This morning we somewhat reluctantly cleared out of our beautiful Malaga condo and made for the train station to catch the noon train to Madrid, where we would then switch trains to Barcelona.
The train was an experience! Arriving at the station with enough time to wander a bit, we found ourselves at the McDonald’s restaurant on the second floor. It was unlike any McDonalds you will find in North America. First off, they had beer. But not only that, they had coffee and ice cream. Together. I’ve discovered the perfect breakfast food.
We made our way down to the main level and went through security. It was pretty relaxed compared to airport security. You had to put your bag on a conveyor belt and you got checked with a metal detector, but that was it. Once we found our platform and then our train, we boarded.
The first class car was pretty nice. There were two seats on one side together and one opposite. The seats were not particularly comfortable, but they did recline somewhat and there was lots of legroom. The train was scheduled to leave at 12 noon and it did. It was kind of surreal because it was so quiet.
Soon, we were accelerating and leaving the city behind, heading into the countryside. Before long we were whipping along at 300km/h, and it really didn’t feel like we were going that fast. That is, until we were in close quarters with the landscape or meeting another train travelling in the opposite direction. Then it became apparent we were really hauling ass.
The countryside was generally pretty arid looking with groves of what looked like olive trees being the primary vegetation. In the distance, dry looking brown mountains. Occasionally, we would pass a small village or some ruins or make a quick stop in a sizeable town, but by and large it was a lot of dry looking countryside whipping by at incredible speed. I was spending quite a bit of time struggling with the onboard wifi trying to get some work done. I probably missed a fair amount of the scenic highlights. Carla was tring to point stuff out to me, but by the time I looked over, it was 10 miles behind us.
The first leg of our journey was over before we knew it and I scrambled to get my stuff together before we hopped off the train. As we were hoofing it from the train to the terminal building, I had a moment of panic where I thought I had left my phone on the train because it wasn’t in my front left pocket where I always kept it. I ran back in the direction we came from but I quickly realized that all of the trains looked the same and I couldn’t identify which one I had just gotten off of, much less which car, I borrowed Carla’s phone from her and tried using the find my phone app, but the data connection was too dodgy to be of any help. I was beginning to panic a little. Then, I thought I should maybe look in my backpack, and there it was. tremendous relief. We would really be operating at a disadvantage without my phone.
We had a tight connection and boarded the next train to Barcelona shortly before it departed. This leg of the journey was definitely more mountainous. We watched the temperature drop to 18 degrees ( about 10 degrees cooler than it was in Malaga) as we crested the highest point. My ears were popping as we ascended and again as we started heading down. We passed through quite a few tunnels along the way. As we neared Barcelona, the vegetation got greener and we noticed that it was still quite cool, meaning about 2o degrees (I know.. brrr… ha ha).
We rolled into Barcelona right on schedule and then hopped into a cab. It immediately became apparent that Barcelona is quite different from Malaga. It is much more “city like”… at least what we have seen so far. We checked into our airbnb, which is a 4 bedroom apartment that is shared with other guests. It’s on a fairly busy but narrow street with a restaurant downstairs. The place is clean, and nicely appointed, but not overly spacious. We’ll make it work for the next six nights.
We rested for a while, then set out to walk the streets and find a place to eat. Our first impression is that it is a much different vibe here. It’s definitely not as polished as Malaga, not as tourist oriented by a long shot. We’ve been warned by multiple people that we should be on the lookout for thieves and scam artists and consequently we’re on high alert.
Tomorrow we will set out to do more exploring….