Monthly Archives: September 2018

Arabian Nights: Riyadh

Riyadh is Saudi Arabia’s capital and largest city. It is sprawly and modern and you’ll need a car or a cab to get around. There is plenty of iconic architecture, including the UFO-style Ministry of the Interior building, and something that looks like a large vegetable peeler that has also arrived from another galaxy:

If you happen to go there is a neat fort downtown and the national museum at the King Abdulaziz Historical Center. The Masmak Fort, dating from 1865, is notable as the Al-Saud clan conquered it in 1902, and then started the formation of the country as a single entity. They have some good historical information and photos of the fort when it was mostly surrounded by sand and scrub. If you go anytime around summer, there are stiff hairdryer-like winds even in the evening, so stay hydrated.

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You can go for a wander around the migrant neighborhoods, which tend to be lively and have a good market atmosphere. In this case I stumbled across an Indian/Bangladeshi area in the Al Futah neighborhood just northeast of the fort.

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Bangladesh has a large migrant community in Saudi Arabia and so there are plenty of flights to Dhaka should you need them.

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The usual Saudi travel rules apply – see notes from a trip to Jeddah are at: https://wp.me/p7Jh3P-vr

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Aveiro to Viseu: Sea to Hills

Want to visit Portugal to avoid large crowded cities, but are looking for lively small towns as base to explore from? Try Aveiro for the coast and Viseu for the highlands – Portugal isn’t wide and they are a few hours’ drive away from each other.

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Aveiro

Aveiro is a compact town that sits beside the coastal Aveiro Lagoon, with 17th-century running through it to support commerce. Now it’s a mostly local seaside town and a great place to hole up for a few days. It’s Portugal, so clear your calendar for lunch.

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Apart from a few hours walking the lanes around the canals, Aveiro has a few rainy day museum sites – the most interesting being the Aveiro Museum – St. Joana, housed in a former 15th-century convent, which has the full-on baroque decoration that is best sampled in small doses.

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St Joana was an heir to the Portuguese throne who gave it up to become a nun and lived in the Aveiro convent. The nun’s refectory is well-preserved and St Joana’s tomb stands in an elaborate tiled room.

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With the original convent spaces and chapel on the ground floor, there is a comprehensive museum of Portuguese medieval and renaissance religious art up above.

Aveiro is proud of it’s still intact canals and the place gets nice sunsets.

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Logistics. Aveiro is a good base to explore the larger city of Porto – you could day trip it by train. There are plenty of beaches within striking distance as well. Meanwhile, Aveiro gets plenty of local visitors and so has good accommodation and food options, some of which are:

O Batel – great seafood in a wood-paneled 1970s-era time machine.

Armazém da Alfândega – more casual and modern deal.

Nos os Tras Montes – cafe/store for local produce. Local wine and microbrews on tap with outside seating.

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Pastelaria Ramos – cakes etc.

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Viseu

Viseu doesn’t get much attention but was well located enough between the plains and the hills to be picked out as a regional capital by the Romans – who liked the view and called it Viso – and to grow as a medieval and renaissance center for Portugal’s central highlands. It’s a neat little town with a bunch of great outdoors around it.

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You can start at the main square and navigate your way around the medieval alleyways that lead down to the new town.

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One of Portugal’s best known renaissance-era painters, Vasco Fernandes, better known as Grão Vasco, was from Viseu and there is a collection of his and others’ work at the Grão Vasco Museum by the cathedral.

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Viseu is a great base to explore some of the national parks and villages in the Beira Alta highlands – start with the Parque Natural da Serra da Estrela. It’s about 90 minutes east of Viseu and you could pick a town like Manteigas as the base for a few days of hiking. One simple day hike out of Manteigas is the Poco do Inferno waterfall.

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The drive from Viseu up and over the N232 will give you some incredible views.

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Logistics. Viseu is a compact town with a well-preserved medieval core, so walking is your best bet to get around. I stayed at the Casa da Sé just off the main square which was fine. Good food options are:

Tasquina de Se. Tapas and wine, all good.

Mesa d’Allegria. Small plates as well.

