Showing posts with label Travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Travel. Show all posts

Saturday, June 27, 2009

A Trip to Béarn

This article was published at France Today:

Le Béarn: A Foray into France Profonde

Judy Fayard


When Henri IV succeeded to the throne of France in 1589, he was king of Béarn and Navarre. Knowing that his proud people would not relish being absorbed by the French, he declared to them: "I am not giving Béarn to France. I am giving France to Béarn."

One of candidate Francois Bayrou's most astute moves in France's recent presidential campaign was to meet the press while riding a tractor in the fields of his native Béarn. Those photos struck a deep chord with millions of voters-representing the reassuring stability of an idealized pastoral and agricultural France profonde in the face of an uncertain globalized future.

In many ways, the idealized image is true: the flatlands are rich with fields of wheat and corn, and in the mountains some farmers are still plow with horses and and harvest hay by hand. But the region is also

Béarn today is the larger half of the département of Pyrénées-Atlantique, shared with the Pays Basque to the west. It's a lush land of a thousand different shades of green, pierced by deep valleys and gaves-rushing rivers highly prized by fishermen for their salmon and trout.

The Béarnais share many other things besides their département with their Basque cousins, including the béret, which was in fact originally Béarnais, and jambon de Bayonne, first developed in Salies-de-Béarn by curing ham with salt from the town's springs.

And, even more than for the Basque country, the defining feature of Béarn is the stunning vista of the snow-capped Pyrénées, filling the southern horizon like a majestic battlement wall. The mountains partially account for the legendarily independent character of the Béarnais, somewhat mellowed by a mild, almost Méditerranean climate that also-witness those verdant valleys-gets a lot of rain, especially in the spring.

The Béarnais language, a variant of the langue d'oc, is still spoken by many and is being taught to schoolchilden once more. And like their beloved Henry IV, "Lou Nouste Henric," the Bearnais have a well-established appreciation for their hearty southwestern food and regional wines-sweet or dry white Jurançon, rosé de Béarn, Béarn-Bellocq, Madiran and white Pacherenc, also both sweet and dry.

"Béarnais baptism": garlic and wine

Pau, the regional capital, is perched on a cliff over the wide Gave de Pau, with an unparalleled view of the mountains from the terrace of the Boulevard des Pyrénées. The narrow cobbled streets of the old quarter lead to the château, an almost cartoonlike hodge-podge of a castle begun by the Vicomte de Béarn Gaston Phébus in the 14th century and meddled with by just about every sovereign who followed. Like the city itself, it's full of beguiling, low-key charm.

Henri IV was born in the château in 1553, the son of Henri de Bourbon and Jeanne d'Albret. On his father's side, he was directly descended from Louis IX, Saint Louis. His maternal grandfather was Henri II d'Albret, a rough and ready bon vivant, and his grandmother Marguerite d'Angoulême, sister of François Ier, was an intellectual and poet who wrote the Tales of the Heptaméron, inspired by Boccaccio's Decameron. When Henri was born, his grandfather gave him a "Béarnais baptism"-rubbing the infant's lips with garlic and a drop of Jurançon wine.

Henri's cradle was the shell of a giant tortoise, a curiosity thereafter displayed beneath a pyramid of lances holding a gold knight's helmet replete with white plumes. Given the quirky look of bemusement on the dozens of statues of him strewn around the château, Henri might have found the tortoise-shell shrine a bit over the top.

But the rest of the castle is worth the price of admission, including a grandiose dining room table that seats 100 guests, and rooms opulently refurnished in the 19th century under Napoléon III and Louis Philippe, both of whom were anxious to establish their connections to the direct descendant of Saint Louis.

It was also in the 19th century that Pau became known as la ville anglaise, a fashionable health resort for wealthy English folk. That notoriety earned the city a bevy of elegant English villas, the first golf course on the European continent, and horse-breeding and fox-hunting traditions still alive today.

The Musée des Beaux-Arts offers an eclectic collection-El Greco, Breughel, Rubens, Zurbarán, Degas's "The Cotton Exchange in New Orleans" plus local contemporary works-and the small Musée Bernadotte is the former home of Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte, one of Napoléon's maréchals, who became King of Sweden in 1818, founding the dynasty that reigns today and making this modest Béarnais city the birthplace of two kings.

A futurist complex in la France profonde

Perhaps a better base for forays into the countryside, though, is Orthez, lively but smaller and easier to negotiate. It's an authentic Béarnais town, the home of Jeanne d'Albret, whose former manor house now houses a small museum of Protestantism in Béarn. The formidable Jeanne was a devout Protestant who imposed Calvinism on her realm and on her son, Henri IV, until he bartered his faith for the crown of Catholic France (in his famous phrase, "Paris is well worth a Mass"). The main street in front of Jeanne's house leads, on one end, to the "Château" Moncade-an imposing 13th-century tower with a panoramic view-and on the other to the fortified Vieux Pont.

Between Pau and Orthez lies Lacq, and a modern-day tale. Until the mid 20th century, Béarn was an economic backwater and rural life was harsh. In 1951, the largest deposit of natural gas in western Europe was discovered here. Within a few years the immense gas plant at Lacq brought in thousands of workers, jobs and wealth to the entire region and spawned a sprawling industrial complex that looks like a futuristic city from another planet.

A few kilometers and a world away, Salies-de-Bearn (pronounced SaLEES) sits atop the salt springs that gave it name and fortune. The crystallized salt was used for preserving food, notably jambon de Bayonne, and the springs-seven times saltier than the sea, it's said-still supply the town's thermal baths. Delightful Salies calls itself the "Venice of Béarn," since the Saleys river meanders through, bordered by balconied houses on stilts.

Home of the béret

Nearby Sauveterre-de-Béarn is a stop on the pilgrimage route to Compostela. The name comes from salva terra, referring to hamlets founded by monasteries as safe havens for fugitives and wanderers. It's still an appealing place to wander, past stone houses topped by steep, slightly turned-up Béarnais roofs made of red tiles called picons. Only half of the 12th-century Vieux Pont still stands, site of a legendary trial by divine judgment: In 1170, the widow of Gaston V de Béarn, accused of murdering her newborn child, was thrown off the bridge bound hand and foot; she floated safely to shore, and so was "proven" innocent.

Tiny Navarrenx is surrounded by the remains of its medieval walls, considered a perfect example of 16th-century fortifications. It too is a stop on the pilgrim route (also a good café stop on the route de tourisme), and the site of the annual World Salmon Fishing Championships. Or so they are called.

Red tile roofs give way to the gray slate of mountain towns like Oloron-Sainte-Marie, where a chocolate factory fills the whole town with its aroma. The béret Béarnais is made here, and so are Artiga "Basque" linens. But the star attraction is the superb 12th-century portal of the cathedral, a UNESCO World Heritage site. Sculpted in Pyrénéen marble, the astonishing tympan portrays Biblical and allegorical figures along with fishermen (toting very big fish), hunters, farmers and cheesemakers. On either side, a mounted King Constantine treads on the head of Paganism, and a monster devours a man.

Eco-disaster in paradise

Straight south of Oloron, the Aspe valley is deep and narrow, with sheep and hay meadows and exhilarating views at every bend in the road. Villages pop up here and there: Sarrance, with a pilgrimage church and cloister; Bedous, where a turnoff to leads down to the river and a perfect picnic ground beside a limpid salmon pool. Near Accous there's a small aluminum factory owned by the Japanese company Toyal. It's incongruous, and recently the cause of controversy: When the owners announced they would build another factory at Lacq, local congressman Jean Lasalle, fearing the old one might close after the new one opened (only 43 miles away, but out of his district), went on a hunger strike to put the kibosh on the new project. Even more bizarre, he seems to have won.

Farther along, a turn off the main road winds up to Lescun, a flower-decked stone village with a café and a plain stone church with an ornate Baroque altar. The village sits in a majestic cirque of needle rocks, but climb a little higher above the church for the valley's most breathtaking view.

Sadly, all is not idyllic in this mountain paradise. The two-lane Aspe Valley road is a pleasure on weekends, but weekdays it's heavy with truck traffic crossing from Spain through the Somport tunnel. In mid-June a truck carrying chemicals went off the road near the Lescun turnoff, spilling thousands of gallons of toxic liquid into the gave, destroying fish and vegetation along a four-mile stretch. Farther down, the river eventually diluted the chemical disaster, but for the affected segment the river and its banks are closed off indefinitely.

Heading back, a detour north of Oloron will take you through the hilly vineyards of Jurançon, a beautiful drive on peaceful country roads where you can stop for a tasting wherever you see a dégustation sign. One great bet is the Château de Rousse, near La Chapelle de Rousse almost directly south of Pau. There, on the former hunting grounds of Henri IV, the Labat family produces award-winning Jurançons on steeply terraced vineyards. Geneviève Labat graciously shows visitors around, and a chat about the beauty of her garden leads inevitably to talk of rain, and the generous quantities of it in the region. "Ah, oui," she says with twinkling eyes and musical accent, "in Béarn we don't lack for water...or for wine."


We guess profonde means "not really", and taking the very first paragraph as our cue we can say that the author knows that Béarn is not quite a part of France. If you do some research you will find out that Béarn is actually part of Nabarra (Navarre in English).

