London, Málaga, Ronda

by Mark | Oct 3, 2011 | Deep In It | 0 comments

skyline of San Miguel de Allende

The search for an expat life will take many people to world-famous San Miquel de Allende, Mexico. The spiritual center of Mexico and a UNESCO World Heritage city where thousands pilgrimage for Holy Week, San Miguel (SMA) is an expat’s mecca, complete with vortexes, art, history, culture, famous people, and a nearly perfect climate.

It was our first stop in a six-year long journey to find a place abroad that we could call home. That journey has not ended but we have discovered much about the places we visited, the people we met, and ourselves.

Along this path, we published an anthology called At Home Abroad: Today’s Expats Tell Their Stories. Hopefully our three-month stay in San Miguel will catapult you, as it did us, into the wonderful world of living at home abroad.

Image of the book At Home Abroad with a link to purchase

View of Bullring in Malaga, Spain

We arrived in Málaga (Spain) on Friday, March 19, 2010,  at around 4pm (local time) after missing our scheduled connection in London the previous morning.  Since British Airways made the connection too close and our plane was late leaving Miami, they paid for (2) hotel rooms plus (3) meals. It turned out to be a great mistake.

We found the London hotel, laid down our bags, put our post red-eye game face on, and  took the subway into London around 2pm for a free of day of sightseeing.  We were able to easily walk to Buckingham Palace, Big Ben, Parliament, Hyde Park, Piccadilly Circus, Westminster, etc., then a bite to eat. With a plane for Spain to catch early the next day,we were back at the hotel by 11. We measured the last 24 hours since leaving Miami as full.

The next day we arrived in Málaga, got in our rented car and drove about two hours to Ronda, where we stayed the night at the Arunda Hotel in the heart of the city, nothing fancy but reasonable and clean. Ronda is a beautiful city in the mountains about 100 kilometres (62 mi) northwest of Málaga. It was a short visit in this city of about 35,00 people but we all fell in love with it. It seems we are not alone, American artists Ernest Hemingway and Orson Welles spent many summers as part-time residents of Ronda’s old town quarter called La Ciudad.

The Guadalevin River runs through the city, dividing it in two and carving out the steep canyon, above which the city perches.

We toured the city on foot the next morning (stretching the pins as the Brits say) and then drove to Cadiz about two hours away. The weather was perfect, around 22 degrees Celsius.

 

From Ronda it was a short drive to Cádiz where we planned to rent an apartment, explore, soak up some sun, and learn Spanish.