One Night in Jeddah

Saudi Arabia. Tough to visit as the visa categories include: Diplomatic, Government, Business, Accompanying someone on Diplomacy, Government or Business; Hajj Pilgrimage and Umrah Pilgrimage (similar to Hajj but at a different time). Note the absence of a coming to take a look and dawdle around visa. There are plans to introduce a tourist visa so watch this space. While tourism is restricted, there is still a significant expat community, especially from West and South East Asia.

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Jeddah is a good place to start, as it has been Saudi Arabia’s commercial center as a Red Sea port since medieval times and there are a few things to see before heading on. It also has the world’s highest fountain, that you can view from the seafront.

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Jeddah is now mostly sprawley functional low-rise buildings; until Saudi Arabia developed it’s oil industry post WW2 it was hard to maintain a large population (and the attendant sea water desalinization plants) so the growth is quite recent. However, the al-Balad district downtown still shows a slice of pre-growth Jeddah and is a good place to wander around.

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The souk is a good place to detour, not so much for nasty Chinese plastic goods, but the dates are going to be fresh from the farm and if you are missing a keffiyeh or an abaya in your wardrobe this is the place to haggle for one. Head for Suq al-Alawi and look from there.

Al-Balad is a live neighborhood with some preserved historical buildings such as the Matbouli and Nassif Houses, and others that merge traditional features with modern additions.

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Foodwise the traditional Saudi restaurants offer varieties of roasted meat and rice although barbecued fish is another local specialty. Lebanese and Indian restaurants are plentiful and another good option.

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Visits to the supermarket will show a poor (non-alcoholic) beer selection but plenty of fruit juice varieties.

Rumor has it that the re-sealable swing tops on the glass fruit juice bottles allow introduction of yeast and sugar to make it a more interesting beverage. When the company switched to non-resealable crown tops, sales plummeted, allegedly.

Logistics. Jeddah Airport is rather outdated at present and there is limited public transit, although the new Terminal 1 is planned to have a light rail connection downtown. Taxis at the airport will try and rip you off – a trip into the central area of Jeddah should run about 50 Saudi Riyals in a taxi (~US$15) but they will start the bidding at 200. Depending on which if the two existing and separated (North and South) terminals you arrive at, Uber may have a long wait time. You should set up the Careem app, which is a regional version of Uber that works quite well. Uber and Careem are otherwise efficient to get around and the taxis are better value around town.

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Women visiting Saudi Arabia should acquire an abaya before getting off the plane to cover up, although visitors don’t appear to need a headscarf (while the locals do).

Restaurants and coffee shops are divided into male and family sections – if you are in mixed company you can use the family section.

Lisbon: A Low Key Guide

Lisbon. Everyone’s going however, so it’s time to work out how to see the place while avoiding undue interaction with bus-size tour groups and hordes of weekending Danes until things cool down.

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Lisbon has had it’s work cut out for it trying to become a grand European capital, in part owing to a catastrophic earthquake in 1755 followed by invasion and destitution in the Napoleonic Wars. A fairly extended dalliance with fascist government (1933-74) and it’s geographic isolation from the rest of Europe (assisted by its neighbor Spain’s own dalliance with fascism between 1939 and 1974) has meant that Lisbon has retained an older feel.

Orientation: the city is arranged in a bowl around the Baixa district, which is perhaps the least interesting part of the city, reconstructed after the earthquake and then further modernized in a grid pattern. To the West of the Baixa are the Chiado and Bairro Alto districts, and to the east is the medieval/moorish Alfama, more of which later. These areas are all walkable if you don’t mind some sharp hills to get you there. Further west along the waterfront is the Belem district, which is where Vasco da Gama sailed for India in 1497 and is worth seeing for a fix of maritime history.

The Baixa is a good shopping area if you need one, and it opens out onto the Praca do Comercio for waterfront views. The Chiado, up the hillside just west of the Baixa, is a good area to wander with a late 19th century feel. Stop off at the Cafe do Brasil and see the Museum of Contemporary Art. Just east of the Baixa is the Alfama, the city’s original medieval center lying below the originally Moorish Sao George castle, which is worth a look if you want some windy hillside streets.

