April 26, 2025 Zaragoza SP

We had just visited Zaragoza two weeks ago but we had been focused on the area around the Cathedral due to the Palm Sunday celebration that was going on. Today we wanted to explore a different part of Zaragoza’s history.

The exterior of the Aljaferia Palace.

The Aljaferia Palace was started around 1045 AD by the Moorish rulers of Zaragoza and completed around 1080. It is one of the best examples remaining of Spanish-Moslem architecture. After the reconquest of Zaragoza in 1118 the palace was taken over by the Christian kings of Aragon.

Beautiful ceiling panels preserved in the palace.

While the palace has been substantially altered over the last 900 years there was no concerted effort to remove the Islamic style carvings and art in the palace. What was lost was nearly always due to repurposing and redesign of areas of the palace.

Another beautiful ceiling in the palace.

As a result a lot of the details of the building remain from the original Islamic artists and workers who built the building. Also as the building has evolved some of the original construction is hidden behind later construction and being rediscovered today.

Examples of Arabic calligraphy discovered in the Aljaferia.

Many of the doorways remain from the original construction and have the traditional Arabic arches. They are quite elaborate with remarkably skilled stone carving built into them.

One of the Arched doorways with a Goya portrait in the background.

We were lucky because the Goya museum is being renovated so two floors of the palace had collections from the Goya museum on temporary display. Goya is one of the most famous Spanish artists and a native of Zaragoza.

A drawing by Goya.

The displays included everything from pen and ink drawings, political cartoons, and of course loads of religious paintings and portraits of rich people and royalty. There were also some paintings from other famous Zaragoza artists.

A religious painting from the Goya museum. We think it is a Goya but are not 100% certain.

After finishing with the Aljaferia palace we headed to the old town. Our first priority was lunch, but on the way to the old town we came across the bull ring. They are always interesting buildings though we cannot imagine attending a bull fight.

The exterior of the bull ring. Bull rings, more than any other modern sports building always remind me of Roman coliseums.

We found an street lined with Tapas shops and found our way into one. It took us a while to figure out the system (to be honest I was never 100% certain what was going on), but in the end we had an interesting meal of 7 different tapas, and a very interesting regional potato dish, plus 4 drinks for about $7 each.

The entrance to our Tapas restaurant.

After lunch we returned to the immense main square which is one of the largest in Europe. They were setting up for the Goya festival which begins tonight. So the square was kind of blocked off into sections which took away the effect its large size gives it.

One of the displays of the Goya festival which begins tonight.

We popped into the Cathedral which is much larger than it looks from the square. Ton really likes this Cathedral and wanted to revisit some of the parts of it from our last visit.

Mary.

Our last stop in town was the Ebro river which was wider than I expected and flowing fast with spring runoff from the mountains. By this time we had been moving around Zaragoza for seven hours, so the vote was 4-0 to make our way to the bus stop and head back to camp.

A bridge over the Ebro River.

After everyone got a little rest in, we all re-gathered for a glass of wine, and another delicious meal by Kit. The weather has been good this trip, but we had quite a change in temperature in 24 hours. Yesterday when we were sitting around at 8pm it was 80 degrees and we were watching thunderclouds build. Today it 62 degrees and the wind was howling. Around sunset everyone was cold and we turned in for the evening.

Indie Jones and François the campers with two cold old men.

March 25, 2025 Zaragoza SP

We are back in Zaragoza. We are making our way to Madrid and Zaragoza is on the way and made a good impression on Ton and me, so we have booked two nights here so we can show Stephen and Kit what we saw. The drive over here was going easily until I noticed an electronic sign board saying the Autopista was closed ahead and all traffic would have to exit on the N-2 which is a two lane road. The accident was between two exits so we had to travel about 25 kilometers on the two lane road. It ended up taking about 45 minutes for the detour which all in all isn’t too bad.

The poppies seem to really enjoy the soil next to the highway.

We arrived at the Costco in Zaragoza for a restock and more importantly refuel of very cheap fuel. Both Stephen and I were very happy after we were done. We then went inside Costco where Stephen and I tried a hotdog for €1.50 and a large box of fries for €1.65. Stephen pronounced the hotdog as excellent but he was not impressed with the fries, nor was I. About an hour later we walked out of Costco with an awful lot fo food to put away.

The rest of the day was spent chatting under Stephens awning until an evening thunderstorm drove us into the motorhomes.

April 14, 2025 Zaragoza SP

We really need tires for François and since Zaragoza is a good sized city we decided to take the day and see if we could find some here. A google search led me to a tire place with multiple branches in Zaragoza and one of them was near Costco so that is where we went to start the day. The store near Costco did not have any but the receptionist did a quick search and found that another branch did. She even said she would call ahead since she wasn’t sure anyone there spoke English. On arrival it was clear we were expected, and they got right to work. It was a busy place with a police car, two ambulances, a road safety truck, and a bunch of cars getting tires.

François in the middle of getting new rubber. Not NASCAR fast, but pretty efficient.

