Monday, October 22

3 Días en Córdoba: Sunday

Sunday morning began with breakfast at El Olivo. Orange juice and tostada again, this time with jelly.
(PS–look at Friday & Saturday too, Saturday has the best photos by far)
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Next, we went to the Museo de la Inquisición, which was essentially a torture museum with rusty metal artifacts that were once used in all sorts of gruesome ways. 
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Probably a little too happy for someone in the stocks...

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We also wandered the town some more, then ate lunch in another Spanish cafe. After lunch, we went to a sandwich place Kristi ate at when she was in Córdoba two years ago, ordered sandwiches to go, and then went to pick up our backpacks from the hostel so we could get on the train back to Madrid.
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Kristi's name in Aarabic
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Puente Romano again
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 Lamps in a souvenir shop
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On the Renfe train
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And this exists at the train station in Madrid… there's an accompanying one with its eyes closed too
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Train station in Madrid

I finally arrived home when it was almost midnight, and realized I did not have my keys anywhere accessible. Turns out they were in my makeup bag, I just didn't know it at the time. Luckily, the Spanish keep very different hours than those of the US, so María was still up when I rang the doorbell!
And then I uploaded and sorted through 400 photos of this city and went to bed at an obnoxiously late hour. Oops.

Sunday, October 21

3 Días en Córdoba: Saturday

So Saturday morning, we all miraculously were up and out of the hostel by 9:00 AM. Amazing. And well worth it, because even though I would've paid to go into the Mezquita, going early meant we also avoided the clusters of tourist groups that like to invade these places. And the mosque is amazing–there's nothing quite like realizing you're in a place you've seen photos of for years. It was a little strange because even though it is also a mosque, the Catholic influence was strong enough that it really felt like a church in a lot more ways. The central part of the mosque, in the middle of all those columns and arches, is designed to be a Catholice cathedral, where they were actually holding mass while we were visiting. Photos not permitted while in session. Luckily, I took mine before mass, when they were just playing the organ–a great addition to the ambiance while visiting.
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Arabic arches

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Catholic time
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Combined religions
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The bell tower–and the palm trees

So, roughly 50 photos later, we'd done a lap of the huge expanse that is the mezquita, and ventured into the courtyard. My favorite part of the courtyard was the irrigation system they'd put in place so the fountain would water the trees eventually. Today, they also use a hose to get the job done (something I referred to as the "modern marble of plumbing" in my early-morning, not-yet-eaten-breakfast state), but I loved the design of it.
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Courtyard walls
When we were done taking photos, we decided it was breakfast time–the idea that we could survive the whole morning on apples was not our best one. Plus, we had to make an attack plan for the day, so we went to a cafe called Oh La Lá, where I had the best tostada con tomate y jamón, café con leche, and zumo de naranja. Also known as toast with tomato and ham, coffee with milk, and orange juice. Or also known as my absolute favorite Spanish breakfast food.
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Our attack plan first took us to the Puente Romano–another thing every Spanish city seems to have. There is almost always a Cathedral, and if there's a river, there will be a Roman bridge. 
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While at the bridge, we met a man who does impressionist paintings on little slides of glass with his fingers. And they're amazing, so we bought some, and picked out the ones that depicted the white walls of Córdoba with the flower pots that are on every single window.
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Next, we were considering going to the hostel for a short rest before lunch… but then we ran into the Alcázar de los Reyes. I don't even know how to describe this place, except that we took about 150 photos of the towers and the gardens–see below.
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This is Kristi trying to drink the water even though they put a sign up that it's not drinkable...
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Mila & I
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After the Alcázar, we went to lunch at a place called 5 Arcos–in honor of the million Arabic arches all over town. This food was not exactly a winner, but it was good enough for a pre-siesta snack.
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Also pre-siesta, we wandered around town and found Calleja de los Flores (it has more flowers than your average street) and the itty bitty little skinny street that requires you to go single file through it.
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After siesta, we went to a Moroccan place we'd seen the first day, which advertised belly dancing at 8:00 on Saturdays. We thought we'd have dinner there, but unfortunately they were only serving drinks and pastries. So we all drank tea or juice and ate a baklava and watched the belly dancer, and then promptly decided we wished we could do something like that. The girl has some real skills.
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Then, it was really dinner time. We found a fantastic tapas place, Taberna de la Tapa, where the waiter was super nice, there was a fútbol game on, and the tapas were pretty much your typical Spanish fare. Also a great dinner find. The waiter even recognized us the next day when we were walking around town! Oh, and I tried blood pudding, Mom & Dad! (Ten years after I was supposed to in London… better late than never?) It wasn't quite as terrible as I'd imagined when I was 9, but still not my favorite. What was my favorite was queso ovejo, the cheese tapa we ordered, which was also on the tostada with tomato and jamón that we ate. Simply delicious.
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Om nom nom, tapas.

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We wandered around town for a while after dinner, took some silly photos, and ran into a totally random parade/procession of some kind that involved a marching band and a lot of religious-looking things that we don't understand. It was either a funeral or some kind of religious ritual, we just have no idea which. And may never actually find out.
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Friday, October 19

3 Días en Córdoba: Friday

So this was an absolutely fantastic weekend, Mila, Kristi and I lucked out big time in that we managed to pull of a nearly flawless weekend trip. And I have roughly 400 photos to prove it. Partially because my camera battery was the only one that lasted the entire trip, so I wasn't the only one using my camera for photos. And Kristi likes to take photos of more or less everything. Which is good for recording the trip, I must say. But when I told María how many photos I'd taken, I think she thought I was either kidding or didn't know what number I was saying in Spanish. She thought I meant to say 40. Nope.
In any case, the weekend began very, very early Friday morning with a bus ride to Madrid, then a train ride down to Córdoba. It was cloudy when we arrived, but at least it wasn't pouring rain like it was in Salamanca.
First order of business–find the hostel. Which was put on a major hold when we came across a park with palm trees in it. Couldn't pass up the dozens of photo opportunities that provided, right?

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Anyway, we finally got to the hostel, which was incredibly nice, it was a really great find. We had our own very spacious room, with its own little bathroom and individual beds for all three of us. So after dropping our stuff and taking a quick siesta, we set out to explore the town. We ran across the horse stable right next to the Alcázar, and then explored the ciudad antigua–the central, older part of the city with the famous mosque and other ancient stuff. 
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The lobby of our hostel

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A real orange tree!
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Horsies!
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Typical street of Córdoba
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Fountain in the plaza, with pink water in honor of breast cancer month.
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For dinner, we went to this place called El Rincón de Carmen, which was slightly pricier than we originally planned, but so worth it. We decided to go family style and shared plates of marinated salmon with a tuna & pepper salad, pork with french fries, and fried eggplant with molasses. Plus we got desserts, and discovered, after the table next to us asked what our favorite was, that everyone liked someone else's dessert better than their own, so we we just rotated! Which did nothing to help our new friends decide what to order later, but made us happy. After dinner, we headed home even though it was only 10:00, because we wanted to get up bright and early for free admission to the Gran Mezquita, if we got there before 9:30 AM.
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Weekend Jaunt

Took a very foggy bus ride to Madrid this morning where myself and two friends caught a train to Córdoba. Pictures & details to come after the weekend, have a good one everybody!!