Thursday, April 21, 2011

Lagos

Finally! A post for Lagos! Sorry I have been so slow on posting blogs, I have been very busy writing papers, traveling to Paris and now studying for my 5 exams this week! Paris post to follow, maybe at the end of the week or beginning of the next. Maybe.

If I could sum up my weekend in Lagos in one word, it would be: perfect. It was the perfect getaway, a relaxing paradise.

We arrived on Thursday night (we being myself, Cherise, Alex, Carly, Alice and Alyssa. Our entire program ended up going to Lagos that weekend, but the group of us went together.) It was a 5-hour bus ride, so by the time we got there it was night and we were exhausted. We stopped at a little pizzeria in town before heading to our hostel for the night.

Alex, Carly, Cherise at the pizzeria

Me, Alice

After filling up on pizza we found our way to the hostel. We were greeted by a little old lady, Dina, who runs the place on her own. She gave us the keys to our rooms and we ascended a staircase off the street.

The hostel was incredible. It was more like a beach house than a hostel. We had two of the three rooms on the upper floor, each with its own private bathroom. Outside the rooms was a kitchen and a computer in the hallway. The rooms were decorated with actual furniture and the beds were not just the metal bunk beds you usually find in a hostel-- they were real beds, with wooden backboards and sheets, blankets and comforters. One of the rooms had its own balcony. Since we didn't see any of the girls staying in the third room on our floor, it was like the entire place was our own private getaway.

All this, for only 14 euros a night!!

Our room

The next morning we got ready for the beach. On our way we stopped for breakfast at a darling little hole-in-the-wall called "Odeon," where we got a 3-euro breakfast of toast with eggs, bacon and a giant pancake. I was in love with Lagos already...

Odeon Cafe


Then we headed to the beach. We hiked up a hill to one of the most famous of Lagos beaches, Praia Dona Ana. There are several beaches in Lagos, each one a sandy paradise tucked between beautiful steep rock cliffs. They look like they're straight off a desktop background, with white sandy beaches and the clearest blue water I've ever seen in my life.

We stayed on this beach for awhile, soaking up the sun, climbing on the rocks, taking hundreds of pictures, reading on the beach and wading in the ice-cold waters.

The hike down to the beach



Alyssa and me


Desktop background?

We hiked up the hill to a little convenience store to buy some lunch meat, bread and cheese and water even though we weren't all that hungry after our huge breakfast!

A few hours after we arrived, the beach was besieged by Discover Sevilla. Discover Sevilla is a tour group like the one I went with to Morocco. We had the option to go with them to Lagos, but decided to just go ourselves because it was cheaper and we had more freedom. A lot of people from my program decided to go with Discover Sevilla, so we met up with them for a little bit. But the group was huge-- hundreds of students and with the tide coming in, the beach was becoming smaller and smaller. We decided to pack up and head to the next one.

The Discover Sevilla group that took over our beach

We hiked along the road for a bit and then down a dirt path to Praia do Camilo, a tiny beach packed full with only 10 or so people. There was also a cave you could climb through to another tiny little beach.


It was a long hike down



The beach

When we had stayed awhile on this beach we decided to make our way back to the beautiful hostel, where we showered and rested. Then we went out to find food, and ended up at a friendly little Chinese restaurant.


We went out that night and found a rooftop bar, where we could people-watch.

The next morning we slept in, headed to Odeon for breakfast again where we were quickly befriending the staff, then went to the bus station to buy our return tickets to Sevilla. On our way we found a rather large farmer's market, where Alyssa and I bought delicious strawberries.


Heart-shaped strawberry on the beach, too perfect

We went to a closer but equally-beautiful beach; I think its name was Batata. We laid out in the sun, ate our strawberries and went swimming in the crystal clear ocean.


Look at that clear water!

Our group, minus Alyssa

An girl came over to us as we were taking pictures and asked if we wanted a picture of all of us. I noticed that she was lounging on the beach alone, so we decided to befriend her. Turns out she was from Pennsylvania, and was also studying abroad in Sevilla. She had come with a friend from her program, but her friend was sick and had to stay in the hostel all day. We ended up inviting her to breakfast at Odeon the next morning, and they were on our bus ride back to Sevilla.



