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Sunday, 26 January 2020

Social history

The title is a bit misleading, but if I’d called it ‘my holiday’, you wouldn’t have bothered visiting, huh. People’s holiday blog posts can be a little of the erm, photo heavy bragging variety, can’t they. Of course this is no exception.

Whilst other, noble souls live in our house and man the work phone line - I can just hear her saying, ‘oh they’re away at the moment, try his mobile number’ - we two Dunnits are languishing in Lanzarote. It’s one of the Canary Isles. It’s 74.something miles from the coast of west Africa and on GMT which has not, I’m delighted to say, caught us out. Others have been more confused. I have to say that Mr Dunnit and I, who are struggling to stay in our fifties, are improving the average age at this particular resort. By about a millennia. But, it’s lovely to be referred to as a youngster by the residents and deferred to as a grown up by the children masquerading as staff, so it’s all good. 
Lanzarote is small-ish, and like the other Islands in this chain, formed by its volcanic history. There are golden beaches, but also there aren’t; lava and volcanic dust are evident everywhere. The fields are purposefully covered in the black dust after planting...it holds moisture like a sponge, and because of the trade winds, overnight dew is pretty much the only moisture. 150mm of rainfall a year doesn’t encourage much growth. And yet.....there are vineyards. I know this because we did a fabulous Wine & Tapas tour of three Bodegas yesterday. First sip of wine was at 11am. Luckily and as predicted, they were all dry and fancy, so I didn’t really love them, which kept my volume, tact and friendliness at an acceptable level. It was fascinating.
Vines are planted deep below the volcanic dust and encouraged to spread rather than clamber. The little walls are wind breaks (it is constantly windy on the high ground and the wind kills any growth that pokes its head over the wall!). Harvesting has to be done by hand, on the black lava dust, in temperatures that exceed 110. There have to be easier ways to earn a living. Certainly I cannot understand how a Bodega that produces say 5000 bottles a year can afford to sell them at 9 or 10 Euros each. They can’t be paying themselves much at all.

To be honest, my interest in the Wine tour was the same one that started WOYWW! Bodegas are the home businesses of lovely Canary locals and they were charming. Obviously because I’m English and have impeccable manners, I did not take any photos inside their homes. Sitting around tables under the shade of massive vines or beautifully kept stucco and sipping from their produce, eating homemade cheeses and getting ‘strawberries, and end notes of citrus’, whipping the old phone out to take some pictures would have been crass. After the third tasting, we were taken to a roadside cafe for a tapas lunch. You know the sort of cafe...where all the signage is faded by years of sun exposure, the shutters are drawn and paint peeling, and any locals around stop to watch you as you negotiate the broken steps. In short, the sort of place that we would never be brave enough to try. On Lanzarote, there a ‘teleclubs’ such as this in a fair few small towns across the island. The first house that had television was frequented by other villagers until it was a bar and food place. They seem still to be community centred and again, absolutely lovely. Lively and local, and with those straight backed chairs that force you into excellent posture!  I could not understand a word of the thick, treacle like Spanish being spoken at speed, but the lady who served our party was valiant in her attempt at explaining round after round of tapas. And of course, we relied, child like on Dan -  our extremely young, knowledgeable, personable young man of a tour guide. There was a feast, and despite being full, we were reluctant to finish. A chickpea and something stew, a goat and something else stew, fresh fish fingers (!), fried cheese, canarian potatoes, a salad with jam, lettuce, mozzarella and extra thick, probably years old balsamic vinegar....oh my life it was wonderful. If you’re planning a visit to Lanzarote, I recommend this tour. And they haven’t even paid me to say that.
 ( @winetourslanzarote on FB if you’re really interested).
Here we are, lily-white and tourist looking, outside the second Bodega. Note two things...Mr Dunnit will not appreciate the exposure, specially because we can’t work out how to change the mirroring image thing on his phone, but what the hell. And hey, my wonky face really appreciates the warm sun and would definitely benefit from longer than a week. I’m telling you this because I’ve already told Mr Dunnit and been pretty much ignored on the matter.
There will be more, but you don’t have to read what has essentially turned into a holiday diary; I’m really enchanted by Lanzarote. The clue will be photos that involve sunshine. 

13 comments:

  1. It sounds delightful, I have heard that Lanzarote is really lovely and it looks it from your photos. I hope you enjoy your week in the sun xx

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  2. Thanks for taking us along! I do believe that's the first real photo I've seen of Mr. D. Nice to meet him. As to a wonky face? Dear Miss Julia, you are pretty as ever. Safe travels! Kel

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  3. You can share photos of sunshine with me anytime. I was beginning to think the sun had deserted this planet and we were in an ice age!

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  4. You can share photos of sunshine with me anytime. I was beginning to think the sun had deserted this planet and we were in an ice age!

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  5. I love vacation photos, mostly because you go to exotic places I'm sure I'll never see in my lifetime. What an amazing place. Lava dust and all. And you look absolutely beautiful, Julia.

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  6. Hi Julia, So glad you are enjoying your break away. The fact you are only there for a week, obviously means you will have to go back. Sue

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  7. The spreading vines and teensy walls were amazing, really interesting to me and G! The food sounds delish, so glad you're having a lovely break 💖
    Xxx

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  8. So wonderful! Thanks for sharing! You are so articulate and paint life like pictures! Enjoy! (glad you don't photos in peoples homes...:)

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  9. Hello Julia, your post was simply delightful. I wish I could have some of that warm sunshine at the moment ( I am cold!) Frequent trips to the garden with my young puppy are not helping ! I do not like wine, well alcohol in general, but I do like Tapas, the tour sounds quite wonderful. It's funny how the older you get you start thinking "He/she doesn't look old enough" for what ever job they are doing. xx Angela (CraftingwithJack)

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  10. ooh sounds idyllic warmth, wine and wandering......perfect :-)

    kyla

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  11. If your phone is like mine, the mirror image button is next to resize button, love the image flipper for craft have used it so inadvertently you can hit it at any time just to make you cross of course!
    Lovely post gla should enjoyed yourselves and lovely pickie of you both, specially as never did meet you in the flesh, you definitely are the youngsters!l 😉😊❤️

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  12. We did Lanzarote a few years ago, and I agree it is lovely, as are the people. We didn't do the wine tour- I can't stand the stuff,lol- but we did do the Volcano one which was fascinating. I also recall one tour guide tell us that there is only one patch of grass on the island, and that was planted on a traffic roundabout! They have no natural water at all, so everything is bottled, and what comes through pipes is desalinated sea water, so not drinkable at all. Enjoy the rest of your break. Hugs, Shaz XxX

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  13. Who needs photos when you can describe it so elegantly? Lovely to meet Mr Dunnit at last - I think I'd only ever seen the top of his head before peeking into your craft room LOL! Sounds like you had a lovely time, shame you can't stay another week! Safe travels home xx

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