Do you have a refuge, a quiet
place you’d retreat to if you suddenly had an important project and wanted to
avoid life’s daily distractions? I don’t mean an upstairs bedroom or a friend’s
granny flat but a totally different hidey-hole, in a different country. I have
a few possibilities.
In my fantasy inspiration would
strike and I’d come up with a cracker idea for a novel, an idea so good that
I’d auction the publication rights and pocket a huge advance. Now all I need to
do is write the book away from harassing phone calls from Steven Spielberg and
Peter Jackson who would be after the film rights. Where would I go? High up on
my list of hideaways is my own Spanish Shangri-la: Arnedillo.
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Arnedillo, La Rioja, Spain |
Arnedillo (arnay-DEE-yo), population
477, is nestled in a valley high up in the mountains of La Rioja in northern
Spain. Arnedillo is dry, bitter cold in winter and very much off the beaten path.
And it’s picturesque. Why work in an ugly and depressing place? The town doesn’t
have the sort of UNESCO-listed historical attractions that would draw mobs of international
tourists so it’s a quiet place. It’s also crime-free (according to the locals)
and it’s a long way from a beach. In short, the perfect place to settle down for
a few months to work.
Spanish tourists do go there
but these are Spanish tourists, mainly from nearby Logroño. The shops aren’t
filled with souvenirs: no “Arnedillo a Noche”
postcards, Chinese-made castanets or even miniature bagpipes with “Requerdos de Arnedillo” printed on them.
(Forget the flamenco---this is flute, drum and bagpipe country.)
In addition to being a
beautiful town, Arnedillo is steeped in history. The Romans were there when
Spain was a part of the Roman Empire and since then the Vandals, Visigoths and
Moors came and went. There are a few remnants of these conquering peoples but it
was in the High Middle Ages that the town took the shape it has today. The town
is protected by heritage orders and the valley itself has been declared a Biosphere
Reserve by UNESCO.
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That tower is the little that's left of the 10th C castle of the bishops of Calahorra. |
Okay so while I want to get
away from major distractions I will need a few things to do to break up the
boredom of writing. I like to walk and there are some lovely walks along the
valley and up into the surrounding hills. There’s a tiny bit left of a ruined
10th century castle and there are three hermitages up above the town
that can only be accessed on foot. These date from the 10th to the
16th centuries and now look more like miniature churches than the
hovels or caves the hermits would have lived in. No skinny bearded men raging against the evils of the world.
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Vultures nest in the peaks around the town. |
A bit of bird watching helps to
break up the writing routine and Arnedillo has a colony of Griffon vultures that nest in a rocky crag above the town. The population of Griffon vultures in
Europe had been diminishing but has come back thanks to public awareness
interest. There was a bit of a hiccup a few years ago when the European Commission
banned the leaving of carcasses out for the vultures because of the danger of
spreading of BCE (Mad Cow Disease) but their numbers are growing again. These
are magnificent birds.
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Looking back along the Cidacos River to Arnedillo. |
Still struggling with Chapter
One and out of ideas I need another break. I think I’ll take a walk up to the
town’s nevero artificial. No, I’d
never heard of one either but some friendly people took me to see this one and
explained its use. A “snow well” is the best translation I’ve found. It’s a
stone-lined hole in the ground that neveros
filled with snow in the winter. In summer the compressed snow and ice could be
taken out though a bottom entrance---a source of ice all summer long. These
apparently were common in Europe and the Middle East from at least 2000 BC. Where
I grew up in New England, USA, you just waited for a lake or pond to freeze, sawed it
into blocks and packed it in sawdust in a shed. Needless to say, industrial
ice-making factories in the 19th century and, later, fridges put the
neveros out of a job just as happened
with the ice-harvesters of New England.
There’s another walk to see
dinosaur footprints but I’ll save this one for when I’m really stuck.
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Iglesia de San Servando y San Germán |
There are a couple of churches
in town, both unlocked and generally people-free when there are no services.
The grander of the two is the 16th century Iglesia de San Servando y
San Germán. This is just across a tiny square from the entrance to the lovely
little boutique hotel where I’ve stayed and would stay again while I work on
the novel. This is the Hospedería LasPedrolas.