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Friday, March 20, 2009

An Invitation to Visit Nabarra

This information was posted at the Sierra Mountain Times:

Discover the Cultural Riches of Spain’s Basque Country

This summer, Columbia College is again offering a unique opportunity to get an insider’s view of the colorful culture, art and history of the Basque Country of north central Spain. Located to the west of the Pyrenees along the Bay of Biscay, the region is rich in its Basque, Gothic and Roman heritage.

Based at Vitoria-Gasteiz, the seat of the Basque Parliament, those interested in going on the trip will attend the Zador Institute, an accredited school of Spanish language where classes will be taught by certified native teachers for four hours per day, five days a week in classrooms and neighborhood settings. Their website is located at www.zadorspain.com. Travelers will stay with Spanish families for a total language immersion experience. Of course, participants will also earn a total of six units of credit from Columbia College: three in conversational Spanish 10A, 10B, 20A or 20B – depending on initial assessed level of proficiency – and three in humanities (old world culture), taught by local expert, Dr. Susan Still.

Afternoon activities and field trips with Spanish-speaking guides will include city tours, art and history museum visits, bike tours, dining at typical Basque tapas bars and restaurants, and cider house samplings, as well as day trips to an ancient Roman saltworks, nearby lakes and a nature park.

Vitoria has a population of about 200,000 and with its excellent train and bus transportation and central location, excursion destinations are never more than an hour or so away. On weekends, tours are planned with Spanish-speaking guides to Pamplona in Navarra, the medieval walled city of LaGuardia, the La Rioja wine region and Alavese fishing villages. Students will also see Spain’s most famous Gothic cathedral in beautiful Burgos, the Guggenheim Museum of Modern Art in Bilbao and the inviting beach city of San Sebastian.

The two-week program begins on June 6, with an optional third week. The approximate cost for the two-week program is $2,900, and $850 for the additional week. This covers tuition, classes, airport transfers, home stay, meals, excursions and insurance – airfare is not included.

Columbia College Spanish Instructor Vonna Breeze-Martin is coordinating the program and is again leading the Basque Country visit. “It is so enlightening and inspiring to see how another culture views the world,” she said. “The Basque cities are modern, clean, prosperous and environmentally-friendly places, steeped in history dating back to the Bronze Age. Vitoria, for instance, boasts of its bike paths (and free bikes for loan); green spaces and parks that are among the highest per capita in Europe; walking paths; mall routes; a restored medieval quarter and excellent public transportation. And if you’ve ever had an opportunity to enjoy a Basque meal here in the U.S., you know what a real treat is waiting for you in Pais Vasco!”

Despite the title and the insistence in calling the Basques by the term Spanish, this article has some redeeming qualities. Is good to learn than more and more people are identifying not only the Basque Autonomous Community as the Basque Country but also Navarre and even Rioja (Errioxa). This means that people are recognizing the cultural identity of once sovereign and independent Nabarra.

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Saturday, March 14, 2009

Visiting Errioxa

This article published at The Times contains a pearl of historic truth, Errioxa (known as Rioja) is actually a Basque province, here you have it:

On the trail of a fine rioja by way of the annual wine battle

David Sharrock

Spain’s most famous wine-producing region actually extends across its eponymous province into the Basque Country and Navarra, although at its centre is the historic city of Logroño, an important halt on the Camino de Santiago pilgrimage trail.

Thousands of years ago La Rioja region was an inner sea of the Iberian Peninsula and its geography gives its wineries a distinct advantage, sheltered from the more extreme climates of its regional neighbours by mountain ranges to the north and south. The region is slowly but surely developing a wine trail, the jewel in its crown being the Marqués de Riscal Hotel, in Elciego, designed by Frank Gehry, whose rippling roof of titanium leaves reflects the colours of the landscape during the grape harvest.

While the hotel is visually stunning, the winery designed by Santiago Calatrava for the makers of Ysios rioja is perhaps a happier match with the stunning landscape.

The winery or bodega is located close to Laguardia, a fortress-like town which well reflects its name: it was originally known as Laguardia de Navarra – the Guard of Navarre.

Cars are not allowed through its medieval gates for a very good reason: beneath the narrow streets lies a honeycomb of catacombs, the original bodegas where wine was made and stored. Most lie empty, but El Fabulista is one exception where guided tours and tastings are given inside a beautiful underground vault.

Primicia is another town worthy of visit, where recent restoration work has opened up what is thought to be its oldest building, a tithe house established by the Catholic Church.

If you are very lucky you may also visit Primicia’s bodega garden, set among some of its vines with views of the mountains. I enjoyed a memorable autumnal lunch there, feasting on barbequed baby lamb chops.

Laguardia makes an ideal base for exploring the immediate area. For those of us with pockets too shallow to stay in the Marqués de Riscal – where Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt have rested their Hollywood heads – I recommend the Posada Mayor de Migueloa, a characterful 17th-century house in the heart of Laguardia.

For a busier nightlife head for Logroño and some of the best food in northern Spain.

The city highlight is Calle Laurel, where some 50 bars create what is known locally as the Elephant Trail.

It derives its nickname from the Spanish phrase Ir trompa – to stagger drunkenly along. Trompa is Spanish for an elephant’s trunk. On a Friday evening it makes perfect sense: you can just imagine the herd in full cry.

Don’t worry, it is all very good natured, washed down with small but frequent glasses of good rioja and accompanied by a type of tapas called pinchos, with each bar offering its own speciality.

My favourite bar is the Soriano – fantastic mushrooms. And if you think that wine tourism is simply refined sniffing and slurping then try being in Haro for its annual wine battle, held each year on June 29.

Its origins are based on a local territorial dispute but that is beside the point: thousands of litres of red wine are sprayed, poured and thrown. Be sure you are not wearing anything you value too highly.

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A Cycling Paradise

From what the press usually publishes about Euskal Herria you would never guess that this tiny nation in Western Europe is a paradise for those who enjoy practicing sports. There is excellent surfing spots like Mundaka, Zarautz and Biarritz, there is plenty of places where to go hiking and well, there is a wide range of options for those who love cycling. PezCycling News published this article about what the Basque landscape and geography offer:

GIANT TOURS: Cycling The Basque Country & Pyrenees

Friday, March 13, 2009

We first met Giant Tours last year as they launched with trips through the Pyrenees hosted by former World Champ Abraham Olano. For 2009 they’ve expanded their catalogue of cycling adventures, and the company’s Javier Sánchez offers some new reasons to go cycling in Basque Country…

Special Travel Feature By Javier Sánchez-Beaskoetxea of Giant Tours -

The Basque Country, Euskadi as it’s known in the Basque language, is a magical place for all lovers of cycling, and also is one of Lonely Planet's Top 10 Best, must-see, destinations for 2009. This green land has given the sport some of its great riders, cyclists who have shone in the world’s greatest races, like Marino Lejarreta, Abraham Olano or Miguel Indurain. GIANT TOURS offers the chance to enjoy cycling, gastronomy, life and this beautiful scenery.

The Basque Country is just a step away from some of the most important climbs in the Pyrenees, scene of some of the most historic stages in the Tour de France. So it’s a perfect chance to ascend the legendary slopes in the good company of some ex-pros, like Abraham Olano, World Champion, or Roberto Heras, three-time winner of the Vuelta a España, both of whom are present on some our our trips.

GIANT TOURS is a biking holiday company set up by Giant Bicycles in Spain, and all the people who are a part of it have one thing in common – a passion for cycling and life. And it’s this passion that we transmit with our cycling tours. We love riding the roads of the Basque Country and the Pyrenees, the ideal place to enjoy cycling at any level, whether you want to train hard or simply go for a relaxing ride.

Each cyclist who signs up for one of our trips can be sure that he or she is in the hands of people who truly love their work and who know the Basque Country and the Pyrenees perfectly, because we’re playing on our ground, a place which we want to share with everybody.

The TRIPS

We offer many trips in our catalogue, but a few a worthy of note here. For those of you looking for a great adventure, we suggest riding through the Pyrenees from the Mediterranean to the Bay of Biscay on the TRANSPYRENEAN.

What cyclist has never daydreamed about going on a fantastic trip by bike? If we pick up a map of Europe, our attention will soon be drawn to the Pyrenees, whose name brings us memories of some of cycling's greatest moments from more than 100 years of history of the Tour de France. And the idea of crossing this majestic mountain range from sea to sea via its legendary climbs will have occurred to more than one.

This trip allows any cyclist to make this dream come true, since we provide all the organization, transport, accommodation and support necessary. So, cyclists only have to think about enjoying each stage with the only worry of hauling themself up the awesome climbs.

This trip consists of one day’s travel by bus from Hendaye to the Mediterranean, plus seven fantastic days cycling back on the most famous roads in the French Pyrenees following the D-618 and the D-918 from Argelès-sur-Mer to St. Jean-de-Luz - including a rest day in Luchon where you can just rest or climb other famous Cols like Port de Balés or Superbagneres.

THE TOUR DE FRANCE: In July, from 10th July to 14th July, we’ve prepared a trip to the French Pyrenees to see the best race in the world. During the stage in Argeles Gazost, at the bottom of Tourmalet, we’ll have the chance to live the Tour de France and to climb some of the most famous Cols of this race, like Col d’Aubisque, Luz Ardiden or Hautacam.

