April 25 Day 10 (Friday)

The day started with a rude awakening as the alarms went at 2 am (6 pm Thursday night at home) so we could make 230 breakfast and 3 am departure.

We had one traveller who may have slept through the alarm, but all was good as that possibility was built into the schedule.

I went to knock on the traveller’s door and found the door open and unlocked. I knocked and called a name. I turned the light on and saw golf clubs and heard a voice that didn’t match any of our travellers’ voices. Oops. I used the wrong rooming list and opened some stranger’s door 🥴 as it was unlocked. I made a hasty retreat down the hallway.

The Malaga airport was surprisingly large and very busy for 330 am. We said goodbye to our Matthew and scooched through security. The 2.5 hr flight to Paris seemed pretty short as many of us caught some shuteye.

Our travellers ❤️ Every trip YGTravellers have embarked on brings new discoveries. We like to travel, but always come back to the idea that we live in the best place on earth – as long as the election on Monday goes the “right” way 😘 Each traveller always brings something unique to the trip

Ben. The quiet, lone male on our trip. He easily could have cancelled and choose not to travel with the bevy of women, but he soldiered on with the gentle smile on his face. He was always game to try to new food whether it be octopus, calamari, gazpacho or anything else that were considered leftovers. I felt bad for him for when we finally landed in Madrid after our 22 hr trek to arrive. We had lunch and he ordered a full meal and enjoyed every morsel. “It was the first full meal we had since we left home” was the phrase he used as we had been eating airline food and snacks along the way. He was always patient with posing for our group photographer, Connie, and I think he enjoyed it eventually. I hope Ben keeps his inquisitive attitude and willingness to try new experiences.

Ciara. Our quiet determined young lady who was brought up not to offend and to be respectful. On our tour, we had some not admirable behaviour from the other group. Ciara was not impressed when they choose to not wear their “whispers” (portable headphones to hear the guides). She told me they should just put their earphones in and pretend to be listening as it was really rude to the guide not to pay attention. ❤️ I also got a bang out of her when we had our giant lunch at the Spanish lady’s home yesterday. She had given us a huge bowl of lentil stew which was a lot for everyone and if you aren’t prone to liking lentils, it could be not to your liking. When the Spanish lady questioned Ciara, Ciara blushed making the lady smile broadly. I was proud of her for standing her ground, but being respectful to the host. She also encouraged the other girls in doing the trapeze. She was a good addition to our group. ❤️

Brooklyn. I really didn’t know Brooklyn before travelling other than knowing some of her family. I have never met a Williams who I haven’t enjoyed. Brooklyn definitely has the fun Williams genetics that her dad and Uncle Steven possess. She was always ready to have fun whether it was flying on the trapeze or having a giant grin zipping across the Spanish river in Toledo. Her blue lively eyes sparkled with mischief every morning and she was ready for adventure with her hearty laugh

Rozlin. She is a quiet and determined young woman. I didn’t hear one negative utterance from her all week. Always a smile on her face and wanting to soak it all in. She shared with us that her mom thinks she had the same tour director just a couple of a few years ago. I loved her enthusiasm for the scavenger hunt that the students at did in Saville. YG didn’t place first in it, but according to Roz, “We just didn’t use our data like the other teams did. They didn’t cheat, but the other teams just used technology to find things.” Solid, dependable, unflappable Roz ❤️

Jacey. She was my only returning traveller this year from 2023. Jacey is fun and understood the assignment about embracing all aspects of the trip from food and activity trials. From literally running in the scavenger hunt up and down the steep hills, jumping into the sea, doing a back flip on the trapeze, Jacey embraced!

These five students weren’t necessarily a team before the trip, but they gelled so well together, it was as if all five had known each other their entire lives.

I feel honoured as I get to keep travelling showing students, who aren’t even my students anymore, the beauty of travel. There are numerous quotes about the importance of travel, but a few have really struck a chord with me.