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17th Century organ in the Iglesia de San Servando y San Germán |
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Jill outside our hotel, the Hospederia Las Pedrolas. |
Arnedillo does have three
festivals dotted around the calendar and their own peculiar customs to
celebrate them. One of them, in November, is la fiesta de San Andrés in which the streets are filled with smoke of burning rosemary and he (or she) who breathes is will be immune from sickness such as colds or the flu all winter.
It is also a gathering place in autumn for mycologists. One
of the restaurants, Casa Cañas, hosts the annual Jornadas Micológicas de Arnedillo. For mushroom and funghi aficionados there are lectures, guided
mushroom collecting walks and the restaurant serves mushroom degustaciones for those mycologists who
have a gastronomic as well as scientific interest in their subject.
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photo: Casa Cañas |
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photo: Casa Cañas |
Arnedillo’s main attraction is
its hot springs. At one side of the normally-icy Cidacos River, which skirts
the town, water comes out of the ground at 52.5 degrees Celsius. The town has
built a series of pools, one flowing into the next. By the time the water
reaches the lowest pool it’s not too hot to get into so the usual procedure is
to work your way up from the warm pool to the almost-painfully-hot one. Once in
the hottest pool it’s very hard to move a muscle, even to get out, but somehow
you feel good afterwards. There is a big hotel and spa on the outskirts of town
with mud baths for those who believe in the medicinal benefits of the water and
have a bit of loose change.
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Arnedillo's thermal springs. |
Anyway, Arnedillo would be one
of my perfect retreats: good restaurants, good accommodation and just enough to
do to kill the boredom but not enough to not so much that I couldn’t get my
work done. At least that’s my fantasy.
I didn’t just happen upon
Arnedillo by taking a wrong turn between Barcelona and Bilbao.
Many years ago as
a teenager living in Madrid, a young woman came to work for for my family.
Charo---diminutive of “Rosario”---was not only an excellent cook and tireless
house-keeper but she soon became a well-loved member of the family. Much of
what we learned of the Spanish language and Spanish customs we owed to her.
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Charo on the right and another friend on a picnic in the 1950s. |
Charo had grown up in Arnedillo and moved to Madrid to work. We lost track of her for years after we left Spain but eventually found her living in Logroño in the Rioja region. She'd lived in England, been married and been widowed. To make
the story short, I met up with her a couple of times on trips from Australia to
Spain. She was still the lovely, intelligent woman I’d known all those years
ago and the two of us were as close as ever.
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Jill, Charo and me in Arnedillo a few years ago. |
Later, Charo's sister, Juli, contacted me to say that Charo had had a stoke and
that she was looking after her back in their pueblo, Arnedillo. We visited her there a couple of times. Charo
has since passed away but Jill and I have now been adopted by Juli, her husband, Roberto,
and all their relatives and friends. Spaniards being the
social animals that they are, on our last visit we were almost killed with
kindness.
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Some of our Arnedillo family. |
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Roberto and I check the wine in his bodega and declare it ready for drinking. |
At this point I'm having second thoughts about whether Arnedillo really would be the ideal hideaway. Maybe I'd better start thinking about hideaway No. 2 before inspiration strikes. But more on that at another time.
3 comments:
Hopeless writer's retreat, Duncan. Can't imagine getting any work done there at all.
Look lovely though. Must get my cousin to take me there next time we visit Logrono.
It's true, Richard. We really did have to sneak out of town the last time we were there. We were occasionally allowed to go back to our hotel for a rest but then there were get-togethers in the local bar and then a restaurant or someone's house. Eating, talking, drinking, eating talking drinking. All in Spanish, of course, so it was a bit boring for Jill. I'm sure that an Australian country town of 477 people would have fewer distractions. On the other hand...
Wow ... what a wonderful photo essay about your first choice for a writer's hideaway! If you were writing for the tourist industry Arnedillo would be inundated with tourists!! It makes me want to hop a plane and visit! =)
As Richard said, however, it probably would be hard to get any work done there with all the people you know there. However, I'm sure there would be many wonderful stories and tales told there (especially during the eating and drinking times!!) that would be great fodder for a novel of that area. ;-)
Looking forward to vicariously visiting some of your other writer's hideaways real soon.
All the best to you!!!
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