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Our Andalucian paradise

My husband and I had lived in Mexico City, LA, Paris, Guadalajara, Oslo, Montreal and Vancouver. On a rainy November night we moved to a small town an hour inland from Malaga. 'Our Andalusian paradise' is about the historical town of Ronda, the mountains that surrounds it, the white villages dotted amongst them, of hikes, donkey trails and excursions around Andalucía and journeys further afield.

Our decade in Andalucía
Wednesday, November 2, 2022 @ 9:51 PM


Ronda. Illustration by Virgínia Jiménez Perez


Unbelievable, but true! Exactly ten years ago to the day, on a stormy night on November 3rd, 2012, my husband and I arrived in the small town of Ronda in Andalucía with a couple of suitcases. Our few other earthly possessions that we hadn't given away, donated, sold, recycled, or thrown away, sat in a container on a dock in Canada to be dealt with at a future date. We had spent a single night in the town before, and now we were suddenly here indefinitely. The plan was to stay in Ronda for a few months before we travelled to other towns in search of our slice of Andalusian paradise. But gradually we understood that we had more or less found our paradise right here! 



Casita 26. Illustration by Virgínia Jiménez Perez


What happened during the last ten years? How did we handle the transformation from living in a cosmopolitan city of millions to becoming adopted Andalusian village dwellers? Without pontificating too much, here is our last decade made in bullet form:   
 

  • We became intimately acquainted with Spanish bureaucracy when we searched for, found, purchased, and renovated a ruin after an archaeological excavation and a two-year wait for our building permit.
  • I had to learn TWO new languages – Spanish and Andalu’ and subsequently forgot most of my French.  
  • We had to take our Spanish driving licence from scratch - classes and all - though we had driven for over 70 years combined. The first Spanish book that I read cover to cover was the 318-pages driving manual with the intricate Spanish traffic regulations.   
  • We became the proud renters of a community garden plot and immediately realized that we knew nada about gardening in the Spanish south.
  • My 21. Century transatlantic immigration tale was published as a book in the USA.  
  • We became political activists, me as the co-founder of Ronda’s first official volunteer environmental clean-up group and later as vice president for the public trail association while my husband became a health specialist for local TV and lecturer for the town's cancer association.
  • The neighbourhood kids came to get help with their English homework, and then came their teachers …
  • We became active members of the hiking association Pasos Largos and confirmed that the old Andalusians are tough as nails!
  • I began to write freelance for five magazines and became the editor of one of them.
  • We survived seven weeks closed in our tiny little home and two years of wearing masks during Covid-19.
  • With much help from friends and acquaintances, my book (Casita 26) was translated into Spanish and will be released by a wonderful Spanish publisher at the same time as the second English edition. It is supposed to happen muy pronto (very soon).
  • A genuine rondeña gave me a flamenco dress, but to her great disappointment, I never learned how to dance La Sevillana



Andalu' leg. Illustration by Virgínia Jiménez Perez



Our decade in Andalucía has been filled with joys and challenges. I still cannot stop pinching my arm to assure myself that it is true – that this mind-boggling place truly is our home! It is a privilege I hope I will never take for granted.

Your slice of paradise might be somewhere entirely different, but for those who have found your dream home and for those of you who might still be looking – enjoy the process and treasure every minute of the journey.

And as for the next decade - my only plan is to finally try to find the time to write that sequel to my book so you will know what happened to our Ronda ruin and our tailless lizard.

 


Our house pet, the tailless lizard. Illustration by Virgínia Jiménez Perez



Like 5




3 Comments


Stinkey said:
Saturday, November 5, 2022 @ 8:13 AM

Once again a lovely piece of writing, I so enjoy reading your tales of your lifes journey 😀


Supra805 said:
Saturday, November 5, 2022 @ 8:47 AM

Nice little story..
Spain had so much to offer...
Sadly, the continuous political unrest and inter fighting make one wonder...another Europe as controlled by them...in the end.
I am glad you landed on your feet..
When things, no matter how strange..start to work out, then it's a joy in the heart.
I came here to Spain...back in 2005...
Looking and searching, but one saw good and bad photos...and some historic places, but it did not flick that gold coin.
One day, (not sure how) l saw another photo...A warm gold coloured brick wall in the mountains.. surrounded by trees... looking down onto a river..
I was intrigued, where could this place be..
After some time..l was told the River, was the Ebro.
Village name, Benifallet....it could just be made out in the distance..Wow!!!..got to go.
As said, this all started in 2005.
In 2007 found a beautiful plot of land...with stunning views of a Delta...and herb aromas...from the mountains.
The next property was bought in 2012/3 and have stayed ever since...never looked back..
Although it can be slow and silly difficult.. wouldn't change it for anything...
I am self sufficient...no mains water no grid electrics...l have loads of rain water and solar panels.. generators...
And l at am peace...l have done more learnt more in the 9ish years here than the 50 plus in the UK...
So well done to you in Andalucia ...and l hope you continue to enjoy your lives..here in Spain...that applies to all


Dave11 said:
Saturday, November 5, 2022 @ 3:43 PM

A great story, and good luck for the next ten years.
Yes, Spain is a lovely country with many attributes and nice people.


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