Madrid
For 8 months
of the year Madrid goes without any rainfall, and although there are many, many
huge tress and fountains throughout the
city all of them use recycled water. The south of Spain is dryer than the north
with a small desert down in the bottom right of the country called the desert
of Tabarno. Just near here is where they grow tomatoes. 70% of all tomatoes
used in the UK come from Spain and the best variety is Raff.
As we’ve travelled around the countryside
we’ve seen forests of Wind Farms on the tops of ridges and learned that de-salination
plants were established on the Canary Islands because there was so little
rainfall there. Franco was aware of this and in the last years of his ‘dictatorship’
in the early 70’a he created great reservoirs throughout the country. In
Valencia they have a ‘tribunal of the waters’.
We’ve spoken
a lot to the Spaniards about the global recession and the particular problems
of Spain. Apart from the inequity of the 7% interest rate from the German
global banks loans the political structure in Spain has become quite unwieldy.
There are 17
autonomous regions or communities and many of them have their own government
with their own laws and languages. AndalucĂa (south) has 8 provinces each with
their own local government. I’ve been told that there are 455,000 politicians
on the payroll!
Another
reason that Spain is suffering so much at the moment is that it has to support
a brilliant infrastructure. It appears to me that all the small time politicians
in the provinces stay in power by giving the people what they want, there are
52 airports in Spain as well as high speed trains (RENFE) connecting all parts
of the country and fantastic, well maintained highways and historical buildings
and gardens. The over abundance of politicians in each local government gains
favour with the local people by providing excellent infrastructure. Compare the
52 airports in a country one fifteenth
the size of Australia which has 26 international airports (Ireland has 4) and
15 regional airports. High speed rail projects have been
under investigation in Australia since the 80’s although it hasn’t progressed
past the planning stage. Spain on the other hand has 9,000 kilometres of fast
speed railway!
The payment
from the government for unemployed young people is around 1,000 euros a month
but this is only paid for 18 months. To rent a modest two bedroom apartment in
Madrid costs about 1,000 a month. Most young people live at home until they are
32 or 33 years old.
The economic
recession has hit hard and there are now around one million apartments that
were in the process of being built but now vacant not so surprising when we
were told that 40% of all apartments built in Europe in the last 5 years were
built in Spain.
One of our
Spanish friends who is an engineer gave us a fascinating talk about building
roads in Spain. A normal stretch of road costs 3 million euros a kilometre and
bridges and tunnels cost 30 to 50 million euros a kilometre. It gave us all a
new respect for roads! Many areas such as Cadis and Seville to Leon are built
along the original roman roads.
He spoke
about the difficulty of building a road when so many excavations produce
remnants of roman ruins. He told us that along that
road Merida is a Roman City where you can see the Granite base of the military
base which is generally 1 mile long and half a mile wide with manor houses and
churches contained within it. Outside are the remnants of the Jewish quarter. Merida
also has the best Roman theatre where you can actually watch theatre presentation
in the ancient Roman theatre. There is
also a hippodrome nearby.
Our time in
Madrid was far too short. Our last night in Madrid we took a tour bus around
the city. Sitting on the front seat of the top deck, listening to a commentary
with headphones in English at 8pm and 35 degrees was fantastic. We realise that
to enjoy Madrid properly would take months. It is a magic city full of green
leafy chestnut trees, amazing architecture and fabulous fountains and littered
with museums and art galleries that we had no time to visit. It definitely
deserves another visit.
Around
10.30pm after our bus tour we went back to our favourite tapas bar for wine
garlic prawns and chicken skewers all washed down with a lovely crisp Spanish
Verdelho. Sitting at the edge of the park being entertained by roving
musicians, talking together and to our favourite Spanish waiter was a lovely
end to our Spanish holiday.
Our bright
and breezy disposition deteriorated as we left Madrid when we realised that Jim’s new leather manbag complete with the new
video camera (and a week’s worth of photos and video) and Mukiem our travelling bear companion had
disappeared. With no Spanish and a plane to catch we were forced to be
philosophical about the loss, but the videos from our English program will be
sorely missed.
It is such a sorry thing to lose your photps/video! Often a memory for a whole day can be jogged along by one image.:( But all in all this trip has been a winner. I'm so glad that you shared it via this blog. Welcome home...Karin
ReplyDelete