Rick arrives today, lands around 6:30 and then has to get luggage and a taxi. So no point in waiting around for him. Haven't been in the same time zone for the last month. Walked to Puorto de Segunto again with a couple of things I wanted to check out: bike/scooter hire and bus schedule from there.
 |
| As I was walking along by the sea I noticed that there was someone in the municipal offices, that have always been empty. I went in, not sure what she was doing there, and she certainly wasn't sitting in the tourist office section. She didn't speak English but with my limited Spanish and lots of gestures, I asked if she could photocopy the bus schedule that was posted in the window. After a couple of false starts (I don't think the printer had been used in months), I finally have "hard copies", my preference. |
 |
| All the sand that was on the road has been dumped back onto the beach. Just waiting for another storm to send it inland again. |
 |
| Still dredging and almost full, very low in the water and water pouring out of the hopper that holds the sand. |
 |
| Sitting right at the marina mouth so anyone going in has to make their way around him. |
 |
| Way out on the horizon, it looks like a ferry. Probably going into Valencia. |
Ferries from Valencia, Spain,
offer
regular, year-round connections to the Balearic Islands (Ibiza, Palma
de Mallorca, Mahón) and Algeria (Mostaganem, Oran, Algiers). Key operators including Balearia, Trasmed GLE, and Grandi Navi Veloci (GNV) provide around 59 weekly sailings, with options for passengers to take vehicles. From AI summary.
 |
| There are more spring flowers starting to emerge |
 |
| along the path. |
 |
| At the same place I had breakfast last time, I had lunch this time. Tostada con tomate y queso, with the coffee and orange juice. One Euro more (5.50) than breakfast. |
 |
| There's a coolish breeze today so they had the plastic screens down, makes for a mildly distorted photo. |
 |
| People at the table next to me left and the sparrows immediately swooped in for the crumbs. |
 |
| Pigeons on the other hand just make themselves at home. |
 |
| I walked into Sagunto, following google maps directions, and found the bike shop but was informed that they only rent for the Sagunto decathalon, not just to tourists. Oh well. I had found a bakery on the way and that was a win. |
 |
| Walking back towards the sea, there was a Carrefour. I have shopped at a lot of these in Europe and they seem to cater to British tourists. Of interest was that it opens on Sundays, though it is an "express" so not a full size supermarket. |
Carrefour (lit: « intersection » or “crossroads”) is a multinational distribution chain of French origin. It is considered the first European group, within walking distance in net revenue of the German company Schwarz Gruppe (matrix of Lidl and Kaufland), and the third in the sector worldwide. 3] In 2024, the group had 14 000 stores in 40 countries.[[4] 5381 stores in France, 4830 stores in the rest of Europe, 1036 stores in Latin America and 235 in Asia, as well as 487 stores in countries under agreement. 5] from Wikipedia. (interesting translation from Spanish)
 |
| Googled it and its a US company but the products for sale in Spain are made in Spain, under license. |
 |
| Heinz is also American but for the European market most of the sauces are made in the Netherlands. |
 |
| This is definitely Spanish. I buy it in Canada for about 3 times the price. I would have bought some but didn't want to carry it back. |
 |
| Who knew? a route from Sagunto that ends at Santiago de Compostela. |
No comments:
Post a Comment