Sunday, February 25, 2007
Our recommendations in Nerja
A lovely evening in late February
Saturday, February 17, 2007
We have never paid more than 1000.00 Canadian per person for airfare including transfers from the airport to our accommodations. We've flown with Air Canada, KLM, Alitalia, British Airways and Spanair via Heathrow, Amsterdam, Milan and Madrid on various trips. The rule of thumb is an overnight flight from Toronto, Ottawa or Montreal to a major hub such as Heathrow or Paris or Frankfurt with an early morning arrival, time to have a coffee and a break in the airport and then a short hop of less than two hours directly to Malaga where you will arrive in the bright Spanish sunshine, depending on your airline, from 1pm to 5 pm. Forty minute airport transfer on a good motorway brings you to your doorstep in Nerja in time for tapas and a drink in the late day sunshine.
Our accommodation per month on the costa averages about 900.00 Euros (1450.00 Canadian per month) depending on the rate of exchange and the particular place we choose. We have stayed in one and two bedroom apartments in and out of town and in small villas in the countryside. These prices are all inclusive...that is...for two people with hydro, water, heating, satellite television, hi-speed internet, parking, clean linens weekly and end of stay cleaning all included in this one flat fee. Should you be travelling with more than two people, the additional cost is usually minimally more...for example for four people instead of two, a two bedroom apartment might be 1100.00 Euros per month. Four sharing is of course, extremely cost effective and there are countless spacious apartments with ensuite bathrooms and lots of space ideal for two couples or a group of friends. We can recomend an excellent selection.
Then there's food and drink and entertainment and transportation. A car rental for one month for a small car (such as a Peugot or Opel or Kia....much like a Chevrolet Astro in Canada....is less than 500 Euros FOR A MONTH. Shorter periods such as three days for 60 Euros are also available from excellent reliable agencies here on the Costa. Cars are brand new, small or midsize, with excellent fuel efficiency and easy to maneuvre on the narrower village streets. Standard stick shift is the norm so if you need an automatic, that will add some price and you need to reserve well in advance.
One of our reasons for choosing Nerja as a destination is that we don't need a car here unless we wish to go out exploring on the back country roads. Nerja is walkable in its entirety and has an excellent reliable town bus which runs every hour from one end to the other. Nerja is also served by the larger Andalucian bus system which means you can hop on the bus in the morning to nearby villages and towns and return in the afternoon. You can take the bus to Malaga for less than four Euros and spend the day shopping in the big city and be home by mid-afternoon for a siesta. In Malaga you can also catch buses and trains and planes for all the rest of Spain and Europe.
Daily cost of living: We have a budget that we adhere to pretty strictly in order to afford our winter life on the Costa (we still have hydro bills to pay in Ontario while we are over here lolling in the sun) and that budget is 30 Euros per day to cover food, drink, eating out, buses, entertainment, books, etc. This makes about 50.00 per day for two people and allows us to eat and drink well at home and to have a couple of meals out a week, as well as little excursions round and about the area and lots of books to read and wine to drink. If you wish to forego restaurant meals you can do it easily on 15-20 Euros a day for two people...if money is no object...well, the sky can be the limit.
So in total: 2000.00 for airfare and ground transportation. 2000.00 for accomodation. 2000.00 for food, drink, fun and games. 500.00 for travel and health insurance depending on your age and good health...comes to 6500.00 for two people for two months. Compare that with any long stay package or even shorter resort holiday and you will see that the Costa is a bargain for a long stay. If you're only looking for a month you can halve the accommodation and daily costs...airfare of course remains the same. And speaking of health...the Costa has excellent English speaking dentists, doctors, health clinics and services so it's also an excellent choice in terms of access to medical services if that should ever be required.
The opulence of old Spain
After you've chosen the food for your dinner, walk over to the wine aisles and choose a nice red, or white or cava to accompany the meal. You'll drink well for under 4 Euros a bottle (about $6.00 Canadian) although we have had lots of success with decent wines in the less than 2.00 Euro price. And there's the fabulous Asturian apple cider...for the grand price of .69 cents for a quart bottle. Chilled, it makes a delicious low alcohol alternative (4%)to beer or wine with lunch or as a cool drink on the terrace mid afternoon. Spanish champagne or "cava" is inexpensive enough to mix it with orange juice every morning should you feel inclined to start the day off in a sparkly fashion. And of course, brandy, gin and all the usual liquors and liqeurs are equally inexpensive. The only problem you should encounter in the face of all this largesse is self-discipline.
A seafood lover's delight in every supermercado on the Costa. Fish, shrimp, oysters, scallops, octopus and every manner of sea creature laid out on beds of ice. If your tastes run more to meat, the selection of sausages, smoked, dried, spiced, and otherwise is equally varied. And then there's the usual packaged beef, pork, chicken, lamb and turkey as we see in Canadian supermarkets. And olives by the gallon, fresh produce (especially oranges and avocados). A cooks delight!!!
Colourful ceramics are on display in the market which comes to Nerja on Tuesday mornings and to the nearby white village of Frigiliana on Thursday mornings. You can also buy pottery and similar bright dishware in the shops in Nerja but the market has cheaper prices and the vendors are more than willing to bargain.
The delights of shopping in Spain
Tuesday, February 13, 2007
The services we offer
Who needs to arrive at an unfamiliar airport and wonder which taxi company to use? Who needs to arrive at an unfamiliar town and have the taxi-driver have no idea of which urbanization you are in, or where your accommodation is located. Our favorite tale is of looking for calle Naranjo in El Capistrano which involved a driver who took us first to the Naranjo urbanization (wrong) and then was about to go to either San Juan de Capistrano, El Capistrano Playa or Oasis de Capistrano before we ourselves figured it out (we'd been here before so had some idea). In retrospect, it all seems simple now, but the burros who first wandered these streets and alleyways, weren't walking in a linear fashion. Who needs to wake up the first morning after a long trip and have to go out in search of a grocery store for coffee and orange juice and cereal?