LUXURY TRIPS

Dream landscapes, legendary climbs, cuisine for connoiseurs, surprising museums, exquisite hospitality. All this, and more, is offered by our GIANT VIP TOUR – an extraordinary holiday for lovers of cycling, travelling and life, all in six marvellous days divided between the Basque Country and the French Pyrenees, through green valleys and along an amazing coastline, with visits to the best restaurants and climbs up cycling legends like the Tourmalet or the Aubisque. What more could anyone who loves cycling and life ask for?

The restaurants and hotels have been especially chosen in order to make your stay a delight for all your senses. From the moment guests set foot in Bilbao Airport until the moment you have to leave, you’ll have the pleasure of being treated like royalty. You won’t have to worry about a thing, since at every moment GIANT TOURS will be available for your every need. For example, you’ll be able to enjoy riding a GIANT carbon composite bike, and we’ll even invite you to a beer if you fancy one!

THE FISH & WINE ROUTE travels through the breathtaking landscape of the old commercial route which joined the inland wine-growing areas with the coast for the trade of fresh fish for wine and other produce. From La Rioja Alavesa to the coastal villages of Bizkaia, guests travel through the Basque Country from south to north as we discover the changing countryside and enjoy the delicate shades of colour which are characteristic of this marvellous corner of Europe.

Read more about these and other trips at: Giant Tours
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Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Inky Gourmet Treat

This delicious recipe comes to us courtesy of EiTB:

Baby squids in Getaria

Nora García

Getaria is the most characteristic fishing port in Gipuzkoa. Its narrow streets hold all the charm visitors are after, and its port is a kaleidoscope of images, lights, colours and smells.

The fishing fleet processed, although a large part of the labor of the "arrantzales" (fishermen) ends up on the grills and in the kitchens of some of the top restaurants in the Basque Country.

Grill houses line the streets but, in fact, the local speciality is the mouth-watering combination of freshly caught chipirones (baby squids) and onions, a dish known as "chipirones pelayo". The recipe has spread throughout the Basque Country, and is considered one of the true masterpieces of our cuisine. Needless to say, it should be accompanied by a glass of "Txakoli" wine, also from the town of Getaria.

Stuffed baby squids in ink sauce

Ingredients (3 servings):

24 small baby squid (best caught on a hook), 3 large onions, 2 small tomatoes, 1 green pepper, 4 cloves garlic, 2 sprigs parsley, oil and salt.

For the filling:

squid fins and arms, 1 onion, 1 clove of garlic, a bit of chopped parsley, oil and salt.

Separate the head and the arms from the body. Remove the pen and the outer and inner membrane. Wash thoroughly. Cut the fins off and chop them up. The innards will come out when removing the head and arms. Very carefully remove the ink sac before discarding the innards. Dissolve the ink sac in a glass of water. Remove and discard the mouth and eyes and wash the squid again. Chop up the arms and add them to the diced fins.

Follow the same procedure for each squid. Dice the onion, garlic and parsley. Add them to the chopped up squid fins and arms and sauté the mixture in a bit of oil. Let cool. Use this mixture to fill the baby squid bodies, being careful not to stuff them too full as they will shrink while cooking. Fasten the end of each squid with a toothpick to keep the filling from falling out.

Put an earthenware casserole and with the burner on low slowly sauté the garlic, tomatoes, green pepper and parsley in the oil. After a while turn up the heat and add the baby squid. Let them cook for a few minutes until they brown a little. Add the dissolved ink, season and lower the heat to a simmer.

When the squid are tender (but not overly soft), remove them from the vegetable mixture. Press the mixture through a food mill. This dish can be accompanied by white rice or croutons.


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Thursday, January 29, 2009

Pintxos in Donostia

This article was published by Time magazine, a news outlets that often plays it by the book and insists on divesting the Basques from their history and their identity.

Anyway, here you have it:

Tapas: Bite-Size Beauties

By LYDIA ITOI

How many Flavors can a tapa hold? Originally, a tapa was a piece of bread set on top of a wine glass to ward off flies and hunger. Today, a few tapas can make a full-fledged meal. The tapas capital of the world is San Sebastián, in the gastronomic heart of Spanish Basque country — where San Sebastián is called Donostia and tapas are called pintxos.

Whatever the city's name, its streets are lined with places serving one delectable nibble after another. But even in these rich pintxo pastures, nowhere is the grazing more highly evolved than at Aloña-Berri (www.alonaberri.com), which routinely sweeps national and regional tapas competitions with its innovative offerings. Aloña-Berri's staff manage to fit more tastes in a teaspoon than most restaurants put on a platter; their architectural pintxos are so elaborate that I have counted 12 perfectly balanced elements in a single bite.

Take txipiron. Traditional tapas bars serve the tiny squid simply grilled. At Aloña-Berri the txipiron is stuffed with onion confit, artfully suspended over a thimbleful of seafood-laced martini, garnished with a fragile pane of caramelized sugar scattered with onion sprouts and red pepper, and accompanied by a cube of toasted squid-ink rice. The bar offers a 10-course haute cuisine feast in miniature for a minuscule price of $35, but don't miss the pigeon baztela cooked slowly with sweet spices, raisins and rose petals, then wrapped in a crisp filo pastry. Another standout is the milhojas, a luscious caramelized tower of coin-sized potato disks sandwiched between slices of apple, cèpe mushroom and foie gras. The only problem? One bite is never enough.

At least Time does have the courage to break through the wall of lies built by Spain and France about the Basques and they have published at least 32 articles using the term "ethnic Basques", something that must of the USA based main stream media avoids.

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Sunday, January 25, 2009

Surf in Biarritz

Miarritze is redefining itself according to this article that comes to us via Irish Times:

Surf's up, m'lord

BIARRITZ: Once the preserve of royalty and the superwealthy, Biarritz has been reinventing itself as the destination of choice for avid windsurfers, writes Peter Cluskey

IF EVERY grand-but-fading seaside resort dreams of reinventing itself to meet the quick-fire demands of the 21st century, they have a role model: Biarritz.

For centuries it was the glamorous spa town of choice for the crowned heads of Europe. Today its award-winning beaches are regarded as some of the best windsurfing coastline in the world – and its wealthier regulars mix quite happily with an international parade of,well, beach bums.

It has been an extraordinary transformation. Perched at the southernmost point of France’s Atlantic coast, on the border with Spain, Biarritz first appeared on the radar of Europe’s elite in 1854, when Empress Eugénie, wife of Napoleon III, built a magnificent white palace on cliffs just outside the town.

The British royal family, including Queen Victoria and Edward VII, were regular visitors. So were Alfonso XIII of Spain, Leopold II of Belgium and even Germany’s Iron Chancellor, Otto Von Bismark. But republic replaced empire, and in a sign of the times Villa Eugénie, as it was dubbed by les Biarrots, was bought by Banque Parisienne and reopened as Hôtel du Palais Imperial Resort Spa in 1893.

The clientele changed but the hotel’s cachet remained unassailable. A new royalty replaced the old – the shah of Persia, Frank Sinatra, Jayne Mansfield, Bing Crosby, Hemingway, Chaplin and Stravinsky – although the duke and duchess of Windsor remained loyal to the end. And while some of the glamour of Biarritz was usurped over the years by the Côte d’Azur, and Saint Tropez in particular during the 1960s, the town remained a byword for high-end leisure and sophistication.

Why does the history matter? Because it’s what has made Biarritz the charming, relaxed and welcoming place it is today. The ancient split-windscreen VW campers with fading anti-nuclear stickers may outnumber Rolls-Royce Silver Shadows; more holidaymakers may arrive by no-frills airline than by private jet; more waitresses may be speaking French with distinctly Aussie accents, but Biarritz is more vibrant than ever. It has made the journey from chic to cool. And the celebs are coming back: the iconic designer Karl Lagerfeld bought a holiday home here last year.

Place Georges Clemenceau, in the centre of town, is where you’ll find yourself as you get your bearings. Almost everyone starts by taking a walk along the promenade, Quai de la Grande Plage, which gives a magnificent view of the crescent of apartments, hotels and restaurants overlooking the bay.

At one end you’ll find the Hôtel du Palais, still the reserve of those with five-star budgets. At the other there’s the less-than-exclusive Casino Municipal, where you can choose between an informal section with slot machines and a more elegant section with table games.

By day, if you fancy your chances, there are numerous surf schools on the Grande Plage. Given the town’s elite background, golf is popular, with five top-class courses within an hour’s drive. Biarritz’s Basque heritage is most evident in the food and in the souvenir shops, which sell intricately-sewn Basque tablecloths, antiques, jewellery and handmade sandals.

To spoil yourself, there are a a number of famous local chocolatiers and one or two still-demure tea rooms. Or, for something healthier, there’s thalassotherapy at the Thalassa Institute, at Hôtel Miramar, and thermal seawater baths on Rue de Madrid.

When the sun goes down, relax in a deckchair with a cocktail at Côte 57, nibble some tapas at Le Bistroye or head to Chez Albert for some memorable local seafood. And while you tuck into the house speciality – steak de thon rouge aux saveurs douces, confitures d’oignons au vinaigre balsamique et croustillant de pommes de terre aux pieds de porc – remember the old Basque saying “To know how to eat is to know enough.”

