Monday, February 3, 2014

Valencia and .... oranges 8-10 Jn 2014

Until we reached Valencia, we didn't associate it with oranges. But once we reached the streets and parks, we realized there were orange trees everywhere and then it clicked - I used to buy Valencian oranges even in the supermarkets back home.

Posing below the orange trees



Oranges are so abundant that they are used 
as paper weights to hold down the
tissue paper in restaurants

But Valencia is more than oranges. It's really a very pretty old and new town, lovely to explore on foot, by bike or by bus. The Yeong family plus explored Valencia by bicycle and we thoroughly enjoyed it! You have to get down from the town roads to the park's cycling paths below. These paths were previously in the old sunken riverbed of the Turia River that made its way to the sea. You can get across the entire city by foot or bike using these paths without meeting a single traffic light or junction! Why?  All the junctions and traffic lights are above on the car roads. All along the bicycle paths, you would come across mooring sites for boats ( because it was the river Turia) and many arched bridges crossed above the river bed.

Cute dolls climb ladder in bicycle rental shop

The Yeong family is set to cross Valencia by bicycle
with two oranges plucked from the trees

The only tree where we could pluck the oranges because there 
was a staircase behind the tree. Sue Jan climbed up and grinned 
because she could just stretch out her  hand to finally pluck an orange.


From the busy roads into the park area through the gates

There were nice bicycle ramps in Turia Park that allowed us
 to play Mak Rempit on bicycle in great safety

Pretty girl in pretty arch of grape vines


When we first reached Valencia by train, we were enthralled by the prettiness of the train station.

The ceiling had this pretty tile design. The trademark 
broken tiles design is seen everywhere in Spain


Sue Ann with the old train station in the background


Then we were delighted by our pretty apartment, located very near the market. There was this house we always passed on our way to the market. It  had 3 Santa Claus climbing over the balcony railings. So cute! And the market had plenty yummy fresh food and fruits and ....

The indoor pretty balconies in our apartment block


Pretty and intricate staircase railing

Lovely plaster ceiling


Francesca upstairs in our Duplex

. I have this habit of buying fresh flowers for the apartment or hotel 
when I travel. So I bought pretty peonies, and 
they really added even more beauty to our pretty apartment.


The cute Santas climbing over the balcony.
 Won't they supposed to come into the house
via the sooty chimney?


Fresh market produce

Blue mushrooms? Yes blue mushrooms!


Sue Jan holding this huge capsicum.

Ken Jon and Francesca eating in the market. 
They were the appointed tour guides in Valencia. 
Their  good research enabled  us to explore 
Valencia by bicycle and to cover a lot in Valencia..


Grilled squid - so fresh!!!

There is the ultra modern City of Arts and Science and the Zoo etc. And there is .....yeah shopping!!!! We all got very good buys on Zara and Mango and other Spanish brands. And the food is yummy!

Jason near the Center of Science and Arts


See the pretty reflection. The design is
supposed to remind you of a fish.

Our apartment was also in the old city itself. There are old high towers, forts, squares, fountains and beautiful churches. Here we discovered beautiful designs in the doors, the ceilings, the floors and ....

Climbing one of the many stairs up to the roof.
I lost weight while in Spain.
Must be all the cycling and climbing.


Intricate carved ceiling in an old church


3 D floor in an old church. How could such
an old building be so modern?


 Sue Jan looked so tiny.We had climbed up
the fort and she stayed down there.


Valencia remains fondly etched in our memories. It's my favorite city in Spain.

Barcelona, Mont Serrat - the serrated mountains and La Sagrada Familia.

6th -7th Jan 2014

Barcelona has some very interesting sights both in the city itself and in the nearby Catalonia region. The highlights and cannot missed sites include La Sagrada Familia - an amazingly awesome ( yet unfinished ) Gothic church, Park Guell and of course the football stadium.




Locked in this rectangular maze of buildings, you see the pinnacles of the La Sagrada Familia church. More about that later. Mont Serrat  is a multi peak serrated mountain range located in Catalonia about an hour's drive from Barcelona. It's highest peak is Sant Jeroni at 1236 m height..

Jason and Sue Jan and the serrated mountains
with the Santa Maria Benedictine
monastery in the background




The two red circles show two groups of hikers on the trail.
That is how small and people the trail look from 1/3 way up this trail


There are many hiking mountain trails beginning from the funicular train station up to Sant Joan.  I could only complete 1 and 3/4 mountain trails that day whilst Ken Jon did about 3 mountain trails. Some trails are quite challenging but they are not impossible. It is quite amazing when one realizes  the early monks built these huge monasteries at the end of so many mountain trails without modern technology. It reinforces a very clear point - back in the good old days, people were much cleverer than we actually give them credit for.



Climbers ascending the trail


Ken Jon and Francesca posing above us.
This point is about  1/2 up the trail


Me and Sue Ann are 3/4 up this trail.  After this point,  we girls 
chickened out when we saw the  intimidating steep steps
 ascending an open mountain face. Ken Jon was the only one 
who completed this trail. Note the cave behind us. Here the monks 
could eat at a rock table and enjoy the mountain view 
whilst being sheltered from the biting winds


I am jubilant because I finally finished one trail.
 See the serrated mountains behind me.
Although the temperature is about 6 degrees Celsius,
I feel quite hot after the climb and has removed
my scarf and unbuttoned my jacket.



After we descended to the monastery, I feel cold again
and stayed nicely bundled inside my jacket and scarf.

We spent some time at the monastery where we waited in line to touch the Black Madonna. Then we took the Sant Cova funicular down. Here there was another track with stations featuring different stages of Christ's life. Jason, Sue Ann, Francesca and Ken Jon finished this trail too while I sat it out together with Sue Jan.


At the station where Simeon meets the
Holy  Infant Jesus and his family at the temple


Sue Jan prettily  perched in the pavilion
overlooking the valley below Montserrat

The next day, we went to the awesome Sagrada Familia, a large church designed by the famous Catalan architect Antoni Gaudi (1852-1926). Although still largely incomplete, the beautiful church is gazetted a UNESCO world heritage site. You have to see the inside to do it justice. Antoni Gaudi was a devoted Christian who showed his love of God in the extravagant, detailed and at times, playful architecture of the church.

The stained glass windows



The forest like canopy ceiling


Our creed on what we believe.

A bright burst of rainbow color


Gaudi was not afraid to show his playful childlike streak. He incorporated nature in the architecture of the church. He was a mathematician as well as an architect. He calculated the weight of  each beam and lever and made  stringed models to hang  upside down to ensure the weight is supported. We await our turn to the escalator to go to the top. There we gawk and marvel at the playful colorful uniquely different "smarties" placed on each sacred pillar. We descend down this wonderfully symmetrical spiral stairway that looks beautiful both from the top and bottom view.




Gaudi added playful  colorful and different
"smarties"on top of each sacred pillar.



Down the spiral staircase.

Empty spiral staircase  looks so
symmetrically pretty.
See Jason's face on one end

What do I learn from Gaudi? Be passionate about what God has made you to be passionate about. Give to your work or passion, the time and energy above and beyond the call of duty. And God will bring generations of people, both believers and heathen to marvel and gawk at the passion He has displayed through you.