All who travel are not lost. The best way to really appreciate home is to experience the wonders of other places. Every place we travelled to was different from home in a good way, but home is still best.

The phrase “travel beats racism” can be interpreted in a few ways, but it generally conveys the idea that travel can help to combat prejudice and promote understanding. The phrase “travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness” by Mark Twain is a famous quote that expresses this sentiment. We are all people who strive for very similar ideals no matter where we live or culture we are used to experiencing.

I’m so lucky as you, the parents, trust me (and Lindsay) enough to allow us to travel with your family members. I get to travel to young people who see the world in a new light and with my friends who join us for these adventures. This was Felecia’s 4th trip with me, Lindsay’s second and Connie’s first EF tour. I’m a lucky, lucky woman to be able to share my love of travel with friends!

Favourites/worst/weirdest

Lindsay:

  • Fave: lunch at Spanish lady’s home
  • Worst: drive to Seville as it seemed worthless
  • Weird: diarrhea dog in lunch station

Connie:

  • Fave: the drive to the flamenco dancers in Granada
  • Worst: dog poopiness and bathrooms, having to wait on the other group’s tardiness
  • Wish for next time: market in Madrid

Felecia:

  • Fave: Granada Lahambra and little Morocco
  • Worst: bathrooms
  • Weirdest: guy in the speedo doing butterfly stretch

Jacey:

  • Fave: costa du sol and everything after
  • Worst: scavenger hunt to stressful
  • Weird: ham everywhere and on everything

Brooklyn:

  • Fave: Costa du sol
  • Worst: cathedrals all the time
  • Weird: ham and chips

Ciara:

  • Fave costa du sol, flamenco dancer
  • Worst: art museum and restaurant before
  • Weird: the food is different.

Pam:

  • Fave: Gibraltar
  • Weird: tour director stories
  • Worst: rain storm and opening a stranger’s hotel room looking for our Kate traveller

Roz:

  • Fave:the flamenco dancing
  • Worst: standing in line for zip line as my feet hurt so much
  • Weirdest: first restaurant

Ben:

  • Fave: first day in Madrid in museum and last day seeing traditional villages
  • Worst: flight to Paris due to tiredness
  • Weirdest: seeing monkeys

Fave souvenir:

  • Face serum
  • Bracelet
  • Zipping
  • Sweater of Madrid
  • Wool coat
  • Window view magnets
  • Sword

April 24 Day 9 (Thursday)

Last day of touring! We are doing the spirit of Andalusia today.

We left the hotel at 830 to pick up our guide. He told us we would be trying churros and the bus cheered as Connie has been wanting those babies all week and we have been having a churro drought! We cheered and the guide was surprised by our enthusiasm for churros!

We are travelling north of Malaga to farms today. We stopped in Colerma (sp?) for fresh churros. Sampling with plain, sugar and chocolate. Pretty neat to watch the lady pour the mixture into the oil and make the circle with the long piece of dough.

Olive farm. We saw the processing which is very similar to how we would take grain to the terminal dumping in the pit, augering up and getting weighed. We had a taste of pure olive oil plain and one with garlic cloves in the oil. Very good! Olive facts: 350 million olive trees

We then had a walking tour of the wee little town where we were definitely the only tourists and everyone else was a local. Very quaint, peaceful and calming which is a huge change from everywhere else we have been.

Recycling spot made into art
Super busy street🥴

Lunch. Our adventure includes being invited into a home for a typical Spanish lunch for company. We started with salad with oil and vinegar and meat and cheese with bread. Then the lentil stew arrived which had hints of orange in it. We were full. Then the pork and potatoes with homemade aioli showed up 🥴Custard for dessert was eaten but everyone was definitely slowing down. Then the dessert of anise cake, coffee and quinze liquor (for the adults) was offered. It was all so good, but man alive are we full. It will be a very quiet bus back down the mountain to the beach for the last few hours of our tour.