Where to stay, eat and go

5 places to stay

Hôtel du Palais . 1 Avenue de l’Impératrice, 00-33-559- 416400, www.hotel-du-palais. com. If you need to ask how much it costs, you can’t afford to stay here. But we all have special occasions – and it is one of the world’s historic hotels.

Sofitel Thalassa Miramar . 13 Rue Louison Bobet, 00-33-559-413000, www.sofitel.com. A luxury hotel incorporating the Institute of Thalassotherapy (sea-water spa treatment), and with a golf course just a stone’s throw away. High-season rates for a double room go as high as €544, with breakfast €27.

Radisson SAS Biarritz. 1 Carrefour Hélianthe, 00-33-559-011313, www.biarritz.radissonsas.com. It may not be the Hôtel du Palais, but it’s luxurious nonetheless, and only a short walk from the centre. Rates begin at about €350 for a double standard room with an ocean view.

Hôtel Mercure Thalassa Régina et Golf. 52 Avenue de l’Impératrice, 00-33-559-413300, www.mercure.com. The thalassotherapy centre is very popular here. High-season rates for a double are around €240.

Hôtel Centre-Biarritz . 7 Rue de Gascogne, 00-33-559- 223654, www.hotel-centre biarritz.com. This is a nice quiet hotel just two minutes’ walk from the centre. The high-season rate for a double room is about €72.

5 places to eat

Hôtel du Palais. 1 Avenue de l’Impératrice, 00-33-559- 416400, www.hotel-du- palais.com. The hotel has three restaurants: La Rotonde, overlooking the ocean; Hippocampe, by the pool; and Villa Eugénie, for foodies.

Chez Albert. Allée Port des Pecheurs, 00-33-559-244384, www.chezalbert.fr. Bright, colourful, buzzing seafood restaurant with large outside terrace and Basque specialities.

Café de Paris . 5 Place Bellevue, 00-33-559-241953. If you fancy eating well, with the ocean and the Grand Plage spread out below you, this is the place to soak up the atmosphere.

Le Bistroye . 6 Rue Jean Bart, 00-33-559-220102. If you’re looking for fresh, authentic Basque cuisine in a friendly atmosphere, this is the place to go.

Bar Jean . 5 Rue des Halles, 00-33-559-248038. A relaxed bistro atmosphere with excellent tapas – after all, Spain is just 35km away – and grilled langoustines.

5 places to go

Russian Orthodox Church, 8 Avenue de l’Impératrice. Located right next door, this extraordinary church was built for Russian aristocrats who visited Hôtel du Palais before the 1917 revolution.

Chocolate museum (Planète Musée du Chocolat). 14 Avenue Beaurivage, 00-33-559-232772, www.planetemuseeduchocolat.com. The history of chocolate, how it’s made, and best of all, a hot-chocolate tasting. Pretend it’s for the kids.

Rocher de la Vierge (Rock of the Virgin). On the outskirts of the town, this outcrop, which you reached over an old iron footbridge, is topped with a celebrated statue of the Virgin Mary. It’s a popular stroll, with great views right along the Basque coast.

Asiatica Museum of Oriental Art, 1 Rue Guy Petit, 00-33-559-227878, www.museeasiatica.com. This is reputed to be one of the best oriental art collections in all of Europe. Don’t miss it.

Créations Jean-Vier, 58 Avenue Edouard VII and 25 rue Mazagran, 00-33-559-222936, www.jean-vier.com. Basque linen has a big reputation in France, and Jean-Vier is where the renowned Parisian chef Alain Ducasse buys his table linen.

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Friday, November 28, 2008

Visiting Iruñea

This article about the capital city of Euskal Herria, Iruñea (known around the world as Pamplona) comes to us courtesy of Napa Valley Register:

No bull: Pamplona is cultural and culinary center of Basque Country

Friday, November 28, 2008

By L. PIERCE CARSON
Register Staff Writer

PAMPLONA, Spain — While Pamplona has achieved international notoriety thanks to Ernest Hemingway’s fascination with and descriptions of the thrilling Running of the Bulls in his novels, this otherwise tranquil city is without a doubt, much more than the edge-of-your-seat, bull-dashing frenzy that often seems to define it.

The winding streets of the compact center not only host the clamoring bulls for one week each July, but are also home to lots of history, architectural treasures, picturesque plazas, quaint shops and delightful cafés.

Tucked into a valley and surrounded by lush alpine countryside of the Pyrenees foothills, Pamplona is the historic capital of Basque Country and the current capital of Navarra, one of Spain’s 17 autonomous communities.

Pamplona’s main sights are dispersed throughout the so-called “old town,” which is divided into three parts — La Navarrería, the city’s oldest section, and the 12th century boroughs of San Cernin and San Nicolás.

Culture vultures won’t walk away disappointed after a meandering stroll through La Navarrería, the oldest “burgo,” home to well-preserved architecture, stretches of the original city walls, museums, theaters and Catedral de Santa Maria with its thundering bells.

In addition, La Navarrería is the hub of Pamplona’s social life and without a doubt “pintxos” central, where you can enjoy the Spanish art of bouncing around from bar to bar tasting each establishment’s scrumptious tapas, called “pintxos” in Basque.

One of Pamplona’s noteworthy aspects is the impressive amount of parks, gardens and other greenspace that make it one of Europe’s greenest cities. Also at the edge of the city is La Ciudadela, a star-shaped citadel built centuries ago to defend Pamplona from invaders. Today, it is a top historical attraction and home to non-stop exhibitions.

On top of that, it is a great place to stay should you want to meander around the region to visit impressive wine estates.

Where to stay: if you want to keep the bill under 200 Euros per night, one of the best options is Iruña Palace Hotel Tres Reyes, a four-star hotel located by the Taconera Gardens, right in the center of Pamplona, between the old town and the modern city. Hotel Tres Reyes features a garden and an outdoor swimming pool. For those aiming to keep fit, the hotel boasts a complete gym, offering personal trainer service. It also offers an Internet Point with printer.

For well under 100 Euros per night, there’s the three-star Husa Avenida Hotel, a short walk from Ciudadela Park and Taconera Gardens. It has two restaurants, the Leyre and the Tradicional, which offer traditional dishes, a coffee bar, Wi-Fi Internet connection throughout and the advantage of being only minutes away from the train station and Pamplona-Nóain International Airport.

Where to eat: With its small, compact city center, Pamplona is the perfect city in which to spend an evening bar hopping from tapas bar to tapas bar. Basque tapas are widely considered to be the tastiest in all of Spain. The streets Calle San Nicolás, Calle Estafeta and Calle de Jarauta are chockfull of pintxos bars.

Another popular establishment is Café Iruña with its Belle Epoque decor. Located on Plaza del Castillo, Café Iruña was a Hemingway hangout and is a great place to nurse a coffee, nibble on a snack, grab a drink and just people watch.

There are also a few fine dining establishments, including one with a Michelin star. Long one of the premier restaurants in Navarra, Rodero Restaurante offers both nuevo and traditional Basque dishes. Executive chef Koldo Rodero and his team provide exciting menus paired with the restaurant’s extensive wine collection — or even the wines you may have discovered while visiting — matched by the outstanding service directed by the family’s distaff side in the front of the house. A recent dinner there featured baby squid casserole with sweet and sour potatoes and squid ink-infused tapioca, as well as a hare stewed in foie gras, truffles and its own blood.

Named for a mountain in Quinto Real, Enekorri features creative cookery and a fabulous wine list. A comfortable dining room features contemporary oil paintings on the walls and never-ending plates of outstanding food from the kitchen of chef Fernando Flores. Flores and his first-rate culinary team delighted visiting journalists with a meal that ranged from a very seductive tomato soup to a dessert plate that explored the diverse yet complementary flavors of spices — pear with cardamom, creme anglaise with cloves, chocolate mousse with nutmeg and cake roll with cinnamon cream. In between, taste buds were stimulated by wild bluefish over black olive and onion sauce, sautéed langoustines on creamed broccoli and butter foam, plus grilled loin of venison with seasonal vegetables and raspberry jus.

Getting there: If you want to fly directly into Pamplona, then your best bet is to book a flight to Madrid on Iberia and connect to Pamplona. Our group flew to Bilbao instead, allowing us a little time to check out the cultural scene in this bustling Basque city. You can fly to Bilbao via Frankfurt on Lufthansa or United, or via Paris with Air France. Then when you’re ready, hop aboard a relatively comfortable bus for the inexpensive, picturesque two hour ride to Pamplona.

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Monday, November 10, 2008

Basque-phobe of the Week : Ronald Holden

Here you have a gastronomic review at the Seattle Global Gourmet Examiner by a Basque-phobe visiting the heart of the Basque Country, Navarre:

Language Lessons: Northern Spain

November 8, 10:05 AM
by Ronald Holden, Seattle Global Gourmet Examiner

Only three weeks ago, it was Italian. Now, another country and two new languages. Talking about Navarra here, in the north of Spain. My hosts for this trip. A province the size of Los Angeles County, shaped like a trapezoid, sharing its northern border with southern France, then dropping like a diamond from the crest of the Pyrenees. Called Nafarroa in Basque, but resolutely unsympathetic to the Basque separatist movement. Navarra is a kingdom, they will tell you, even as the street signs are bilingual and the capital, Pamplona, has been known as Iruña since time immemorial. Basque influences abound in the daily language, notably the tx spelling for the Spanish ch.