Then Alex and I decided to go for a romantic walk on the beach, but with the rock cliffs there wasn't far to go! So we hiked up a rock and went through a cave to explore the neighboring beaches, which were even less crowded and even more beautiful!


climbing up rocks to get to walk through the cave and get to the other beaches

The cave

Pedestrian bridge leading to a lookout on our own private beach




That evening, Alyssa and I went on a little boat tour of the coastline and the grottos, the little caves along the coast. It was absolutely breathtaking.



Little bridge from the other side


Our tourguide showed us various rock formations. This one was Titanic.


Ape

Eagle

Through an archway

Coming out of a cave


Inside of a cave


That night we went to Odeon for dinner, too. By this time we had befriended the entire staff, including a waitress from Canada who had moved to Europe after high school graduation for what was supposed to be a gap year from college, but never went back. She had been living in Lagos, working at the diner to make her living and spending every day at the beach for the past year, and was moving to Austria in the fall (after tourist season ended).

After dinner we raced to catch the sunset, and ended up winding our way through the suburb part of Lagos. We barely caught the last of the sunset over a strange little deserted field. We hadn't realized that even though we were facing west, the beaches on the peninsula faced east!

Sunset... or what was left of it
Me, Alyssa, Alice at the field


The next morning we wandered through the downtown part of Lagos and bought some souvenirs before saying goodbye and hopping on the bus back to Sevilla.

Overall an incredible trip, and just what I needed before a stressful three weeks of three essays, Paris and five exams!



Sunday, April 10, 2011

Photoshooot!

Just got back from a wonderful weekend vacation in Portugal. It was perfect, with beautiful weather and the most gorgeous beaches I've ever seen. I almost hate being back in Sevilla, with three essays to write before I leave for Paris on Friday!

I promise to do a Portugal post as soon as I can, but for now you can enjoy some photos from a photoshoot that we did in the Parque María Luisa last week. Alice is experimenting with photography, so we offered to be her "part-time models" for the day. Check it out by clicking: http://lookinglensphotography.blogspot.com/2011/04/part-time-models.html. (and you can also put a face to all the friends I talk about in my blog!)

Adios!

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Sevillanas

Last week I started Sevillanas lessons, and it has been by far one of the best things I have done in Sevilla. For some background, Sevillanas is a folk dance similar to flamenco, but less complicated and done with a partner. It´s only done in southern Spain, mostly in Andalucia. It is descended from flamenco which, as we just learned in one of my classes, is a fusion of dances brought by gypsies from India and Egypt. Nearly all people in Andalucia learn Sevillanas from an early age-- my señora and host sister both know how to dance it. It´s mainly danced during fiestas and the Feria de Abril, the huge festival in Sevilla happening in two weeks!

I have been looking for something to do to fill all my free time and had been searching for sevillanas lessons, but all the lessons I found at the Sevillanas schools were incredibly expensive. Then I just happened across these lessons advertised in Facebook. They are taught at the Tex Mex bar (now becoming one of my favorite American-friendly places) by a dance instructor from Ecuador. The classes mostly consist of American students, but there are also French students, German students and friends of the teacher who take the class. I had been meaning to go for weeks, but hadn´t been able to because of exams and getting sick. I also was hesitant because I didn´t want to go alone. Although I tried to get my friends to take it with me, none of them were interested.

But I got to the Tex Mex bar and met six girls from the United States who had been taking lessons for a few weeks. They were all studying in Sevilla through another program-- some of them through Sweet Briar college. They were all very friendly and spoke Spanish much better than I do, so it was great practice.

It was difficult to come in halfway through lessons, but for a beginner I caught on fairly quickly. Although the steps are challenging, the rhythm is simlar to a waltz. There are four Sevillanas dances, and I learned the first and second. The steps are simple once you have practiced them a lot (and once you stop mixing up dances), but I think the arms are the hardest part.

To see what it looks like, you can watch this video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zlpiSUp9T8A&feature=BF&playnext=1&list=QL&index=1

So far I've had three lessons, and I´m looking to get in one more before my trip to Paris next week. I´m looking forward to dancing at Feria! Wish I had some pictures-- I´ll remember to take a few next week. But for now, I should go work on my essays. So excited about the sunny beaches of Portugal tomorrow!! adios