Monday, January 16, 2017

Last Two Months - Saying Good-bye


The hardest part about leaving Barcelona is saying good-bye to all the amazing people that we came to know.   It seemed like the month of June was just one big farewell.  Too bad Barcelona is so far from Detroit, we will definitely miss the friends we made in Spain.


ASB Spanish Class group.  Some of us were together for 3 years!
We had so many great Spanish class lunches, this was officially my last class
Farewell lunch with Ann Long, Karen Hausch, Christine Lee and Gorana Ilijev
Farewell picnic with members of the Cornellá Ward
Mis amigas del barrio, our last dinner party
Ciara's friends Noelia and Maria Belen
We will miss all the singing and dancing (well maybe not all of us)
Last picture with the Cornellà high-priest group
Rylan having a farewell with his school friends

Cole's farewell with his school friends

The last youth activity in the pool at La Mallola
The kids with Angel, who always remembered their names, even their middle names
Lunch with my favourite couple, Socorro and Americo

Dinner out with our Barcelona Brazilian Japanese friends
Masumi and Adrianna (well at least we all look Japanese)
Celebrating Maricarmen's birthday the night before we left Spain.  Bishop Gil drove us to the airport the next morning 





Thursday, January 12, 2017

Last Two Months - Via Ferrata Adventures

I first came across via ferratas about two years ago while researching things to do in Andorra and quickly put it on my list of things to do before leaving Spain.  Via ferrata mean "iron path" in Italian and were first built by the Italian military to help soldiers cross the Alps.  Now it is a fairly popular activity, and routes can be found all over Europe.  Via ferratas are marked climbing courses with a steel cable that runs along the entire route so that the climber can clip in and be secure.  You get the whole mountain climbing experience, without the danger.  To do a via ferrata you don't even need prior climbing experience and children as young as 7 years old can participate.  To make it even more appealing, you can access most via ferratas for free! For a really great guide to via ferratas in Europe, go to the 'de andar' website https://deandar.com/ferratas/

Nathan had been taking rock climbing lessons at Climbat, an indoor climbing gym in Barcelona for about 5 months.  I knew that he was anxious to try outdoor climbing, so I organized an outing for him and his friends with an adventure tour company call Pics D'Europa.  For €25 per person, the guides met us at the start of the Via Ferrata in Cala del Moli, Costa Brava, with all the equipment.  They showed the boys how to do the via ferrata and also took pictures during the whole excursion.  It was probably one of the most incredible experiences of my life!










My favourite picture
At the end of the course, Stephen, Mathias, Victor, Aryan, Nathan and I
After doing Cala del Moli with Nathan and his friends, I told Bob that he had to try it.  Our last weekend in Spain, we decided to rent via ferrata kits for the whole family (€18 a kit) plus we took our friend Alfredo Peña (YM president and Nathan's seminary teacher) to Gorgues de Salenys also in the Costa Brava region.  The kids had no problem navigating the via ferrata.  The most difficult part of the trip was finding the via ferrata as the start and end of the route was not marked very well.  After we finished our little climb through the gorge, I dropped off Nathan, Alfredo and Bob at the Cala del Moli so that they could experience it for themselves and I took the rest of the kids to the beach in Sant Feliú de Guíxols.  







Gorges de Salenys

Bob, Nathan and Alfredo start the via ferrata Cala del Moli

But, I couldn't stop there.  Since we had the equipment until Monday, so I decided that we should attempt one more via ferrata.  I took Nathan and Rylan up to Vallcebre at the foot of the Pyrenees mountains.  There is a nature park there with 4 via ferrata of different levels.  You pay €4 to access the park and you can also rent equipment there for an additional fee.  We started with the easiest via ferrata called La Canalassa and then went on to do the level 3 via ferrata de Cal Curt.  This route took us straight up the mountain face for about 160 metres.  Nathan zipped up the mountain about 20 minutes ahead of Rylan and I.  After about 100 metres, I started to feel kind of bad that I had brought Rylan (then just 10 years old)  up so high.  Or maybe I was just feeling bad for myself.  Even though the via ferrata is supposed to be very safe, you still feel unsafe when you are hanging off the side of a mountain 160 metres off the ground.  If we were to slip, we might not die, but we would probably still hurt ourselves quite badly. Rylan did great, he didn't seem too fazed by the height and we all made it to the summit and got an amazing view of the valley below.







Wednesday, January 11, 2017

Last Two Months - Visit to Montserrat

Two weeks before we left Spain, we got a surprise visit from some old friends, Maria and Patrick D'vaz.  We met for dinner at Arenas near Plaça Espanya and then invited them to come to Montserrat with us the next day.  Bob had actually never been and it is one of the most famous landmarks of Catalunya.  Montserrat is a small mountain range north of Barcelona famous for its interesting shape, rounded peaks caused by errosion.  It also has religious significance because in 880 AD a group of shepherd children saw a bright light descending over the Monserrat mountains and heard angels singing.  Later religious elders went to the cave where the children saw the vision and found an image of the Virgin Mary.  The Virgin Mary of Montserrat is different from traditional depictions of Mary in that she is black.  In the Basilica there is a statue where pilgrims and tourists line up to catch a glimpse of the Black Virgin and ask from her blessings. 


Dinner with the D'Vazs at El Mussol
View of Montserrat from the monastery 



We hiked down to the Holy Grotto where the image of the Virgin Mary was seen.













Tuesday, January 10, 2017

Last Two Months - Futbol and Football

During our last two years in Spain, Cole enjoyed playing soccer with the school team at the American School of Barcelona and Rylan enjoyed playing flag football.  I wish that all my kids would have embraced soccer, since it is such an important part of Spanish culture.  Cole really became obsessed with the sport.  His love for soccer really defined his time in Spain.  Our last year, he played soccer almost every day and as a result he became quite good at it and it helped him to make friends in the neighbourhood.  Rylan also excelled in flag football, but it is not a very well known sport in Spain, so there were limited opportunities for him to play.

It was nice for Cole to win the MVP trophy at the end of the season for being the top scorer on his team.

Cole receiving the MVP award

Cole's team

Rylan's flag football team


 

Last Two Months - Parc del Centre del Poblenou and Collserola


 June 5th, 2017

I had passed by Parc del Centre del Poblenou on occasion while zipping down Diagonal and always thought it looked interesting, but never had the opportunity to stop and check it out.  It was a beautiful sunny Sunday afternoon and so I decided to take the kids to explore this park because with less than a month left in Barcelona, we would likely not get the opportunity again.  We were not disappointed, the park has really unique design features and play structures.


Cool loungers for enjoying the shade

Interesting circular garden at one end of the park

Another chair for sitting back

An art installation in the park

One of the entrances to the park

Some spinning chair

A metal igloo for climbing

A garden refuge




That evening we decided to climb up Collserola hill near our house and talk about our experience in Spain.  This was one of the first places we came to when we moved to Barcelona, and it was nice to come back and look over the city and remember what we did over the past 3 years.