Pintxos, for a start. Known as tapas elsewhere in Spain, it's how you start the night. (Txori, in Seattle, is a Basque-style pintxos bar.) The other evening, four of us stopped in Bilbao (which is Basque Country) for three small bites and two glasses each; the bill was under $40. So we went to two more places.

Rabo, the tail. Rabo de buey is oxtail, rabo de cochinillo asado is the tail of a suckling pig. Kinda tough, actually, though the rest is indescribably juicy and delicious.

Caña, copa, vaso, Vasco: the first is a glass of beer, specifically. The next two are glasses or tumblers or wine glasses. And the last one is, you guessed it, Basque. Pais Vasco is the Basque Country. Which, we remind you, is not Navarra.

Boina: the traditional Basque head covering, a beret. Bought mine at a souvenir shop for $10.

Barquito. A little boat. The piece of bread you use to mop up the last of the sauce on your plate.

Txupito: a sip. By extension, the little straight-sided glass from which you drink a shot of orujo. We'd call it a brandy or a grappa, except that the orujos we've been drinking (sorry, sipping) are much milder and sweeter than the Italian version.

Echar una siestacita: your afternoon cat nap.


Sad thing to see an individual so obsessed with misleading the readers into thinking that Navarre has nothing to do with the Basque Country when in fact Navarre is THE historical Basque state.

He himself mentions that the street signs are in two languages, which happen to be Euskara (Basque language) and Spanish, but he insists Navarre wants nothing to do with the Basque Country. If so, ¿why do they have this urge to name their streets both in Basque and Spanish?

Does he know that Euskara was called Lingua Navarrorum by the Romans? And that the Basques call their nation by the name of Euskal Herria which means "land of the Euskara speakers"?

Gladly enough, two people have already taken the time to set the record straight:

jane: While you may think Nafarroa (Navarra) has no sympathy for the Basque separatist movement, you would have a hard time convincing the people I know in the northern part of Navarra. These people congregate in the tiny "Basque Basque" bars, where Basque is spoken and banners supporting bringing the Basque prisoners back to Basque country adorn the walls. Be careful to make blanket political statements based on an inadequate sampling of opinions.

tfd: Because I am am Seattleite as well as a Basque, and because I happened to catch the last post on the Basque cuisine. My gentle advise to you is that you stick to the gastronimic aspects, as you have 0 understanding of the political ones. btw its called San Fermin, grammar is important.


Because he did not care to do some research about the history of Navarre before publishing his article and because of his more than obvious bias against the right of the Basque people to its self determination, Ronald Holden is out Basquephobe of the week.

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Thursday, September 25, 2008

From Ziortza to Markina

This article comes to us via EITb:

Land of pelotaris

Between Ziortza-Bolibar and Markina-Xemein

09/24/2008

The lands that saw the birth of The Liberator Simon Bolivar’s ancestors, the ‘Basque Pelota University’, a collegiate church and much more...

A collegiate church that is one of the most important jewels of the Basque religious and architectural heritage. The ‘Basque Pelota University’, the court in which more players have trained and played all around the world. And the lands that saw the birth of The Liberator Simón Bolivar’s ancestors. We find all this and much more in the localities of Ziortza-Bolibar and Markina-Xemein –one only locality until last year– in the Bizkaia’s Comarca (Land) of Lea Artibai.

We start at the Collegiate Church of Ziortza, also known as Santa Maria de Cenarruza. A two-kilometre path, before arriving at the locality of Bolibar, leads us to this collegiate, which was an important hospital and a monastery of the Coast Road to Santiago. It was built in the year 968 and, after being abandoned for years and suffered a fire, it has been recovered and occupied by the Cistercian Community of the Monastery of La Oliva, in Navarre. This site consists of a 14th-century church, a Renaissance cloister, and two access gates with different coats of arms.

We go down to Bolibar through the same path that has led us to the Collegiate (BI-2224). Crossing this locality, different monuments devoted to Simon Bolivar tell us that his family was from these lands.Besides the museum named after the Liberator, we find the first monument erected in his honour in Spain and paid by the Government of Venezuela.

We must also stand out the Church of Santo Tomás, dating from the 10th century and rebuilt during the 17th and 18th centuries. Leaving Ziortza-Bolibar behind –the locality adopted this name after the separation from Markina-Xemein last year–, the BI-633 road leads us to Markina-Xemein, famous due to its Basque Pelota court, known as the ‘Basque Pelota University’ because many pelotaris (Basque Pelota players), who now play all around the world, were trained here. Nevertheless, Markina is much more than a Pelota court. The point of reference is a triangular park, known as the Prado, the axis of most of the activities in the locality. To the right of this triangle, we find the Pelota court. On the other side, just opposite the court, the Church-Convent of La Merced. And, closing the triangle, the town’s old quarter which is made up by parallel streets crossed by the Zear Street.

There are other interesting buildings: the Antxia Tower-House, the Ansotegi Palace, the Town Hall, and, among many others, the Baroque Andonaegi Palace.Near the park, crossing the Xemein Avenue, we will get to the Xemein Quarter, annexed to Markina since 1952. There are outstanding tower-houses: Barroeta, Bidarte, Ubilla, Kareaga and Ugarte; nevertheless, if something must attract our attention, that is the Church devoted to Our Lady of La Asunción. The biggest church in Bizkaia is a monastery that became a Renaissance temple in the 16th century. Near the church, we will find a classic graveyard, with neo-Greek and neo-Egyptian elements on the gravestones.


I have been to the area and I recommend you visit it whenever you have a chance.

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Saturday, September 13, 2008

Bilbao's Best Pintxos

Like I mentioned before, it is the summer and the news outlets take a break from the political related articles about the Euskal Herria and they focus on publishing notes about travel and culture, which includes the top notch Basque cuisine.

Here you have this one from The Telegraph about the best pintxos in Bilbao:

Bilbao: a delicious nibble in the city's bars

The winners of the contest to find Bilbao's best 'pintxos' - the Basque equivalent of the Spanish tapa - have just been announced. Nigel Richardson samples some of the dishes

By Nigel Richardson
Last Updated: 1:06PM BST 12 Sep 2008

The potato omelette had just emerged from the oven and lay blinking, as it were, on the plate. Juan Mari tasted and swooned.

“This bar doesn’t appear in any guidebooks,” he said, “but I think the tortilla is brilliant. Not like the thick brick they do in Spain.” Basques routinely refer to the rest of Spain as another country.

He was right. The egg was warm and moist, the potato firm and the onion slightly caramelised. We accompanied it with a white wine from Valladolid. It was shortly after noon in Cafeteria Concha, a bar in Bilbao, and my txikiteo with four Bilbaino friends — all aficionados of snacks on a stick — had begun.

A txikiteo is a Basque institution, a bar crawl involving the frequent eating of pintxos — roughly speaking, the Basque equivalent of the Spanish tapa. But whereas “in Spain” a tapa often comes automatically when you order a drink, a pintxo costs extra. It is also, according to the rules of the annual competition to find Bilbao’s best pintxos, something that you must be able to consume standing up, in a maximum of two mouthfuls.

The pintxo started life modestly, as a piece of tortilla or ham on bread but in recent years has evolved into many mouthwatering combinations.

This evolution is partly a by-product of the so-called Guggenheim effect — the tourism boom generated by the architect Frank Gehry’s futuristic museum — and partly a result of the aforementioned competition, the Muestra de Bares de Pintxos, now in its 11th year, for which bars compete avidly.

This year’s winners had just been announced when I arrived in Bilbao, so my partner’s cousin, Juan Mari, suggested we sample a few of them. Nine hours after that first wonderful tortilla, we ended the tasting in Lekeitio, a bar specialising in tortilla paisana, with spinach and chorizo. However, they had run out of this — a happy hazard of the quest for pintxos, which should be freshly made, so we ordered a ración, which we all tucked in to — a portion, bigger than a pintxo, of seafood salad. Juan Mari touched his lips and made that petal-opening gesture with his fingers meaning “very good”.

Alasne disagreed: “Too dry.” Juan Mari amended his judgement: “It could do with more tomatoes.” And so the food discussion continued, as around us 85-year-olds clinked glasses of txakoli — a local slightly sparkling white wine — and five-year-olds skittered at their feet.

“You can’t learn in a day what we have taken 40 years to learn,” Marivi chided me. Geri and Alasne agreed. The point of the txikiteo, they said, is that it is an intimate, delicate experience that changes each time, depending on different bars and days for culinary fancies.

On this particular day, our txikiteo had involved the following 10 bars, five of them close together in the old town, the Casco Viejo. Honourable mention should also go to Victor Montes, the Harry’s Bar of Bilbao, which we omitted only because it always is included in such gastronomic top 10s.

Expect to pay €1.20 to €3 for pintxos, from €1.20 for a glass of txakoli or wine. Most bars close on Sundays, or Sunday evenings, and opening times can be erratic. If a bar is closed, simply go to the one next door.

Cafeteria Concha, Calle General Concha

This modest bar, with flashing fruit machines, does not enter the Muestra de Bares de Pintxos competition — the owner explained that his wife, who makes the pintxos, can’t be doing with all the fuss. Consequently, its mouthwatering tortilla remains something of a secret.