We spent time watching the cars come and go, watching a cooking show on the TV with one of the customers, and Ton tried to read the local papers. The two local papers had extensive coverage of yesterdays parade, its too bad we couldn’t read them.

The local papers had extensive coverage of the parade.

Since we had such good luck with the tires we decided to try a RV place to see if we could solve our problem with the privacy screen. A google search showed a place with good ratings that was supposed to be a dealer for our motorhome. It was only about 15 minutes away so we decided to try our luck again. Greta directed us into a BP station and said we had arrived. We looked around for a minute and saw a shop with a motorhome in front of it tucked into a corner of the lot with the BP. I went in and asked if they could look at the problem. The lady was very nice but then said no mechanic, vacation. She did come out and look at the problem, she asked where we were going next and when I told her Barcelona she actually called a repair place there and described our problem. Unfortunately, they told her they could not fix it.

Nothing from today, Ton liked this picture from yesterday so I included it today.

Figuring we still had done pretty well, and having solved our major problem we decided another trip to Costco would do us some good. After an hour of walking around Costco, and filling another cart with stuff we headed out to François to see a major thunderstorm heading towards us.

The land around Zaragoza reminds me of the mid-west which means you can see the storms coming. We beat feet for the campground, and I was just able to get set up on our site before the storm hit. We spent the rest of the day relaxing and watching the thunderstorms approach trying to guess if they were going to hit us. Two of them did, both pretty large with lots of lightning and rain.

April 13, 2025 Zaragoza SP

Today is Palm Sunday which represents the official beginning of Holy Week. Zaragoza goes in big for Holy Week with 53 processions during the week by the 23 brotherhoods in the city.

Palms for sale for Palm Sunday celebration. They came in many sizes and shapes.

I had tried to check the schedule for the processions before we left for the center of the city, and as near as I could tell there was not one until 7:45 at night, which is too late for us. But as we turned the corner onto a main road we noticed a large crowd lining the road so we joined the crowd and found a good spot looking down the road at the main Cathedral.

The road to the Cathedral that the procession would come up.

While we were waiting I did a quick Wikipedia search of these processions and found that they were led by different Cofraternity of penitents, or to use their simple names brotherhoods. The brotherhoods exist in many countries, and were initially secret male only societies. Today they are not so secret and are not male only. They exist to allow the members to make penance through charitable works, and once a year to walk the streets doing a public penance. Each “brotherhood” takes a story from the life of Jesus to base their work on and adopts a unique dress and color to tell them apart from the other brotherhoods.

This large statue of Jesus was the center piece of the procession.

One of the principles of the brotherhood is that the penitents must do this work anonymously to the community at large. So they wear what is to an American a startling piece of head gear to maintain their anonymity. It is called a Capirote and is a tall pointed mask with a face covering that we associate with the KKK in the US.

This conjures up a very different image here in Spain than it does in the US!

Today the penitents parade thru town with many of the members banging on drums and a small ratchet like device. When they went by it was quite noisy.

There were several hundred drummers in the parade. Some did not wear the pointed hats but these white hats.

Each “brotherhood” has its own unique color combination, and today the group in the procession wore blue Capirotes. Near the end of the procession there were representatives of other brotherhoods marching in support of the blue group.

Representatives of other “brotherhoods” walking with their palms in support of the Blues.

After we got over being startled by the dress it was an interesting experience. There appeared to be a lot of symbology in the dress, the statues, and the drums that went over our heads. But we enjoyed watching it.

This women surrounded by Palm bearing walkers in plain robes was near the front of the procession. These were the only people in the parade without their heads covered by some kind of cover.

After the statue with a scene of Jesus’ life went by their was a collection of older ladies dressed in traditional Spanish widow dresses. Ton wondered what that was about but I could only guess.

The widows with a couple of priests and politicians behind them.

It was a beautiful day in Zaragoza and with the processions the city center was hoping. We headed down to the Cathedral-Basilica of Our Lady of Pillar to check out the sites in the center. The Cathedral is located on a very large square. On one end is a very modern fountain, on the other end are a series of sculptures dedicated to the artist Goya who was from here, and in between is the Cathedral, what is now the parliament building of Aragon that resides in an old Mosque as Zaragoza was ruled by Moslems for about 300 years.

Another large church, with a carousel in the forefront that was doing booming business.

It is said that there are three major architectural influences in Zaragoza. It started as a Roman city, then was conquered and ruled as a Moslem city, and finally the influence of Christianity. Each has left their mark on Zaragoza.

The interior of the Cathedral.

We were not able to tour the parliament building today, but it is supposed to have some of the best examples of western Islamic art in the world. When we got to the Roman theater it was closed but we were able to look at it thru a fence and it is quite extensive though it looks like it was buried for a while so is not functional like many we have seen in Europe.

The Roman amphitheater.

The center of Zaragoza was also full of good restaurants that were doing booming business on this beautiful Sunday. Zaragoza is the fifth largest city in Spain and seems to be a prosperous and comfortable city.

Statue fo Goya enjoying a cup of wine on the main square in Zaragossa.

After spending several hours watching processions and wandering thru the city we were getting tired so we returned to the campground and for the first time on the trip had to open up all of the windows in François to allow him to cool off. We were pretty happy about that too.