Once you have had a general wander around, it’s worth focusing in on some specific destinations and here are some ideas.

Belem. If you want a handle on why and how Portugal stepped out into the world you can head out to Belem, the waterfront area where Vasco da Gama set out for India and where the massive Mosteiro dos Jeronimos was built to commemorate his safe return. Start with the Museu de Marinha, the maritime museum, where there will be plenty of nautical material.

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Museu de Marinha: Pre-Earthquake Lisbon

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Mosteiro dos Jeronimos

Renaissance-era navigation charts with the known world covered off and the rest a mystery.

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Funky sail and steam powered late 19th-century frigates.

Goa became Portugal’s foothold in India in 1510 until they were forcibly ejected by the Indian military in 1961.

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The Gulbenkian. The Museu Calouste Gulbenkian is a must-see for art. Calouste Gulbenkian was an original 1%-er, an Armenian Turk who started in the oil business in the late 19th century, developing interests in Iran and elsewhere, and making a mint in the process. Fleeing Turkey in 1896 after the first of many Armenian massacres, he took British citizenship. Turkey’s neutrality in WW2 made life less comfortable for him in the UK, and he later emigrated to Lisbon, leaving his accumulated artworks to his foundation. The collection is spectacular as a sample across human creativity and the modern art museum – in a separate building covered with the same admission – is worth a visit.

 

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The Aljube. Portugal’s history attempts to be more dramatic than many European countries, and largely succeeds, covering the formation of the state from warring Iberian tribes, the first global empire, hundreds of years contending with Spanish dominance of the Iberian peninsular, joining in the slaughter of WWI trench warfare and then succumbing to fascist dictatorship between 1933 and 1974, before reemerging as a vibrant democracy since. The Aljube Museum on Rua Augusto Rosa 42 covers Portugal’s political history under fascism, and is located in the former secret police headquarters under the Salazar regime. It’s a history of repression and dictatorship, but also explains how the regime was ultimately ejected.

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Aljube Museum

The Alfama and and Lisbon Cathedral are also convenient to Aljube.

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Lisbon Cathedral

Arte Antigua. You can reach further back into Portugal’s history at the Museu Nacional de Arte Antiga. There is a lot of religious and royal art, although the Japanese Namban folding screens from the early 1600’s depicting the early interaction with the Portuguese are fascinating. The Portuguese arrived at Nagasaki in 1543 and the depictions of the arrival and trading are detailed yet slightly cartoonish.

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Also worth a look is this painting of St. Vincent and the Portuguese court, dated from around 1470 with remarkably lifelike and expressive figures. No messing around when you have to fend off the Spanish while invading North Africa.

Logistics

I stayed at the My Story Hotel Tejo at the northeast corner end of the Baixa, which was good as a base to explore the city.

In general, a good place to head out for the evening is Bairro Alto and I’d avoid the Baixa and Alfama as it tends to be a bit overrun. Some restaurants and pubs that worked out well were:

Ribadouro, Av. da Liberdade 155. Great fresh seafood, a bit pricey but worth it.

Mercado da Ribeira – Time Out Market, Av. 24 de Julho 49. Time Out Market has great variety – order self-serve and grab a communal spot on the tables.

Terras Gerais Bistro, Calçada Santana 70. Small Brazilian family operation, well worth it.

Picanha, R. das Janelas Verdes 96. Save your meat requirements for this place.

Varina da Madragoa, R. Madres 34. Neighborhood favorite of the late great author Jose Saramago.

Duque Brewpub, Calçada do Duque 51. Great Portuguese microbrews in the Bairro Alto.

The Beer Station, Largo duque de Cadaval 17.

Dois Corvos Cervejeira, R. Cap. Leitão 94.

Passes. Lisboa Story Centre, Praça do Comércio 78. You can pick up museum and transport passes here with the Lisboa Card, and this is worth it if you are going heavy on the museums – https://www.lisboacard.org/discounts/. If you just need a bus and metro pass, you can buy a Viva Viagem card at transit stations – if arriving at the airport you can start with the metro station there and go into town that way.