Zuga, Plaza Nueva (Casco Viejo)

A trendy bar serving a young crowd in a corner of the Plaza Nueva, the heart of the old town, Zuga specialises in ambitious combinations including goat’s cheese with manzanilla sherry, dried fruit vinaigrette and honey; liver with red fruits and Modena vinegar; and turkey neck — surprisingly tender and delicious — in a filo parcel on bruschetta.

Sasibil, Calle Jardines (Casco Viejo)

One of several bars that excel in, and serve, just one thing, in this case productos del mar: grilled fish, anchovies from the fishing port of Ondárroa and shellfish. There is also a small restaurant.

Gatz, Calle Santa Maria (Casco Viejo)

Gatz is this year’s winner of “best bar” in the Muestra de Bares de Pintxos and certainly one of my friends’ favourite haunts. The speciality of the house is bacalao (salt cod) al pin-pil: succulent little bombs of fish, garnished with browned slivers of garlic. There is a print on the wall featuring a footballer in the red-and-white strip of Athletic Bilbao, chatting up a girl in this very bar. “Look at his legs,” said Juan Mari. “He looks as if he eats a lot of pintxos.”

Irrintzi, Calle Santa Maria (Casco Viejo)

Next door to Gatz, and named after the ululating Basque cry, with which people are said to have hailed each other across the valleys, this has the most helpfully displayed pintxos, each flagged with neat labels, so you don’t have to ululate above the din to ask what they are. The choice is imaginative, including onion stuffed with black pudding and peppers and croquettes made with squid in its ink — a new dish.

Eguiluz, Calle del Perro (Casco Viejo)

This is one of several excellent cazuelita bars on this street, a cazuelita being a hot dish served in a terracotta pot — bigger than a pintxo, smaller than a main course. Here, they include paella, grilled prawns, meatballs, tripe, and snails and cost between €7 and €15.

Bitoque, Calle Rodriguez Arias

This small, self-consciously fashionable bar was the winner of the “golden beret” for best pintxo in Bilbao, the champion being a somewhat pretentious concoction of egg yolk, potato, pancetta and an “air” of cheese, for a steep €4.50.

Like a cocktail barman, the chef made mine while I waited and it tasted disappointing, a triumph of style over substance. Other pintxos include grilled scallops “with violet and gold potatoes”.

Café Estoril, Plaza Campuzano

Among a clutch of bars popular with football fans before and after games, it is known for its Camparis and Martinis. Pintxos include ham and green peppers, bacalao with peppers, and bonito (tuna) with mayonnaise.

La Viña del Ensanche, Calle Diputación

Wood-panelled and cheerful, with a bar carved from a single tree, this is one of the oldest bars in the city (established 1927). It specialises in hams and chorizo, and has the feel of Andalusia, reckoned my companions. There is a shop and delicatessen attached.

Bar Lekeitio, Calle Diputación

Another classic bar of Bilbao, packed with young and old, and named after the pretty Basque fishing port of which there is a blown-up old photograph on the wall. Its star pintxo is the tortilla paisana but they are also proud of their tacos with raw bacalau, garlic and parsley.


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Coast Full of Contrasts

This article about the strikingly beautiful coast of the Basque province of Bizkaia comes to us thanks to EITb:

The Basque Coast in Bizkaia: A coast full of surprises

09/13/2008

Mundaka is the destination of surfers all over the world. They come to surf the best left hand wave in Europe.

The winding coast of Bizkaia is dotted with small fishing villages and jagged coves that make up a landscape full of contrasts. Beaches, harbors and cliffs merge into the nearby summits along the whole length of the Basque coast. From Bakio to Sukarrieta, the route is full of visual surprises.

To get from Bilbao to Sukarrieta, we must take the road towards Mungia and continue on towards Bermeo. 5 km down the road is the turnoff for Bakio, the cradle of Bizkaia's txakoli. This town, a local tourist destination, has a large beach which is packed with beachcombers during the summer months.

The coast road takes us to the beautiful view of the San Juan de Gaztelugatxe promontory. This rocky island, which is joined to the mainland by a small bridge, together with the hermitage on the top, is a nearly sacred place for many Bizkaians. A little bit further down the road we arrive at the lighthouse and Cape Matxitxako.

The town of Bermeo, with its gothic church of Santa Eufemia, the Medieval Ercilla tower, and the port, is one of the most important towns along the coast. It has a lively street atmosphere and excellent restaurants, which are two of many good reasons to visit the town.

Just a couple of kilometers down the road is Mundaka. The view from the Atalaya or vantage point is one of the most beautiful and relaxing in the whole of Bizkaia: the mouth of the Urdaibai estuary, merging into the ocean, and Izaro island on the horizon. This symbiosis originates the best left-hand wave in Europe, which attracts many surfers from around the world.

The same view can be contemplated from Portuondo lookout, on the road to Pedernales-Sukarrieta, which is the next town down the coast. This secluded place has a few and beautiful caves on the banks of the estuary. Each valley, each fishing port, each of the summits in the Basque Country is yet another beautiful spot to be discovered.

I've been to all the places described in the article and I fully recommend that you take any chance in the future to visit them.

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Thursday, September 11, 2008

Nature

This article comes to us thanks to EITb:

Nature in the Basque Country

09/11/2008

Ambling plains, mountain ranges, green forests, rich marshes and relaxing beaches. Nature lovers have plenty to discover in the Basque Country.

Although the wide range of beautiful and rugged landscape is easily found in the nature reserves, it is also a feature of many other parts of the province. Deep countryside is only minutes from the towns and cities. Both active tourism enthusiasts and those only coming along for the views will be in their element.

But it’s not all green. The Basque Country offers any amounts of different landscapes sure to delight lovers of the open countryside: steep cliffs and gentle beaches in the coastal cities; green valleys set around little rivers; mountainous ranges offering all sorts of pleasant walks; sweeping plains with a different colour and climate. Despite its high population density, almost 290 inhabitants per square kilometre, and the heavy industrialisation of certain areas, with their subsequent environmental problems, the Basque Country has nevertheless managed to preserve its natural resources. Proof of this are the several nature reserves making it possible to enjoy flora and fauna in their virtually pure state.

Humid and dry

The little over 7,200 km2 covered by the Basque Autonomous Community offers two main kinds of landscape. On the one hand is the wide, green, humid and mountainous coastal belt of Bizkaia and Gipuzkoa, and the mountains of Alava. On the other, the extensive, dry meridional plains of southern Alava as they head towards the landscape and climate of the succeeding Castilian meseta. The Alavese plain serves as an area of transition between the two extremes.

This difference is clearly reflected in the local hydrographic attributes. The rivers flowing into the Bay of Biscay (Mayor, Ibaizabal-Nervión, Butrón, Oka, Lea, Artibai, Deba, Urola, Oria, Urumea and Bidasoa) are fairly short, steep and run along the bottom of little valleys. On the other side of the mountains, however, the rivers of Alava become wider and meander a while before their waters flow into the river Ebro in the Rioja alavesa region.

These two hydrographic areas are likewise responsible for different climates. In the north, the weather is oceanic, with mild temperatures in both winter and summer and a fair amount of rain. In the south, however, the climate is cataloged as being of the continental kind, that is, dryer but with more extreme temperatures.

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Monday, September 01, 2008

Travel : From Andoain to Tolosa

This article comes to us thanks to EITb:

The inland road

Way of St. James in the Basque Country: From Andoain to Tolosa

09/01/2008

Tolosa is especially famous for its deeply rooted Carnival, during which the streets become alive with hordes of enthusiastic participants in disguise, on decorated floats, or as part of a carnival group.

Until 1614, the date on which Philip III granted it the title of town, Andoain swung back and forth between Donostia-San Sebastian and Tolosa. Its conversion meant that it could unite the two parts making up its population: Leizaur, next to the Rivers Leizaran and Oria, and Andoain, on the side of Mount Buruntza.

The parish church, located in the Village Square, is dedicated to San Martín de Tours, a loyal companion of the pilgrims to Compostela. This 18th century Baroque church is built in veined marble and is not far from the Town Hall, built in the same period, or Urigain Palace, presently the cultural centre and an example of early century French-Basque architecture.

Travelling along this important road, pilgrims would come across places such as Bilabona-Villabona, which could have its origins in Amasa, presently a neighborhood of the former. In fact, the parish church of San Martin de Tours, started in the 16th century, stands in Amasa, as does the hermitage of la Santa Cruz, possibly the first local church and home to a greatly worshipped calvary. Whatever the case, pilgrims were so common in Billabona that the expenses of running the local hospital were even paid for by the district.

Travellers would have covered about half of their journey through Gipuzkoa on reaching Tolosa, where they would find everything they needed to prepare themselves for setting out on the last part of the Road through this territory. Tolosa was created and fortified in the 13th century on order by Alfonso X the Wise, who was afraid that the aspirations of Teobaldo, from Navarre, would bring about the downfall of the prosperous commercial route through Gipuzkoa.

But Tolosa was already a highly important spot in the province well before it attracted the monarch’s attention, and it was precisely in its church of Santiago that the lawyers of Gipuzkoa deliberated on their annexation to Castile and where the first written ordinances in Gipuzkoa were issued.

Tolosa, which was the capital of Gipuzkoa from 1844 to 1854, still has a medieval quarter of narrow streets and extremely ancient buildings, such as the 12th century Idiaquez Palace. This Palace, built over a fragment of the surrounding walls, provided shelter in 1538 to the Emperor Charles V, and belonged to the latter’s secretary, Alonso de Idiaquez.