Our little group
Our little group with Matthew, our tour director
Our little group with our lunch chef

The last two days of our tour were spent without our consolidated school as they choose not to tour Gibraltar or do the Andalusia experience. Our group feels that they missed out as the last two days have been very different from the rest of the tour – minimal crowds in Gibraltar, absolutely no crowds on the farm, and the food has been delicious! We also prefer to travel with our group of 9 plus the tour director. We are built for speed with only 10 people.

Tomorrow morning will have us leaving the hotel at 3 am (7 pm home) time. Hopefully, all flights are on time so we arrive in Regina at midnight on Friday night.

It has been another good trip for YgTravellers! Stay tuned for our next adventure!

April 23 Day 8 (Wednesday)

Early morning as we were off to see the monkeys at Gibraltar!

Our little group of 9 with Matthew, our tour director, left the hotel and our sister school behind behind at 730 am. We travelled to Gibraltar for 1.5 hrs. Seeing the rock from afar was picturesque with one cloud around the top.

After arriving at our meeting place, we teamed with another EF group since we were so small. What’s. small world – Balgonie was our partner! Of all of the places in the world, a town an hour away from home. There was one girl who has relatives from YG and Pangman area.

We jumped in smaller vans and went to see the view as we crawled up the rock. We saw where the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea meet up and saw the spot that the Queen and Prince Philip stood when they were there. I wonder if they will put up a plaque for us.

Our next stop had us going into a monster cave and seeing the beautiful stalagmites set to a light and music show. After emerging from the cave, monkeys were there to enjoy and view. The monkeys are very important to Gibraltar, which has been ruled by the Moors, the Spanish and then the British. Winston Churchill said that the rock will remain British until there are zero monkeys left.

From there we went to tour the tunnel system in the big rock.

It was very interesting to see, but we could have spent more time with the monkeys.

We went for a British tapas lunch of Yorkshire pudding, shepherds pie, and fish and chips with mushy peas.

A little shopping followed where souvenirs were found with lots of monkeys and then back to the beach for a couple hours.

Our time is winding down. It’s been fun , but I think the energy is starting to be spent.

Tomorrow we tour an olive and almond farm and then prepare for our long flight home on Friday.

April 22 Day 7 (Tuesday)

Seville!

Today started with a city tour of Seville on the bus.

We went to the Seville City Center which was where all regions of Spain could trade. There were different stalls for each region with ceramic and shelves. Pretty neat to see as it was so huge. It was used in Star Wars movies for the all trekkies out there. Horse drawn carriages circle the centre. Vendors selling fans, castanets, and paintings. Gypsy women trying to give you rosemary and tell your fortune.

We toured the Seville Cathedral. It was questionable if we would be allowed in as they are to prepare for a mass for the Pope’s funeral since he passed when we have been travelling. It is big news worldwide, but especially in Catholic Europe. The students and most adults walked up to the top of the tower in the cathedral for an impressive view of the city of Seville.

We went for another bus ride to our final hotel in Malaga! Right on the beach! The smiles on our Ygtravellers face was awesome to see!!

Tomorrow we go to Gibraltar bright and early to see the English colony and the monkeys!

April 21 Day 6 (Monday)

Granada!

Today was an early morning with breakfast at 645 as we had to be checked out and on our way by 730.

We visited the Alhambra today and we were one of the first groups to go through today. It is a giant complex that has Arab origins where the sultan used to have over 200 wives! It used to be used for religious purposes that were transferred from different groups. Very beautiful and very complex with many Arabic influences.

The students did a scavenger hunt looking for certain monuments – trust me it was safe. They had to find monuments and take selfies with them.

We also visited an alley called Little Morocco. Spain is very close to Morocco and they sell their wares there from purses to decorative pomegranates to bookmarks. Very pretty.

We nine had a lovely lunch outside or al fresco of more Italian influences then Spanish influences with pizza, pasta and risotto with a splash of gazpacho soup.

