in my life and I still have some very dark days, and while I certainly wish that some things had been dealt with or had turned out differently, I do not regret for one minute handing in my resignation, quitting my job and taking off to follow my dreams.

I can’t mention everybody by name but I will keep in touch with and collaborate with many bloggers and quite a few of the show sponsors and I am also intending to be at TBEX in Bangkok. But I do want to mention and thank Jaume Marin, the director of Patronat Turisme Costa Brava Girona and his team who put together a most spectacular package of opportunities and who showcased Catalunya, at its very best and the hotels which hosted me – the Hotel la Sala de Camos in Banyoles and the Hotel Planamar in Platja d’Aro

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Bristol: in photos

Bristol: in photos

I recently visited Bristol for a day. A friend who lived there gave me a whistle stop tour of a part of the city. Whilst I have been to Bristol before, there was so much more than I remembered and so much more that I didn’t see and that I couldn’t cover in a day. Take a look at my article and see how many of the buildings or places that you recognise – click here for the full photo tour And do try to visit this summer for the Shaun the Sheep charity art walk

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