Even the most humble of pilgrims were given shelter in the hospital built over a primitive Templar commandery which, it would seem, used to stand next to a hermitage dedicated to Saint James, home to an ancient carving of the Apostle. This Ospital-Zaharra (Old Hospital), which stood next to the parish church of Santa Maria, was rebuilt by the Town Council in 1775 and yet again, after a fire, in 1819.

The above-mentioned parish church was built in the 16th century, although it has additions from every period, such as the Romanesque door of the hermitage of San Esteban, still standing until the beginning of this century. Other interesting buildings are the 17th century Convent of Santa Clara, its 18th century church, and Baroque palaces such as that of Atodo, among others.


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Sunday, August 31, 2008

This Time, Biarritz

It is the summer, so a lot of the news papers take this rare chance to talk about the Basque Country without referring to the political conflict, which is a welcomed relief. Yesterday I posted about traveling from England to Euskal Herria by ferry, well, today is time to pay a quick visit to Biarritz thanks to The New York Times:

36 Hours in Biarritz

By KABIR CHIBBER
Published: August 31, 2008

THE glitz may have migrated to the French Riviera, but Biarritz doesn’t need it. The posh seaside town in southwest France is enjoying a renaissance, as people discover the appeal of this aristocratic resort on the Bay of Biscay where worlds collide and expectations are upended. Once the reigning vacation spot for Europe’s noble and gentry classes, Biarritz’s golden shores are now shared by everyone from bronze beauties in designer sandals to drop-out surfers in frayed flip-flops. Even the languages are mixed up. Walk into any of the town’s creaky old bars, and the patrons might strike up a conservation by saying a few words in rapid-fire French, Spanish, English or even Basque, the local language that, like the resort, is in a class by itself.

Friday

5 p.m.

1) THE BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE

Biarritz is a tale of two beaches, so start by getting acquainted with the Grande Plage, a curved stretch of golden sand dotted with brightly colored parasols. Buy a gelato from La Passion des Fruits and watch the impossibly pretty young things in oversized Christian Dior shades flirt for hours in the blazing sun. Farther down the beach, the crowd splits between chic-looking families frolicking in the water, and wealthy 50-year-olds enjoying their early retirement.

9 p.m.

2) DUCK!

Linguists have long been stumped by Basque, a language that bears no relation to Latin or any other European tongue. Hear it shouted at a pelote match, a game similar to handball that’s reputed to be the fastest sport in the world and is played in almost every village. Watch a competitive match, sometime using a curved wooden glove called a xistera, at the Fronton Couvert Plaza Berri.

10:30 p.m

3) LA CôTE BASQUE

Avoid the tourist-trap fish restaurants and head straight for L’Instant in the Port Vieux area, the throbbing historic old town. Be prepared to pass some time: the small restaurant is run entirely by the husband-and-wife team of Jean-Marc and Sylvie Leonhard-Salva. The menu, which changes monthly, features seasonal dishes like baked Basque trout with a light artichoke purée and an almond tart with an ice cream made of cheese. A meal for two, about 70 euros.

Saturday

10 a.m.

4) CAKE WALK

Pick up a gâteau Basque, a small cake filled with a delicious eggy custard, from the posh pâtisserie Loubère. Then head down to the Côte des Basques, a plain beach with rowdy waves where Peter Viertel, a Hollywood screenwriter, introduced surfing to the stunned French more than 50 years ago. Expect to find rows of beat-up vans with makeshift clotheslines parked along the road leading to the sea. There are no changing rooms, so be prepared to shed your modesty or practice changing underneath a towel.

11 a.m.

5) ÉCOLE DU SURF

If you’re prone to wiping out, track down Jean-Baptiste, the true-blue dude at the beach’s sole surf shop, BTZ Clothing. He’ll set you up with a lesson at Hastea, a professional surfing school, and BTZ’s owner. Ninety-minute lessons with the gruff-but-friendly instructors run 35 euros per person for a group session. And don’t worry about all the small jellyfish in the water. They don’t sting ...much.

1 p.m.

6) RECHARGE

Walk straight up from the shore to Le Surfing, the coziest of the two bars on this undeveloped stretch of coast. It may be the most casual place in Biarritz, with groovy boards, black-and-white surf posters and friendly employees who don’t mind if you’re dripping water everywhere. Order the brandade de morue, a sort of purée of salt cod, or the hefty rib-eye steak.

4 p.m.

7) FASHION VICTIM

As the day progresses, the unspoken dress code goes from beach bum to Diddy and Donatella. Pay a visit to 64, a fashion label that has several stylish stores on Biarritz’s most fashionable street, including ones for beachwear and children, and was set up by local designers. Named for the area code of this département of France, 64 is famous for making T-shirts with the eponymous number in every color. Devotees of the brand collect them all.

8 p.m.

8) FOOD AS ART

With his long hair and air of cockiness, the Ducasse-trained chef Philippe Lafargue may come across as a pretentious rock star. But his restaurant, Chez Philippe serves some of the most exciting nouveau Basque cuisine in the region. Start with an aperitif of Txakoli, a sparkling wine from the Spanish Basque country, and then sample the degustation menu, which features delights like roasted pork loin and sea bass with herbs from the restaurant’s own garden.

11 p.m.

9) BEER-ITZ

People in Biarritz don’t booze, but they certainly know how to unwind. Start with drinks at the Côte Vestiaire. This unassuming little bar, which feels a world away from the masses in the Port Vieux, is packed with rugby shirts hanging from hooks and other memorabilia, a reminder of how proud (and borderline fanatical) everyone here is about the local team, Biarritz Olympique Pays Basque. Strike up a conversation and rest your feet on the quintessential French stool: overturned wine crates.

1 a.m.

10) CLUB WITH A VIEW

Park the Ferrari with the valet and slide into Le Carré Coast, a sleek club that looks out over the beach. Sip vodka cocktails with the sons and daughters of Europe’s elite until the wee hours. Not ready to go home? Just cross the road and sit on the Grande Plage with the other diehards until the sun rises.

Sunday

11 a.m.

11) ONE-STOP SHOP

Pick up goodies at the Halles, a large covered market just off the Rue Gambetta, where getting elbowed by a grandmother who jumps the line is part of the fun. Overwhelmed? Pick up a few slices of the famed Bayonne ham from Didier Carrére’s stall. Then, walk down the road to Mille et Un Fromages, where the moustachioed, fourth-generation owner Henri Bilé sells only the finest in Basque cheeses and wines. Try a Bostmendi, a bright-red liquor made from prunes and sealed in bottles with melted wax.

1 p.m.

12) HISTORY LESSON

It would be heresy to leave Biarritz without meeting Jêrôme Dimitri. He’s an institution, a Serbian who gained fame by photographing celebrities and European royalty in Biarritz’s heyday in the 1960s. His store, Biarritz Photo, is in a back alley, and covered with old photos for sale, as well as pictures and articles about himself. Dimitri doesn’t speak much English, but that won’t stop him from talking about his past, his travels or his children — until you’re called back out to the sea.


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Saturday, August 30, 2008

Pride of Santurzi

More about travel experiences and the Basque Country, this time from The Independent:

Bilbao by ferry: Plain sailing

The 'Pride of Bilbao' may take 36 hours to reach Spain, says Simon Calder, but it's worth it

Saturday, 30 August 2008

Flying through one of the London airports during a peak weekend in August tests any passenger's nerves to destruction. Earlier this month, Stansted airport exemplified the appeal of flight-free travel. After the barely penetrable mass of humanity at check-in, security was overstretched and undignified, and the shuttle to the western satellite was packed tight.

In my experience, departure screens at airports mostly comprise a succession of fibs: "boarding" usually translates as "not boarding". But I hurried to the gate just in case – to find a scrum of passengers going nowhere. While I waited, two announcements caught my ear.

One reproached the unfortunate passengers who had just discovered they were going to experience a flight-free Sunday: some had hoped to fly to Edinburgh, others to Naples, but they failed to negotiate the airport labyrinth before the gates had closed. "Report immediately to gate 18 for transport back to the terminal or you will be waiting here even longer," a disembodied voice warned.

The other was for the flight to Bilbao, announcing a delay of an hour. The biggest city in the Basque Country is accessible in a couple of hours once the flight departs, but having tried both, the 36-hour surface version is far preferable. The Pride of Bilbao may not be the most modern ferry in Europe, but she is comfortable enough – and the two-night voyage provides relaxation, indulgence and excitement in whatever proportions you choose. The average no-frills flight does not offer that choice.

The electronic map aboard the ship shows the route in both directions as virtually identical, yet they are very different experiences. Leaving Portsmouth after dark, the ship slides into the busy shipping lanes of the English Channel and steers west-south-west for the pointy bit at the end of Brittany. The on-board catering ranges from a defiantly proletarian self-service to a restaurant branded as Langan's Brasserie, and it is easy to find a quiet corner of a bar for a nightcap.

When you awake (in your cabin, silly, not the bar) the vessel is likely to be near the tip of the Breton peninsula, where she turns a full right-angle to head south-south-east across the Bay of Biscay towards the Basque Country.

