Yes….I am here on my own

A whistle-stop tour of Andalucia – Ubeda, Baeza and on to Cordoba

I am only just picking up the second leg of my tour, having been mired in my own and family health matters, various household emergencies and trying to improve my input at the creative writing course that I attend.

So, back to Andalucia…….

Despite the hectic day at the Alhambra and the evening watching some even more hectic Flamenco, we were up and on our way bright and early. Our first stop was the small town of Ubeda, which is a World Heritage Site. We were met by a local tour guide who took us around the town. A quick check of the Andalucia Tourist website (www.andalucia.org) tells me that there is so much to see in this town but my main memory is of a large square with a church at one end. This is the Holy Funerary Chapel of El Salvador del Mundo. It is the interior of the church with its breathtaking golden altar which sticks in the mind. I don’t think I have never seen its like anywhere else that I have visited.

Our next stop was in another World Heritage Site, Baeza, where we stayed overnight. Another single visitor and I had a rather unsuccessful self-directed tour as we found the cathedral closed and a little train, which thought would take us for a tour around the town was not running. The highlight of the afternoon appears to have been the Kit-Kat ice-cream, which we discovered at our hotel.

Next morning we set off from Baeza for a tour of some of the local countryside. We drove up through a Natural (not National) Park to a stop atop the hills with a view of the Guadalqivir River and visited a small town (name unknown, I’m afraid). We returned to Baeza to spend a second night and left for Cordoba the next morning.

Ubeda and Baeza are both in the Province of Jaén, which is an are known for its olive oil and so we stopped en route for a tour of an olive oil museum, including tasting and a chance to buy some of the delicious varieties grown there.

After rather a strange lunch at a motorway services (omelette sandwich – shouldn’t have worked but did!), we continued on to Cordoba and a brief tour of the walled city.

Next day we went on a walking tour of Cordoba, I discovered the Mezquita, which I was surprised to find even more beautiful than the Alhambra. Constructed as a mosque in the 8th century, the Mezquita was developed throughout the following centuries by Muslim rulers until it was appropriated by the conquering Christian army in the 12th century and then re-dedicated as a Catholic cathedral in the 13th century. It has been designated as a World Heritage Site since 1984. I found the interior absolutely breathtaking, especially the beautiful lines of the structures from the Muslim era.

After more walking and a spell back at our hotel to escape the afternoon heat, we were dropped off to make our own choices of restaurant for dinner. As the temperature gradually cooled, I joined with some of the other lone travellers and sat outside a restaurant, watching the world go by and enjoyed shrimp salad with lettuce, broad beans, tomatoe jam and a curry sauce, followed by calamari, prawns and chips and finally a light mousse. Then it was time to return to our hotel to prepare for another prompt start, heading for Seville.

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