One may wonder why I write the Spanish version of Andalucía, instead of Andalusia, as written in English. I fall back on a movie scene, Mask of Zorro or something like that, which takes place in Mexico during the Spanish Empire. Katherine Zeta-Jones has a line where she says, “In Andalucía, I would ride my horse on a full moon night…” As one would expect, it was said in full accent, with loads of sensuality and flare endemic to most Spanish interactions. That is about the only takeaway from the movie, such that I when I finally did fly to Andalucía, I kept hearing her voice in my head, even while in the cockpit on a sunny day. When I was standing on a balcony with a 50-something year old male friend of mine, literally on a full moon night, in Andalusia, it was “a full moon night in Andalucía.” He’s not as attractive as Ms. Zeta-Jones, unfortunately.
Be that as it may, Catalans do not have such a sensual perspective of Andalucía. Whatever negative that occurs in Catalunya (that usually happens all over Spain to some varying intensity), Catalans are the first to brush off anything I say about it with a “Well, in Andalucía…..” In other words, “you haven’t seen anything yet.” Well, I went to Andalucía and found the people to be the most generous, kind, and laidback subculture of Spain yet. Go figure. And nothing I was told would happen down there did end up happening; really, it was the opposite.
As for aviation, I was trying to fly to Morocco again. It didn’t work, though I did get a bunch of local flying done in that neck of the woods.
The Portuguese Outback – Much of it looks like this.
Évora
My first view of flowers in bloom in the Portuguese Alentejo.
Zoomed out perspective of some of these flower fields. Also a bit hazy on the way down south…
Near Alqueva, Portugal.
And the 590nm infrared version…
Aqueduct just over the border in Spain, near El Granado.
Deer.
Closeup on a river.
Just east of Mafé Aerodrome, Spain.
Rio Tinto.
Tilled field near Trebujena.
Solar installation at Sanlucar de Mayor.
And the death ray…
Somewhere in vicinity of Jerez.
Wheat fields.
The significance of this could go a few ways. I find the flowers rather intriguing.
Salt ponds near Cádiz.
“Salinas” & marshes near Cádiz.
Caño de Sancti-Petri, with Atlantic Ocean on the horizon.
Punta del Boquerón.
This looks like a painting to me. Canal water mixes with various tide cycles to create such different colors. I have seen variations like this, though not as intense, in Portugal and North Carolina.
Avenida Via Augusta Julia, Cádiz.
Cádiz, Spain.
Puente de la Constitución de 1812.
Wheat fields en route toward Trebujena from Cádiz.