We'd been looking forward to visiting Valencia since talking with Carmen's friends, Luis and Ester, who used to live there. They loved the city and we weren't there long before we understood why. We stayed with a couchsurfing host, Bérengère (Bébé) who is a French woman originally from Toulouse, France but who has lived in Spain for 15 years. The borders are open here so if Europeans want to live and work in a different European country, they can without needing a Visa or anything like that.
Bébé lives in a 3-bedroom flat just blocks away from Old Town, the city center. Her neighborhood is a lively place, with shops, restaurants, bakeries, tapas bars - anything you'd want, all within a few blocks. There was a great bakery around the corner where we found ourselves far too often and a small market across the street where we stopped every morning to buy fresh fruit. She's renting her place and is in the middle of an extensive renovation of the new flat she just bought a couple months ago. Just about from the ground up, new walls, new almost everything. She's so excited and we had great fun when she gave us the big tour, seeing the work in progress and imagining the finished space. It was fun to be excited with and for her.
We first got to Bébé's about 6:00 Saturday evening, after driving around a bit trying to find a parking place - just about impossible in the busy city streets. We decided then and there to return our rental car BEFORE our five-day visit to Barcelona the next week! We ditched the car when we found a place and carried our backpacks the last few blocks to her place. We settled in and had a nice chat, getting to know each other a bit, while we waited for Fernando to arrive. Fernando was another couchsurfer staying there, a 25-year old PE teacher from Buenos Aires, Argentina, who is spending two months traveling Europe. Once Fernando got there, we went to a bar to have a bite to eat and listen to a friend of Bébé's who played in a band. Another friend of hers also joined us, Nuevella. Nuevella is from the Italian part of Switzerland and speaks not only Swiss and Italian, but also English, French, Spanish, and a dialect of Spanish spoken in the Catalonia region of Spain. She was so friendly and interesting to talk to. She ended up joining us for most of the places we went to while we were there. The band that night played enthusiastically if not particularly well but we had a great time. The bass player was about 45 minutes late so they started about 10:00. The three of us who had traveled that day were a bit tired so we called it a ( relatively) early night and were back at the flat by midnight.
One of the best parts about staying with Bébé was the great places she took us to and the suggestions she gave us when we went out on our own. We told her one of the things on our must-do list was to see a Flamenco dance so she took us to this small bar in the next neighborhood to see an authentic and impassioned show - it was wonderful! Because of the size of the place it was mostly standing room only and the stage was about 10 feet from where we were standing. We could see the dancers' expressions and the sweat on their foreheads. All for only 8 euros and that included a drink!
She also took us to the local couchsurfers meeting on Sunday afternoon. We had a picnic on the beach. It was also the day of the kite festival so there were fun, colorful, some amazing kites flying. Val has some pics and a video that we'll soon post. For the picnic, everyone brought something to eat from their home country and many people shared. There were chicken legs, a rice dish, pastries, bread and an Argentinian tea called Mata that was shared. The custom is that first the "host" pours herself a cup, then a cup for another person, then herself, etc. (I guess this tea is a big deal in Argentina because when Fernando met up with us later he was almost heartbroken that he missed the tea sharing. He said he missed his family and friends after two months of travel, but he missed his Mata more :) ) At any given time there were conversations in Italian, Bulgarian, Spanish and French but since English was the common denominator - and that was the only language Val and I spoke, they were all nice enough to mostly speak English. After the picnic, we wandered down the beach to find where they were judging the finalists in the kite contest. This wasn't a children's contest, these pilots were professionals! We only caught two of the final flights, but the two we saw were incredible. The flights were choreographed and set to music. It was hard to believe a few people working the strings to these kites could fly them with such grace and precision.
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Our picnic on the beach. |
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Passing the Mata around. |
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Just a small view of the kite festival. |


Bébé was generous with her time. But Val and I also spent a lot of time exploring on our own. We walked, we rented bikes one day, and walked some more. We loved sightseeing in this city! It became our favorite city. It was very easy to get around and because it's still a little early in the season there weren't crowds of tourists we had to navigate around. There was so much to see! Val just loved all the architecture and the juxtaposition of contemporary (like the opera house, aquarium and science museum) with the historic (the city center with its century-old walls, gates, buildings and cathedrals) and the green, open spaces (there was an old riverbed, now a park that ran over six miles through the city not far from the city center. We spent hours there, running, walking and riding bikes. The people we had dinner with in Thailand, Rety and Bruce, told us about it that night and it happened to be just down the street from Bébé's). Valencia was truly another highlight of our trip - the city, the architecture, the people we met, the parks and open spaces, the markets, bakeries, restaurants and pubs down every street and around every corner. Val especially liked the city - he said he felt a kinship with it. VAL. VALencia. (He thought he was very clever with that one.)
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Opera House - this building took nine years to build and will hold 40,000 people. |
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Outside the City of Arts and Sciences; on this boardwalk there were these "candy wrapper" sculptures of each state. |
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A view of the park near Bebe's house. |
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Valencia! |