Lindsay has been inspiring us with her dancing and photo poses. Have a peek.

She says she was trying to warm up, but I think she was just finding her groove.

I can’t believe my good luck in parents trusting me with their children in allowing me to travel with them. Our travellers have been kind, generous, PATIENT, and just over fantastic! Zero complaining. Following the rules. Zilch for drama. A little tired, but having fun!

From Granada, we took a 3 hr bus drive to Seville where we will dine tonight at Spanish time of 830 which they still consider early. Tomorrow we tour Seville and then head for the south of Spain!

April 20 Day 5 (Sunday)

Off to Granada!

Notes from the bus:

Olives. Extra virgin is best. Pressed in November is best.

Pain main money making: wine, fruits and vegetables, olive oil and tourism.

Quite a bit of time riding the bus today. The countryside is very rolling with grape trees/vines (called whiskers), olive trees and almond trees. Some colorful flowers with poppies growing in the wild with lots of Russian thistle with its purple flowers. Weather is quite cool today (10 degrees Celsius). No rain yet, but the clouds are getting more built up and grey as we travel to Granada.

I spoke too soon. Going through periods of pouring rain showers. Good thing our awesome bus driver has good wiper blades.

We travelled to Consuegra to tour the Don Quixote windmills: tour of the castle and the explanations of the moat and all the intricacies of the building. Very interesting and beautiful views when we crawl the stone steps to the top of the castle. Ciara and Brooklyn were crowned knights in the demonstration! We also visited the windmills which were used for milling grain.

Spanish teenagers make cheap alcoholic drinks by mixing cheap red wine with coke. It is supposed to taste like Dr Pepper, which is very expensive here.

Our group has noticed that there is ham everywhere – hanging in huge amounts in stores, on potato chips, in croquettes that trick you into thinking it is a mozzarella stick, in thick pieces and as skinny meat at breakfast and on tapas. We haven’t seen any pork ranching (is that even what you would call it??). Where is all the ham coming from??

We have viewed many many wind turbines along with solar panels for “green” energy. It seems a shame to pollute the beautiful scenery with those contraptions.

We received the zip line company’s photos today from yesterday’s zip!

We arrived in Granada at 6 pm. We just had time for supper of a green salad with roast chicken.

Flamenco dancing! We took a little bus into the higher elevation of Granada with very narrow streets. The bus driver was incredible! We went into a cave for lack of any other word. A long narrow cave where the dancers and singers sat at one end, all of the spectators lined the length of each wall on chairs (probably 50 people) and then the dancers did the flamenco dancing up and down the alley with incredibly fast stomping feet! It was loud and vibrant. Lindsay couldn’t decide if it was the best thing ever or a Saturday Night Live skit! I saw Ben tapping his foot It was heart pounding either way!

We are only in Granada one night.

Seeing the smiles and hearing the laughs and maybe hearing a few jaw-cracking yawns are all wonderful aspects of the trip.

Tomorrow, we will explore the Alhambra! Now I must get some sleep!

Happy Easter everyone! Take a little peek at my lovely little granddaughter celebrating her first Easter!

April 19 Day 4 (Saturday)

Today was good!

It was raining in Madrid, but we left it behind going to Toledo, which is a wonderful, rugged little city.

First off, we visited a blacksmith shop where they created swords, knives and jewellery. It was interesting to see.

Then we visited the Cathedral of Toledo which is very old (1200) but very beautiful

From there we went to the highlight of the trip – so far- zip lining! We zipped across the Tajo River after a really long wait which is very unusual for EF, but seeing everyone’s nervous smile and elated smiles at the end was so awesome!

Had a late lunch at a food court in Toledo so the kids got their McDonald’s fix or giant burgers else – burgers that included pork chops!

Ms Roz

Drove back to Madrid for a little souvenir shopping and supper. Tonight will be our last night in Madrid and tomorrow will take us to Granada.

Connie has been taking some beautiful pics so I will try to upload as many as possible tonight.

