Casa Rosales

Casa Rosales

Monday 27 June 2011

38 Degrees


I love sunny days.
I like the feel of sunshine on my skin. I like warm summer days.

Today has been sunny; lots of sunshine - but I have hugged shadows as I walked out briefly this morning to buy bread. The canopy and the persianas have been well and truly pulled down. The recently purchased fan has been whirring all day.

And the hardest, the most difficult thing for me to do, after years of living the summer in England - having the windows firmly closed against the sun's searching rays.

At home, when the temperatures rose, all that was needed was to open doors and windows and let a little air current cool things down inside - freshen the hot and heavy indoors air by stirring it up a little. Here - absolutely to the contrary to all the fibres of my upbringing - we have to keep the windows closed as the air outside is much hotter than the air inside. 38 degrees hot to be precise.

It pains me - I have an inner struggle everytime I pass a window. I want to throw them open and cool things down but it doesn't work like that here. I know it's the same for other ex-pats out here - we've discussed the overwhelming temptation to keep doors open - only they can't resist. They open their doors and windows and set local tongues wagging, heads shaking and create much tutting and sighing amongst concerned neighbours.

Cesar keeps me on the straight and narrow.
And our house stays relatively cool.


The nacimiento
This evening, at around 8pm, after staying in most of the day - out of the heat and away from a viciously hot sun - we decided to visit the 'nacimiento' (source) of the river San Juan, which is just outside Castillo de Locubin, of the cherry festival fame. We'd heard it was a nice place though not developed much for visitors but when we arrived, although many people were leaving, it was still busy and full of families who'd clearly been there most of the day.

Pools of chilly, crystalline water






The place was stunning; large pools of the clearest, coldest water, bubbling up directly from the mountain source behind it. Lots of trees for shade and places to just sit and 'chill' - it wasn't exactly chilly but once I'd dipped my feet for a few seconds, the 'coolth' began to spread up my body - I could feel the effect of cooled blood. And a few seconds longer and the extreme coldness of the water began to bite, really bite!






Not that this prevented both Romy and Ruy (told you they were brave!) who both went in without much hesitation and eventually came out quite pink with cold.

I tell you - it was really, really cold!

Ruy's first tentative entry - we eventually had to insist he got out!

Super cool
 

As the night started to fall, bats began swooping low over the water and most folk packed up and went home, apart from the group of friends playing guitar and an old couple who were filling up bottle after bottle of water - it tastes delicious, they told us - and they were taking it as it came into the pools, not where we'd been dunking our feet, so perhaps it was.






After rubbing a bit of warmth back into the younger ones and persuading them not to go back in again - that we would come back another day, we ate paraguayos - which is a flat peach-like fruit that's unique to the Spanish mainland, Andalucia in particular - and the kids played 'pooh sticks' and climbed the trees.





Watching and waiting.


Then we had to wait a bit longer for Ruy's shoe to float across the pool towards us after Romy had knocked it in by accident at the other side. It took quite a while but it eventually it drifted near enough for us to pull it out and make our way home.



By which time, the temperature here in Alcala had dropped to a manageable 28 degrees and with this, a cooler breeze.

And we could open all the windows - and with an effect that was worth waiting til 10.30 in the evening for - that pleasant 'fresh air' feeling.


6 comments:

  1. Wow, that's rather hotter than we managed in Normandy, Annie. About 29 here yesterday and hot again today, but it's not going to last. The water pools look deliciously cooling, but to look at, not get into :-)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hello Annie

    No heat stroke here in the north today. It's 15 degrees C. windy and raining.

    Anna

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hello Annie:
    Oh yes, we know the feeling of wanting to throw open doors and windows but therby risking the 'hot hairdryer' effect of hot winds blowing in and raising the temperature still further. We always find the heat in Budapest hits an all time high at about 3pm when the buidings seem to radiate heat like boilers!!

    And, how marvellous to have the cooling pools nearby, especially for the children to enjoy.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hi Roseanne; we cope by staying indoors after about 1pm until about 8pm - mainly to sleep and eat! Then, along with all the other folk here, we go out and spend the evening in the park or popping into nice, air-conditioned shops - just to cool down.
    Ax

    ReplyDelete
  5. I'm lucky, because of the way my house is orientated I can leave my ground floor doors and windows open from April until November and I have a ceiling fan to stir the air and it stays cool enough. Upstairs I have to draw the blinds to keep the temperature inside below 30 and because I remember the hot, stuffy hell of Andalucian summers without aircon as a child I have aircon in all the bedrooms. My parents are horrified by that, they firmly believe you don't need it, they are wrong! BTW those pools look wonderful. K xxxx

    ReplyDelete

I welcome your comments - it makes blogging even more fun to know someone is reading!