Ese’s Weekly Shoot & Quote Callenge: Direction

Direction is what Ese points out to us this week…as usual a delightful challenge – why don’t you join in?

Trees go wandering forth in all directions with every wind, going and coming like ourselves, traveling with us around the sun two million miles a day, and through space heaven knows how fast and far!

John Muir

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Cee’s Fun Foto Challenge: Three Items Or the Number Three

Cee’s challenge this week is about Three. Not as easily done as I thought…but here are mine: Flowers, fruits, on the table and number four…people in Segovia.

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Weekly Photo Challenge: Unexpected

The WordPress challenge this week is about the unexpected. Walking along the beach I met these two friends where the unexpected had already happened…

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My Guest – Splendid architecture in Valencia!

Finally I have got the possibility of hosting a guest here – my husband. An avid traveller and seldom home, this is what I have been waiting for him to let me do…Back from a short trip to Spain, he brought back home some great architecture  – in pictures and stories of course. I’m happy to show some of them here – hope you will enjoy them as much as I do!

The river Turia in Valencia used to flood often and sometimes at the cost of several lives. In 1957 the river was redirected to run south of the city. This created a more than 100 metres wide, dry river bed, which has been converted into parks, sports arenas and recreation areas, but also into CAC (City of Arts and Science), the futuristic science city.

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The City of Arts and Science is a complex of culture and science exposed in the futuristic architecture of several buildings. The architect is Santiago Calatrava, the man behind Turning Torso in Malmoe. These buildings are very spectacular – and beautiful – the effect highlighted by different water pools. Calatrava was much criticized for overriding the budget though. And this was no less tough when CAC was completed, 1998-2005, during the recession followed by a financial collapse.

The first building I visited, Palau de les Arts Reina Sofia, was the last one completed – 2005. Size: 163 m long, 87 m wide and 70 m high, but it’s the spectacular architecture that catches the eye. It’s built in white concrete, and clearly resembling a baleen whale. The ”baleen plates” is a restaurant and above it a window with flowing water. Inside are four concert halls where two of them take 1400 people each. They are used for operas, concerts and ballets. The two smaller ones hosts 400 people each. Unfortunately there were no guided tours in this magnificent building – it wasn’t even open, except for the restaurant.

Please click on any picture to show off the gallery.

The next work of art is called Hemisféric, finished in 1998. This piece looks almost like an eyeball resting in water. It’s about 100 m long and inside is an IMAX-cinema. On the curved screen (900 square metres…), you can project movies as well as the whole canopy of heaven. This screen is the biggest in Spain and both in definition and sound it is among the best ones known in the world. Unfortunately the Hemisféric wasn’t open either, other than for movies or guided tours. Had I known, I would have booked in advance.

I then continued my walk past the spectacular Science Museum. Here I walked along an even more spectacular construction by the name of Umbracle. This is a botanical garden characterized by its white vaults running along the whole structure of 1,5 hectare. The plants are all from the Mediterranean area and the view from here over the whole complex is fantastic. The surrounding areas are sometimes used for outdoor expositions.

Passing a wide street I reached the Agora, another breathtaking piece of architecture used for congresses, conventions, fashion shows and concerts – and also for sport events as tennis and frisbee.

The Oceanografic was the last architectural phenomenon for the day, hosting among other things an Aquarium.

The last gallery shows more overview pictures of this very rewarding day.

Ese’s weekly Shoot & Quote Challenge: Intangible

Ese gave us another beautiful task this week – Intangible. The best things in our lives are indeed intangible, love, for example. Or, a morning rainbow over my old appletree.

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The true harvest of my life is intangible – a little star dust caught, a portion of the rainbow I have clutched.

Henry David Thoreau

Weekly Photo Challenge: Layers

The word Layers is a very useful word, so many interpretations are possible here. I picked what first came to mind: Flowers and stone.

 096Ranunculus is a wonderful species,  to which also ordinary buttercups belong. But this one, above, is one of the most beautiful specimens I have put in a vase on my table. Its delicate layers in yellow and orange nuances speaks to my senses as few others do.

 2013 446In the mountains you sometimes come across beautiful coloured layers created thousands of years ago. And if you get the chance to get a close-up, they can seem almost like a rainbow.

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Travel Theme: Short

Ailsa at Where’s My Backpack? gives us all the opportunity to be Short this week…so, here are my contributions:

 032This spring was very, very short this year – and so were the stems of the small, daring daffodils trying to survive in the frozen surroundings.

 2012 378I have had a couple of dachshund ”ladies” in my life, but unfortunately their legs are too short and their back too long. One of them got paralysed because of this. They always had to be carried when we were hiking too. Very sweet dogs, but a bit too stubborn for my taste perhaps… This beautiful gentleman I met in a park in Madrid.

My son on his first visit to China! Beside this giant of a warrior he felt a bit short…

Ese’s Weekly Shoot & Quote Challenge: Spread

Spread is the word from Ese this week. Being a book lover that just had to be IT didn’t it?

May books spread the world over!

Yann Martel

Hand Me Down World

I had some days off…and that’s when I always read a good book – or try to find a good book to read. This October week I was lucky, because I brought Lloyd Jones’s Hand Me Down World.

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A woman washes ashore in Sicily. She has come from north Africa to find her son, stolen from her by his father when the boy was just days old and taken to Berlin. With nothing but her maid’s uniform and a knife in a plastic bag, she relies on strangers— some generous, some exploiting—to guide her passage north.
These strangers all tell their story about her, and each account gives a different view of the truth, just like the versions of truth we all create to accomodate our lives. These fragments of a life piece together to create a spellbinding story of her, this woman and mother, who crosses continents searching for her missing child. Not until towards the end, we also get her own version of the story.
It’s haunting and beautiful, because ”Sometimes a person passes through your world and you don’t forget them.” She is one of them, and this is her story. I suggest you read it.