As Canadian innkeepers, we have enjoyed expanding our expertise to include winter holidays in our favorite part of the world Let us take care of the details and still keep your holiday affordable and distinctly suited to your tastes. For more information email us at wilnostation@hotmail.com. We can also advise you on flight options and the pros and cons of various airports en route to Malaga and assist you in booking your flights online. Hasta luego. Tom and Joanne
points to consider
- location: in town or in the nearby urbanizations (subdivisions or housing developments). most of which have been developed in the old Andalucian pueblo style with charming casitas or bungalows with walled gardens and roof terraces and wrought iron balcons.
- amenities included: ask about satellite televison (which language is the package ..we have spend a winter with only German sports television), heating source, orientation of balcony,(south is ideal) and if there's a roof terrace, are there any obstructions preventing sunshine for most or all of the day. You will want to sit out in the sunshine and some balconies are just very narrow almost decorative affairs for plants rather than people.
- Kitchen facilities: full cooktop and/or oven. You won't find a dishwasher but almost every place has a washing machine for laundry. A very handy thing when you are staying for a month or two. Every apartment we have ever rented has had an iron, full kitchen equipment including juicers and coffeemakers, microwaves etc. Ask about hair-dryers. Make sure you bring with you from Canada, an adaptor plug for the European outlets. They are impossible to find once you get here. We found one at Capitol Luggage in Ottawa, and you may have to search in various travel oriented stores to find one. Or let us know and we will include one in your welcome pack should you decide to use our services to organize your winter vacation.
what to consider in rental accommodation
Location is an equally important consideration in choosing a vacation rental. Geographically, Nerja lies on a fairly flatish stretch of area between the nearby mountains (Sierra Almirija) and the Mediterranean. In some areas of town there's a steepish drop from the flat part down to the beach so housing in those areas, while possessed of wonderful views over the Med, can involve a short but reasonably strenuous uphill walk home from downtown. Further back in the urbinazations of San Juan de Capistrano, it's a steady slow incline to the villas near the top. Just a bit arduous for more than one excursion per day and probably even quite fatiguing if you had to carry the groceries up there every day. Renting a car is certainly an option and Nerja is pretty simple to navigate, but for us, again, cost and the difficulties of parking downtown, mean we prefer not to have a car while we're in town. There's an hourly bus service which goes from east to west and down to Burriana beach which can get your almost anywhere in town for .90 Euros. There's also cheap taxi service available. But if you prefer to walk, there's many housing options which will give you access to the old town and the beaches with a less than 20 minute walk on fairly flat terrain.
Our reasons for choosing Spain
Our priorites include cost, safety, accessibility, comfort and a level of activity or amenities which keep us from going mad with boredom. When you spend the winter in a long-stay self-catering sort of holiday, you will settle into the same sort of routines that you enjoy at home. One cannot shop or eat out or drink in cafes for twenty-four hours a day every day. Take stock of what your amusements and enjoyments are when at home. (If drinking cheap wine from sunup to midnight is part of your life, you will truly think you've gone to heaven when you reach the Costa with it's plethora of cheap friendly little bars and shelf upon shelf of excellent red wine in every corner store and supermercado.) But other than those dubious pleasures necessary amenities for us include a reliable cheap source of English language reading material. Yes, the truth is that we settled on Nerja because it has the largest, most comprehensive second-hand bookstore in all of southern Europe. It's also a great place to meet other folks who are spending the winter in this area of Andalucia.
Monday, February 12, 2007
Nerja in February
This is looking east along the beach to Burriana which is Nerja's "party beach". In February, there's not that much partying going on, but it's a popular spot for eating paella in the big open-air beachfront bars. Watch the cooks stirring the paella in their huge cast-iron pans over outdoor fires...but frankly, the quality of the paella isn't what it could be. It's cheap though...all you can eat in a couple of places for 8 Euros...and it's the kind of thing you should check out at least once. Even in February, you'll see sunbathers stretched out on this glorious sand or tucked in along the nooks along the cliffs further down.
Finding good food & drink in Nerja
What clothing should we bring?
Why Spain????
Welcome to our Canadians in the Spanish Sun blog. We hope our experience, tips and suggestions will inspire you to join the growing number of Canadians who are enjoying the sunshine, good food, excellent wine, and friendly people of the Costa del Sol. Over the past few years we've discovered great little villages, wonderfully affordable accommodations, excellent restaurants and useful money-saving tips and tricks to make your Spanish holiday as wonderful as ours have been. Here's some photos of this years journey. We're in Nerja (about 35 minute drive from Malaga airport) in a cosy apartment in the centre of old-town Nerja. Outside our wrought-iron balcony is a traditional narrow cobbled street where the local people have shops and homes. In the morning, the old Spanish ladies sweep their doorsteps and water the brilliant red geraniums adorning their windows. In the afternoon, the children run home from school. At night, the shutters are closed up tight and there are strolling couples, occassional tourists, sometimes a local boy on his scooter with a fashionably dressed senorita perched behind him. It's a traditional Spanish village brought into the 20th century, overlooking the Mediterranean....the building we live in is probably three hundred years old but I am writing this on my laptop using my landlord's wireless internet. It's this juxtaposition of old and new, of the modern and the historic, that makes Spain such a delightful holiday destination. And the way to appreciate it, is to make Spain your winter home for a month or two months or even longer. We'll show you how it can all be possible. Hasta luego! Johanna