We spent five days on Lanzarote, one of the Canary Islands. The
first order of business was looking at the boat. Mike is in love with it: he
says it is a good boat: well designed, well made, and well maintained and
updated. The interior layout leaves a bit to be desired as living space and for
guests, but of course its sailing prowess is his priority. It was more
expensive than he wanted to spend, but he decided to make an offer. And it was
a good offer. The owners are deliberating, as well as considering other
potential buyers. We’ll see. He hates the limbo.
We spent the rest of our time touring the island. Mike had a bad cold and his energy was low, so we didn’t do anything terribly ambitious. Spent some time in town looking at museums and going to the film festival. Took a bus trip north to see the Jameos del las Aguas, a house/ auditorium/ pool / restaurant/garden built in a giant lava tube by Lanzarote’s most celebrated son, artist, sculptor and architect Cesar Manrique. It was very cool. Took a bus trip south to the tourist beach town Playa Blanca. It was just what you’d expect: over run with tourists, tourist hotels and villas, and tourist-oriented businesses. On our last day, we rented a car to go see the national park, which is an ethereal volcanic landscape. Very worthwhile. We drove to the
north end of the island to see the Mirador del Rio, also designed by Cesar Manrique, but it had just closed, so all we got to see was the dramatic view of the ocean and the next island.
We spent the rest of our time touring the island. Mike had a bad cold and his energy was low, so we didn’t do anything terribly ambitious. Spent some time in town looking at museums and going to the film festival. Took a bus trip north to see the Jameos del las Aguas, a house/ auditorium/ pool / restaurant/garden built in a giant lava tube by Lanzarote’s most celebrated son, artist, sculptor and architect Cesar Manrique. It was very cool. Took a bus trip south to the tourist beach town Playa Blanca. It was just what you’d expect: over run with tourists, tourist hotels and villas, and tourist-oriented businesses. On our last day, we rented a car to go see the national park, which is an ethereal volcanic landscape. Very worthwhile. We drove to the
north end of the island to see the Mirador del Rio, also designed by Cesar Manrique, but it had just closed, so all we got to see was the dramatic view of the ocean and the next island.
We returned to Barcelona for a short week of Spanish
classes. Studying Spanish intensively is exhausting. It is humbling. Almost
humiliating. I come to it with a decent background and vocabulary, but it is
being taught at a higher, more nuanced level of the grammatical conventions and
professional linguistic terminology. I find that I pick up the concepts being
taught readily enough, but 24 hours later can’t put them into practice. And the
irregular verbs bedevil me: I don’t seem to remember those either. I feel more
and more like TR when he was wanting to learn Spanish and not making much
progress. There are a number of words that are used differently in Spain and Latin America. In Spain they use the vosotros second person plural which they don’t use
in Latin America, so that is new to me. And they use tu all the time for most
everyone and rarely use usted. My favorite word in Castillian Spanish is vale, which basically
means okay, and is used all the time. I mean tons. More often that any other
two words combined.
Mike’s attorney hasn’t been able to get him an appointment yet
with the police to finish his residency process. So we will leave for a week to
go to the Pyrenees to finish our hike from last summer. I have made a little
progress on writing my book: here is the next installment for you.
Basque
Pastoral
Cows and horses
and sheep, oh my! This is the Land of Oz. From an Alaska perspective, cows, horses
and sheep are exotic; bears, moose and Dall sheep are common-place.
France is one of
the top meat and dairy producers in Europe. The Pyrénées-Atlantiques region is
the number one producer of beef cattle and horse meat, and number two for sheep
milk in France; 90% of the farms are concentrated in the mountain and high
mountain areas along the southern border. In 2017 there were 4,500 farms with
71,804 head of cattle and 1750 sheep farmers with 490,000 dairy ewes. (France
as a whole has over 8 million head of sheep.) Goats and donkeys are also
raised. The sector includes over 400 artisanal farmer cheeses.
Alaska has only
one dairy farm left, with about 200 milk cows. They all stay home and don’t
roam around in the mountains. But we do have 140,000 bears, 200,000 moose, and
50,000 Dall sheep and mountain goats that roam freely. Anchorage alone—Alaska’s
largest city with 294,000 human inhabitants--has 400 resident black and brown
bears, 1,900 moose, and 3,100 sheep and goats. The sheep and goats like to hang
out in the mountains on the east side of town. About 300 moose live in town
parks and greenbelts all year around and can readily be seen browsing the road
margins; another 500-700 come into town in the winter to stroll along the
plowed streets and sidewalks and dine on gourmet ornamental shrubbery.
Unfortunately, they become a hazard to motorists: an average of 150 jump out in
front of speeding cars and are killed every year. The bears sleep all winter
and spend their summers in the parks and greenbelts eating fish, berries and
the occasional moose calf. The brown bears are mostly smart enough to keep out
of sight, but the black bears, not so much: some of them like to visit
neighbors who thoughtfully have left out garbage, bird seed or pet food. We see
them on video surveillance cameras all the time. One year a black bear broke
into a house, raided the refrigerator and smeared chocolate all over the white
rug. And from time to time a delinquent young male will lose all fear and
wander freely through the streets and parking lots, causing fear and
consternation for the humans.
Pyrenean sheep,
cows and horses are better behaved and supervised. Most of the herds are
escorted to their mountain pastures every spring, and back down to their winter
grounds in the fall. The word for this is “transhumance.” (In this era of
politically correct language, you can free-associate your own meanings for the
term.) There are more than 6000 farms in
the Pyrenees that practice transhumance, so that must mean at least 6000
shepherds moving their flocks up and down the mountains. In many areas
transhumance on foot has been replaced by motor transport, largely because
walking the flock up the road is hazardous. But loading the sheep into trucks
has its own hazards: it stresses and sometimes suffocates the animals. There is
some resurgence in transhumance by foot and hoof, in some cases involving
bureaucracy and permits, and an increasing tourist interest in the practice. Many
Pyrenean communities have organized festivals for tourists to follow the sheep,
and of course taste and buy the cheeses, along with wine and music and dancing.
Another labor-saving
innovation is “virtual shepherding”: a cross-border consortium in the Basque
region is testing satellite geo-tracking of the collared animals. The shepherd
sits at his computer to monitor the movements and behaviors of the herd to
remotely sense grazing activity and signs of health problems. They are also
experimenting to see if there might be a way to direct the movements of the
herd through vibrations, sounds or electrical impulses.
But for now, the
time-tested technology is sheep dogs. What amazing teamwork!
Bravo!
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