By now, I am realizing the time I have spent on this account and the fact that I've already seen a new pueblo and a birthday and end of year celebration has passed, I feel the need to complete this tomfoolery. We walked through some super narrow alleys, lit by diffused sunlight bouncing in angular waves from the tops of the walls to our feet. Enter el Plaza Mayor. Totally different from the enclosed square of madrid, this one is quite a bit more charming and more like what you would expect a main square to be. Away from the major auto roads, elevated and situated a point where all small ambulatories seem to converge, set between the gorgeous pale yellow romanesque cathedral where isabella was coronated and the peach colored teatro real. we spent quite a bit of time here, digesting and soaking, comparing this with our own plaza mayor. I think i'm the only one who didn't immediately prefer the segovian model. Having taken at least a half dozen pictures each of the outside of the cathedral, we opted to check out the inside. Much less dark than one would expect from a pre-gothic cathedral, it was spacious and frigid inside. Massive pillars flanked the nave and over a dozen chapels with the typical ornate altars and ceilings piqued our fancy as we spread out and admired in silent contemplation. some nice photos, though one wishes they had more than a little point and shoot at their disposal to render these sorts of places. How people can worship there on a regular basis is beyond me. Aside from the need to constantly be wearing a parka, how do you feel genuine? People come from all over the world and pay to get in a take illegal photos, and you sit and believe in it all? Guidebooks at the door? The building is amazing but doesn't that render it useless for its initial purpose? I imagine stargazing in a famous planetarium or cooking fish over a fire in a life-size diarama in the natural history museum. Maybe it's a quality possessed only by the faithful. Anyway, we bust out and stand in the sun for 5-10, allowing our blood to rise above amphibian temperatures before heading down a shabby cobbled alley in search of the most famous edifice in the city - el Alcazar.
Pass by a witchcraft museum and stop to stand in single file for numerous infuriating autos before coming around the corner to a sunspot before a grove of trees and an iron gate. to your immediate left a vendor sells swords, canes, and post cards. 10 lb man-killing letter openers. ceramic ashtrays that read segovia. beyond him, you walk to a shin-high wall of solid stone that looks out over an expanse of land stretching for miles to the mountains that divide this land from the plain of madrid. photo op. here most sound has dispersed and you walk alongside picturesque euro cars from the 50's parked on a gravel drive like film props and finally you see a massive keep rise in the middle of castle walls, standing at the other end of a bridge over a 40 foot moss-lined stone drop to a tiny serpentine moat. it's almost too authentic till you remember that its an 18th or 19th century reconstruction of the ancient moorish castle that stood guard over the vast expanse of nothing beyond it. two rivers converge a few hundred meters below the westernmost extremity of the castle. 4 euros to climb the keep, but shit, what else did we come for? suckling pig? maybe next time. 152 spiral steps later we hit the top and set up camp for 20 minutes while we individually recuperate from the strain on our lungs and bask in the sunshine and crystal clear air. at this point im farting like a bastard and we are all chuckling as we give my flatulence epithets like castle-crop (dust) on the spiral stair. the thought crosses our mind to roll up some hash but the boys are fearful and i accept their decision as a fortunate defense from the darkness of confinement. rather, we do the tourist thing and snap foto after foto. the views to the east show the bell tower emerge from the cathedral in the center and look out over the entire pueblo, ecompassng fields all around and nearby settlements and, of course, those eternal mountains behind. finally, we have used up the castle and descend to make another pass around the city.
Take the low road by some ancient looking homes and take another break at a tiny grass square to toss a frisbee, juggle a hackysack, and burn some tree. somehow our hacking has improved 5fold and we get a real kick out of it this time. but there is more city to see and we move along. on this side of plaza mayor there is little traffic, foot or otherwise, and we are able to spread across the roads and admire different aspects at our leisure. every now and then a strange statue marks our progress; juan bravo the poet (?) stands with pointed features and an upturned face, in a dontellan pose; even further a strange figure in garb identical to our ku klux knights stands firm, grasping and touching to his nose a massive, ominous iron cross. a creepy sight. one more small plaza contains a playground and at its northwestern corner a gate looking into what used to be the inside of a building but has since been derooved and left to the devices of nature, who has planted what looks to be the softest verdant moss along the once marble floor. here in this plaza there is a small drinking fountain one must stoop to reach that pours the coldest, freshest tasting water in the whole of spain, I am convinced. i fill my bottle, and we all swig and feel the purity slide down our gullets. onward.
more views more pictures more buildings and streets and back at the aqueduct. still time to kill, but there is one thing we have set out to do and have not yet achieved - ponche. according to the spain guidebook, a native segovian desert, some sort of richness drenched in local sweet liqueur and worthy of the most fervent adoration. on to the cafe Limón y Menta, right off the plaza mayor to the southwest. 3 euros gets you a cube a bit smaller than your palm, and introduces you to one of the finest culinary delights one can ever enjoy. I will not attempt to describe the taste, however once your fork pierces the sweet, delicate, dumpling-like casing and grabs a slice of the dense yellow cake-like interior and dutifully delivers it to your anxious mouth, you will never consider another desert worthy of a moan again. the holiday lasted over 3 weeks, and among all of the meals, parties, events, sights, women, and trips, this delight remains in the top tier. i will never forget eating that thing, whatever it was.
sated, we decided to kill another hour in a bar, drinking coffee and wine and actually getting to pick the tapas we received - a rare privilege, reader, i assure you. as the sun went down we learned we had yet another hour before the bus arrived and decided to follow the aqueduct till we could follow it no more. this took us to the edge of the old town, where the start of the structure is marked by a small obelisk and a stone plaque. a few more pictures and we found ourselves more than ready to head back to the city. on the train we busted out the rest of our food and had a crumb-factory feast as we guzzled the last bottle of wine and finished our ham and bread and pasta and everything. Like the royalty of olde, we took a leisurely day to enjoy the quietude of the country, and we were pleased.
Segovia showed us it doesnt take a lot of advanced planning to have a good trip. it doesn't take a lot of money and it doesn't take a lot of endurance. We saw another side of Spain for less than 40 euros for the entire thing, and i was back in time for an hours-long calimocho session with an old friend from the shire...