For anyone with an interest in sea life, this is where the fun starts. A naturalist is on board and on hand to spot the marine mammals who converge on the bay, and shrieks go up from the assembled passengers whenever whales or dolphins are sighted. In between times, you learn about the lives of the cetaceans – and the role that a regular ferry can play in researching the creatures.

Make sure you are up in good time on the second morning for the triumphant arrival on Spain's north coast. At about the time that mobile phones reawaken with a cacophony of bleeps, trills and gongs after their day-and-a-half-of slumber, the shoreline hoves into view: thrillingly corrugated, with a green ridge rasping beyond it melting into the (not-infrequent) mists.

Gradually the deep inlet leading to Bilbao takes shape – and only at this stage do a few poorly researched passengers realise that the ferry stops short of the city proper. She should really be named Pride of Santurzi, since that is the name of the dockland suburb where the voyage ends. No disappointment necessary: foot passengers can hop on the fast and frequent train direct to the heart of the city, perhaps pausing to admire the gigantic transporter bridge that commands the skyline. Meanwhile drivers who want to set the controls for the heart of sunny, ie. southern, Spain, can easily access the autopista network. Now, the neat thing about Bilbao is that there are no wrong answers in terms of onward direction: due west takes you into lovely Cantabria, going east puts you amid the Pyrenees in no time.

In between are three other viable vectors; south-west, for León and, beyond it, Extremadura; south, into the Rioja; and, south-east to Zaragoza – still with three weeks in its role as Expo 2008 venue – and beyond to the Mediterranean. And, when you reach ports such as Barcelona and Denia, you can carry on flightlessly flitting across Europe. If the ferry to Italy does not appeal, how about a (relatively) short hop to the Balearics? Palma airport may be one of the very busiest in Europe, with millions touching down in August alone – but you will have gone the pretty way.

Coming back on the long haul from Bilbao, you will have an equally attractive journey as outbound, just different. The voyage north is faster, and begins at lunchtime. This means that around 24 hours later you have a fascinating approach to Portsmouth along the south side of the Isle of Wight, then swinging around into the Solent and a dramatic arrival back to mainland Britain. And, unlike in Stansted, you will not be hanging around waiting for your luggage.


By the way, the triumphant arrival is not on Spain's north coast. You arrive on Euskal Herria's coast, its only coast.

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Saturday, August 16, 2008

Aste Nagusia in Bilbao

This article comes to us thanks to EITb:

Bilbao's Great Week kicks off

08/16/2008

Basque chef Aitor Elizegi was in charge of launching the firecracker rocket at 19,00 at Arriaga Square in Bilbao to start the "Aste Nagusia" (Basque name for Great Week).

Bilbao's "Great Week" kicked off officially at 19,00 with a warm reception to Marijaia -the figure of the festival- and the launching of the firecracker rocket –"txupinazo"- by the Basque chef Aitor Elizegi. An hour later the open air bars –"txosnas"- will be opened and the 23rd local pop-rock show will start with the performance of Mamba Beat and Munlet.

First fireworks of the "Great Week" 28th contest will be launched by the Saragossan pyrotechnic, beginning at 10:30 p.m.

The first concert will start at midnight in Botica Vieja with groups such as Delorean and The Teenagers.

As it is usual, Bilboko Konpartsak has already organized an alternative program to create an even greater festive atmosphere. Pinpilinpauxa, for instance, has organized a male strip tease at midnight.


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Friday, August 15, 2008

Bilbao's Zazpi Kaleak

This article about Bilbao's iconic Zazpi Kaleak (The Seven Streets) comes to us via EITb:

Bilbao's seven street: the heart of the villa

08/15/2008

Somera, Artekale, Tendería, Belostikale, Carnicería Vieja, Barrenkale y Barrenkale Barrena. These are the names of the seven parallel streets located between the Church of Santiago and the estuary of Bilbao.

When the villa was established, traders settled in these streets. The oldest place in the old quarter of the city is still known as Siete Calles (Seven Streets). The narrowness of the city ceases to be a problem due to the environment of its bars and its picturesque trades.

It is a pleasure to wander round the Siete Calles heading nowhere. However, we have planned a route for those who do not want to miss any attractive details in the area. We will start our itinerary from the Church of San Anton, next to the bridge with the same name that was the first successful attempt to link both sides of the estuary.

San Anton is in fact San Antonio Abad, to whom this graceful temple was dedicated in the fourteenth century. It was constructed in the fourteenth century on top of the primitive fortress of the villa and it is a gothic building with a squared plan. Its picture comes up on the shield of Bilbao next to the picture of the bridge.

An impressive building of eclectic style located next to the church catches the eye of anyone passing nearby. It is the Ribera Market. “Nothing can be conceived more lively or picturesquely as the look the market of Bilbao offers”, Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer wrote about what he saw in front of him. This big market place, known as the Ribera Market or the Atxuri Market, was constructed in 1929 on the side of the river. It is a project designed by Pedro de Ispizua y Susunaga from Bermeo. Have a look at its glass.

It is a must-do to properly go into the Siete Calles, through Belostikale or any of its parallel streets. If there is enough time, we will be able to go shopping or practice the txikiteo, you know, chatting as we go from one bar to the other and so on.

However, we will stop at the church of Santiago, the tallest and most important building in the Old Quarter that stands in a way that makes the main door be the first thing people see. It was built on top of an ancient cemetery and it is of gothic style. However, the following building works have added, once at a time, newer elements, such as a neoclassic cloister and a façade from the nineteenth century, under the directions of Severino de Achucarro.

We cannot forget that Bilbao once constituted part of the Camino de Santiago (Saint James’ Way) and that the apostle is the patron saint of the villa from the seventeenth century. It was before, during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, when the church, that has 26 altarpieces, was constructed.

On the other side of the cathedral, we will find the Church of the Santos Juanes (Juanes Saints) and, next to it, the Basque Museum of Bilbao. It is an archaeology, ethnography, and historical centre that gives the visitors the opportunity to acknowledge the roots of the Basque Country. It was built on top of an ancient school with a cloister that belonged to the Jesuit Company; the work of art that stands out the most is the Mikeldi, a pale-Christian sculpture of animal-like shape that was possibly worshipped as if it was an idol.

Our attempt of approaching the Old Quarter will end by going to a newer place, the Plaza Nueva (New Square). This magnificent arcaded square of neoclassic style is a place for encounters and party. If the weather is good, relax in one of its terraces. If it’s Sunday, do not give up on the idea of wandering round the bazaar. The king Fernando VII started the process of building this square, and it was finished in the middle of the nineteenth century, under the orders of the architect Antonio de Echeverria. The square has 64 arches with columns of a classic Greek style and the space it guards has always a nice environment.


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Thursday, August 14, 2008

The 2008 Billabong Pro in Mundaka

This article comes to us via Global Surf News:

The Billabong Pro returns to mythic barrels of Mundaka

Billabong Pro Mundaka

ASP World Tour event #9
Mundaka, Basque Country
29 September - 12 October 2008

The Billabong Pro returns to Europe’s mythical Mundaka rivermouth

Surfersvillage Global Surf News, 12 August, 2008 : - - - Mundaka has become a reference in worldwide surfing for its mythical rivermouth left-hander located at the opening of the river of Gernika and the North Atlantic Ocean. Since the inaugural event in 1999, surfing legends from all over the world have come over to surf this mythical wave, renowned for its long and hollow waves.

However, the wave of Mundaka is also known for its fickle conditions. This was made evident with the absence of a workable sandbar, reason for the cancellation of the event in 2005. According to the latest studies and the comments of the surfing locals, the barrels of Mundaka are in perfect condition.

This year, Billabong will set up an alternate site on the beach of Sopelana, a place that offers fantastic waves. The site is only a few car-minutes away from the center of Bilbao. The decision to surf either at Mundaka or Sopelana will be taken on a daily basis by the contest director, after assessing the conditions in both sites with the surfers and the ASP officials.

The Billabong Pro Mundaka plays a crucial part in deciding world champions. Being the third last event on the 11 stop tour intense competition ensues as tour leaders jostle for rating points leading into the final two events of the year in Brazil and Hawaii.

Bobby Martinez (USA) will be back to try to make it 3 wins in a row at Mundaka along with prestigious names such as Joel Parkinson (Australia), Taj Burrow (Australia), 07 World Champ Mick Fanning (Australia) and current tour leader Kelly Slater (USA).

Alongside the 45 world´s best surfers, three “Wild Card” surfers have also been invited to compete in the Billabong Pro Mundaka: surfing legend Marc “Occy” Occylupo (Australia ), local charger Hodei Collazo (Basque Country) and rising star Marcos San Segundo (Basque Country).

More information about rankings, surfer profiles and the tour can be found on aspworldtour.com.

The opening of the Billabong Pro Mundaka sees a truly traditional show with dances and music. At the start and end of the competition, surfers and officials will be greeted by the Aurresku, an honorific and traditional dance, and the 2008 winner will be carried by the local surf club members to be thrown in the port.

Winners always accept their trophy wearing a wetsuit and a newly-won Txapela (a traditional large hat)! That is the price to pay to have your name carved in the white stone of the perpetual Billabong Pro trophy. The Billabong Pro Mundaka is supported by Euskaltel, Kustom, Von Zipper, Nixon, Yamaha and Cobra Jetski, as well as the villages of Mundaka and Sopelana with their respective Surf Clubs and the EHSF.


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