One of the old gates in the city walls. The walls appear to have been removed in the 1800’s to allow for development of the city.

April 12, 2025 Zaragoza SP

This will be short. We were up early, said goodbye for our neighbors and were on the road about 9:30. Our destination for today was Zaragoza for two reasons. We had not visited it on our previous trips, and it had a brand new Costco to visit. We are still on the hunt for new tires for François and we were hoping this brand new Costco would have doors that he could fit in to change tires.

One thing we like about visiting Costco’s over here are the interesting products that we don’t have at home. These are chicken feet. Lots of chicken feet.

The drive over was smooth though a little more expensive than we hoped for. It looks like the Spanish are catching up to the French for the cost of toll roads. We found the brand new Costco on the edge of Zaragoza and headed straight for the fuel station. This was the cheapest fuel we have seen in years and was 40cents a liter less than we have paid anywhere in the last two years. That translated into €30 savings on a tank of fuel.

Ton kept me from making a disastrous mistake. In the US diesel fuel pumps have green handles and gas have black handles, these colors are reversed in Spain. I had the green handled filler for gas in the fill spout for François and was about to turn on the pump when Ton came flying over and intervened before I started, putting gas in a diesel engine would have caused a tow, and a lengthy stay in a garage to purge the system and change all of the filters. I am going to have to pay more attention going forward.

Unfortunately, it looks like none of the Costco’s in Europe are going to be able to take François but the guy at the tire center gave us a tip for a RV place that does tires so we will swing in there Monday and see if we have any luck. We spent the next hour happily perusing Costco and we now have a bunch of Spanish goodies in our cupboards.

October 25, 2018 L’Ampolla SP

We finally did some serious back country driving today.  Rather than take the freeways back to the coast we decided to cut across the mountains of Aragon to the coast.  The drive was up and down and for about 35 km’s on a pretty rough one and a half lane road.  The good news was that the roads were not busy at all and most of the time we could take our time traversing the many switch backs and curves.  While it was a lot of work we were rewarded with some incredible views and the most remote terrain we have seen anywhere in Europe.  We saw a great town right out of the movies called Morella which had an immense hilltop castle with a walled town under it.  The castle was originally built by the Knights Templar to defend against the Moslem kingdom in Andalusia.  While it was beautiful and remote it was obviously poorer than the areas we have been traveling in with none of the modern homes and apartments we have seen everywhere else.

We are not sure of the name of this town, but we eventually passed thru it on the road near the top left of the photo.  Miles and miles of the hills also had the terraces you see on the lower left side. We are not sure what crop they grow there.
We also saw our first fall colors in Spain.  The mountains were full of cottonwoods.

Tonight we are parked in the town of Ampolla which is adjacent to one of the largest estuaries in Spain.  After the long drive we took some time to rest before going out to explore the local area.  Adjacent to the campsite is the estuary which is one of the major rice producing areas for Spain.  It is also a wildlife sanctuary hosting a wide variety of birds including flamingos even though we did not see any.

After dinner we walked along the boardwalk into town.  It is a pleasant little seaside resort, which was largely abandoned during off season.  We continue to be very impressed with how the Spanish set their towns up to make walking a pleasure with wide sidewalks.

Sunset on the Mediterranean.

October 24, 2018 Tereul SP

After a string of big cities we decided to head a little more into the back country.  Teruel is in the mountains west of Valencia and is famous for it’s Mudejar style towers.  Mudejar architecture is a style developed by the Moslem residents of Spain in the 13th and 14th century.  

We arrived at Tereul and found a place to park across from the Guardia Civil Barracks in a free parking place.  The Guardia Civil are a national police force that are associated with the army.  In addition to doing police work in the country, they often serve as the Spanish representation on UN peacekeeping operations.  They also have one of the most distinctive hats of any military organization in the world, a patent leather tri-corner thing with an extension that comes off the back, completely impractical but cool.   I think we are pretty safe for tonight.

After a quick shop in the Mercadado Grocery across the street to stock up our depleted supplies, we headed into town.  The old town is quite nice, but it was a little dead as we arrived right at the beginning of the siesta from 2 to 5 pm.  As a result we had the town pretty much to ourselves.

The Mudejar style Cathedral of Teruel.

The town did have some very nice Mudejar towers, and a really unique staircase that led into one of the towers.  The towers mark where the gates were when the town was fortified during the middle ages.  

Our favorite of the Mudejar towers of Teruel.
The stairway to the main entranceway to the town.

Teruel is also famous for a Romeo and Juliet type love story.  Isabel and Diego were lovers who intended to marry after Diego returned from 5 years in the army.  Isabel waited the 5 years but Diego did not return and was reported dead, so she became engaged with another fellow.  On the day of her marriage Diego returned and asked for a kiss, but she refused.  Diego died of a broken heart.  Isabelle went to his funeral and gave him the kiss she refused when he was alive, and promptly died.  They are now buried together in the Cathedral of Teruel.

Diego and Isabel, the star crossed lovers of Teruel.