Once again, our travellers are so good!

Lovely Ciara!
Ok. I’ll do it this time 🤗
Long legged Jacey
Sweet Brooklyn
Ben loving the swords
Lindsay, group leader in training
Let go Jacey!
Our official photographer Connie
This was from the night before. So many umbrellas!
Tour director Matthew
Overlooking Toledo
Felecia soaking in Europe

April 18 Day 3 (Friday)

Good morning and Happy Good Friday!

Everyone is looking so much more alert this morning!

Our tour director is Matthew and is a character. Imagine Joe Pesci from Home Alone and you have him pictured. A real storyteller who loves to entertain. He is actually an American who left the USA and moved here.

Notes from the bus:

Spaniards eat breakfast like a prince, lunch like a king and dinner like a pauper.

Full belly, content heart

Bull fighting. A dying terrible event according to Matthew

Madrid is very much a festival city. Something like 800 festivals a year – I’m thinking an exaggeration but who knows. Madrid is not a monument city. For activity then looking.

Spaniards work to live, not live to work.

City centre. Puerto du sol.

Deck you may. Say it with gusto. “Leave me alone” in Spanish. it is considered harsh. We had a Gypsy woman panhandling and learned to push them away.

We learned this morning about the trials of travelling with a large group when we were left waiting for the other group. No worries all good, but our perfect Canadians proved golden as usual ❤️.

We went and spent time this morning at a beautiful park. Our guide was excited about it as he rarely has enough time to take group there. Very beautiful with kayaking on the water and classical music being played by a random musician.

We had a lunch of tapas (small plates of food) which consisted of read, cheese, prosciutto, potatoes, frittatas, tater tot like things, calamari, and jalapeños. I may have forgot some as there was so much selection. The adults were given a sample of sangria while students had pop and water. The picture I have included shows the leftovers.

We also toured around the city central and saw many beautiful places. We went to a unique market that was like a large expensive food court with incredible selections: olive kabobs which would be great with a Caesar 😘, ceviche, potato chips with cut up pieces of ham (Brooklyn thought she would prefer her chips plain), desserts, and so much more. It would be a great place to return. It was very similar to the St Lawrence Market in Toronto.

We visited the Royal Palace in Madrid. Quite beautiful and so vast. We understand why they don’t use it much any more because it needs a a good cleaning, and the flooring makes for sore feet.

We had a city tour on a bus. We learned lots of info, but we stopped at the bull fighting arena. They fight one bull a day in May and then again in September or October. This is mostly a tourist activity as the locals frown upon it

Weather today started cool with minor showers, but raincoats and umbrellas did appear do a very short time. After supper we were going to wait for an Easter procession. As we waited, it started to rain and I mean rain. Our bus couldn’t get to us so we trudged through the street with thousands of Spaniards who were also wanting to see the procession. It rained so hard that the water ran down the street. Good thing we packed an extra pair of shoes as an alternate pair will be needed.

Drowned rats!

Supper tonight was tapas again, but different ones than we had earlier.

Step count is going to be high today as mine is at almost 19000, but Connie’s is over 20000. It depends on your length of leg.

A group of tired travellers tonight, but many smiles and giggles tonight. We need a good sleep because tomorrow we go sword shopping (what Toledo is known for – Ben is pumped!) and zip lining!

Highlight of the day:

Ciara: palace.

Brooklyn: the park

Jacey: the park

Roz: seeing the castle.

Ben: palace tour

Everyone is good! Thank you for sending your kids with us! We have a group of rockstars as they are reliable, punctual, and good attitudes! We will try for more pics tomorrow!

April 17, Day 2 (Thursday)

We landed in Madrid to sunny skies!

We met an EF guy who took us to the city centre to visit the Museo del Prado where Goya (famous Spanish painter) has many incredible paintings.

We returned to our hotel to have supper and have an early to bed. Tomorrow has many adventures in store, but first we need a good night sleep.